Georges Danton was a charismatic French revolutionary who co-founded the Cordeliers Club, helped overthrow the monarchy and establish the First French Republic in 1792, and served on the early Committee of Public Safety before Robespierre had him executed in April 1794 for urging an end to the Terror.
Georges Danton was the loud, larger-than-life orator of the French Revolution's radical phase. He co-founded the Cordeliers Club, helped rally Paris against the monarchy in 1792, and pushed hard for the creation of the First French Republic after Louis XVI fell. When France faced invasion from foreign monarchies and rebellion at home, Danton helped build the emergency machinery (including the early Committee of Public Safety) that gave the Jacobin government dictatorial power to fight back.
Here's the twist that makes him exam-worthy. By late 1793, Danton started arguing the Terror had gone far enough and France should ease up. That moderate turn made him a threat to Robespierre, and in April 1794 Danton was arrested, given a show trial, and guillotined. He is the Revolution's clearest example of the saying that the Revolution devoured its own children. The radicalism he helped unleash is exactly what killed him.
Danton lives in Topic 5.4 (The French Revolution) in Unit 5 and supports learning objective AP Euro 5.4.A, explaining the causes, events, and consequences of the Revolution. Specifically, he's your human evidence for KC-2.1.IV.C, the essential knowledge point that after Louis XVI's execution, the radical Jacobin republic under Robespierre answered war abroad and opposition at home with the Reign of Terror. Danton's arc traces the whole radical phase in one person. He helps create the Republic, helps justify emergency terror to save it, then becomes a victim of that same terror. If you can explain why the Revolution executed one of its own founders, you can explain how revolutionary radicalization works, which is the analytical move Unit 5 is built around.
Keep studying AP® Euro Unit 5
Reign of Terror (Unit 5)
Danton helped justify revolutionary violence as a wartime emergency measure, then was executed by it in April 1794 when he called for the Terror to wind down. His death shows the Terror eliminating moderates, not just royalists.
Committee of Public Safety (Unit 5)
Danton was a driving force behind this emergency executive body in 1793. Robespierre later used the same Committee to order Danton's arrest, which is a tidy example of revolutionary institutions outgrowing their creators.
Jacobins (Unit 5)
Danton sat on the relatively moderate end of the Jacobin Club by 1793, favoring negotiation and an end to mass executions. His split with Robespierre's hardliners shows the Jacobins were a faction full of factions, not one unified bloc.
Coup d'état of Napoleon (Units 5-6)
The instability that killed Danton kept going. After the Terror consumed Robespierre too, the exhausted Republic drifted until Napoleon's 1799 coup, so Danton's fate is an early data point in the pattern of revolution sliding toward authoritarian order.
Danton shows up mostly in multiple-choice questions about the radical phase of the Revolution. Stems ask you to place him politically within the Jacobin Club by 1793 (the moderate, anti-Terror wing), to explain what his April 1794 execution reveals (the Revolution radicalizing and turning on its own leaders), and to identify the institutions he helped build that shaped the radical phase. No released FRQ has used his name verbatim, but he's strong specific evidence for an LEQ or DBQ on the causes and consequences of revolutionary radicalization under AP Euro 5.4.A. The move the exam rewards is not biography. It's using Danton to show that the Terror destroyed moderates as well as monarchists.
Both were leading Jacobins who steered the radical Republic, so they blur together easily. The split that matters is timing and temperament. Danton was the pragmatic orator who wanted to relax the Terror by late 1793 and was guillotined in April 1794 for it. Robespierre was the ideological purist who ran the Terror at full intensity until it consumed him too in July 1794 (Thermidor). On the exam, Danton equals the moderate-turned-victim; Robespierre equals the architect of the Terror.
Georges Danton was a co-founder of the Cordeliers Club and a leading voice in overthrowing the monarchy and establishing the First French Republic in 1792.
He helped create the emergency institutions of the radical phase, including the early Committee of Public Safety, to fight foreign war and internal rebellion.
By 1793 Danton represented the moderate wing of the Jacobins, arguing the Terror should be scaled back.
Robespierre had Danton executed in April 1794, which shows the Reign of Terror eliminating fellow revolutionaries, not just royalists.
Danton's arc, from founder of the Republic to victim of its Terror, is your go-to evidence for explaining revolutionary radicalization under AP Euro 5.4.A.
Danton co-founded the Cordeliers Club, helped lead the overthrow of the monarchy in 1792, championed the First French Republic, and served on the early Committee of Public Safety during the war emergency of 1793.
Eventually, yes. He helped justify revolutionary violence early on, but by late 1793 he argued the Terror should end and France should seek peace. That moderate stance is what got him arrested and executed in April 1794.
Danton was the pragmatic moderate who wanted to wind down the Terror; Robespierre was the ideologue who intensified it. Robespierre had Danton guillotined in April 1794, then fell to the guillotine himself three months later during Thermidor.
Robespierre and the Committee of Public Safety saw Danton's calls to end the Terror as a threat to the radical government. He was arrested, given a show trial, and guillotined in April 1794, a textbook case of the Revolution devouring its own.
You won't need his full biography, but he appears in multiple-choice questions on the radical phase of the Revolution, and he's excellent specific evidence for essays about the Jacobin republic and the Reign of Terror under Topic 5.4.
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