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Bastille Day - French National Day - Thursday 14th July
It is Bastille Day, the French National Day, this coming Thursday 14th July and we will be having a typical French evening at the Duke. That's a typical French evening menu, of course, with all the usual favourites... Starters: French Onion Soup, Frogs Legs, Baked Camembert, Duck Pate, Coquilles St. Jacques. Main courses: Chicken in Chasseur, Beef Bourginon, Duck Breast in Cherry Sauce, Moules Mariniere, Bouillabaisse. Desserts: Creme Brulee, Profiteroles, Tart Tartin or French Cheese Board. ...we are sure the evening will be a gastric delight. 2 courses with coffee - £14.95.
Call now to book a table. Tel: 01344 882736. Download a menu in PDF here. About Bastille Day Bastille Day, the French national holiday, commemorates the storming of the Bastille, which took place on 14 July 1789 and marked the beginning of the French Revolution. The Bastille was a prison and a symbol of the absolute and arbitrary power of Louis the 16th's Ancient Regime. By capturing this symbol, the people signaled that the king's power was no longer absolute: power should be based on the Nation and be limited by a separation of powers. Although the Bastille only held seven prisoners at the time of its capture, the storming of the prison was a symbol of liberty and the fight against oppression for all French citizens; like the Tricolore flag, it symbolized the Republic's three ideals: Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity for all French citizens. It marked the end of absolute monarchy, the birth of the sovereign Nation, and, eventually, the creation of the (First) Republic, in 1792. Bastille Day was declared the French national holiday on 6 July 1880, on Benjamin Raspail's recommendation, when the new Republic was firmly entrenched. Bastille Day has such a strong signification for the French because the holiday symbolizes the birth of the Republic. As in the US, where the signing of the Declaration of Independence signaled the start of the American Revolution, in France the storming of the Bastille began the Great Revolution. In both countries, the national holiday thus symbolizes the beginning of a new form of government. On the one-year anniversary of the fall of the Bastille, delegates from every region of France proclaimed their allegiance to a single national community during the Fete de la Federation in Paris - the first time in history that a people had claimed their right to self-determination. The French Revolution The French Revolution had numerous causes which are greatly simplified and summarized here:
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