July 14, 1789 — The Day Paris Tore Open a Prison

On a sweltering Tuesday in 1789, a crowd of Parisians stormed the Bastille fortress — a building most of them had never set foot inside. In about twelve hours they dismantled the most powerful symbol of royal authority in France. This episode walks through every step of that day: the hunger, the gunfire, the improbable surrender, and why a near-empty prison became the founding myth of a revolution.

July 14, 1789 — The Day Paris Tore Open a Prison
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On the morning of July 14th, 1789, the Bastille fortress held exactly seven prisoners — four forgers, two men declared insane, and one aristocrat his own family wanted locked away. By sunset, a crowd of ordinary Parisians had stormed it, overwhelmed its garrison, and put the governor's head on a pike. This episode walks through the full twelve hours: the famine and fear that packed the streets beforehand, the improbable breakfast negotiation between the governor and the crowd's representatives, the firefight that broke out when talks collapsed, and the moment a group of defecting soldiers dragged up real cannons and ended the standoff for good.
The Bastille mattered less because of who was inside it and more because of what it stood for — a place where the king could imprison anyone, without charges, without trial, without explanation. When it fell, something older than the building fell with it: the assumption that royal power had no ceiling. Three weeks later, the National Assembly put that assumption in writing by passing the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen — a document whose core ideas, born out of that sweltering Paris Tuesday, still live in constitutions around the world.

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