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LA LIBERTAD GUIANDO AL PUEBLO The canvas represents a scene of July 28, 1830 in which the people of Paris, the barricades. King Charles X of France had abolished the parliament by decree and had the intention of restricting press freedom. The initial disturbances became an uprising that led to a revolution followed by crazed citizens of all social classes. There was not an only leader. That is why Delacroix represents Freedom as a guide that leads to the people. Neither is represented by an abstract fo rm, but is an allegorical figure very sensual and real. The spectator only has possibilities, joining the mass, or being devastated by it. The town is the union of classes: the bourgeois is represented with his top hat and wielding his rifle, next to a ragged and wounded man who asks for mercy from France. In the background appear mists and fumes of the battle that dilute a fairly realistic French quarter. At the foot of Liberty a dying man stares at her, telling her that it is worth dying for her. The painting was bought by the French State in 1831, but it seems that it was sent in 1839. However, in 1848 the director of the national museums claimed it, being delivered by the author the following year. When the Second Empire was established, the cloth became part of the Louvre reservation, until it was presented in 1863, after the author's death. The work has become a universal icon of the struggle for freedom.