âLibertĂ© - ĂgalitĂ© - FraternitĂ©â
aka the official French motto, one of the only symbol of my country I really like but itâs kinda anachronic because this gang there, LĂ©on, Io:nhiĂČte and Selim lived in the early 1800âČs and the French Republic really adopted this motto after the 1848 revolution*Â
*(yeah, I know, another one, we love revolutions)*
Before that, this motto was lost among a lot of other mottos** like "la Nation, la Loi, le Roi" (The Nation, The Law, The King), or "Union, Force, Vertu" (Union, Strength, Virtue), â libertĂ©, unitĂ©, Ă©galitĂ©â (liberty, unity, equality).Â
**(Iâm really happy this one survived, I feel itâs the one which bring the more hope for a better society and future )*
Another thing about it: it has some alteration over time, like sometimes people*** merged it with another motto, the previous official one: âVivre libre ou mourirâ (Live free or die)**** and it become âLibertĂ©, ĂgalitĂ©, FraternitĂ© ou la mortâ (Liberty, Equality, Fraternity or death )
***(mostly socialists, communists and leftists )*
****(This one is really cool, you can see some banners in the Paris of the 1789 revolution (aka AC Unity) but if I remember well, itâs written âLa libertĂ© ou la mortâ (Liberty or Death)*
This last motto was adopted officially by the Paris Commune***** of 1870, in 1871
*****(OK FIRST this one was an insurection, NOT a revolution... but yeah, they tried to do another revolution, but try to understand them: it was almost 40 years since the July revolution of 1830 )
Last thing but not least: some legend attribute the idea of adding âFraternityâ to âLiberty, Equalityâ to Jean-Baptiste Belley, a revolutionary, former slave and the first black deputy to take a seat in the Convention