Abstract
Like many German intellectuals of his day, the Catholic publicist and
scholar Joseph Görres (1776-1848) initially welcomed the French
Revolution. A native of Coblenz, he hoped that the arrival of French
troops in the Rhineland in 1792 would liberate his homeland from
provincialism and usher in an era of greater enlightenment. But after
traveling to Paris in 1799, his enthusiasm for the French Republic began
to wane. He was dismayed by the violence he had witnessed there and felt
that the revolution had betrayed its own ideals. Years later, he joined
other German publicists in the journalistic battle against Napoleon
during the Wars of Liberation.