Asked by caleb

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How did the French Revolution differ from the
American Revolution?

The Americans were less interested in providing equal rights for citizens regardless of social class.

In America, the division between rich and poor made the revolutionary process more difficult.

The people of France were entirely focused on overthrowing the current king, Louis XIII.

The population of France was divided about the need to change the entire political system, which led to civil war.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
"The Americans were less interested in providing equal rights for citizens regardless of social class."

Explanation: The American Revolution aimed mainly at independence and preserving the colonists' political and property rights; it did not fundamentally overturn social hierarchies. By contrast the French Revolution sought sweeping social and political equality (ending feudal privileges) and a radical remaking of society. The other options are inaccurate (Louis XVI, not XIII; while France had internal conflicts, the defining difference is the Americans' lesser emphasis on social equality).