The Paris uprising of 18 March 1871 was an insurrection involving elements of the National Guard and sections of the Parisian population, triggered by the attempt of the government led by Adolphe Thiers to reclaim artillery pieces that had been financed by public subscription during the Prussian siege of Paris. The uprising marked the beginning of the Paris Commune, the most significant of the insurrectionary communes that emerged in France in 1870âÂÂ1871. The Commune came to an end during the suppression known as the Bloody Week from to .
The operation to seize the artillery began before dawn. However, many regular army units encountered resistance from local residents and, in several instances, soldiers refused orders and fraternized with the crowd. General Claude Lecomte was arrested and later executed at Montmartre, together with General Jacques Léon Clément-Thomas, who had been apprehended while dressed in civilian clothing. At the same time, the Federated National Guard (Fédérés) occupied key strategic points across the city.
Historians have variously interpreted the failure of the operation, attributing it to poor planning, hesitation, or deliberate delay, and have often cited it as evidence of ThiersâÂÂs limited capacity to reassert control over Paris. The government and the forces that remained loyal to it subsequently withdrew to Versailles, leaving the capital in the hands of the insurgents. The Central Committee of the National Guard assumed authority at the Hôtel de Ville and took charge of the cityâÂÂs municipal administration.
On , France declared the Franco-Prussian War. From early August, French armies suffered a series of defeats. After the capitulation of Napoleon III at Sedan, Parisian deputies proclaimed the Republic on , but the war continued and Paris was besieged from . The Government of National Defense failed to reverse the military situation and signed an armistice on .
Stunned, the Parisian population â having endured the hardships of the siege, winter cold, and Prussian bombardment â was overcome with resentment. The National Assembly, elected on and dominated by monarchists and conservatives, deepened Parisian bitterness. Many felt abandoned or betrayed by rural France, which, in the words of historian Michel Cordillot, âÂÂthought only of peace and had no regard for the sacrifices they had madeâÂÂ. Of the 43 Paris seats, voters elected 36 republicans, but they could not prevent the Assembly from ratifying the preliminary peace treaty on . The armisticeâÂÂs provision for partial Prussian occupation of the city further enraged Parisians, who had never been militarily conquered.
During the siege, elements of the National Guard had already shown discontent with the conduct of operations and distrust of the government, notably during the failed uprisings of 31 October 1870 and 22 January 1871. On , General Clément-Thomas, exasperated by the indiscipline of his men, resigned his command, while the National Guard Federation gradually took shape. On , to mark the anniversary of the Revolution of 1848, about one hundred armed battalions paraded around the July Column to demonstrate their attachment to the Republic. Government authority was increasingly challenged, and regular troops were withdrawn from working-class districts.
On , in accordance with the armistice, Prussian troops entered Paris; confrontation was narrowly avoided by establishing a cordon around the wealthy districts. The National Guard emptied arsenals and concentrated its cannons on the heights of Montmartre, Belleville, and the Place des Vosges.
The appointment of General Louis d'Aurelle de Paladines on was seen as provocation. On , the Assembly passed measures perceived as humiliations: ending pay for most National Guards (restricted to those proving destitution) and demanding immediate settlement of commercial debts, threatening thousands of traders and artisans with bankruptcy. The Assembly also chose to sit at Versailles, thereby, in Jacques RougerieâÂÂs phrase, âÂÂdecapitating Paris in favour of the city of kingsâÂÂ. These measures radicalised even moderate elements while the National Guard Federation organised itself.
From Versailles, the government perceived Parisian anger. General Joseph Vinoy, military governor of Paris, multiplied repressive measures (banning meetings, suspending republican newspapers) to no avail. Mayor Georges Clemenceau of the 18th arrondissement attempted mediation, but the announcements ended negotiations. Thiers arrived in Paris on to reassert control. By , 215 of 242 National Guard battalions had joined the Federation, which adopted its statutes and elected a Central Committee.
Thiers was determined to restore order before the National Assembly convened at Versailles on . Several northern and eastern districts were already in open rebellion after regular troops withdrew. The government planned to seize the National Guard cannons and arrest the movementâÂÂs leaders while posting placards calling for support.
About 15,000âÂÂ25,000 troops were mobilised. General SusbielleâÂÂs division was to take the Montmartre cannons; General FaronâÂÂs was to secure Buttes-Chaumont and Belleville; General MaudâÂÂhuy was to hold the Bastille and isolate the Left Bank.
On , from 3 a.m., troops reached their objectives by 6 a.m., but horses and harnesses were late, delaying removal of the cannons. At Montmartre, guard Germain Turpin was gravely wounded, and the National Guard post in the Rue des Rosiers came under fire. As residents awoke â many of them women â crowds gathered around the cannon parks and hemmed in the soldiers. Inhabitants cut the horsesâ traces to prevent the guns being moved.
General Lecomte ordered his men to fire, but soldiers of the 88th March Regiment refused, lowered their rifle butts to the ground (crosse en lâÂÂair), and fraternized. The Montmartre Vigilance Committee sounded the alarm; six battalions erected fortifications. Lecomte was arrested and taken to the Château-Rouge.
Similar scenes occurred elsewhere. Barricades rose in the 11th arrondissement and Faubourg Saint-Antoine. The government failed to rally loyal National Guard battalions from bourgeois districts. By noon the Fédérés held the Place de la Bastille; regular troops withdrew.
On the Left Bank, Blanquist ÃÂmile-Victor Duval seized the Latin Quarter and the Panthéon powder magazine. Regular troops evacuated the entire Left Bank to avoid further fraternization.
On the Right Bank, the Fédérés took key buildings. Panic gripped the Ministry of Foreign Affairs at the Quai dâÂÂOrsay. At 4 p.m., on the advice of generals Vinoy and Le Flô, Thiers ordered evacuation to Versailles.
In the evening, columns converged on the Hôtel de Ville, which was occupied shortly before midnight. The Central Committee installed itself there.
In the afternoon, General Lecomte was transferred to 6 Rue des Rosiers. A hostile crowd gathered but was momentarily calmed. Then General Clément-Thomas, recognised in civilian clothes, was brought in. Despite interventions (including by Mayor Clemenceau), both men were summarily executed by an enraged crowd.
After 18 March, the Fédérés controlled most of Paris and the main seats of power, including six mairies (5th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 19th, and 20th arrondissements). The Central Committee, considering its mandate limited to the National Guard, called municipal elections (first scheduled for 22 March, then held on 26 March). It appointed members to head administrative services and adopted urgent measures: lifting the state of siege, freeing political prisoners, restoring press freedom, suspending pawnshop sales, postponing rent payments, etc. It refused to march on Versailles, fearing civil war.
Negotiations with ParisâÂÂs mayors and deputies failed. The Commune Council was officially proclaimed on .
The Versailles government reorganized its army, retook the Mont-Valérien fort, and on entered Paris. The ensuing Bloody Week crushed the insurrection.
Short-lived communes were proclaimed in several cities (Marseille, Lyon, Toulouse, Narbonne, Saint-ÃÂtienne, Le Creusot, etc.), but none matched the duration or radicalism of Paris.
Major writers unanimously condemned the uprising. Théophile Gautier compared the insurgents to wild beasts released from a menagerie. Socialist and later republican memory, by contrast, celebrated 18 March as a popular victory and, from the 1880s, increasingly emphasised the martyrs of the Bloody Week.
Michel Cordillot argues that the uprising cannot be called an insurrection in the classic sense, because the chain of events was triggered by the governmentâÂÂs operation rather than by a revolutionary headquarters.
Jean-Pierre Azéma and Michel Winock go further, holding Thiers responsible both for provoking the revolt and for the armyâÂÂs failure. They accuse him of cowardice and of fleeing prematurely, possibly hoping to provoke civil war in order to crush Parisian opposition once and for all. The execution of the two generals was exploited by Versailles propaganda (notably through Ernest-Charles AppertâÂÂs staged photomontages) to depict the Commune as barbaric, though the killings were spontaneous acts by an enraged crowd.