The events of 9 Thermidor proved a watershed in the revolutionary process. The Thermidorian regime that followed proved to be an unpopular one, facing many rebellions after its execution of Robespierre and his allies, along with 70 members of the Paris Commune, the largest mass execution to have ever taken place in Paris. This led to a very fragile situation in France. Often, members of these targeted groups were the victims of prison massacres or put on trial without due process, which were overall similar conditions to those provided to the counter-revolutionaries during the Reign of Terror. At the same time, its economic policies paved the way for rampant inflation. Ultimately, power devolved to the hands of the Directory, an executive of five men who assumed power in France in November 1795, in year III of the French Revolutionary calendar. The Thermidorian regime excluded the remaining
Montagnards from power, even those who had joined in conspiring against Robespierre and Saint-Just. The White Terror of 1795 resulted in numerous imprisonments and several hundred executions, almost exclusively of people on the political left. These numbers, while significant, were considerably smaller than those associated with the previous Reign of Terror, which killed over 40,000. Many executions took place without a trial. On July 29 the victors of the 9th Thermidor condemned seventy members of the Paris Commune to death; thereafter the Commune was subject to the convention. As part of the reorganization of French politics, practitioners of the terror were called to defend their records; some such as Tallien, Barras, Fouché and
Louis-Marie Stanislas Fréron rejoined the leadership. Others such as Jacques-Nicolas Billaud-Varenne,
Collot d'Herbois,
Barère and
Vadier were sentenced to exile in South America, though the latter two managed to evade arrest. Many Jacobin clubs were closed. Freedom of worship was extended first to the
Vendée and later to all France. On 24 December 1794, the
Maximum (controls on prices and wages) was abolished. The government exacerbated this inflationary move by issuing more
assignats. In April and May 1795, protests and riots in support of the radicals broke out culminating in an invasion of the convention by an insurrectionist mob on 20 May. On 22 May the Convention struck back, having troops under
Pichegru surround the
Faubourg St-Antoine and force the capitulation of the armed rebels. In May and June 1795, a "White Terror" raged in which Jacobins were victims and the judges were bourgeois "moderates". Throughout France the events of the
September Massacres were repeated; however this time the victims were imprisoned officials of the Terror. In Paris, Royalist sentiments were openly tolerated. Meanwhile, French armies overran the
Netherlands and established the
Batavian Republic, occupied the left bank of the
Rhine and forced
Spain,
Prussia and several
German States to sue for peace, enhancing the prestige of the convention. A new constitution called the
Constitution of the Year III was drawn up on 22 August 1795, which eased back some of the democratic elements of the
constitution of 1793, establishing an
electoral college for the election of officials, a
bicameral legislature and other provisions designed to protect the current holders of power. On 5 October (
13 Vendémiaire), a revolt led by Royalists challenged the convention. It was put down by troops led by general
Napoleon Bonaparte with "a whiff of grapeshot". On 25 October the Convention declared itself dissolved and was replaced by the Directory on 2 November 1795. == Other uses of the term ==