Final answer:
In the aftermath of the storming of the Tuileries, Parisians killed about 1,200 prisoners in what are known as the September Massacres, fueled by fear and paranoia of counter-revolutionary threats.
Step-by-step explanation:
A month after the Parisians storming Tuileries, Parisians attacked prisons that held priests and royalists accused of counter-revolutionary offenses. About 1,200 prisoners were killed, among them were political criminals. Historians disagree about the people who carried out the "September Massacres". Some call them revolutionary mobs. Others describe them as citizens defending France from its enemies. In fact, most were ordinary citizens fired to fury by fear and paranoia, imagining imagined threats.