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July Revolution
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=== Tuesday, 27 July 1830: Day One === [[File:Saisie des presses du National.jpg|thumb|upright=1.2|right| Seizure of the presses of the ''Le National'', a triggering event of the July Revolution. Paris, 27 July.]] Throughout the day, Paris grew quiet as the milling crowds grew larger. At 4:30 pm commanders of the troops of the First Military division of Paris and the ''Garde Royale'' were ordered to concentrate their troops, and guns, on the [[Place du Carrousel]] facing the [[Tuileries]], the [[Place Vendôme]], and the [[Place de la Bastille]]. In order to maintain order and protect gun shops from looters, military patrols throughout the city were established, strengthened, and expanded. However, no special measures were taken to protect either the arm depots or gunpowder factories. For a time, those precautions seemed premature, but at 7:00 pm, with the coming of twilight, the fighting began. "Parisians, rather than soldiers, were the aggressor. Paving stones, roof tiles, and flowerpots from the upper windows... began to rain down on the soldiers in the streets".<ref>{{harvnb|Mansel|2001|p=239}}.</ref> At first, soldiers fired warning shots into the air. But before the night was over, twenty-one civilians were killed. Rioters then paraded the corpse of one of their fallen throughout the streets shouting "''Mort aux Ministres!'' ''À bas les aristocrates!''" ("Death to the ministers! Down with the aristocrats!") One witness wrote: <blockquote> [I saw] a crowd of agitated people pass by and disappear, then a troop of cavalry succeed them... In every direction and at intervals... Indistinct noises, gunshots, and then for a time all is silent again so for a time one could believe that everything in the city was normal. But all the shops are shut; the [[Pont Neuf]] is almost completely dark, the stupefaction visible on every face reminds us all too much of the crisis we face....<ref>{{Cite book |last=Olivier |first=Juste |author-link=Juste Olivier |url=https://archive.org/details/parisjournal0000unse |title=Paris en 1830 |publisher=[[Mercure de France]] |year=1951 |location=Paris |pages=244}}</ref> </blockquote> In 1828, the city of Paris had installed some 2,000 [[street lamp]]s. These lanterns were hung on ropes looped-on-looped from one pole to another, as opposed to being secured on posts. The rioting lasted well into the night until most of them had been destroyed by 10:00 PM, forcing the crowds to slip away.
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