The Girondins were the moderate faction of the French Revolution who favored a decentralized (federalist) republic and resisted Jacobin radicalism; their purge from the National Convention in June 1793 marked the Revolution's turn toward the Reign of Terror (AP Euro Topic 5.4, KC-2.1.IV.C).
The Girondins were a political faction in revolutionary France, named for deputies from the Gironde region around Bordeaux. They came out of the Revolution's first, liberal phase, the one that produced the Constitution of 1791, and many of them pushed France into war with Austria in 1792, expecting it to unify the nation. Once the monarchy fell, they wanted a republic, but a moderate, decentralized one. They distrusted the Paris mob and wanted power spread across France's provinces (that's the "federalism" part), and many of them hesitated over executing Louis XVI.
Their rivals, the radical Jacobins (the Montagnards, backed by the Parisian sans-culottes), saw all that hesitation as treason while France was losing a war and facing revolt at home. In June 1793, Parisian crowds forced the National Convention to expel and arrest the leading Girondins, and many were guillotined that fall. Think of the Girondins as the human marker of the Revolution's radicalization. When they fall, the liberal phase is truly over and Robespierre's Terror begins.
The Girondins live in Unit 5, Topic 5.4 (The French Revolution), and they're your best evidence for learning objective 5.4.A, explaining the causes, events, and consequences of the Revolution. The CED's essential knowledge breaks the Revolution into phases. KC-2.1.IV.B describes the liberal phase (constitutional monarchy, abolished privileges, nationalized Church), and KC-2.1.IV.C describes the radical Jacobin republic under Robespierre that answered opposition at home and war abroad with the Reign of Terror. The Girondins are the hinge between those two essential-knowledge statements. Their purge in 1793 is exactly the moment the Revolution shifts from B to C. If an essay asks you to explain how or why the Revolution radicalized, the destruction of the Girondins is the event you point to.
Keep studying AP® Euro Unit 5
Committee of Public Safety (Unit 5)
The Committee, dominated by Robespierre, was the Jacobins' tool of centralized emergency rule, the exact opposite of Girondin federalism. The Girondins' arrest cleared the way for it, and their executions in fall 1793 were among the Terror's first major political killings.
Constitution of 1791 (Unit 5)
The Girondins rose during the liberal phase that this constitution defined. Their fall shows why that constitutional, rights-based experiment collapsed once war and internal revolt made moderation look like betrayal.
Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen (Unit 5)
Olympe de Gouges, who wrote it, was guillotined in 1793 partly because of her ties to Girondin moderates. Her execution shows how the anti-Girondin purge swept up writers and activists, not just deputies.
De-Christianization (Unit 5)
Radical de-Christianization campaigns took off after the Girondins were gone. With the moderates purged, the Jacobin republic could push far more extreme cultural policies than the liberal phase ever attempted.
Multiple-choice questions rarely ask "who were the Girondins" flat out. Instead they test whether you can read an event as evidence of radicalization. Practice questions in this style ask why Jean-Paul Marat attacked the Girondins in his publications, why Olympe de Gouges was executed in 1793, and what Georges Danton's execution in 1794 reveals about the Revolution turning on its own. In every case, the answer is the same underlying logic: the Jacobin republic eliminated rivals to its left and right, starting with the Girondins. No released FRQ uses "Girondins" verbatim (the 2025 LEQ quoted the Constitution of 1791 instead), but the term is perfect LEQ/DBQ evidence for prompts on change over time in the Revolution. Use the Girondin purge of June 1793 as the turning point between the liberal phase and the Terror.
Both groups were revolutionaries and both wanted a republic by 1792, so the difference is degree and method, not revolution vs. monarchy. The Girondins were moderates who wanted a decentralized republic, distrusted the Paris crowds, and hesitated over killing the king. The Jacobins (Montagnards) wanted centralized revolutionary authority, allied with the sans-culottes, and were willing to use terror against enemies. Technically, many Girondins even started inside the Jacobin Club before the split. On the exam, "Girondin" signals moderation and federalism; "Jacobin" signals Robespierre, the Committee of Public Safety, and the Terror.
The Girondins were the moderate faction of the French Revolution who wanted a decentralized, federalist republic rather than Jacobin-style centralized rule from Paris.
They pushed France into war with Austria in 1792, but military failures and their hesitation over executing Louis XVI made them look like traitors to the radicals.
Parisian crowds and the Jacobins purged the Girondins from the National Convention in June 1793, and many were guillotined that fall.
The Girondin purge is the clearest marker of the Revolution shifting from its liberal phase (KC-2.1.IV.B) to the radical Jacobin republic and the Reign of Terror (KC-2.1.IV.C).
Olympe de Gouges' execution in 1793 was tied to her Girondin sympathies, showing the purge extended beyond politicians to writers and activists.
On the AP exam, mentioning the Girondins works as evidence for radicalization, factional violence, and why moderate revolutionary movements collapse under wartime pressure.
The Girondins were the moderate republican faction in the National Convention, named for deputies from the Gironde region. They favored a decentralized republic and opposed the radical centralism of the Jacobins, who purged and executed them in 1793.
Both wanted a republic, but the Girondins wanted a moderate, decentralized one and distrusted the Paris mob, while the Jacobins (Montagnards) embraced centralized emergency rule, the sans-culottes, and the Terror. The Jacobins won, purging the Girondins in June 1793.
No. They worked within the constitutional monarchy of 1791 early on, but after the monarchy fell in 1792 they supported a republic. Many just opposed executing Louis XVI, which let the Jacobins paint them as secret royalists.
With France losing the war abroad and facing revolt at home in 1793, the Jacobins and Parisian sans-culottes branded Girondin moderation as treason. The Convention expelled them in June 1793, and leading Girondins were guillotined during the early Reign of Terror.
Yes, as evidence rather than a standalone term. They support LO 5.4.A on the French Revolution, and their 1793 purge is the cleanest way to explain the shift from the liberal phase to the Reign of Terror in an LEQ or DBQ.
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