The 'Paris Commune' during the
French Revolution was the government of
Paris from 1789 until 1795, and especially from 1792 until 1795. Established in the ''
Hôtel de Ville'' just after the
storming of the Bastille, the Commune became insurrectionary in the summer of 1792, essentially refusing to take orders from the central French government.
The first mayor was
Jean Sylvain Bailly; he was succeeded in November 1791 by
Pétion de Villeneuve after Bailly's unpopular use of the
National Guard to disperse a riotous assembly in the
Champ de Mars (
July 17 1791).
On the night of
August 9,
1792 a new revolutionary Commune took possession of the ''Hôtel de Ville''; the next day insurgents assailed the
Tuileries, where the royal family resided. During the ensuing constitutional crisis, the collapsing
Legislative Assembly of France was heavily dependent on the Commune for the effective
power that allowed it to continue to function as a legislature. The all-powerful Commune demanded custody of the royal family, imprisoning them in the
Temple fortress. A list of "opponents of the Revolution" was drawn up, the gates to the city were sealed, and on
August 28 the citizens were subjected to domiciliary visits, ostensibly in a search for muskets. By the evening of the 31st, every prison in Paris was full to overflowing, and on
September 2 the
massacres in the prisons commenced.