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Tuesday, March 26, 2019

France Section 1770 - 1789 - Crisis in the old regime :: European Europe History

France Section 1770 - 1789 - Crisis in the mature regimeThe causes of tensions and conflicts generated in the old regime that contributed to the outbreak of revolution The penning of society was a major(ip) contributing factor to the tensions and conflicts generated under the old regime. Society was divided into lead Estates, the first Estate comprised of the clergy (1%), the brilliance, and rest of the population was classified as the ternary Estate. Not only was the three Estate heterogeneous, comprising of the burghere (lawyers, doctors, intellectuals, businessman, the traders, merchants, factory owners), peasants, and beggars, but each three Estates. Their were many distinguishing factors that set the three Estates apart. The first two Estates were associated with the monarchy and avoided or paid little taxes, whilst at the same time earning the most money. The Third Estate paid the highest taxes and earnt the least. Lefebvre saw the bourgeoisie as becoming stronger econom ically but still maintaining the same legal status as that of the poorest peasant. The bourgeois resented their nobles, who were simply born into their position of wealth. They nobles believed that their noble birth set them apart from the rest of society. However, the nobility were also dissatisfied under the ancien regime, where they had little, yet still more and so the bourgeois, influence in politics. Although the upper clergy enjoyed many privileges, including being exempt from stipendiary taxes, owned about 10 per cent of the kill, and received their wealth from the land they owned and the collection of the tithes. Yet, the lower clergy did not enjoy these same privileges, mend the Bishop plays the great nobleman and spends scandalous sums on hounds, horses, furniture, servants, food and carriages, the parish priest does not have the wherewithal to buy himself a new cassock...the bishops treat their priests , not as honest footman, but as stable-boys. It is clear that soc ial unrest was felt by the whole population. Prior to 1780s the people of France blindly accepted the foudations of the Ancien Regime. The extremity known as the Enlightenment or Age of Reason saw philosophes such as Voltaire and Rousseau attack the Church, and the absolute power of the King and the inequitable social composition of society. For the first time people were questioning the society in which they lived. It became the cutting-edge conversation of the times, and this propoganda took place in salons, cafes and even educational institutions such as the museum of Paris.

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