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The new Constitution of France, as accepted by the Nation on the 10th of August, 1793. Declaration of rights

Authors of source text

National Convention Committee of Public Safety

Contributions

uncertainty Daniel Isaac Eaton
translator
Thomas Spence
publisher

Related resources

is other edition
An authentic copy of the new constitution of France, as adopted by the National Convention, June 23, 1793. Faithfully translated from the French translation has other edition
is part of
One pennyworth of pig's meat or, Lessons for the swinish multitude. Collected by the poor man's advocate, in the course of his reading for more than twenty years. Intended to promote among the labouring part of mankind proper ideas of their situation, of their importance, and of their rights And to convince them that their forlorn condition has not been entirely overlooked and forgotten, nor their just cause unpleaded, neither by their maker not by the best and most enlightened of men in all ages

Notes

Pig's meat, vol. 1 (1793), p. 176-180, p. 207-212 and 212-245. Translation of the Constitution of the Year 1 and the new Declaration of Rights of Man. The date of their adoption is wrong, this happened really on June 23rd. Spence's later 'The Constitution of a perfect commonwealth' and 'Constitution of Spensonia' were based on this translation. The translation is partly cited in a long review of the 1793 Constitution in The Critical Review, vol. 8 (1793), p. 557-571. It is also reproduced in the (probably non-radical) An impartial history of the French Revolution (1794).