To clear themselves of responsibility (and, indeed, many of Robespierre’s enemies had more blood on his hands than he), they accused him of being the villain, of being a dictator who had misled them. Their judgment has stuck because the winners get to write histories and because Robespierre often served a the spokesperson of the Committee of Public Safety. His words and speeches have endured, and with them his reputation as the dictator of the Terror.

Sylvia Neely, A Concise History of the French Revolution.

(via bunniesandbeheadings)

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