<P> Two Muscadins in Paris (1795) </P> <Li> <P> Paul Barras in the ceremonial dress of a French Director </P> </Li> <P> Paul Barras in the ceremonial dress of a French Director </P> <Ul> <Li> January 19: French army of Pichegru captures Amsterdam . </Li> <Li> January 21: French cavalry capture the Dutch fleet, trapped in the ice at Den Helder . </Li> <Li> February 2: Confrontations between Muscadins and sans - culottes in Paris streets . </Li> <Li> February 5: The semi-official government newspaper Le Moniteur Universel condemns the past incitement to violence and terror by Marat and his allies . </Li> <Li> February 8: Removal of the remains of Marat and three other extreme Jacobins from the Panthéon . </Li> <Li> February 14; Several former Jacobin leaders in Lyon, who conducted the Terror there, are assassinated, beginning of the so - called First White Terror . </Li> <Li> February 17: An amnesty granted to former Vendéen rebels, restoring freedom of religion . </Li> <Li> February 21: On a proposal by Boissy d'Anglas, the Convention proclaims freedom of religion and the separation of church and state . </Li> <Li> February 22: In the Convention, the deputy Rovère demands the punishment of Jacobins who carried out the Terror . Former Jacobin leaders in several cities placed under arrest . Four Jacobins in Nîmes who conducted the Terror there are assassinated . </Li> <Li> March 2: The Convention orders the arrest of Barère, Villaud - Varenne, Collot d'Herbois and Vadier, the Jacobins who had orchestrated the downfall of Robespierre . </Li> <Li> March 5: In Toulon, arrest of the Jacobins who had carried out mass executions of the population . </Li> <Li> March 8: Riot in Toulon by sans - culottes, who execute seven imprisoned émigrés . </Li> <Li> March 17: Food riots in Paris . </Li> <Li> March 19: Grain supplies in Paris are exhausted . The assignat falls to eight percent of its original value . </Li> <Li> March 21: On a proposal by Sieyès, the Convention votes the death penalty for leaders of movements who try to overthrow the government . </Li> <Li> March 28: Beginning of the trial of Fouquier - Tinville, the head of the Revolutionary Tribunal, who conducted the trials during the Terror . </Li> <Li> April 1: Insurrection of 12 Germinal, Year III . Sans - culottes invade Convention, but leave when the National Guard arrives . Paris is declared in a state of siege . </Li> <Li> April 1: The Convention orders the deportation to French Guiana of Barère, Billaud - Varenne, and Collot d'Herbois, and the arrest of eight extreme - left deputies . </Li> <Li> April 2: The French army under Pichegru suppresses an armed uprising in the Faubourg Saint - Antoine . </Li> <Li> April 5: Signature of a peace agreement between Prussia and France in Basel . Prussia accepts the French annexation of the left bank of the Rhine . </Li> <Li> April 10: Convention orders the disarmament of Jacobins who were involved in the Terror . </Li> <Li> April 11: The Convention restores civic rights to all citizens declared outside the law since May 31, 1793 . </Li> <Li> April 19: Assassination of six Jacobins involved in the Terror in Bourg - en - Bresse . </Li> <Li> April 23: The Convention names a commission of eight members to revise the Constitution . </Li> <Li> May 2: Agreement of last Vendéen rebels to lay down their arms in exchange for amnesty . </Li> <Li> May 4: Massacre of twenty - five Jacobins imprisoned in Lyon . </Li> <Li> May 7: The former chief prosecutor, Fouquier - Tinville, and the fourteen jurors of the Revolutionary Tribunal are condemned to death and guillotined . </Li> </Ul>

What was the longest of the six periods of the french revolution