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While Robespierre and the Jacobins occupied the political center-left, the true ancestors of socialism were the (The Enraged Ones). Led by figures like Jacques Roux, they argued that "liberty is but a vain phantom when one class of men can starve another with impunity." They demanded the total redistribution of wealth and strict punishment for speculators.

The French Revolution is often remembered as the dawn of liberal democracy, but for socialist historians, it was something more complex: the first great struggle of the working classes against both feudalism and the nascent capitalist order. While mainstream history focuses on the rise of the "Rights of Man," a socialist perspective highlights the "Rights of Subsistence"—the battle for bread, fair wages, and communal property. The Class Struggle Against Feudalism

Under pressure from the streets, the government enacted the , which capped the price of grain and essentials. They also abolished feudal dues without compensation, effectively redistributing land to the peasantry. This period represented a brief moment where the state intervened in the market to protect the poor, proving that "private property" could be subordinated to the "public good." The Enragés and the Conspiracy of Equals

The socialist "hero" of the Revolution is not the moderate Mirabeau or even the early Lafayette, but the radical movement of 1793. During this phase, the sans-culottes pushed the Jacobins to implement policies that look remarkably like early socialism.