Rousseau and Revolution

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Rousseau and Revolution Page 184

by Will Durant

Passionei, Cardinal (fl. 1754), 326–27

  Passionerna (Thorild), 661

  Passionist Order, 225

  Pater, Walter (1839–94), 326*

  Paton, Betty (fl. 1785), 774

  Patriarcha (Filmer), 177

  particians in Geneva, 143

  Patrick, Saint (389?-461?), 767

  Patriot, The (Johnson), 833

  Pau, Parlement of, 947

  Paul, Lewis (fl. 1738), 673

  Paul, Saint (d. 67), 194

  Paul I (Grand Duke Paul), Czar of Russia (r. 1796–1801), 441, 462, 465–66, 468, 492, 908

  Paul et Virginie (Bernardin de Saint-Pierre), 904, 917

  Paul of the Cross, Saint (Paolo Danei; 1694–1775), 225

  Pavia, 310

  university in, 219

  Pavilliard, Pastor (fl. 1753), 797, 804

  Paysan perverti, Le (Restif de La Bretonne), 918

  Peacock Throne, 419

  peasant revolts: in Russia, 423, 455

  in Wallachia, 361

  peasantry, 12

  in Austria, 345

  in Egypt, 415

  in England, 669–71, 732, 814–16

  in France, 859, 861, 902, 954

  French Revolution and, 927–31

  in Germany, 501, 503

  in Hungary, 341

  in Italy, 217–18, 249

  Mirabeau père’s tribute to, 74

  in Poland, 472, 474, 487, 491

  in Prussia, 501

  revolts of, see peasant revolts; Rousseau’s opinion of, 174

  in Russia, 142, 422, 451, 454–56, 469

  in Spain, 274, 287

  Sturm und Drang movement and, 522

  in Sweden, 654–55, 657, 663

  in Switzerland, 27

  Pechlin, Baron Karl Fredrik von (fl. 1789), 662, 664

  Peder Paars (Holberg), 650

  Pedro III, King of Portugal (r. 1777–86), 271

  Peel, Robert (1750–1830), 678–79

  Peel, Sir Robert (1788–1850), 678

  Pellegrini, Giovanni Antonio (1675–1741), 235

  Pembroke, Lord, 745

  Pembroke, Elizabeth Spencer, Countess of, 753

  Pennsylvania Assembly, 868

  Pentateuch, 629, 639

  Penthièvre, Louis de Bourbon, Duc de (1725–1793), 852

  Percy, Thomas (1729–1811), 518, 568, 767, 809, 817

  Pereira, Dr. Pedro Gonçalves, see Gonçalves Pereira, Pedro

  Péreire, Jacob Rodrigue (1715–80), 636

  Perekop, 430

  Perfektibilisten (secret society), 507

  Pergolesi, Giovanni Battista (1710–36), 100, 223, 240, 254, 255–56, 333

  Permanent Council, Polish, 485, 487

  Persia, 411, 417–21

  disorder after Nadir’s death, 420

  invasion of India (1739), 419

  invasion of Uzbekistan (1740), 420

  poetry in, 421

  Safavid dynasty in, 417

  taxation in, 420

  Turkey and, 417–19

  war with Russia (1722–23), 419

  Persian rugs, 421

  Pertl, Anna Maria, see Mozart, Anna Maria

  Perugia, 244

  perversions in France, 98

  Peshawar, 419

  Pest, university at, 360

  Pestalozzi Johann Heinrich (1746–1827), 888

  Peter I the Great, Czar of Russia (r. 1682–1725), 39, 142, 425–26, 433, 456, 632–63

  escape from Turks, 414

  nobility and, 438

  statue of, 467

  war with Persia (1722–23), 419

  Westernization of Russia, 470–71

  Peter II (Piotr Alexeevich), Czar of Russia (r. 1727–30), 429

  Peter III (Piotr Feodorovich, orig. Karl Friedrich Ulrich of Holstein-Gottorp) Czar of Russia (r. 1762), 432–40, 456

  aids Frederick II, 438

  Catherine deposes, 61, 439–40

  conflicts with Catherine, 435–36, 439

  death of, 442

  early life and personality of, 432–33

  habits of, 435–36

  imprisoned by Catherine, 440–42

  love affairs of, 436

  meets and marries Catherine, 434–35

  popular sympathy for, 441

  Pugachev’s pretensions as, 45

  reforms of, 142, 437–39

  reign of, 437–40

  unpopularity of, 439

  Peterwardein, battle of (1718), 414

  Petit, Abbé (fl. 1750), 27

  Petit Trianon, 111, 852, 910

  Petty, Sir William (1737–1805), see Shelburne, 2d Earl of

  Pezay, Alexandre-Frédéric-Jacques Masson, Marquis de (1741–77), 884

  Phaedrus, (1st cent. A.D.), 486

  Phaidon (Mendelssohn), 638–39

  Phèdre (Racine), 169

  Philalethie (Basedow), 507

  Philanthropinum of Dessau, 506

  Philidor, François-André Danican- (1726–95), 16, 100

  Philip, Duke of Parma, see Felipe, Duke of Parma

  Philip II, King of Spain (r. 1556–98), 279

  Philip IV, King of Spain (r. 1621–65), 297, 305

  Philip V, King of Spain (r. 1700–46), 273, 276–79, 297, 298, 301

  centralization of Spanish state, 277

  death of, 279

  Farinelli and, 278–79, 296

  he becomes insane, 278–79

  international conflicts of, 277–78

  marriages of, 276–77

  personality of, 276–77

  presides over auto-da-fé, 276

  Philip of Orléans, Regent, see Orléans, Philippe II, Duc d’

  Philippe-Égalité, see Orléans, Louis-Philippe-Joseph, Duc d’

  Philippines, population of, 273

  philosophes, 94–95, 280, 286, 487, 536, 549, 867, 889

  American Revolution and, 867–68, 872

  Archbishop of Paris and, 193

  atheism and, 183

  attitudes toward religion and morality, 183, 902–3

  Brienne and, 945

  Catherine II and 446–50, 452–53

  Choiseul and, 88, 89

  classical ancient ideals of, 898

  clergy and, 901

  deaths of, 892–97

  declining influence of, 170

  fear of revolutionary action, 898

  Frederick II and, 496–98

  French Revolution and, 890–91, 897–99, 937–38, 940

  friendships with monarchs, 897–98

  Joseph II and, 353

  last of 894–97

  Louis XVI and, 867

  Mme. de Pompadour’s friendship for, 67

  moderate views of, 95, 897–98

  Mozart’s dislike of, 392

  on music, 100

  Paris Parlement and, 90

  physiocrats and, 75

  Pombal and, 267–68

  prudence of, 31

  Robespierre’s rejection of, 890–91

  Rousseau and, 162–65, 182–83, 195, 214

  Russia and, 140

  Turgot and, 78–79, 858–59, 863, 865

  views on communism, 82; see also names of individual philosophes

  Philosophes, Les (Palissot), 120

  Philosophical Dictionary (Voltaire), see Dictionnaire philosophique

  Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of the Sublime and Beautiful, A (Burke), 691

  Philosophie rurale (Mirabeau père), 74

  Philosophische Briefe (Schiller), 572

  Philosophische Gespräche (Mendelssohn), 638

  Phocaeans, 312

  physiocrats, 356, 455, 678, 858

  influence of, 76–77, 287, 769–71

  philosophes and, 75

  theories of, 71–77

  Physiognomische Fragmente, 563, 645

  Piacenza, 278

  piano: importance in musical evolution, 527

  mechanical improvements in, 525

  pianoforte: improvement of, 332

  invention of, 221r />
  Piazza di Spagna, 247

  Piazzetta, Giovanni Battista (1682–1754), 235–36

  Piccini, Niccolò (1728–1800), 100, 291, 333, 334, 373, 386, 388, 875

  death of, 333

  personality of, 333

  rivalry with Gluck, 371–72, 908

  sympathy for French Revolution, 333

  writes musical score to Metastasio’s Olimpiade, 333

  Piccolomini, Die (Schiller), 601–2

  Pico della Mirandola, Giovanni (1463–94), 620

  Pied de Fanchette, Le (Restif de La Bretonne), 918

  Piedmont, Jesuit colleges in, 219

  Pietism, 465, 531, 636

  Pigage, Nikolaus von (1723–96), 525

  Pigalle, Jean-Baptiste (1714–85), 106, 107, 280, 908, 911

  Pilâtre de Rozier, Jean-François (1756–85), 932

  Pinto, Isaac (1715–87), 630

  Piozzi, Gabriel Mario (1740–1809), 837–38

  Piozzi, Hester Lynch, see Thrale, Hester Lynch

  Piranesi, Giovanni Battista (1720–78), 248, 479, .747

  Pirna, siege of (1756), 45

  Piron, Alexis (1689–1773), 121

  Pisa, 312

  university in, 219

  Pisano, Benedetto, 323

  Pisiani library, 219

  Pitt, William, the Elder, Earl of Chatham (1708–78), 342, 683, 725, 741, 794, 812, 842

  accepts peerage as Earl of Chatham, 700

  American Revolution and, 689, 708, 710–12

  basic policies of, 57, 689

  de facto ministry of. 700

  death of, 713

  personality of, 688–89

  refuses peerage, 698

  SEVEN YEARS’ WAR (1756–63): 40, 698

  denounces convention of Kloster-Zeven, 50

  dismissal of Pitt (1757), 46, 60–61

  refuses French peace feelers, 60

  support for Frederick II, 39, 698–99

  Pitt, William, the Younger (1759–1806), 461, 680, 696–97, 718–19, 734, 750:

  Adam Smith’s influence on, 772

  consumption of alcohol, 726

  death of, 726

  duel with Tierney, 732

  early life and education of, 696–97

  economic policies of, 719, 726

  enters Parliament, 697

  establishes “cabinet government,” 718

  forms ministry, 718–19

  leads war against revolutionary France, 726

  personality of, 697

  policies toward India, 719–20

  policies toward Ireland, 726

  resoluteness of, 697

  Samuel Johnson and, 833

  support for American colonies, 714

  Pittoni, Giambattista (1687–1767), 235

  Pittsburgh region, French forts in, 57

  Pius VI (Giovanni Angelo Breschi), Pope (r. 1775–99), conflict with Joseph II, 359–60

  Jews and, 631

  Ricci imprisoned by, 314

  Pius VII (Luigi Barnaba Chiaramonti), Pope (r. 1800–23), 319

  Plains of Abraham, battle of (1759), 58

  Plan for a Dictionary of the English Language (Johnson), 821

  Plan of a University for the Government of Russia (Diderot), 892

  Planché, John Robinson (1796–1880), 576

  Plassey, battle of (1757), 58, 716–17

  Plato (427?–347 B.C.), 171, 177, 188, 251–52, 294, 435

  Platon (Peter Levshin; 1737–1812), 465

  Plautus, Titus Maccius (254?–184 B.C.), 241, 508, 650

  plays, see theater

  Pleyel, Camille (1788–1855), 380

  Pleyel, Ignaz (1757–1831), 380

  Plus Beaux Monuments de la Grèce, Les (Le Roy), 110

  Plutarch (46?–120? A.D.), 435

  pocket boroughs: in England, 685, 733

  in Ireland, 760

  Pococke, George, Admiral (fl. 1758), 58

  Podolia, 492, 634

  Podstatsky, Count (fl. 1767), 386

  Poesie drammatiche (Metastasio), 369

  poetry: in Denmark, 652

  in England, 518, 808–17

  in France, 104, 889

  in Germany, 511, 517–21, 557–58, 564–65, 584–86, 590, 595, 599, 601, 603, 608–11, 623–25

  Islamic, 412–13, 421

  in Italy, 220, 335–36

  Jewish, 641

  opera and, 223

  in Persia, 421

  in Poland, 485–86

  in Portugal, 269–70

  in Russia, 427–28, 464

  in Scotland, 767–68

  in Spain, 295–96

  in Sweden, 659–62

  Poetry and Truth (Goethe), 626

  Poggio Bracciolini, Giovanni Francesco (1380–1459), 804

  Poisson, Mme. (d. 1745), 86

  Poland, 89, 656

  agriculture in, 472–73

  army in, 485, 487

  art in, 479

  Austria and, 475, 482–83

  clergy and religion in, 472, 480–81

  constitution adopted for (1791), 487–88

  culture in, 475

  decay of towns, 474

  Denmark and, 480

  Diet of, 475–76, 479–81, 484, 490–91

  dress in, 474

  education in, 475, 485

  England and, 480, 484

  Enlightenment in, 484–87

  feudalism in, 472–73, 487

  final dismemberment of (1794), 491–92

  first partition of (1768–72), 350, 481–85

  France and, 476, 482

  governmental weakness of, 472–73, 476–77, 480–82, 484–85, 487

  in Holy Roman Empire, 341

  industry and commerce in, 473–74

  Jews in, 472, 475, 482, 632–34, 636, 641

  last stand against dismemberment (1794), 491–92

  minorities in, 472, 480, 484

  morality in, 474

  partriarchalism in, 473

  population of, 485

  Prussia and, 474, 479–84, 487–88, 490–92

  religious tolerance in, 481, 487

  Rousseau’s constitution for, 178; 884–85

  Russia and, 430, 456, 470, 474, 479–84, 487–92

  Saxon kings of (1697–1763), 475–77

  second partition of (1792), 490–91

  size of, 472

  social classes in, 472–74, 476–77, 480–82, 484–85, 487, 491

  Sweden and, 475–76

  trade treaties with Russia, 456

  Treaty of Versailles (1756) and, 42

  Turkey and, 415, 458, 475, 482

  women in, 474

  Polignac, Duc Jules-François de (1745–1817), 864–65

  Polignac, Yolande de Polastron, Duchesse de (1749?–93), 852–53, 875

  Polish Succession, War of the (1733–35), 430, 476, 630

  political clubs and French Revolution, 939

  political economy, first university chair in, 250

  Political Law of the Polish Nation, The (Kollantaj), 486

  poll tax in France, 936

  Poltawa, battle of (1709), 476

  Polzelli, Luigia (1780–1832), 376

  Pombal, Sebastião José de Carvalho e Mello, Marquês de (1699–1782), 261–72, 631, 880

  attitude toward religion, 268

  conflict with Jesuits, 262–68

  conflict with nobles, 263–65, 268

  reforms of, 142, 268–70

  Pomerania, 653

  promised to Sweden, 45–46

  Seven Years’ War in, 48, 54

  Pomfret, Henrietta Louisa, Countess of, 228, 793

  Pompadour, Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson, Marquise de (1721–64), 73, 87, 105–7, 111, 137, 858, 920

  aid to Mirabeau père, 74

  conference with von Starhemberg, 41–42

  death of, 68

  Diderot on, 69

  Falconet and, 109

  friendship for philosophes, 67

  Kaunitz and, 41

  love for L
ouis XV, 85

  Maria Theresa and, 40–42, 45, 56

  Mozart performs for, 384

  physiocrats and, 71

  Pigalle and, 108

  popular hatred of, 67–69

  reforms of, 144

  role in French government, 67

  Rousseau and, 25

  Seven Years’ War and, 40, 41–42, 45, 53, 56

  Voltaire on, 69

  Pompeii, excavations at (1748–63), 110, 248, 328, 589

  Pondicherry, 58–59

  Poniatowski, Prince Józef Antoni (1763–1813), 488–92

  Poniatowski, Princess Konstantia, nee Czartoryski, 473

  Poniatowski, Prince Stanislas (1676–1762), 473

  Poniatowski, Stanislas II, see Stanislas II Augustus, King of Poland

  Pont-de-Veyle, Antoine de Ferriol, Comte de (fl. 1768), 125

  Ponte, Lorenzo da (Emmanuele Caneglianos 1749–1838), 403, 404, 406, 408

  Ponteeorvo, 317

  Pontejos, Marquesa de (fl. 1785), 301

  Pontenuovo, battle of (1769), 313

  Pontoise, riots in, 934

  Pontverre, Père Benoît de (fl. 1728), 7

  Poor Richard’s Almanac (Franklin), 869

  Pope, the: in 1740–58, see Benedict XIV;

  in 1758–69, see Clement XIII;

  in 1769–74, see Clement XIV;

  in 1775–99, see Pius VI;

  in 1800–23, see Pius VII

  Pope, Alexander (1688–1744), 13, 269, 703, 741, 786, 810, 813, 839, 878

  opposes slave trade, 732

  Samuel Johnson’s views on, 837

  Pope ein Metaphysiker! (Mendelssohn), 638

  pornography, 98

  Porpora, Niccolò (1686–1766), 220, 222, 232, 240, 254, 374

  Porson, Richard (1759–1808), 694

  Portugal, 259–72

  abolition of slavery in, 269

  American colonies of, 262–63, 269

  breaks relations with Vatican, 267

  commerce and industry of, 259–60, 269

  control over Church in, 268

  culture in, 260–61, 269–70

  diplomacy of, 259–60

  England and, 259

  Enlightenment in, 269–70

  expulsion of Jesuits from, 317

  Inquisition in, 260, 267–68, 269–70

  Italian opera in, 224

  Jesuits in, 260, 262–68, 271–72

  Jews, in, 260, 631

  in League of Armed Neutrality (1780), 457

  literature in, 260, 269–70

  Negro slavery in, 259

  nobles in, 263–65, 268

  Old Christians and New Christians in, 268, papal concordat with, 246

  Pombal’s dictatorship in, see Pombal;

  poverty in, 259

  reasons for decline of, 259

  reform of Pombal in, 268–70

  Seven Years’ War and, 62

  Spain and, 262–63, 268

  wealth of Church in, 260

  Potemkin, Grigori Alexandrovich (1739–91), 322, 444–46, 464, 467, 469

  as administrator, 459

  death of, 461

  generalship against Turks, 459–61

  Potemkin villages, 459–60

 

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