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History of France - France, 1715–89 | Britannica
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class="topic-left-rail md-article-drawer position-relative d-flex border-right-sm border-left-sm open"> <div class="drawer d-flex flex-column open"> <div class="left-rail-section-content"> <div class="topic-left-rail-header text-truncate bg-gray-50 position-relative text-right d-flex align-items-center"> <div class="tlr-title px-20 py-15 text-left"> <em class="material-icons text-gray-400 d-lg-none" data-icon="toc"></em> <a class="font-serif font-weight-bold text-black link-blue" href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/history-of-France">history of France</a> </div> <button aria-label="Close" class="js-sections-close-button btn-link btn-sm btn d-lg-none position-absolute top-0 p-10 right-0" > <em class="material-icons font-26" data-icon="close"></em> </button> </div> <div class="section-content pl-10 pr-20 pl-sm-50 pr-sm-60 pl-lg-5 pr-lg-10 pt-10 pt-lg-0 bg-gray-50 clear-catfish-ad"> <div class="toc mb-20"> <div class="font-serif font-14 font-weight-bold mx-15 mb-15 mt-20"> Table of Contents </div> <ul class="list-unstyled my-0" data-level="h1"><li data-target="#ref1"><div class="pl-25"><a class="link-gray-900 w-100" href="/topic/history-of-France">Introduction</a></div><div class="ml-40 toc-drawer sub-toc-drawer"></div></li><li data-target="#ref361865"><div class="d-flex align-items-center"><button class="h1-link-drawer-button btn btn-xs btn-circle d-flex rounded" type="button" aria-label="Toggle Heading"><em class="material-icons font-18" data-icon="keyboard_arrow_right"></em></button><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361865">Gaul</a></div><div class="ml-40 toc-drawer sub-toc-drawer"><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361866"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361866">Geographic-historical scope</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361867"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361867">People</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361868"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361868">Roman conquest</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361869"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361869">Gaul under the high empire (c. 50 <span class="text-smallcaps">bce</span>–c. 250 <span class="text-smallcaps">ce</span>)</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361870"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361870">Gaul under the late Roman Empire (c. 250–c. 400)</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361871"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361871">The end of Roman Gaul (c. 400–c. 500)</a></li></ul></div></li><li data-target="#ref361872"><div class="d-flex align-items-center"><button class="h1-link-drawer-button btn btn-xs btn-circle d-flex rounded" type="button" aria-label="Toggle Heading"><em class="material-icons font-18" data-icon="keyboard_arrow_right"></em></button><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361872">Merovingian and Carolingian age</a></div><div class="ml-40 toc-drawer sub-toc-drawer"><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361873"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361873">Origins</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361874"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361874">Early Frankish period</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361875"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361875">Gaul and Germany at the end of the 5th century</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361876"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361876">The Merovingians</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361877" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361877">Clovis and the unification of Gaul</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361878"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361878">Frankish expansion</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361879"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361879">Conversion of Clovis</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361880" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361880">The sons of Clovis</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361881"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361881">Conquest of Burgundy</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361882"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361882">Conquest of southern Germany</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361883" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361883">The grandsons of Clovis</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361884"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361884">Shrinking of the frontiers and peripheral areas</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361885"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361885">Parceling of the kingdom</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361886" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361886">The failure of reunification (613–714)</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361887"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361887">Chlotar II and Dagobert I</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361888"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361888">The hegemony of Neustria</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361889"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361889">Austrasian hegemony and the rise of the Pippinids</a></li></ul></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361890"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361890">The Carolingians</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361891" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361891">Charles Martel and Pippin III</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361892"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361892">Charles Martel</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361893"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361893">Pippin III</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361894" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361894">Charlemagne</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361895"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361895">The conquests</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361896"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361896">The restoration of the empire</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361897"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361897">Louis I</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361898" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361898">The partitioning of the Carolingian empire</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361899"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361899">The Treaty of Verdun</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361900"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361900">The kingdoms created at Verdun</a></li></ul></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361901"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361901">The Frankish world</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361902" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361902">Society</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361903"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361903">Germans and Gallo-Romans</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361904"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361904">Social classes</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361905"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361905">Diffusion of political power</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361906" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361906">Institutions</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361907"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361907">Kingship</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361908"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361908">The central government</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361909"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361909">Local institutions</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361910"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361910">The development of institutions in the Carolingian age</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361911" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361911">Economic life</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361912"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361912">Trade</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361913"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361913">Frankish fiscal law</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361914" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361914">The church</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361915"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361915">Institutions</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361916"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361916">Monasticism</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361917"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361917">Education</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361918"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361918">Religious discipline and piety</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361919"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361919">Church influence on society and legislation</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361920"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361920">Merovingian literature and arts</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361921"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France#ref361921">Carolingian literature and arts</a></li></ul></li></ul></div></li><li data-target="#ref361922"><div class="d-flex align-items-center"><button class="h1-link-drawer-button btn btn-xs btn-circle d-flex rounded" type="button" aria-label="Toggle Heading"><em class="material-icons font-18" data-icon="keyboard_arrow_right"></em></button><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-emergence-of-France">The emergence of France</a></div><div class="ml-40 toc-drawer sub-toc-drawer"><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361923"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-emergence-of-France#ref361923">French society in the early Middle Ages</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361924"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-emergence-of-France#ref361924">Political history of France (c. 850–1180)</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361925"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-emergence-of-France#ref361925">Principalities north of the Loire</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361926"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-emergence-of-France#ref361926">Principalities of the south</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361927"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-emergence-of-France#ref361927">The monarchy</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361928" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-emergence-of-France#ref361928">Economy, society, and culture in the Middle Ages (c. 900–1300)</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361929"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-emergence-of-France#ref361929">Economic expansion</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361930"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-emergence-of-France#ref361930">Urban prosperity</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361931"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-emergence-of-France#ref361931">Rural society</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361932" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-emergence-of-France#ref361932">Religious and cultural life</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361933"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-emergence-of-France#ref361933">The age of cathedrals and Scholasticism</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361934"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-emergence-of-France#ref361934">Culture and learning</a></li></ul></li></ul></li></ul></div></li><li data-target="#ref361935"><div class="d-flex align-items-center"><button class="h1-link-drawer-button btn btn-xs btn-circle d-flex rounded" type="button" aria-label="Toggle Heading"><em class="material-icons font-18" data-icon="keyboard_arrow_right"></em></button><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490">France, 1180 to c. 1490</a></div><div class="ml-40 toc-drawer sub-toc-drawer"><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361936"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361936">France from 1180 to 1328</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361937" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361937">Kings and the royal government</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361938"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361938">Philip Augustus</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361939"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361939">Louis VIII</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361940"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361940">Louis IX</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361941"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361941">Later Capetians</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361942"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361942">Foreign relations</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361943"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361943">Period of the Hundred Years’ War</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361944" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361944">Kings and the war, 1328–1429</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361945"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361945">Philip VI</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361946"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361946">John the Good</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361947"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361947">Charles V</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361948"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361948">Charles VI</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361949"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361949">Charles VII</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361950" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361950">Recovery and reunification, 1429–83</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361951"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361951">Governmental reforms</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361952"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361952">Military reforms</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361953"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361953">Regrowth of the French monarchy</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361954" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361954">Economy, society, and culture in the 14th and 15th centuries</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361955"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361955">Economic distress</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361956"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361956">Cities</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361957"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361957">The church</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref361958"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1180-to-c-1490#ref361958">Culture and art</a></li></ul></li></ul></li></ul></div></li><li data-target="#ref361959"><div class="d-flex align-items-center"><button class="h1-link-drawer-button btn btn-xs btn-circle d-flex rounded" type="button" aria-label="Toggle Heading"><em class="material-icons font-18" data-icon="keyboard_arrow_right"></em></button><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1490-1715">France, 1490–1715</a></div><div class="ml-40 toc-drawer sub-toc-drawer"><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361960"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1490-1715#ref361960">France in the 16th century</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361961"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1490-1715#ref361961">Military and financial organization</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361962"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1490-1715#ref361962">Growth of a professional bureaucracy</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361963"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1490-1715#ref361963">Age of the Reformation</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361964"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1490-1715#ref361964">The Wars of Religion</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361965"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1490-1715#ref361965">Political ideology</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361966"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1490-1715#ref361966">France in the early 17th century</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361967"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1490-1715#ref361967">Henry IV</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361968"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1490-1715#ref361968">Louis XIII</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361969"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1490-1715#ref361969">The Fronde</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361970"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1490-1715#ref361970">The age of Louis XIV</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361971"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1490-1715#ref361971">The development of central government</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361972"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1490-1715#ref361972">Louis’s religious policy</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361973"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1490-1715#ref361973">Absolutism of Louis</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361974"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1490-1715#ref361974">Foreign affairs</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361975"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1490-1715#ref361975">French culture in the 17th century</a></li></ul></div></li><li data-target="#ref361976"><div class="d-flex align-items-center"><button class="h1-link-drawer-button btn btn-xs btn-circle d-flex rounded" type="button" aria-label="Toggle Heading"><em class="material-icons font-18" data-icon="keyboard_arrow_right"></em></button><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89">France, 1715–89</a></div><div class="ml-40 toc-drawer sub-toc-drawer"><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361977"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361977">Social and political heritage</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361978"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361978">Social order of the ancien régime</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361979"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361979">Monarchy and church</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361980"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361980">Commitment to modernization</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361981"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361981">Continuity and change</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361982"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361982">Agricultural patterns</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361983"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361983">Industrial production</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361984"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361984">Commerce</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361985"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361985">Cities</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361986"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361986">Cultural transformation</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361987"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361987">The Enlightenment</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361988"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361988">Influence of Montesquieu and Rousseau</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361989"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361989">Political response</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361990"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361990">Historical debate</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361991"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361991">Foreign policy and financial crisis</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361992"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361992">Domestic policy and reform efforts</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361993"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361993">Tax reform</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361994"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361994"><em>Parlements</em></a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361995"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361995">King and <em>parlements</em></a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361996"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1715-89#ref361996">Causes of the French Revolution</a></li></ul></div></li><li data-target="#ref361997"><div class="d-flex align-items-center"><button class="h1-link-drawer-button btn btn-xs btn-circle d-flex rounded" type="button" aria-label="Toggle Heading"><em class="material-icons font-18" data-icon="keyboard_arrow_right"></em></button><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815">The French Revolution and Napoleon, 1789–1815</a></div><div class="ml-40 toc-drawer sub-toc-drawer"><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref361998"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref361998">The destruction of the ancien régime</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref361999" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref361999">The convergence of revolutions, 1789</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362000"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362000">The juridical revolution</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362001"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362001">Parisian revolt</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362002"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362002">Peasant insurgencies</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362003"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362003">The abolition of feudalism</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362004" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362004">The new regime</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362005"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362005">Restructuring France</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362006"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362006">Sale of national lands</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362007" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362007">Seeds of discord</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362008"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362008">Religious tensions</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362009"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362009">Political tensions</a></li></ul></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref362010"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362010">The First French Republic</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362011"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362011">The second revolution</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362012"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362012">A republic in crisis</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362013"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362013">Girondins and Montagnards</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362014"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362014">The Reign of Terror</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362015"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362015">The Jacobin dictatorship</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362016"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362016">The Army of the Republic</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362017"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362017">The Thermidorian Reaction</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362018" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362018">The Directory</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362019"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362019">Sister republics</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362020"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362020">Alienation and coups</a></li></ul></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref362021"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362021">The Napoleonic era</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362022"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362022">The Consulate</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362023"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362023">Loss of political freedom</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362024" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362024">Society in Napoleonic France</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362025"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362025">Religious policy</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362026"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362026">Napoleonic nobility</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362027"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362027">The civil code</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362028"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362028">Campaigns and conquests, 1797–1807</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362029"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362029">The Grand Empire</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362030"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362030">The Continental System</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362031"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362031">Conscription</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref362032"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/The-French-Revolution-and-Napoleon-1789-1815#ref362032">Napoleon and the Revolution</a></li></ul></div></li><li data-target="#ref362033"><div class="d-flex align-items-center"><button class="h1-link-drawer-button btn btn-xs btn-circle d-flex rounded" type="button" aria-label="Toggle Heading"><em class="material-icons font-18" data-icon="keyboard_arrow_right"></em></button><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940">France, 1815–1940</a></div><div class="ml-40 toc-drawer sub-toc-drawer"><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref362034"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362034">The restoration and constitutional monarchy</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362035" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362035">Constitutionalism and reaction, 1815–30</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362036"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362036">Louis XVIII, 1815–24</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362037"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362037">Charles X, 1824–30</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362038"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362038">The revolution of 1830</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362039"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362039">The July Monarchy</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref362040"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362040">The Second Republic and Second Empire</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362041"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362041">The revolution of 1848</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362042"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362042">The Second Republic, 1848–52</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362043" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362043">The Second Empire, 1852–70</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362044"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362044">The authoritarian years</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362045"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362045">The liberal years</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362046"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362046">The Franco-German War</a></li></ul></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref362047"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362047">The Third Republic</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362048"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362048">The Commune of Paris</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362049" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362049">The formative years (1871–1905)</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362050"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362050">Attempts at a restoration</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362051"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362051">The constitution of the Third Republic</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362052"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362052">Republican factions</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362053"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362053">Opportunist control</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362054"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362054">The Dreyfus Affair</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362055"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362055">Foreign policy</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362056"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362056">Prewar years</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362057"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362057">World War I</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362058" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362058">Interwar years</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362059"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362059">German reparations</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362060"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362060">Financial crisis</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362061"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362061">Collective security</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362062"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362062">Internal conflict on the left</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362063"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362063">The Great Depression and political crises</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362064"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362064">German aggressions</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362065" class="has-children"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362065">Society and culture under the Third Republic</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362066"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362066">Economy</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h4"><li data-target="#ref362067"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-1815-1940#ref362067">Cultural and scientific attainments</a></li></ul></li></ul></li></ul></div></li><li data-target="#ref362068"><div class="d-flex align-items-center"><button class="h1-link-drawer-button btn btn-xs btn-circle d-flex rounded" type="button" aria-label="Toggle Heading"><em class="material-icons font-18" data-icon="keyboard_arrow_right"></em></button><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940">France since 1940</a></div><div class="ml-40 toc-drawer sub-toc-drawer"><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref362069"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362069">Wartime France</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362070"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362070">The Vichy government</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362071"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362071">The Resistance</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362072"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362072">Liberation</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref362073"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362073">The Fourth Republic</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362074"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362074">Constitution of the Fourth Republic</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362075"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362075">Political and social changes</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362076"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362076">Colonial independence movements</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref362077"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362077">The Fifth Republic</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref362078"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362078">France after de Gaulle</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref362079"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362079">France under a Socialist presidency</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362080"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362080">Mitterrand’s first term</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362081"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362081">Mitterrand’s second term</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref362082"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362082">France under conservative presidencies</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362083"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362083">The Chirac administration</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362084"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362084">The Sarkozy administration</a></li></ul></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h2"><li data-target="#ref362085"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362085">The euro-zone crisis and the Socialist resurgence</a><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362086"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362086">The 2012 presidential campaign</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362087"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362087">The Hollande administration</a></li></ul><ul class="list-unstyled" data-level="h3"><li data-target="#ref362088"><a class="w-100 link-gray-900" href="/topic/history-of-France/France-since-1940#ref362088">The Macron presidency</a></li></ul></li></ul></div></li></ul> <a class="toc-extra-link link-gray-900" href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/history-of-France/additional-info">References & Edit History</a> <a class="toc-extra-link link-gray-900" href="/facts/history-of-France">Related Topics</a> </div> <div class="tlr-media-slider pb-10 mb-30"> <a class="section-header link-gray-900 font-serif font-14 font-weight-bold mb-10 mx-10" href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/history-of-France/images-videos">Images & Videos</a> <div class="slider js-slider position-relative d-inline-flex align-items-center mw-100 "> <div class="slider-container 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Author of <i>Class, Ideology, and the Rights of Nobles During the French Revolution.</i></div> </a> <div data-popper-arrow></div> </div> <span class="btn btn-link editor-link p-0 qa-byline-link gtm-byline font-12 byline-contributor text-decoration-underline"> Patrice Louis-René Higonnet</span>, <div class="editor-popover popover p-0"> <a class="d-block p-20 qa-editor-popup gtm-byline font-12 byline-contributor" href="/contributor/JH-Shennan/2695" > <div class="editor-title font-16 font-weight-bold">J.H. Shennan</div> <div class="editor-description font-12 font-serif mt-5 clamp-description text-black">Deputy-Vice-Chancellor and Professor of European History, University of Lancaster, England. Author of <i>Government and Society in France, 1461–1661 </i>and others.</div> </a> <div data-popper-arrow></div> </div> <span class="btn btn-link editor-link p-0 qa-byline-link gtm-byline font-12 byline-contributor text-decoration-underline"> J.H. Shennan</span><span class="text-gray-700 mx-5">•</span><a class="see-all border-gray-700 gtm-byline" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/history-of-France/additional-info#contributors">All</a> </div> <div class="font-serif font-12 text-gray-700"> <span class="qa-fact-checked-by">Fact-checked by</span> <div class="editor-popover popover p-0"> <a class="d-block p-20 qa-editor-popup font-12" href="/editor/The-Editors-of-Encyclopaedia-Britannica/4419" > <div class="editor-title font-16 font-weight-bold">The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica</div> <div class="editor-description font-12 font-serif mt-5 text-black">Encyclopaedia Britannica's editors oversee subject areas in which they have extensive knowledge, whether from years of experience gained by working on that content or via study for an advanced degree. They write new content and verify and edit content received from contributors.</div> </a> <div data-popper-arrow></div> </div> <span class="btn btn-link editor-link p-0 qa-byline-link font-12 "> The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica</span></div> <div class="last-updated font-12 font-serif"> <a class="byline-edit-history" href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/history-of-France/additional-info#history" rel="nofollow">Article History</a> </div></div> </div> <button class="d-flex d-lg-none btn btn-outline-blue border rounded-sm shadow-sm mobile-toc-button gtm-mobile-toc-inline-button d-none d-sm-block js-sections-inline-button module-spacing btn d-lg-none"> <em class="material-icons mr-5 ml-n10 my-n5 md-icon" data-icon="toc"></em> Table of Contents </button> <div class="d-flex d-sm-none flex-row"> <button class="d-flex d-lg-none btn btn-outline-blue border rounded-sm shadow-sm mobile-toc-button gtm-mobile-toc-inline-button js-sections-inline-button module-spacing"> <em class="material-icons mr-5 ml-n10 my-n5 md-icon" data-icon="toc"></em> Table of Contents </button> <button class="ai-ask-button btn btn-sm border-2 btn-outline-red-400 border-red-400 module-spacing js-inline-ai-ask-button p-10 ml-5"> Ask the Chatbot </button> </div> <!--[BEFORE-ARTICLE]--><span class="marker before-article"></span><!--[H7]--><span class="marker h7"></span><section data-level="1" id="ref361976"> <!--[TOC]--> <!--[PREMOD1]--><span class="marker PREMOD1 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">The year 1789 is the great dividing line in the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/history" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">history</a> of modern <a href="https://www.britannica.com/place/France" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">France</a>. The fall of the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/Bastille" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Bastille</a>, a <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="medieval" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/medieval" data-type="MW">medieval</a> fortress used as a state prison, on July 14, 1789, symbolizes for France, as well as for other nations, the end of the premodern era characterized by an organicist and religiously sanctioned traditionalism. With the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/event/French-Revolution" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">French Revolution</a> began the institutionalization of secularized <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="individualism" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/individualism" data-type="MW">individualism</a> in both social life and politics; individualism and rationality found expression in parliamentary government and written constitutionalism. Obviously, the English and American revolutions of 1688 and 1776 prefigure these changes, but it was the more universalist French Revolution that placed individualism and rationality squarely at the centre of human concerns.</p><!--[MOD1]--><span class="marker MOD1 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD2]--><span class="marker PREMOD2 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Because the revolutionary events had such earthshaking power, the history of France in the century preceding 1789 has until recently been seen as a long prologue to the coming drama, a period marked by the decay of the <em>ancien régime</em> (“old regime”), a locution created during the Revolution. Some contemporary historians, however, reject this view and present 18th-century France as a society undergoing rapid but manageable social, economic, and cultural change. They perceive the French Revolution as a political event that could have been avoided if the French monarchy had been more consistent in its effort to modify political institutions in order to keep up with the new needs of its people.</p><!--[MOD2]--><span class="marker MOD2 mod-inline"></span> <section data-level="2" id="ref361977"> <h2 class="h2">Social and political heritage</h2> <section data-level="3" id="ref361978"> <h2 class="h3">Social order of the ancien régime</h2> <!--[PREMOD3]--><span class="marker PREMOD3 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">To understand the developments of the 18th century and to follow the scholarly debates, one may begin with a definition of the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/event/ancien-regime" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">ancien régime</a>. Its essence lay in the interweaving of the state’s social, political, and economic forms; the term itself, though primarily a political concept, has also always had a clear social and economic <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="resonance" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/resonance" data-type="MW">resonance</a>.</p><!--[MOD3]--><span class="marker MOD3 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD4]--><span class="marker PREMOD4 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">In the society of the ancien régime, all men and women were, by birth, subjects of the king of France. In theory always and in practice often, the lives of French men and women of all ranks and estates took shape within a number of overlapping institutions, each with rules that entitled its members to enjoy particular privileges (a term derived from the Latin words for “private law”). Rights and status flowed as a rule from the group to the individual rather than from individuals to the group, as was true after 1789.</p><!--[MOD4]--><span class="marker MOD4 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD5]--><span class="marker PREMOD5 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">France itself can be conceived of as an <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="aggregate" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/aggregate" data-type="MW">aggregate</a> of <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="differentiated" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/differentiated" data-type="MW">differentiated</a> groups or <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="communities" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/communities" data-type="MW">communities</a> (villages, parishes, or guilds), all of them theoretically comparable but different. In many respects the kingdom was an assembly of varying provinces, a number of them endowed with vestigial representative institutions. In some important ways France was not truly a unit of government. Unlike England, for example, France was not a single customs union; more tariffs had to be paid by shippers on brandy floated down the Garonne to <a href="https://www.britannica.com/place/Bordeaux" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">Bordeaux</a> than on wine shipped from France to Britain.</p><div class="module-spacing"> </div><!--[MOD5]--><span class="marker MOD5 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD6]--><span class="marker PREMOD6 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">The <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="concept" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/concept" data-type="EB">concept</a> of national citizenship was not unknown in France under the ancien régime, existing in the sense that all Frenchmen, regardless of their rank and privileges, had certain legal rights denied to all foreigners. There was, however, no French nation whose citizens taken one by one were equal before man-made law, as was true after 1789. Laws were in the main inherited, not made.</p><!--[MOD6]--><span class="marker MOD6 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD7]--><span class="marker PREMOD7 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">This is not to say that France, though structured around the “premodern” concept of the guild, or group, or corps, was a static or, materially speaking, a stable society. For many artisans, peregrination was a way of life, and many years of their young manhood were spent on a <em>tour de France</em>, which took them from city to city in order to learn their trade. Serfdom was practically unknown (only 140,000 serfs remained in France in 1789, none of them on <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="crown" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/crown" data-type="EB">crown</a> lands, where <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Jacques-Necker" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Jacques Necker</a>, the comptroller general, had abolished serfdom in 1779), and peasants were free to move as they wished from one village to the next. Indeed, such large numbers of people were moving around that the fear of unattached vagrants was strong in prerevolutionary France.</p><!--[MOD7]--><span class="marker MOD7 mod-inline"></span> </section> <section data-level="3" id="ref361979"> <h2 class="h3">Monarchy and church</h2> <!--[PREMOD8]--><span class="marker PREMOD8 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">In the 18th century justifications of royal authority drew on many traditions. The king still claimed the status of a feudal suzerain of his subjects. Familial imagery was an important component of royal <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="rhetoric" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/rhetoric" data-type="MW">rhetoric</a>; the king of France was father of his subjects. His right to reign echoed all husbands’ right to rule over their wives and all fathers’ right to rule over their children. His messages, however draconian and confiscatory they might be, were invariably couched in a rhetoric of religious and paternal solicitude.</p><!--[MOD8]--><span class="marker MOD8 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD9]--><span class="marker PREMOD9 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">The king, moreover, was a Christian monarch and as such was endowed with quasi-priestly functions. He was anointed at his coronation with holy chrism said to have been brought from heaven by a dove. It was thought that, as evidence of his special status, he could cure scrofula by his touch. The relationship of <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/church-and-state" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">church and state</a> was complex. Oftentimes the king did not hesitate to exploit the church, over which he held extensive power by virtue of the still-valid Concordat of Bologna of 1516. Monarchs used their right to appoint bishops and abbots to secure the loyalty of impoverished or ambitious nobles. The crown asserted its right to regulate church policies, limit the authority of the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/pope" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">pope</a> over French Catholics, and abolish or consolidate monastic orders.</p><!--[MOD9]--><span class="marker MOD9 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD10]--><span class="marker PREMOD10 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Nonetheless, until 1788 the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/Roman-Catholicism" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">Roman Catholic Church</a> retained in France unusually broad doctrinal rights and social <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="prestige" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/prestige" data-type="MW">prestige</a>, even by the standards prevailing in central or southern Europe, not to speak of what held true in the far more tolerant countries of northern Europe (Prussia, Holland, and Britain). French Protestants were denied religious toleration until 1787. Jews were tolerated only as quasi-foreigners until 1791. Of considerable symbolic importance was the fact that before 1789 it was the church that kept the registers of births and deaths that marked the beginning and end of each person’s earthly existence. The church, the police, and the courts <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="collaborated" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/collaborated" data-type="MW">collaborated</a> closely to maintain the prestige of religion; until at least the 1780s the church severely condemned <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="licentious" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/licentious" data-type="MW">licentious</a> or irreligious books such as Rousseau’s <em>Émile</em>, which was burned in 1762 by order of the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/Parlement" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">Parlement</a> of <a href="https://www.britannica.com/place/Paris" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">Paris</a>, a measure that did little to stop its circulation.</p><!--[MOD10]--><span class="marker MOD10 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD11]--><span class="marker PREMOD11 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">The monarchy basically respected the various rights of the church <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="accrued" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/accrued" data-type="MW">accrued</a> by tradition, as it did the civil and <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/property-law" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">property rights</a>, or “liberties,” of its subjects generally. <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="Continuity" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Continuity" data-type="MW">Continuity</a> ordinarily seemed to be the first principle of the French state, and it was <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="inherent" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/inherent" data-type="MW">inherent</a> in the concept of king itself: the king was held to have two bodies, a physical one, which necessarily decayed, and a spiritual one, which never died. In this view, the main purpose of the French state was to defend vested interests—i.e., to maintain continuity rather than to change the existing order.</p><!--[MOD11]--><span class="marker MOD11 mod-inline"></span> </section> <section data-level="3" id="ref361980"> <h2 class="h3">Commitment to modernization</h2> <!--[PREMOD12]--><span class="marker PREMOD12 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">The great peculiarity of the ancien régime was that a system committed to preserving tradition also contained within it powerful forces for change. The <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/absolutism-political-system" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">absolute monarchy</a> developed between 1624 and 1642 by Richelieu and later by Mazarin, Colbert, Louvois, and <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Louis-XIV-king-of-France" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">Louis XIV</a> was guided by a modern raison d’état, in which the state was eager to further changes of all kinds for its own purposes. Administratively, its absolutist will, formulated at Versailles in a complex array of governmental councils, was enforced in the provinces by the intendants and their subordinates. The monarchy favoured modern manufacturing and, more desultorily, modern finance. It protected and firmly guided <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="intellectuals" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/intellectuals" data-type="MW">intellectuals</a> through the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/French-Academy" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">Académie Française</a>. With greater hesitation, the monarchy also promoted France’s drive to obtain economic and military supremacy not just in Europe but overseas as well, in <a href="https://www.britannica.com/place/North-America" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">North America</a>, India, Africa, and the Caribbean.</p><!--[MOD12]--><span class="marker MOD12 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD13]--><span class="marker PREMOD13 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Divided in its goals, some of them traditional and others modern, the state was also ideologically double-minded. In the 17th century many intellectuals (some of them clerics such as <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Jacques-Benigne-Bossuet" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Bishop Jacques-Bénigne Bossuet</a> [1627–1704]) developed a Hobbesian justification of absolutist rule, which was renewed throughout the 18th century. Religion and tradition went hand in hand, but absolutist theoreticians went further. They justified the state’s right not only to legislate and tax more or less at will but also to imprison arbitrarily without <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/due-process" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">due process</a> of law. The lettres de <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="cachet" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/cachet" data-type="EB">cachet</a>, which allowed the king to have individuals committed to the Bastille and to other prisons forever and without any kind of trial, were seldom given out, usually to fathers who wished to correct their wayward children. But they did exist, as liberal or scurrilous propagandists knew full well, sometimes firsthand: about one-fourth of the 5,279 people imprisoned in the Bastille between 1660 and 1790 were connected with the world of the book. Royal proclamations often stressed, however, the king’s obligation to govern in the interests of his people. The <em>parlements</em>, frequent critics of arbitrary rule, spread the notion that subjects’ rights were protected by a fixed, if ill-defined, constitution that could not be altered without the consent of their representatives.</p><!--[MOD13]--><span class="marker MOD13 mod-inline"></span> </section> </section> <section data-level="2" id="ref361981"> <h2 class="h2">Continuity and change</h2> <!--[PREMOD14]--><span class="marker PREMOD14 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">The political history of 18th-century France can be conceptualized in terms of the double heritage and the problems it entailed. The discussion may be linked to two issues: first, the economic transformation of a traditional and essentially agricultural society by both commerce and ideas; and, second, the state’s efforts (and eventual inability) to modernize and unify its structure and purpose to <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="encompass" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/encompass" data-type="MW">encompass</a> the changed economic and cultural expectations of the nation’s elites.</p><!--[MOD14]--><span class="marker MOD14 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD15]--><span class="marker PREMOD15 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">In contrast to the France of Louis XIV’s <em>grand siècle</em> (“great century”), beset by economic stagnation and periodic food shortages, 18th-century France enjoyed a climate of growing prosperity, fueled in part by a sustained rise in population. The kingdom’s population, which had barely grown at all during the years 1500 to 1700, increased from approximately 20 million at the end of Louis XIV’s reign to about 28 million by 1789. Better <a href="https://www.britannica.com/science/preventive-medicine" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">preventive medicine</a>, a decline in infant mortality, and the near disappearance of <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="widespread" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/widespread" data-type="EB">widespread</a> famine after 1709 all served to increase the population. Birth rates continued to be very high, despite both a traditional pattern of late marriage (men on the average at age 27, women at 24 or 25) and the beginnings of the practice of <a href="https://www.britannica.com/science/birth-control" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">birth control</a>, the effect of which was to become evident only after the Revolution. The yearly number of deaths per 10,000 fell from about 400 in 1750 to 350 in 1775, 328 in 1790, and 298 in 1800. The increased population meant more mouths to feed but also more consumers, more workers seeking employment, and more opportunities for investment; in short, every aspect of French life was affected.</p><!--[MOD15]--><span class="marker MOD15 mod-inline"></span> <section data-level="3" id="ref361982"> <h2 class="h3">Agricultural patterns</h2> <!--[PREMOD16]--><span class="marker PREMOD16 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">In its basic organization, French agriculture continued its age-old patterns. This contrasted starkly with England, where new agricultural techniques as well as major changes in the control of land—convertible husbandry (a progressive form of land use that did away with the wasteful fallowing of land every two or three years) and the enclosure movement (which made possible the consolidation of small <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="parcels" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/parcels" data-type="EB">parcels</a> of land into large farms fenced off from use by the rest of the community)—were beginning to cause an <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/agricultural-revolution" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">agricultural revolution</a>. In France there was no significant enclosure movement, despite enabling legislation that allowed the division of some common lands in 1767 and again in 1773. Communal patterns of planting—very common in northern France, where a <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/three-field-system" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">three-field system</a> ordinarily prevailed—were not suspended. Modest improvements in farming techniques and the introduction of new crops such as corn (maize) and potatoes allowed French farms to feed the country’s growing population. The increased number of peasants led to further subdivision of land and greater competition for leases; the economic benefits of agricultural growth went mostly to landlords and the small minority of prosperous peasants. In fact, the economic status of many peasants deteriorated markedly in the 18th century; perhaps as many as one-third of them were sporadically <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="indigent" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/indigent" data-type="MW">indigent</a>, though there was no decline in the peasants’ share of the land. In 1789 French peasants still owned about one-third of the arable land, most of it in small plots of less than 10 acres (4 hectares); nobles owned about one-fifth of the land, the church one-sixth, and bourgeois landlords about one-third.</p><!--[MOD16]--><span class="marker MOD16 mod-inline"></span> </section> <section data-level="3" id="ref361983"> <h2 class="h3">Industrial production</h2> <!--[PREMOD17]--><span class="marker PREMOD17 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">After 1740 industrial production in France rose annually by about 2 percent overall and even more in some sectors. During the later decades of the 18th century, French industrial production grew rapidly, although not on the same scale as in Britain, whose industrial development had begun 60 years before that of the French. Coal mining was a major industry by 1789, its production nearly 6 percent higher in the 1780s than in the preceding decade. Mining attracted vast amounts of capital, some of it from the <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="aristocracy" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/aristocracy" data-type="MW">aristocracy</a>. In 1789 the Mines d’Anzin near the Belgian border already employed thousands of workers. In textiles, <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="entrepreneurs" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/entrepreneurs" data-type="MW">entrepreneurs</a> such as the Swiss Protestant Guillaume-Philippe Oberkampf created new manufactories that permitted better regulation and control of production. Most production continued to be centred in small artisanal workshops, however, and power-driven machinery remained a rarity.</p><!--[MOD17]--><span class="marker MOD17 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD18]--><span class="marker PREMOD18 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Although transportation difficulties and internal customs barriers meant that France on the eve of the Revolution was not yet a unified national market (as Britain had long since been), price discrepancies from <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/province-ancient-Roman-government" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">province</a> to province, as well as between northern and southern France, were less significant than before. Throughout the country the demand rose for urban manufactured goods and for those <a href="https://www.britannica.com/art/Louis-XV-style" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">luxury items</a> (textiles, porcelains, furniture, <em>articles de Paris</em>) that the French <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="excelled" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/excelled" data-type="EB">excelled</a> in producing before 1800. French engineers and artisans were highly skilled. French ship design, for example, was superior to that of the English, who routinely copied captured French men-of-war. <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/George-Washington" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">George Washington</a>, the president of the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/place/United-States" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">United States</a>, wishing to buy the best watch available anywhere, turned to the American minister in Paris, because the world’s most accurate timepieces were still made in France.</p><!--[MOD18]--><span class="marker MOD18 mod-inline"></span> </section> <section data-level="3" id="ref361984"> <h2 class="h3">Commerce</h2> <!--[PREMOD19]--><span class="marker PREMOD19 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Commerce, especially with the colonies, was an important area of change as well. France’s first colonial empire, essentially located in North America, was a source of great wealth. Even though France lost both Canada and India during the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/event/Seven-Years-War" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Seven Years’ War</a> (1756–63), the Caribbean sugar islands continued to be the most <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="lucrative" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/lucrative" data-type="EB">lucrative</a> source of French colonial activity in the last 100 years of the ancien régime. The French shared the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/place/West-Indies-island-group-Atlantic-Ocean" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">West Indies</a> with Spain and England: Cuba, <a href="https://www.britannica.com/place/Puerto-Rico" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">Puerto Rico</a>, and the eastern half of Hispaniola belonged to Spain; Jamaica belonged to England; but <a href="https://www.britannica.com/place/Guadeloupe" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Guadeloupe</a>, <a href="https://www.britannica.com/place/Martinique" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Martinique</a>, and Saint-Domingue (<a href="https://www.britannica.com/place/Haiti" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Haiti</a>)—the richest of all nonwhite 18th-century colonies in the world—were French. In Saint-Domingue 30,000 whites stood an uneasy watch over a population of Black enslaved people that grew to more than 400,000 by 1789. In the islands, enslaved labourers produced sugarcane and coffee, which were refined in France at Nantes, Rochefort, and Bordeaux and often reexported to central and northern Europe. This <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/triangular-trade" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">triangular trade</a> grew 10-fold between 1715 and 1789, and the <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="value" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/value" data-type="EB">value</a> of international exports in the 1780s amounted to nearly one-fourth of national income. The sugar trade enriched the planters, the bankers in Paris who had acted as brokers for import and reexport, and the manufacturers of luxury goods that were shipped from France to the Caribbean. Not surprisingly, the French colonial trade was a closely watched process, governed by mercantilist protective tariffs and rules.</p><!--[MOD19]--><span class="marker MOD19 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD20]--><span class="marker PREMOD20 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Indirectly millions of Frenchmen were affected by the accelerating tempo of economic life. The circulation of gold specie in the kingdom as a whole rose from 731 million livres in 1715 to some 2 billion livres in 1788. Domestic commerce also expanded in the 18th century. The urban population and even prosperous peasants began to <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="acquire" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/acquire" data-type="EB">acquire</a> a taste for new luxuries. Estate inventories show that even modest households were buying more varied clothing, a wider range of furniture, kitchen articles, books, and other items their ancestors could not have afforded. By the early 1780s more than 40 regional newspapers with advertising, or <em>affiches</em>, had been founded, a clear sign that France was becoming a consumer society.</p><!--[MOD20]--><span class="marker MOD20 mod-inline"></span> </section> <section data-level="3" id="ref361985"> <h2 class="h3">Cities</h2> <!--[PREMOD21]--><span class="marker PREMOD21 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Commerce rather than industry buoyed up French cities, especially the Atlantic seaports. In 1789 15 percent of Frenchmen lived in cities with more than 2,000 inhabitants. Still, Paris, a city of about 600,000 inhabitants, was only half the size of London, the world’s largest seaport. But, regardless of their size, French cities were centres of <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="intellectual" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/intellectual" data-type="MW">intellectual</a> transformation. It was there, in the Sociétés de Pensées, Masonic lodges, and some 32 provincial academies, that writers found their public. There also took place the cultural revolution that inspired the writers in turn and the economic changes that gave momentum to the cultural upheaval.</p><!--[MOD21]--><span class="marker MOD21 mod-inline"></span> </section> </section> <section data-level="2" id="ref361986"> <h2 class="h2">Cultural transformation</h2> <section data-level="3" id="ref361987"> <h2 class="h3">The Enlightenment</h2> <!--[PREMOD22]--><span class="marker PREMOD22 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">The industrial and commercial developments, already significant by themselves, were the cause, and perhaps also the effect, of a wider and still more momentous change preceding the Revolution—<a href="https://www.britannica.com/event/Enlightenment-European-history" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">the Enlightenment</a>. Today the Enlightenment can be understood as the conscious formulation of a profound cultural transformation. Epistemologically, the French Enlightenment relied on three sources: <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/rationalism" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">rationalism</a>, which had in France a strong tradition dating to Descartes; <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/empiricism" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">empiricism</a>, which was borrowed from English thought and which in France underpinned the work of such writers as <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Claude-Adrien-Helvetius" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Claude-Adrien Helvétius</a> (1715–71), <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Paul-Henri-Dietrich-baron-dHolbach" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Paul-Henri Dietrich, baron d’Holbach</a> (1723–89), <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Etienne-Bonnot-de-Condillac" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Étienne Bonnot de Condillac</a> (1715–80), and <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Julien-Offroy-de-La-Mettrie" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Julien Offroy de La Mettrie</a> (1709–51), the author of a book eloquently entitled <em>L’Homme machine</em> (1747; <em>Man a Machine</em>); and an <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="amorphous" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/amorphous" data-type="MW">amorphous</a> concept of nature that was particularly strong in the immensely popular and important work of <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Jean-Jacques-Rousseau" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Jean-Jacques Rousseau</a> (1712–78) and, in the 1780s, in the works of widely read pre-Romantic writers such as <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Jacques-Henri-Bernardin-de-Saint-Pierre" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Jacques-Henri Bernardin de Saint-Pierre</a> (1737–1814). The relationship between these intellectual developments and the Revolution of 1789 remains a subject of dispute among historians, but there is no doubt that <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/philosophe" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Enlightenment critiques</a> undermined belief in the traditional institutions that the Revolutionary movement was to destroy.</p><!--[MOD22]--><span class="marker MOD22 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD23]--><span class="marker PREMOD23 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Though far apart from one another in a strict philosophical sense, these sources of inspiration generated a number of shared beliefs that were of obvious political consequence. The <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="enlightened" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/enlightened" data-type="MW">enlightened</a> subjects of <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Louis-XV" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">Louis XV</a> and <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Louis-XVI" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">Louis XVI</a> were increasingly convinced that French institutions of government and <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="justice" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/justice" data-type="MW">justice</a> could be radically improved. Tradition seemed to them an increasingly inadequate principle to follow in such matters. Meliorism, gauged especially by the progress of the sciences, was one of the cardinal beliefs of the age. Regarding the economy, physiocrats such as the king’s own doctor, <a href="https://www.britannica.com/money/Francois-Quesnay" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">François Quesnay</a> (1694–1774), praised the virtue of free-market economics and, as they put it, of “<a href="https://www.britannica.com/money/laissez-faire" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">laissez-faire, laissez-aller</a>” (“allow to do, allow to go”). The Encyclopédistes—the contributors to the great <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/Encyclopedie" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true"><em>Encyclopédie</em></a> edited by <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Denis-Diderot" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Denis Diderot</a> (1713–84)—spread the idea that agricultural and manufacturing processes could be rationally analyzed and improved; the work also criticized religious and political orthodoxy. <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Voltaire" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Voltaire</a> (1694–1778), the most celebrated French Enlightenment author, used his sharp wit to skewer the absurdities of absolutism and intolerance. His <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="eloquent" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/eloquent" data-type="MW">eloquent</a> defense of the Protestant merchant <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Jean-Calas" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Jean Calas</a>, broken on the wheel in 1762 for the supposed murder of his suicidal son, made him the model of the engaged intellectual, rallying <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/public-opinion" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">public opinion</a> against injustice.</p><!--[MOD23]--><span class="marker MOD23 mod-inline"></span> </section> <section data-level="3" id="ref361988"> <h2 class="h3">Influence of Montesquieu and Rousseau</h2> <!--[PREMOD24]--><span class="marker PREMOD24 mod-inline"></span><div class="assemblies"><div class="w-100"><figure class="md-assembly m-0 mb-md-0 card card-borderless print-false" data-assembly-id="246377" data-asm-type="image"><div class="md-assembly-wrapper card-media" data-type="image"><a href="https://cdn.britannica.com/55/19555-050-5997EF22/Jean-Jacques-Rousseau.jpg" class="gtm-assembly-link position-relative d-flex align-items-center justify-content-center media-overlay-link card-media" data-href="/media/1/216231/246377"><picture><source media="(min-width: 680px)" srcset="https://cdn.britannica.com/55/19555-050-5997EF22/Jean-Jacques-Rousseau.jpg?w=300"><img src="https://cdn.britannica.com/55/19555-050-5997EF22/Jean-Jacques-Rousseau.jpg?w=300" alt="Jean-Jacques Rousseau" data-width="1439" data-height="1600" loading="eager"></picture><button class="magnifying-glass btn btn-circle position-absolute shadow btn-white top-10 right-10" aria-label="Zoom in"><em class="material-icons link-blue" data-icon="zoom_in"></em></button></a></div><figcaption class="card-body"><div class="md-assembly-caption text-muted font-14 font-serif line-clamp"><span><a class="gtm-assembly-link md-assembly-title font-weight-bold d-inline font-sans-serif mr-5 media-overlay-link" href="https://cdn.britannica.com/55/19555-050-5997EF22/Jean-Jacques-Rousseau.jpg" data-href="/media/1/216231/246377">Jean-Jacques Rousseau</a><span>Jean-Jacques Rousseau, undated aquatint.</span><button class="js-more-btn d-none btn btn-unstyled font-12 bg-white js-content" aria-label="Toggle more/less fact data"><span class="link-blue">(more)</span></button></span></div></figcaption></figure></div></div><p class="topic-paragraph">Two Enlightenment authors who had an especially profound impact on the future revolutionaries were Charles-Louis de Secondat, baron de La Brède et de <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Montesquieu" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">Montesquieu</a> (1689–1755), and Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712–78). In his <em>Lettres persanes</em> (1721; <em>Persian Letters</em>), Montesquieu, a wealthy aristocratic member of the Parlement of Bordeaux, used the device of a foreign visitor to highlight the contradictions of the government shortly after the death of Louis XIV. His daring jabs at the pope, "an ancient idol, worshiped now from habit," and at Catholic doctrine brought down the wrath of the authorities but did nothing to stop the book’s success. Written in an entertaining and accessible style, <em>Persian Letters</em> did not present a clear set of doctrines: instead, readers were drawn into a process of <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="dialogue" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/dialogue" data-type="MW">dialogue</a> and <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="critique" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/critique" data-type="MW">critique</a> modeled by the novel’s characters. In his masterwork, <em>De l’esprit des loix</em> (1748; <em>The Spirit of the Laws</em>), Montesquieu presented a survey of political institutions throughout the world. Drawing on both the rationalist and empiricist traditions, he analyzed politics in purely <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="secular" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/secular" data-type="MW">secular</a> terms, arguing that each country’s laws developed in response to its climate and the nature of its customs. His comparative approach made it clear that, in his view, no <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/political-system" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">political system</a> could claim divine sanction. His personal sympathies lay with mixed forms of government, in which a <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/separation-of-powers" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">separation of powers</a> protected individual liberties; his description of the English constitution, in which the king shared power with Parliament, strongly influenced French political thinking. A former <em>parlementaire</em> himself, Montesquieu argued that the aristocratic courts were "intermediary bodies" whose resistance to royal authority prevented abuses. Although he was himself no revolutionary, his ideas had great influence at the beginning of the Revolutionary movement in 1789; in the Revolution’s early phase, he was <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="cited" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/cited" data-type="EB">cited</a> more often than any other authority.</p><!--[MOD24]--><span class="marker MOD24 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD25]--><span class="marker PREMOD25 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">A generation younger than Montesquieu, Rousseau raised profound questions about both private and public life. According to Rousseau, the self becomes empowered in private union with the beloved other, as portrayed in his immensely popular novel <em>Julie; ou, la nouvelle Héloïse</em> (1761; <em>Julie; or, The New Eloise</em>), or in public union with one’s fraternally minded fellow citizens, as explained in <em>Du contrat social</em> (1762; <em>The Social Contract</em>), a work less widely read before 1789 but even more symptomatic of change.</p><!--[MOD25]--><span class="marker MOD25 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD26]--><span class="marker PREMOD26 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Rousseau argued for a reconstruction of private and domestic as well as public life, to make both more in accord with <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/human-nature" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">human nature</a>. Women, he claimed, have a natural <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="vocation" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/vocation" data-type="EB">vocation</a> to be wives and mothers; they are to leave public affairs to men. He put forward the harmonious domestic family as a new cultural ideal and stigmatized ancien régime society, with its emphasis on fashion and its influential "public women," such as royal mistresses and the salon hostesses who played a critical role in promoting the Enlightenment. Rousseau’s insistence that mothers should breast-feed their children clashed with the realities of French life, where the employment of wet nurses was more common than in any other European country, and symbolized his program for a more "natural" style of life.</p><!--[MOD26]--><span class="marker MOD26 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD27]--><span class="marker PREMOD27 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Rousseau’s second best-selling novel, <em>Émile; ou, de l’éducation</em> (1762; <em>Émile; or, On Education</em>), illustrated how children could be educated to lead a "natural" life. Its most controversial chapter, the "Profession of Faith of a Savoyard Vicar," suggested that nature alone provided humanity with the religious knowledge it needed; this dismissal of the church and the Bible naturally led to the book’s <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="condemnation" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/condemnation" data-type="EB">condemnation</a>. Rousseau’s concern for education was part of a wider movement.</p><!--[MOD27]--><span class="marker MOD27 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD28]--><span class="marker PREMOD28 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">The French administrator, reformer, and economist <a href="https://www.britannica.com/money/Anne-Robert-Jacques-Turgot-baron-de-lAulne" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Anne-Robert-Jacques Turgot, baron de l’Aulne</a> (1712–81), expressed the new sensibility when he wrote that the education of children was the basis of national unity and mores.</p><!--[MOD28]--><span class="marker MOD28 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD29]--><span class="marker PREMOD29 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">In 1763 a prominent <em>parlementaire</em> named <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Louis-Rene-de-Caradeuc-de-La-Chalotais" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">La Chalotais</a> even put forward a scheme for lay and national <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/elementary-education" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">primary education</a>. An important landmark in this respect was the expulsion from France in 1764 of the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/Jesuits" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Jesuits</a>, who had theretofore dominated French <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/secondary-education" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">secondary education</a>. Increasingly, the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/French-language" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">French language</a> was substituted for Latin in the secondary schools, or <em>collèges</em> (the forerunners of today’s lycées). Rhetoric gave way to an emphasis on more “natural” manners and modes of expression. History was raised to the level of a serious discipline; with Voltaire’s <em>Le Siècle de Louis XIV</em> (1751; <em>The Age of Louis XIV</em>), modern French <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/historiography" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">historiography</a> began, and there were echoes of this new attitude in the programs of the secondary schools, which added mathematics, physics, and geography to their curriculum.</p><!--[MOD29]--><span class="marker MOD29 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD30]--><span class="marker PREMOD30 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Rousseau developed the political consequences of his thought in his <em>Social Contract</em> (1762). Because men are by nature free, Rousseau argued, the only natural and <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="legitimate" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/legitimate" data-type="MW">legitimate</a> polity is one in which all members are citizens with <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/equality-human-rights" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">equal rights</a> and have the ability to participate in making the laws under which they live. Like Montesquieu, Rousseau himself was no revolutionary; he expressed a deep pessimism about the chances of freeing humanity from the corrupting institutions that were in place. Although his theories did influence critics of the French monarchy even before 1789, they achieved an unanticipated relevance during the Revolution, especially during its radical phase when Rousseau was read as an advocate of Jacobin-style <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="democracy" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/democracy" data-type="MW">democracy</a>.</p><!--[MOD30]--><span class="marker MOD30 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD31]--><span class="marker PREMOD31 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Exposure to such writers as Diderot, <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Guillaume-Thomas-abbe-de-Raynal" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Guillaume-Thomas, abbé de Raynal</a> (1713–96), author of the anticolonialist <em>Histoire des deux Indes</em> (1770; <em>History of the Two Indies</em>), and <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Jean-Jacques-Barthelemy" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Jean-Jacques Barthélemy</a> (1716–95); to such painters as <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Jacques-Louis-David-French-painter" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Jacques-Louis David</a> (1748–1825) and Joseph-Marie Vien (1716–1809); to such musicians as <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Christoph-Willibald-Gluck" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Christoph Gluck</a> (1714–87); and to such visionary architects as <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Claude-Nicolas-Ledoux" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Claude-Nicolas Ledoux</a> (1736–1806) and <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Etienne-Louis-Boullee" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Étienne-Louis Boullée</a> (1728–99) enabled the educated public of the 1770s and ’80s to pursue and sharpen their new insights. It allowed them to explore the limits of the private domain as well as to clarify their new understanding of the public good. These radical ideas had transformative power. Rousseau’s message especially appealed to the deeper <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="instincts" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/instincts" data-type="EB">instincts</a> of his contemporaries, inspiring them with a quasi-utopian view of what might be done in this world.</p><!--[MOD31]--><span class="marker MOD31 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD32]--><span class="marker PREMOD32 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">The ideological or cultural transformation was in some ways limited to a narrow segment of society. In 1789 only one-third of the population, living for the most part in northern and eastern France, could both read and write French. (Outside the aristocracy and upper <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/bourgeoisie" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">bourgeoisie</a>, literacy for women was considerably below that of men.) About one-third of the king’s subjects could not even speak French. Nonetheless, even though probably not much more than half a million people were directly involved in the cultural upheaval, their influence was <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="decisive" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/decisive" data-type="EB">decisive</a>.</p><!--[MOD32]--><span class="marker MOD32 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD33]--><span class="marker PREMOD33 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">The concerns of the new “high culture” were intensely personal and, for that reason, deeply felt, even by people who did not participate in it directly. Readers of sentimental prose might after all also be employers, husbands, and fathers, who would treat their dependents differently. Printed materials were certainly more widely available in the 18th century than ever before, and new ideas reached a wide public, even if often only in watered-down form. Newspapers, some of them from abroad, were widely read (and manipulated by the royal government to influence opinion). Many pamphleteers were ready to be hired by whoever had money to pay for their services. Lawyers published their briefs. Theatrical performances, such as <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Pierre-Augustin-Caron-de-Beaumarchais" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais</a>’s comedy <em>Le Mariage de Figaro</em> (1784; <em>The Marriage of Figaro</em>), which openly exposed aristocratic privilege, were widely publicized events. In the 1780s censorship was increasingly <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="desultory" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/desultory" data-type="MW">desultory</a>. Public opinion, whose verdict was identified by the middle class not with the expression of its own particular desires but as the voice of universal common sense and reason, became a tribunal of ideological appeal, an intellectual court of last resort, to which even the monarchy instinctively appealed.</p><!--[MOD33]--><span class="marker MOD33 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD34]--><span class="marker PREMOD34 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">These sweeping changes had created a country that by 1788 was deeply divided ideologically and economically. The salons of Paris, many of them directed by women, were the worldwide focus of a rationalist and Deist Enlightenment; both <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Catherine-the-Great" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Catherine the Great</a> and <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Thomas-Jefferson" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Thomas Jefferson</a>, though far removed from each other in most respects, shared an <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="abiding" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/abiding" data-type="MW">abiding</a> interest in the latest intellectual fashions from Paris. But, whatever held true for influential circles, most Frenchmen in these same years remained deeply religious, certainly in the provinces but possibly in Paris as well. Most of the books and pictures Parisians bought on the eve of the Revolution were still related to religious themes. The country was also divided economically; whereas France’s <a href="https://www.britannica.com/money/international-trade" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">foreign trade</a> was very lively, most of the rural communities were, by English standards, unproductive and immobile villages.</p><!--[MOD34]--><span class="marker MOD34 mod-inline"></span> </section> </section> <section data-level="2" id="ref361989"> <h2 class="h2">Political response</h2> <section data-level="3" id="ref361990"> <h2 class="h3">Historical debate</h2> <!--[PREMOD35]--><span class="marker PREMOD35 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">In broad terms, 18th-century French politics could be defined as the response of the monarchic state to the emergence of the new cultural and economic <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="configurations" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/configurations" data-type="EB">configurations</a> that had transformed the lives and especially the imaginations of French men and women. The question was whether the Bourbon monarchy could rationalize its administration and find a way to adapt itself in the 1770s and ’80s to the new perception of the relationship between citizen and state as it had come to be defined by the changes that characterized the period.</p><!--[MOD35]--><span class="marker MOD35 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD36]--><span class="marker PREMOD36 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">On the issue of political mutation, historical opinion is divided. One set of discussions revolves around the issue of whether the monarchy’s efforts at reform were sufficient; whereas some historians believe that the ancien régime almost succeeded, first in the 1770s and once again in the early 1780s, others argue more pessimistically that the efforts of the monarchy were insubstantial. A more radical view, by contrast, holds that the extent of reform was irrelevant because no monarch, however brilliant, could have met the rising liberal and nationalist expectations of tens of thousands of dissatisfied and vocal people, steeped in Enlightenment thought, who were committed to becoming the empowered citizens of a fraternal state.</p><!--[MOD36]--><span class="marker MOD36 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD37]--><span class="marker PREMOD37 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">The weight of evidence appears to be that the monarchy was by the late 1780s doomed to destruction, both from its inability to carry on the absolutist, administrative work formerly accomplished by such men as Colbert and by the nature of its critics’ desires; the gap separating the traditionalism of the monarchy and the ambitions of <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="nascent" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/nascent" data-type="MW">nascent</a> public opinion was too wide.</p><!--[MOD37]--><span class="marker MOD37 mod-inline"></span> </section> <section data-level="3" id="ref361991"> <h2 class="h3">Foreign policy and financial crisis</h2> <!--[PREMOD38]--><span class="marker PREMOD38 mod-inline"></span><div class="assemblies"><div class="w-100"><figure class="md-assembly m-0 mb-md-0 card card-borderless print-false" data-assembly-id="290154" data-asm-type="image"><div class="md-assembly-wrapper card-media" data-type="image"><a href="https://cdn.britannica.com/86/233386-050-2B034873/Claims-Before-After-French-Indian-Wars-historical-geographical-map.jpg" class="gtm-assembly-link position-relative d-flex align-items-center justify-content-center media-overlay-link card-media" data-href="/media/1/216231/290154"><picture><source media="(min-width: 680px)" srcset="https://cdn.britannica.com/86/233386-050-2B034873/Claims-Before-After-French-Indian-Wars-historical-geographical-map.jpg?w=300"><img src="https://cdn.britannica.com/86/233386-050-2B034873/Claims-Before-After-French-Indian-Wars-historical-geographical-map.jpg?w=300" alt="French and Indian War" data-width="1600" data-height="1039" loading="eager"></picture><button class="magnifying-glass btn btn-circle position-absolute shadow btn-white top-10 right-10" aria-label="Zoom in"><em class="material-icons link-blue" data-icon="zoom_in"></em></button></a></div><figcaption class="card-body"><div class="md-assembly-caption text-muted font-14 font-serif line-clamp"><span><a class="gtm-assembly-link md-assembly-title font-weight-bold d-inline font-sans-serif mr-5 media-overlay-link" href="https://cdn.britannica.com/86/233386-050-2B034873/Claims-Before-After-French-Indian-Wars-historical-geographical-map.jpg" data-href="/media/1/216231/290154">French and Indian War</a><span>Land claims in North America made by Britain, Spain, and France before and after the French and Indian War. British claims are shown in pink, Spanish in yellow, and French in green.</span><button class="js-more-btn d-none btn btn-unstyled font-12 bg-white js-content" aria-label="Toggle more/less fact data"><span class="link-blue">(more)</span></button></span></div></figcaption></figure></div></div><p class="topic-paragraph">The 18th-century French monarchy lacked both the ambition and the means to pursue a <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/foreign-policy" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">foreign policy</a> as far-reaching as that of Louis XIV. From the time of the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/event/War-of-the-Spanish-Succession" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">War of the Spanish Succession</a> (1701–14), when France had been invaded and nearly beaten, French statesmen pursued a double goal—the preservation of the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/balance-of-power" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">balance of power</a> in Europe and, in the world at large, the expansion of the French colonial empire and the containment of England. In the first decades after Louis XIV’s death, French leaders sought to avoid a renewal of large-scale conflict. After 1740, when <a href="https://www.britannica.com/place/Prussia" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">Prussia’s</a> aggressive monarch <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Frederick-II-king-of-Prussia" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Frederick II (the Great)</a> attacked Austria, France was drawn into a war against its traditional Habsburg <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="foe" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/foe" data-type="EB">foe</a> and Vienna’s ally, Britain. The end of this <a href="https://www.britannica.com/event/War-of-the-Austrian-Succession" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">War of the Austrian Succession</a> (1740–48) brought France little. By 1754 France was again fighting Britain in North America. On the Continent, Prussia’s rapprochement with the British drove Louis XV to break tradition and ally with the Austrians in the "diplomatic revolution" of 1756, leading to the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/event/Seven-Years-War" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Seven Years’ War</a>. Frederick the Great’s army inflicted humiliating defeats on the poorly led French armies, while the British captured French possessions in Canada, the Caribbean, and India. After the peace settlement of 1763, the foreign minister, <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Etienne-Francois-de-Choiseul-duc-de-Choiseul" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Étienne-François, duc de Choiseul</a>, began military reforms that laid the basis for French successes in the Revolutionary era, but France was unable to stop its Continental <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="rivals" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/rivals" data-type="EB">rivals</a> Prussia, Austria, and Russia from seizing territory from its traditional client Poland in the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/event/Partitions-of-Poland" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">First Partition</a> of 1772.</p><!--[MOD38]--><span class="marker MOD38 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD39]--><span class="marker PREMOD39 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">The one French success in the century-long competition with Britain was the support given to the rebellious North <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/American-colonies" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">American colonies</a> in the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/event/American-Revolution" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">American Revolution</a> (1775–83). French military officers, most notably the young <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Marquis-de-Lafayette" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">marquis de Lafayette</a>, fought with the American forces, and for a short while the French navy had control of the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/high-seas" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">high seas</a>. The real victor of the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/event/Siege-of-Yorktown" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Siege of Yorktown</a>, Virginia (1781), in which the British were defeated, was less General George Washington than <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Francois-Joseph-Paul-comte-de-Grasse-marquis-de-Grasse-Tilly" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Admiral François-Joseph-Paul, comte de Grasse</a> (1722–88), whose fleet had entered <a href="https://www.britannica.com/place/Chesapeake-Bay" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">Chesapeake Bay</a>. The American victory <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="enhanced" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/enhanced" data-type="MW">enhanced</a> French prestige but failed to bring any territorial gains or economic advantages.</p><!--[MOD39]--><span class="marker MOD39 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD40]--><span class="marker PREMOD40 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Regardless of defeat or victory, colonial and naval wars were problematic because of their prohibitive cost. In Bourbon France (as in Hanoverian England and the Prussia of the Fredericks) a high percentage of the governmental income was earmarked for war. Navies were a particularly costly commodity. The crown’s inability to manage the ever-swelling deficit finally forced it to ask the country’s elites for help, which, for reasons unrelated to the various wars and conflicts, they were unwilling to extend unconditionally. Money thus was a large factor in the collapse of the monarchy in 1789.</p><!--[MOD40]--><span class="marker MOD40 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD41]--><span class="marker PREMOD41 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Ultimately, to be sure, it was not the crown’s inability to pay for wars that caused its downfall. Rather, the crown’s extreme financial difficulties could have led to reforms; the need for funds might have <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="galvanized" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/galvanized" data-type="MW">galvanized</a> the energies of the monarchy to carry forward the task of administrative reordering begun during the reigns of <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Louis-XIII" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">Louis XIII</a> and Louis XIV. A more determined king might have availed himself of the problems raised by the deficit in order to overwhelm the defenders of traditionalism. In so doing, the monarchy might have satisfied enough of the desires of the Enlightenment elite to defuse the tense political situation of the late 1770s and the ’80s. Although in 1789 a program of “reform from above” was no longer possible, it might well have succeeded in the early 1770s.</p><!--[MOD41]--><span class="marker MOD41 mod-inline"></span> </section> <section data-level="3" id="ref361992"> <h2 class="h3">Domestic policy and reform efforts</h2> <!--[PREMOD42]--><span class="marker PREMOD42 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">As stated above, in the <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="context" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/context" data-type="MW">context</a> of 17th-century absolutism, Louis XIV had already initiated many rationalizing reforms. This statist and anticorporatist program was now embraced, but in a more liberal register, by the Enlightenment partisans of meritocratic individualism. Though Montesquieu had defended intermediary bodies such as guilds as guarantees of civic liberty, thinkers of the Enlightenment attacked them in the name of <a href="https://www.britannica.com/technology/public-utility" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">public utility</a> and of what would later be called the rights of man. In an article written for the <em>Encyclopédie</em>, Turgot denied the sanctity of what he called foundations: “Public utility is the supreme law, and cannot be countervailed by a superstitious respect for what has been called the intents of the founders.” Most foundations, he thought, had as their only purpose the satisfaction of <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="frivolous" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/frivolous" data-type="MW">frivolous</a> vanity. At the other end of the social spectrum, the Protestant Rabaut Saint-Étienne, later president of the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/National-Assembly-historical-French-parliament" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">National Assembly</a> (Assemblée Nationale), argued that “every time one creates a corporate body with privileges one creates a public enemy because a special interest is nothing else than this.” No distinction was made between private interest and factional selfishness; in 1786 the future Girondin leader <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Jacques-Pierre-Brissot" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Jacques-Pierre Brissot</a> expressed what had become a commonplace when he wrote that “the history of all intermediary bodies proves, in all evidence, that to bring men and to bind men together is to develop their vices and diminish their virtues.” Private <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="benevolence" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/benevolence" data-type="MW">benevolence</a> applied to public purpose was loudly praised in the 1780s, and Louis XVI’s finance minister, <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Jacques-Necker" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Jacques Necker</a> (1732–1804), did a great deal for his reputation by endowing a hospital for sick children, which stands to this day. By 1789 public and charitable concern had become the themes of countless <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="didactic" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/didactic" data-type="MW">didactic</a> works of literature and painting.</p><!--[MOD42]--><span class="marker MOD42 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD43]--><span class="marker PREMOD43 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Many of the monarchy’s efforts to institutionalize this new sensibility were often significant. The crown encouraged not only agriculture but also manufacturing and commerce. It allowed tax exemptions for newly <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="cultivated" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/cultivated" data-type="MW">cultivated</a> land. It subsidized the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/slave-trade" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">slave trade</a>, on which much of the prosperity of the Atlantic seaports was based. It improved communications and in 1747 founded the School of Bridges and Roads to train civil engineers for the royal engineering service that had existed since 1599. In the provinces, many intendants took an active role in road building and in the modernization of urban space. The crown’s administrators also gave sustained thought to the abolition of internal customs and to the creation of what would have been the largest <a href="https://www.britannica.com/money/free-trade-zone" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">free-trade zone</a> in Europe at the time. Social mobility was made possible; after 1750 many successful merchants and bankers were ennobled.</p><!--[MOD43]--><span class="marker MOD43 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD44]--><span class="marker PREMOD44 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">These were important steps. But the royal <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="bureaucrats" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/bureaucrats" data-type="MW">bureaucrats</a> tried to go much further in regard to both the rationalization of the state’s financial machine and the meritocratic individuation of social and economic forms.</p><!--[MOD44]--><span class="marker MOD44 mod-inline"></span> </section> <section data-level="3" id="ref361993"> <h2 class="h3">Tax reform</h2> <!--[PREMOD45]--><span class="marker PREMOD45 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">In 1749–51 Jean-Baptiste de Machault d’Arnouville, then comptroller general of finances, tried to deal with the debts resulting from the just-concluded War of the Austrian Succession by proposing a partial reform of the tax system, his particular concern being to restrict the financial immunities of the church. In 1764 and 1765 another comptroller general, François de L’Averdy, attempted a reform of municipal representation and administration. All royal officials understood the need to reform and rationalize both the imposition and the collection of taxes; many nobles were exempted from taxation, especially in northern France, and many taxes were inefficiently collected by private tax-farmers.</p><!--[MOD45]--><span class="marker MOD45 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD46]--><span class="marker PREMOD46 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">The country’s overall fiscal structure was highly irrational, as it had been developed by fits and starts under the goad of immediate need. There were direct taxes, some of which were collected directly by the state: the taille (a personal tax), the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/capitation" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">capitation</a>, and the <em>vingtième</em> (a form of <a href="https://www.britannica.com/money/income-tax" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">income tax</a> from which the nobles and officials were usually exempt). There were also indirect taxes that everyone paid: the salt tax, or gabelle, which represented nearly one-tenth of royal revenue; the <em>traites</em>, or <a href="https://www.britannica.com/money/tariff" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">customs duty</a>, internal and external; and the <em>aides</em>, or excise taxes, levied on the sale of items as <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="diverse" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/diverse" data-type="MW">diverse</a> as wine, tobacco, and iron. All the indirect taxes were extremely unpopular and had much to do with the state’s inability to rally the rural masses to its side in 1789. In the 1740s attempts had been made to <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="amend" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/amend" data-type="MW">amend</a> this system but had foundered on the <em>parlements</em>’ opposition to a more equitable distribution of taxation. By 1770 the swelling debt made it obvious that something should be done. Unpopular measures, such as forced loans, were put into effect. <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Joseph-Marie-Terray" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Joseph-Marie Terray</a>, Louis XV’s comptroller general of finances, <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="repudiated" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/repudiated" data-type="MW">repudiated</a> a part of the debt.</p><!--[MOD46]--><span class="marker MOD46 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD47]--><span class="marker PREMOD47 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Some observers, partisans of enlightened despotism—such as Voltaire, who defended it indirectly in his play of 1773 titled <em>Les Lois de Minos</em> (<em>The Laws of Minos</em>)—argued that the French monarchy stood in this particular instance for administrative rationalization and progress. But the current of opinion was already moving against the crown. Many writers saw in Terray a tool of royal despotism, plain and simple, and his ministerial colleague <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Rene-Nicolas-Charles-Augustin-de-Maupeou" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">René-Nicolas-Charles-Augustin de Maupeou</a> (1714–92) was even more detested for his destruction of the <em>parlements</em>, which had become the <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="bastion" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/bastion" data-type="MW">bastion</a> of <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="conservative" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/conservative" data-type="MW">conservative</a> opposition to royal reform.</p><!--[MOD47]--><span class="marker MOD47 mod-inline"></span> </section> <section data-level="3" id="ref361994"> <h2 class="h3"><em>Parlements</em></h2> <!--[PREMOD48]--><span class="marker PREMOD48 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">The 13 <em>parlements</em> (that of Paris being by far the most important) were by their origins law courts. Although their apologists claimed in 1732 that the <em>parlements</em> had emerged from the ancient <em>judicium Francorum</em> of the Frankish tribes, they had in fact been created by the king in the Middle Ages to dispense justice in his name. With the atrophy of the Estates-General, which had not met since 1614, the <em>parlements</em> now claimed to represent the Estates when those were not in session. In 1752 a Jansenist <em>parlementaire</em>, Louis-Adrien Le Paige, developed the idea that the various <em>parlements</em> should be thought of as the “classes” or parts of a larger and single “Parlement de France.”</p><!--[MOD48]--><span class="marker MOD48 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD49]--><span class="marker PREMOD49 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">This was a politically significant claim, because these courts had taken on many other quasi-administrative functions that were related to charity, education, the supervision of the police, and even <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="ecclesiastical" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/ecclesiastical" data-type="MW">ecclesiastical</a> <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="discipline" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/discipline" data-type="MW">discipline</a>. Royal decrees were not binding, claimed the <em>parlementaires</em>, unless the <em>parlements</em> had registered them as laws. Although the <em>parlementaires</em> admitted that the king might force them to register his decrees by staging a <em>lit-de-justice</em> (i.e., by appearing in person at their session), they also knew that the public deplored such maneuvers, which manifestly went against the grain of the monarch’s supposed Christian and paternalist solicitude for the well-being of his subjects.</p><!--[MOD49]--><span class="marker MOD49 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD50]--><span class="marker PREMOD50 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Various social, cultural, and institutional developments had served to turn the <em>parlements</em> into <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="strongholds" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/strongholds" data-type="EB">strongholds</a> of resistance to reforms that increased the crown’s powers. Since the 17th century the monarchy’s need for money and the ensuing venality of offices had enabled the <em>parlementaires</em> to purchase their positions and to become a small and self-conscious elite, a new “nobility of the robe.” In 1604 the creation of the <em>paulette</em> tax had enabled the <em>parlementaires</em> to make their offices a part of their family patrimony, even if the value of their offices fell somewhat during the course of the 18th century. They had gained status by intermarrying with the older chivalric nobility of the sword. By 1700 the <em>parlementaires</em> had become a <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="hereditary" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/hereditary" data-type="EB">hereditary</a> and rich landowning elite. (Near Bordeaux, for example, the best vineyards were theirs.) The interregnum of the regency after the death of Louis XIV (1715–23) had given them a chance to recapture some of the ground they had lost during Louis’s reign; the value of their offices, however, fell again somewhat in the course of the 18th century. The <em>parlementaires</em>’ Jansenist leanings and their recent espousal of antiabsolutism—expressed in the work of Montesquieu, himself a baron and a <em>parlementaire</em>—gave this elite ideological consistency.</p><!--[MOD50]--><span class="marker MOD50 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD51]--><span class="marker PREMOD51 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">In 1764 the Jansenist <em>parlementaires</em>, as ideological “progressives,” secured the expulsion of the Jesuits from France. Incidents such as the death sentence <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="administered" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/administered" data-type="EB">administered</a> by the Parlement of Paris in 1766 against the 18-year-old chevalier de la Barre, accused of mutilating a crucifix and owning a copy of Voltaire’s <em>Dictionnaire philosophique</em> (1764; <em>Philosophical Dictionary</em>), showed, however, that the courts were not entirely on the side of the Enlightenment. In 1768–69 the Parlement of Brittany, in an antiabsolutist stance, forced the resignation of an appointed royal official, the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Emmanuel-Armand-de-Richelieu-duc-dAiguillon" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">duc d’Aiguillon</a>, who had boldly tried to limit the power of the local nobility, with whom the Parlement was now in close alliance.</p><!--[MOD51]--><span class="marker MOD51 mod-inline"></span> </section> <section data-level="3" id="ref361995"> <h2 class="h3">King and <em>parlements</em></h2> <!--[PREMOD52]--><span class="marker PREMOD52 mod-inline"></span><div class="assemblies"><div class="w-100"><figure class="md-assembly m-0 mb-md-0 card card-borderless print-false" data-assembly-id="92063" data-asm-type="image"><div class="md-assembly-wrapper card-media" data-type="image"><a href="https://cdn.britannica.com/91/82591-050-C66FDF8E/Louis-XVI-oil-canvas-Antoine-Francois-Callet-Musee-1786.jpg" class="gtm-assembly-link position-relative d-flex align-items-center justify-content-center media-overlay-link card-media" data-href="/media/1/216231/92063"><picture><source media="(min-width: 680px)" srcset="https://cdn.britannica.com/91/82591-050-C66FDF8E/Louis-XVI-oil-canvas-Antoine-Francois-Callet-Musee-1786.jpg?w=300"><img src="https://cdn.britannica.com/91/82591-050-C66FDF8E/Louis-XVI-oil-canvas-Antoine-Francois-Callet-Musee-1786.jpg?w=300" alt="Louis XVI" data-width="1432" data-height="1600" loading="eager"></picture><button class="magnifying-glass btn btn-circle position-absolute shadow btn-white top-10 right-10" aria-label="Zoom in"><em class="material-icons link-blue" data-icon="zoom_in"></em></button></a></div><figcaption class="card-body"><div class="md-assembly-caption text-muted font-14 font-serif line-clamp"><span><a class="gtm-assembly-link md-assembly-title font-weight-bold d-inline font-sans-serif mr-5 media-overlay-link" href="https://cdn.britannica.com/91/82591-050-C66FDF8E/Louis-XVI-oil-canvas-Antoine-Francois-Callet-Musee-1786.jpg" data-href="/media/1/216231/92063">Louis XVI</a><span>Louis XVI, oil on canvas by Antoine-François Callet, 1786; in the Musée Carnavalet, Paris.</span><button class="js-more-btn d-none btn btn-unstyled font-12 bg-white js-content" aria-label="Toggle more/less fact data"><span class="link-blue">(more)</span></button></span></div></figcaption></figure></div></div><p class="topic-paragraph">In 1770 the conflict with the <em>parlements</em> had reached such a level that Louis XV was finally goaded into a burst of absolutist energy. The Paris Parlements, which had dared to attack Terray’s financial reform, were <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="dissolved" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/dissolved" data-type="EB">dissolved</a> on January 19, 1771. Maupeou was then authorized to create an altogether different set of <em>parlements</em> with appointed judges shorn of administrative and political power.</p><!--[MOD52]--><span class="marker MOD52 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD53]--><span class="marker PREMOD53 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">In time, opinion might well have accepted Terray’s and Maupeou’s reforms, despite the outcry raised by the <em>parlements</em>’ supporters, who argued that the arbitrary uprooting of these centuries-old institutions threatened to turn France into a "ministerial despotism.” France might then, like Prussia, have avoided revolution from below through the practice of a revolution from above. But the death of Louis XV in 1774 put an end to the experiment. His 20-year-old successor, Louis XVI (reigned 1774–92), unsure of himself and eager to please, recalled the <em>parlements</em> and forced Maupeou into retirement.</p><!--[MOD53]--><span class="marker MOD53 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD54]--><span class="marker PREMOD54 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">In late 1774 Louis XVI appointed Turgot, a former intendant, comptroller general. Perhaps because he thought that the success of his reforms would guarantee their acceptance, perhaps also because he thought it vain to attack the Parlement directly so soon after Maupeou’s dismissal, Turgot carried through his measures without first destroying the institutional bases of privileged <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="conservatism" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/conservatism" data-type="MW">conservatism</a>. He left the Parlement alone and attempted instead to reduce government expenditures and to alter the methods of tax collecting. In accordance with his physiocratic laissez-faire principles, he freed the grain trade from restraint; suppressed the corvée, or <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/forced-labour" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">forced labour</a> service, exacted from the peasants; and abolished the guilds, which had limited both access to artisanal professions and the competition within them. Finally, he suggested that Protestants should be given freedom of <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="conscience" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/conscience" data-type="MW">conscience</a>. In short, Turgot attempted to rationalize the administrative practices of the French state and to individuate French social and economic life. The solution to the financial crisis, he thought, would come not through the state’s appropriation of a larger share of <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="extant" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/extant" data-type="MW">extant</a> resources but from the expansion of the nation’s ability to produce and pay. The strength of creative individualism, he thought, would break the political impasse.</p><!--[MOD54]--><span class="marker MOD54 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD55]--><span class="marker PREMOD55 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">In May 1776, however, Turgot was dismissed. Opposition to his measures had come from all sides: a poor harvest had sparked peasant disturbances, the clericalists were antagonized by Turgot’s philosophical friends (his greatest and most loyal <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="disciple" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/disciple" data-type="MW">disciple</a> was <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Marie-Jean-Antoine-Nicolas-de-Caritat-marquis-de-Condorcet" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Marie-Jean-Antoine-Nicolas de Caritat, marquis de Condorcet</a>, the future Girondin), and, when the Parlement of Paris once again refused to register the new edicts, Louis abandoned Turgot as he had dismissed Maupeou. Thenceforth, the state carried through only minor reforms, none of them on a scale <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="commensurate" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/commensurate" data-type="MW">commensurate</a> with the needs felt by the Enlightenment <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="bourgeoisie" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/bourgeoisie" data-type="MW">bourgeoisie</a> and notables of the cities and towns. The vestiges of serfdom were suppressed in 1779, and in 1780 torture was abolished. In 1784 the king’s use of lettres de cachet for purposes of arbitrary imprisonment without trial was considerably curtailed. But these were minor adjustments. Nothing was done to solve the fundamental problems of the organization of society and of the state in a manner that would be acceptable to progressive public opinion.</p><!--[MOD55]--><span class="marker MOD55 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD56]--><span class="marker PREMOD56 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">The issue of fundamental reform came to the fore again in 1786, when the loans floated to pay for the American war began to come due, and the controller general, <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Charles-Alexandre-de-Calonne" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Charles-Alexandre de Calonne</a> (1734–1802), had to tell the king that they could not be repaid. "The only way to bring real order into the finances is to revitalize the entire state by reforming all that is defective in its constitution," Calonne told his <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="sovereign" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/sovereign" data-type="MW">sovereign</a>.</p><!--[MOD56]--><span class="marker MOD56 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD57]--><span class="marker PREMOD57 mod-inline"></span><div class="assemblies"><div class="w-100"><figure class="md-assembly m-0 mb-md-0 card card-borderless print-false" data-assembly-id="24356" data-asm-type="image"><div class="md-assembly-wrapper card-media" data-type="image"><a href="https://cdn.britannica.com/82/31782-050-A4CF8718/Marie-Antoinette-canvas-oil-The-Muslin-Portrait-1783.jpg" class="gtm-assembly-link position-relative d-flex align-items-center justify-content-center media-overlay-link card-media" data-href="/media/1/216231/24356"><picture><source media="(min-width: 680px)" srcset="https://cdn.britannica.com/82/31782-050-A4CF8718/Marie-Antoinette-canvas-oil-The-Muslin-Portrait-1783.jpg?w=300"><img src="https://cdn.britannica.com/82/31782-050-A4CF8718/Marie-Antoinette-canvas-oil-The-Muslin-Portrait-1783.jpg?w=300" alt="Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun: Queen Marie Antoinette" data-width="1261" data-height="1600" loading="eager"></picture><button class="magnifying-glass btn btn-circle position-absolute shadow btn-white top-10 right-10" aria-label="Zoom in"><em class="material-icons link-blue" data-icon="zoom_in"></em></button></a></div><figcaption class="card-body"><div class="md-assembly-caption text-muted font-14 font-serif line-clamp"><span><a class="gtm-assembly-link md-assembly-title font-weight-bold d-inline font-sans-serif mr-5 media-overlay-link" href="https://cdn.britannica.com/82/31782-050-A4CF8718/Marie-Antoinette-canvas-oil-The-Muslin-Portrait-1783.jpg" data-href="/media/1/216231/24356">Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun: <em>Queen Marie Antoinette</em></a><span><em>Queen Marie Antoinette</em>, also known as <em>The Muslin Portrait</em>, oil on canvas by Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun, 1783; in the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.</span><button class="js-more-btn d-none btn btn-unstyled font-12 bg-white js-content" aria-label="Toggle more/less fact data"><span class="link-blue">(more)</span></button></span></div></figcaption></figure></div></div><p class="topic-paragraph">Although Louis XVI accepted Calonne’s proposal to <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="convene" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/convene" data-type="MW">convene</a> an Assembly of Notables, chosen from the country’s elites, and to seek their endorsement for a <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="comprehensive" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/comprehensive" data-type="MW">comprehensive</a> reform program, the monarchy had already frittered away the prestige and authority that might have allowed this gamble to succeed. Repeated changes of policy in the previous decades had made the public wary of royal <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="initiatives" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/initiatives" data-type="MW">initiatives</a>. Louis XV’s sexual adventures, especially his public <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="liaison" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/liaison" data-type="MW">liaison</a> with <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Jeanne-Becu-comtesse-du-Barry" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Mme du Barry</a>, widely rumoured to have once been a prostitute, had severely damaged the monarchy’s image. Louis XVI’s embarrassing inability to <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="consummate" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/consummate" data-type="MW">consummate</a> his marriage with <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Marie-Antoinette-queen-of-France" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Marie-Antoinette</a> for seven years also undermined respect for the throne, which suffered a further blow from the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/event/Affair-of-the-Diamond-Necklace" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Affair of the Diamond Necklace</a> of 1785–86, in which a high-ranking prelate was accused of having tried to seduce the queen.</p><!--[MOD57]--><span class="marker MOD57 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD58]--><span class="marker PREMOD58 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">The Assembly of Notables that Calonne had suggested met in February 1787. The minister presented a program that offered the country’s upper classes some voice in lawmaking in exchange for their consent to the abolition of many traditional privileges, particularly the nobility’s immunity to taxes. Although he did not suggest the creation of a national parliament, Calonne’s plan involved the establishment of provincial assemblies that would oversee the use of public money. Even though Calonne’s proposals were a major step in the direction of representative government and the abolition of special privileges, the notables refused to accept proposals put forward by a minister who they held responsible for previously worsening the deficit. Desperate to obtain badly needed new revenues, Louis XVI replaced Calonne with <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Etienne-Charles-de-Lomenie-de-Brienne" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Loménie de Brienne, archbishop of Toulouse</a>, who had been one of Calonne’s strongest critics in the Assembly of Notables. Almost at once Loménie reversed himself and came to Calonne’s conclusion: the state could not go on as it had. The notables, however, refused to be more <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="amenable" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/amenable" data-type="MW">amenable</a> to Loménie than they had been to Calonne. Despairing of securing the consent of the privileged orders, Loménie dismissed the assembly in May of 1787, and in August the Paris Parlement was exiled to Troyes.</p><!--[MOD58]--><span class="marker MOD58 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD59]--><span class="marker PREMOD59 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">But these measures were desperate, and already the monarchy was beginning to lose control of the political process. Indeed, for the next two years it floundered from one scheme to another in the impossible hope of squaring the circle of modernistic reform, popular hostility, respect of privilege, and the preservation of royal absolutism. Essentially unwilling to force the privileged notables to yield their corporate rights, the crown was unable to assert any <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="coherent" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/coherent" data-type="MW">coherent</a> policy. The Parlement was therefore recalled from Troyes in September 1787, again dismissed in May 1788, and, in the face of a beginning of a breakdown of law and order and of the inability of officials to collect taxes, once more recalled to Paris by the crown in August 1788.</p><!--[MOD59]--><span class="marker MOD59 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD60]--><span class="marker PREMOD60 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">By this time, the government had already announced the summoning of a national representative assembly, the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/Estates-General" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Estates-General</a>. All the king’s subjects would be allowed to participate in choosing representatives and in drafting lists of grievances, called <em>cahiers de doléances</em>, in which they could voice their opinions about the problems facing the kingdom. When the just-restored Parlement of Paris, concerned to prevent ministerial manipulation of the Estates-General, rushed to declare that it should be structured "according to the forms of 1614," with the two privileged orders (the clergy and the nobility) having separate chambers and a veto on all legislation, the judges quickly lost most of their popularity. Leadership of the movement for political reform passed to new men who had no stake in preserving old institutions.</p><!--[MOD60]--><span class="marker MOD60 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD61]--><span class="marker PREMOD61 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Self-proclaimed "patriot" pamphleteers such as the abbé <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Emmanuel-Joseph-Sieyes" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Emmanuel-Joseph Sieyès</a>, whose pamphlet <em>Qu’est-ce que le tiers état?</em> (1789; <em>What Is the Third Estate?</em>) was one of the most widely read of the thousands of tracts published as the royal <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="censorship" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/censorship" data-type="EB">censorship</a> system ceased to function, demanded that the upcoming assembly be structured so that the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/Third-Estate" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">Third Estate</a> of commoners, the vast majority of the population, could prevent the privileged orders from paralyzing its deliberations. In a last and fitful assertion of authority, at the behest of Necker, recalled as minister when Loménie was dismissed in August 1788, the crown decided on December 27 to overrule the Paris Parlement. The Estates, it resolved, would meet separately, but the Third Estate would have as many deputies as the other two orders combined. The stage was set for the coming Revolution.</p><!--[MOD61]--><span class="marker MOD61 mod-inline"></span> </section> </section> <section data-level="2" id="ref361996"> <h2 class="h2">Causes of the French Revolution</h2> <!--[PREMOD62]--><span class="marker PREMOD62 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">In an immediate sense, what brought down the ancien régime was its own inability to change or, more simply, to pay its way. The deeper causes for its collapse are more difficult to establish. One school of interpretation maintains that French society under the ancien régime was <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="rent" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/rent" data-type="EB">rent</a> by class war. This position implies that the French Revolution revolved around issues of class; it has led to the class analysis of prerevolutionary society as well as to the class analysis of the opposing Revolutionary factions of Girondins and Montagnards and, more generally, to what the historian Alfred Cobban called “the social interpretation of the French Revolution.”</p><!--[MOD62]--><span class="marker MOD62 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD63]--><span class="marker PREMOD63 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">In keeping with this interpretation, Marxist historians from the 1930s to the ’70s emphasized that the French 18th-century bourgeoisie had assumed a distinct position in French society in that it was in control of commerce, banking, and industry. Revisionist historians in the 1980s, however, responded that the bourgeoisie had no monopoly in these sectors; nobles were also heavily involved in foreign trade, in banking, and in some of the most modern industries, such as <a href="https://www.britannica.com/technology/coal-mining" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">coal mining</a> and chemicals.</p><!--[MOD63]--><span class="marker MOD63 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD64]--><span class="marker PREMOD64 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Most historians today argue that, on balance, it was becoming increasingly difficult to distinguish clearly between the nobility and the bourgeoisie. Like most nobles, wealthy French non-nobles were landlords and even owners of seigneuries, which were bought and sold before 1789 like any other commodity. Although one can speak of a secularized “bourgeois” <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="ethic" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/ethic" data-type="MW">ethic</a> of thrift and <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="prudence" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/prudence" data-type="MW">prudence</a> that had come into its own, supporters of this ethic, as of the Enlightenment ethic, were both noble and non-noble.</p><!--[MOD64]--><span class="marker MOD64 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD65]--><span class="marker PREMOD65 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">There were two areas, however, in which the nobility enjoyed important institutional privileges: the upper ranks of the army and the clergy were, in the main, aristocratic preserves and had become more so in the 1780s. <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Henri-de-Boulainvilliers-comte-de-Saint-Saire" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Henri de Boulainvilliers</a>, in his posthumous essays of 1732 on the nobility of France, had even developed a wholly fraudulent but widely praised theory of noble racial superiority. Thus, there were some issues on which all the <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="bourgeoisie" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/bourgeoisie" data-type="EB">bourgeoisie</a> might unite against most of the nobility. But such issues, it is now claimed, were relatively unimportant.</p><!--[MOD65]--><span class="marker MOD65 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD66]--><span class="marker PREMOD66 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Proponents of a social explanation of the Revolution have also emphasized the role of the lower classes. As population increased during the 18th century, peasant landholdings tended to become smaller, and the gap between rich and poor grew. Although the general trend after 1715 had been one of greater overall prosperity, the 20 years before 1789 were a time of economic difficulties. The months leading up to the <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="convening" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/convening" data-type="MW">convening</a> of the Estates-General coincided with the worst subsistence crisis France had suffered in many years; a spring drought was followed by a devastating hailstorm that ruined crops in much of the northern half of the country in July 1788. Distressed peasants were thus eager to take advantage of a situation in which the privileges of their landlords seemed <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="vulnerable" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/vulnerable" data-type="MW">vulnerable</a> to attack. Urban workers, who suffered acutely when bread prices rose, as they had after Turgot’s reforms in 1775 and again after the 1788 hailstorm, also had social grievances. Some felt menaced by the development of large-scale manufacturing enterprises; others resented the regulations that, for example, prevented journeymen from setting up their own shops in competition with privileged guild masters. The process of elections to the Estates-General gave both rural and urban populations an unprecedented opportunity to <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="articulate" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/articulate" data-type="MW">articulate</a> grievances against elite privileges that had been <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="endemic" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/endemic" data-type="MW">endemic</a> under the ancien régime but that had not been openly voiced.</p><!--[MOD66]--><span class="marker MOD66 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD67]--><span class="marker PREMOD67 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">Contemporary historiography has refocused the discussion regarding the causes for the Revolution. Studying the representation of politics, the shape of revolutionary festivals, and the revolutionary cults of sacrifice and heroism, scholars have come to place the transformation of <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="culture" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/culture" data-type="MW">culture</a> at the core of their discussion. What really mattered was the desanctifying of the monarchy, the new understanding of the self and the public good, and the belief that thinking individuals might seize the state and fundamentally reshape it. Other historians, by contrast, have emphasized the persistent liabilities that French <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/political-culture" class="md-crosslink autoxref " data-show-preview="true">political culture</a> carried through the Enlightenment, such as the suspicion of dissent and the readiness to rely on force to subvert it.</p><!--[MOD67]--><span class="marker MOD67 mod-inline"></span> <!--[PREMOD68]--><span class="marker PREMOD68 mod-inline"></span><p class="topic-paragraph">From either of these two perspectives, it follows that the prospects of the monarchy’s survival were dim in 1788. Many government officials, it is true, were finely <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off eb" data-term="attuned" href="https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/attuned" data-type="EB">attuned</a> to public opinion. The vast neorepublican canvases of Jacques-Louis David (1748–1845), such as his <em>Oath of the Horatii</em> (1784), glorifying traditional republicanism, were commissioned by the king’s dispenser of patronage, the marquis d’Angivillers, a friend of Turgot. Visionary architects, developing a <a href="https://www.britannica.com/art/Louis-XVI-style" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">style of Revolutionary Neoclassicism</a>, similarly received royal commissions for new public works. <a href="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Chretien-Guillaume-de-Lamoignon-de-Malesherbes" class="md-crosslink " data-show-preview="true">Chrétien Guillaume de Lamoignon de Malesherbes</a> (1721–94), another friend of Turgot and, like him, a minister of the crown, protected the Encyclopédistes. On balance, however, it is hard to see how the monarchy, even if it had resolved its financial problems, which it was very far from doing, could have extended this ecumenism from art to politics and social life. To do so, it would have had to transform its institutions in keeping with new <a class="md-dictionary-link md-dictionary-tt-off mw" data-term="conceptions" href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/conceptions" data-type="MW">conceptions</a> regarding men’s public and private affairs and to commit itself to the rejection of the corporatist ethic in economic life. Thus, the monarchy seemed fated to failure and the stage set for revolution.</p><!--[MOD68]--><span class="marker MOD68 mod-inline"></span> <span class="md-signature font-12"><a href="/contributor/Patrice-Louis-Rene-Higonnet/1328">Patrice Louis-René Higonnet</a></span> <span class="md-signature font-12"><a href="/contributor/Jeremy-David-Popkin/4900">Jeremy David Popkin</a></span> </section> </section> <!--[END-OF-CONTENT]--><span class="marker end-of-content"></span><!--[AFTER-ARTICLE]--><span class="marker after-article"></span></div> <div id="chatbot-simplify-root"></div> <div id="chatbot-root"></div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="ai-dialog-placeholder"></div> </div> </div> <aside class="col-md-da-320"></aside> </div> </div> </div> </div> </article> </div> </div> </div> </div> </main> <div id="md-footer"></div> <noscript><iframe src="//www.googletagmanager.com/ns.html?id=GTM-5W6NC8" height="0" width="0" style="display:none;visibility:hidden"></iframe></noscript> <script type="text/javascript" id="_informizely_script_tag"> var IzWidget = IzWidget || {}; (function (d) { var scriptElement = d.createElement('script'); scriptElement.type = 'text/javascript'; scriptElement.async = true; scriptElement.src = "https://insitez.blob.core.windows.net/site/f780f33e-a610-4ac2-af81-3eb184037547.js"; var node = d.getElementById('_informizely_script_tag'); node.parentNode.insertBefore(scriptElement, node); } )(document); </script> <!-- Ortto ebmwprod capture code --> <script> window.ap3c = window.ap3c || {}; var ap3c = window.ap3c; ap3c.cmd = ap3c.cmd || []; ap3c.cmd.push(function() { ap3c.init('ZO4siT4cLwnykPnzZWJtd3Byb2Q', 'https://engage.email.britannica.com/'); ap3c.track({v: 0}); }); ap3c.activity = function(act) { ap3c.act = (ap3c.act || []); ap3c.act.push(act); }; var s, t; s = document.createElement('script'); s.type = 'text/javascript'; s.src = "https://engage.email.britannica.com/app.js"; t = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0]; t.parentNode.insertBefore(s, t); </script> <script class="marketing-page-info" type="application/json"> {"pageType":"Topic","templateName":"DESKTOP","pageNumber":5,"pagesTotal":8,"pageId":216231,"pageLength":8926,"initialLoad":true,"lastPageOfScroll":false} </script> <script class="marketing-content-info" type="application/json"> [] </script> <script src="https://cdn.britannica.com/mendel-resources/3-133/js/libs/jquery-3.5.0.min.js?v=3.133.36"></script> <script type="text/javascript" data-type="Init Mendel Code Splitting"> (function() { $.ajax({ dataType: 'script', cache: true, url: 'https://cdn.britannica.com/mendel-resources/3-133/dist/topic-page.js?v=3.133.36' }); })(); </script> <script class="analytics-metadata" type="application/json"> {"leg":"B","adLeg":"B","userType":"ANONYMOUS","pageType":"Topic","pageSubtype":null,"articleTemplateType":"PAGINATED","gisted":false,"pageNumber":5,"hasSummarizeButton":false,"hasAskButton":true} </script> <script type="text/javascript"> EBStat={accountId:-1,hostnameOverride:'webstats.eb.com',domain:'www.britannica.com', json:''}; </script> <script type="text/javascript"> ( function() { $.ajax( { dataType: 'script', cache: true, url: '//www.britannica.com/webstats/mendelstats.js?v=1' } ) .done( function() { try {writeStat(null,EBStat);} catch(err){} } ); })(); </script> <div id="bc-fixed-dialogue"></div> </body> </html>