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Estates General of France. Estates General of France: history, important dates and interesting facts The emergence of the Estates General in France

Each monarch solved the problems of the state in different ways, some borrowed money, but the kings of France turned to a special authority - the supreme assembly. What is the history of the emergence of the Estates General, what is it, and why the first convening of the Estates General in France in 1789 ended in revolution.

There is a common belief that the monarchy is ruled only by the king, but it should be noted that this is not the case. In any monarchy, most often, the highest authority - parliament or council - acted on an equal basis with the supreme ruler.

In France there also existed the Estates General or the highest estate-representative institution.

The creation of the Estates General in France was associated, first of all, with the active growth of populated areas and the accompanying sharp aggravation of negative sentiments in society.

The struggle between classes was growing, and the king needed a body of power that would help strengthen the feudal state. Previously, extended council meetings, which brought together city government officials, and provincial assemblies were used for this purpose.

The date of the first convocation is considered the founding date of the Estates General - 1302. Circumstances developed in such a way that Philip IV the Fair spoke out against Boniface VIII.

After this there were several convocations on the following occasions:

  1. The Hundred Years' War and the court's dire need for finances.
  2. The Parisian uprising demanding to limit the power of the monarch (“Great March Ordinance” - decree), which ended in failure.
  3. A period of wars and religious disagreements.
  4. The first and last convocation before the revolution.

Louis XVI convened the assembly for the last time on May 5, 1789, in the hope of solving the acute socio-economic crisis in the country after many attempts to resolve it on his own. The discontent of the people manifested itself at the meetings that became the National Assembly, and the third estate took leading positions in it.

Structure and operation of the organ

How the Estates General was structured during the time of the monarchs in France. They were a parliament consisting of three chambers, which included representatives of the nobility (feudal lords), the clergy and the “third estate” - the bourgeoisie.

Moreover, the first two chambers had great advantages and could veto all proposals of deputies from the bourgeoisie. The parties met separately, and the time of meetings was also determined by the monarch.

The real reason why the monarch convened the States General most likely was: the desire to have the support of the entire nation in some pressing issue (the war with the Templars) and the need to fill the empty treasury through taxes or loans.

The body could independently contact the monarch, expressing to him in writing grievances or problems in society that required his attention.

Good to know! Despite the restriction of bourgeois opinion, it was this party that eventually started the French Revolution.

The Estates General in France became an advisory body that met only by decision of the king in particularly difficult times for the country; most often the reason for convening was the need to resolve an issue by voting, for example, on raising taxes. At the same time, their peculiarity was the presence of representatives of all three classes of society.

Useful video: estate-representative monarchy in France in the 11th - 14th centuries

Consequences of the 1789 convocation

Why did the convening of the Estates General take place in France in 1789? For what purpose did the king convene general assemblies after a long break of more than 100 years, since the last time deputies were convened was in 1614?

As with any other convening of the Estates General, the reason lay in the area of ​​​​the economic and social crisis in which the country was.

Initially, meetings and meetings of this body were not planned, but at the meeting of the notables in 1787, Charles Colonne expressed this idea, since the rulers themselves could not come to any effective decision, and the financial reform program was rejected by the Paris Parliament. The decision to convene the three estates for negotiations was an attempt to return to the archaic institution of governing the country, but it changed it forever.

The convocation was carried out by the edict of Louis XVI in the winter of 1789; in the document, the king asked his subjects to gather and help the court overcome financial difficulties. In return, the monarch promised to consider all the complaints of the people that were recorded by his representatives and also to hold elections of deputies to parliament from the people. By wanting to hold the meetings the same way they had in 1614, the court hoped to gain control over the people.

Why was this important? Voting in 1614 took place by class, that is, the clergy, nobility and bourgeoisie voted by party, and then the first two received an advantage. In addition, Louis promised to increase the number of participants in the third party in order to make the voting fair (the nobility and clergy outnumbered the representatives of the third estate).

Several meetings were held during May and June. However, the estates could not agree with each other, even the first issue on the agenda was not resolved, how to vote - by estate or all together. The third bourgeois party did not agree with the decision to vote in parties, because it understood what advantages the opponents received.

Members of the meetings were represented by:

  1. The clergy, which included 100,000 members. It should be mentioned that the church collected taxes (tithes) from the peasants and owned a total of 10% of all land in France.
  2. The nobility totaled 400,000 people (men and women), who owned 25% of the land and set their own fees.
  3. The bourgeoisie, which numbered only 578 deputies, although they represented 95% of the total population of the country.

By decree of Louis, the tax districts voted and nominated delegates to the bourgeois class, and the judicial districts to the class of clergy and nobility. Each party had to present a list of grievances at the meeting, with the largest number of grievances coming from representatives of peasants and unprivileged citizens. A total of 1,139 deputies were elected.

  • clergy - 291 members;
  • nobility - 270 people;
  • bourgeoisie - 578 members.

Meetings began to take place on May 5, 1789 after the grand opening. The king, speaking during the opening, emphasized the need for these meetings only to solve the country's financial problems, while the people of France were waiting for fundamental changes in society.

The conflict between the parties occurred on the second day, when the third estate refused to sit separately, as prescribed by the regulations, and invited the first two parties to a collective meeting. In addition, voting had to take place by party, and this gave an advantage to the first two estates.

Good to know! In the 20th century, some assemblies that decided on pressing political issues, expressing the general opinion of the people, called themselves the Estates General.

Consequences of the 1789 convocation

The result of long negotiations and the inability to find a common solution that suited everyone was the formation by the bourgeoisie of the National Constitutional Assembly, which included entirely deputies of the third party and representatives from the clergy. After several futile attempts by the assembly to meet and draft a Constitution, a meeting of all parties took place on June 23.

The king at the meeting announced the abolition of all innovations and refused to subject his power to restrictions, as well as the rights of the nobility. He surrounded the deputies with troops and ordered everyone to disperse. After the refusal of the third estate, an attempt was made to disperse the crowd by force, but it was unsuccessful. On June 27, by order of the king, all three parties were united, and the Estates General were transformed into the National Assembly, and then into the Constituent Assembly.

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The Estates General in France is the highest class representative institution in the years 1302–1789.

The emergence of the Estates General was associated with the growth of cities, the aggravation of social contradictions and class struggle, which necessitated the strengthening of the feudal state. The estate-representative monarchy was established at a certain stage of centralization of the country, when the autonomous rights of feudal lords, the Catholic Church, and city corporations were not completely overcome. Solving important national problems and taking on a number of new state functions, the royal power gradually broke the political structure characteristic of the seigneurial monarchy. But in implementing her policy, she faced powerful opposition from the feudal oligarchy, whose resistance she could not overcome only by her own means. Therefore, the king's political power largely stemmed from the support he received from the feudal classes.

Since the emergence of the Estates General took place during the period of the struggle of royal power to centralize the state and overcome the resistance of the federal nobility, it was by the beginning of the 14th century that the alliance built on a political compromise, and therefore not always strong, of the king and representatives of different classes, including the third estate, was finally formed. The political expression of this union, in which each party had its own specific interests, became special estate-representative institutions - the Estates General and the Provincial States.

The creation of the Estates General in France marked the beginning of a change in the form of the state in France - its transformation into an estate-representative monarchy.

The reasons for the convening of the Estates General by King Philip IV the Fair in 1302 were the unsuccessful war in Flanders; serious economic difficulties, as well as a dispute between the king and the Pope. However, these events were the occasion, another reason was the creation of a national estate-representative institution and the manifestation of an objective pattern in the development of the monarchical state in France.

The Estates General was an advisory body convened at the initiative of the royal power at critical moments to assist the government. Their main function was tax quotas.

The Estates General has always been a body representing the propertied strata of French society. The class composition of the Estates General included the clergy (highest - archbishops, bishops, abbots); nobility (large feudal lords; middle and small nobility - except for the first convocations); urban population (deputies from churches, conventions of monasteries and cities - 2-3 deputies each; lawyers - approximately 1/7 of the Estates General). Each estate - the clergy, the nobility, the third estate - sat in the Estates General separately from the others and had one vote (regardless of the number of representatives). The third estate was represented by the elite of the townspeople. The frequency of convening the Estates General was not established; this issue was decided by the king depending on circumstances and political considerations.

In the Estates General, each estate met and discussed issues separately. Only in 1468 and 1484 did all three classes hold their meetings together. Voting was usually organized by balyages and seneschalties, where deputies were elected. If differences were found in the positions of the estates, voting was carried out by estate. In this case, each estate had one vote and, in general, the feudal lords always had an advantage over the third estate.

The issues submitted for consideration by the Estates General and the duration of their meetings were also determined by the king. The king resorted to convening the Estates General in order to gain the support of the estates on various occasions: the fight against the Knights Templar (1308), the conclusion of a treaty with England (1359), religious wars (1560, 1576, 1588). But most often the reason for convening the Estates General was the king’s need for money, and he turned to the estates with a request for financial assistance or permission for the next tax, which could only be collected within one year.

The importance of the Estates General increased during the Hundred Years' War of 1337–1453, when the royal power was especially in need of money. During the period of popular uprisings of the 14th century (the Parisian uprising of 1357–1358, the Jacquerie of 1358), the Estates General claimed an active participation in governing the country. However, the lack of unity between the cities and their irreconcilable enmity with the nobility made the attempts of the French Estates General fruitless to achieve the rights that the English parliament managed to win.

The most acute conflict between the Estates General and royal power occurred in 1357 at the time of the uprising of the townspeople in Paris and the capture of the French King John by the British. The Estates General, in which mainly representatives of the third estate took part, put forward a reform program called the Great March Ordinance. In return for granting royal subsidies, they demanded that the collection and expenditure of funds be carried out by the Estates General themselves, which were to meet three times a year and without being convened by the king. “General reformers” were elected, who were given the power to control the activities of the royal administration, dismiss individual officials and punish them, even applying the death penalty. However, the attempt of the Estates General to secure permanent financial, supervisory and even legislative powers was unsuccessful. After the suppression of the Parisian uprising and the Jacquerie in 1358, the royal authorities rejected the demands contained in the Great March Ordinance.

From 1614 to 1789, the Estates General never met again. Only on May 5, 1789, in conditions of an acute political crisis on the eve of the Great French Revolution, the king convened the Estates General. On June 17, 1789, deputies of the Third Estate declared themselves the National Assembly, and on July 9, the National Assembly proclaimed itself the Constituent Assembly, which became the highest representative and legislative body of revolutionary France.

In the 20th century, the name Estates General was adopted by some representative assemblies that considered current political issues and expressed broad public opinion (for example, the Assembly of the Estates General for Disarmament, May 1963).

Conflict between the French king and the Pope

The reforms of Philip IV led to a significant strengthening of royal power. By the beginning of the 14th century, when the main power in European states belonged to the Pope, the independence of the French king was a manifestation of rebellion. One of the areas of Philip IV's reforms was the limitation of the privileges of the clergy. The king in his domain introduced a reduction in the property holdings of the church and its judicial powers.

Note 1

The direct cause of the conflict was the monarch's introduction of taxes on church lands. Internal contradictions between the king and the church outgrew state borders. The French Church, being part of the dominion of the Pope, faced a difficult choice: obey the Pope or the king.

In 1296, Pope Boniface VIII prohibited members of the clergy from paying taxes without his permission, and secular monarchs from collecting taxes from church ministers. The French king carried out a retaliatory strike: he banned the export of precious metals (gold and silver) from the country. The Papal treasury stopped receiving contributions from the French clergy. Then the Pope brought up the issue of reforms in France and the activities of the French king to a church council. The date of the council was set for November 1, 1302. Boniface VIII supported his claims to the king with the theory of Pope Gregory VII about the primacy of spiritual power over secular power.

Formation of the Estates General

Philip IV did not wait for the decision of the church council to be made. He accepted the Pope's actions as interference in the internal affairs of the kingdom. The king also accused the Pope of abusing his rights. Boniface VIII made the same accusations and raised the issue of excommunicating the monarch. In response, Philip IV created a representative body from all classes of France - the Estates General.

The first meeting of the estate institution took place in 1302. Each estate was represented by elected deputies, two people from each large city or region. Philip IV raised the question of recognizing the Pope as a heretic. The king was supported by deputies from the cities. The opposition was represented by elected representatives from the clergy and nobility from the southern regions of the country. There were more supporters, and the king’s opinion was approved in the form of a law.

To depose the Pope, Philip IV sent two agents to Rome: Guillaume Nogaret and Guillaume Plaisian. The agents received enough money from the royal court to win over the Pope's political rivals in Italy to their side. Gathering a group, they broke into the Pope's residence and put Boniface VIII under house arrest. Unable to bear the insults, the Pope died. In 1305, Clement V, a protege of the French king, was elected Pope.

The fight between the king and the Templars

To consolidate its position, Philip IV held a trial of the Templar Order, accusing its members of heresy.

Note 2

The spiritual-knightly order of the Templars was created in the 12th century under the patronage of the Pope. His goal: support for the crusaders in the East. A hundred years later the order became a major land owner.

In the 13th century the order began its activities from the East to Europe. He began to carry out usurious transactions. Philip IV tried to destroy the order, which would solve several issues in one fell swoop:

  1. Eliminate the political enemy within the country;
  2. Confiscate the order's treasury and its land holdings for the benefit of the treasury.

In 1308, the king convened the Estates General and brought up for discussion the issue of recognizing the Templars as heretics and dissolving their organization. But it fails: the class body does not make such a decision. But the order was still dissolved. This happened in 1312 by decision of the Church Council.

In 1309, Pope Cement V moved his residence to the city of Avignon on the Rhone River. The 70-year captivity of the Popes (until 1378) by the French monarchs begins.

At the beginning of the 14th century in France, the seigneurial monarchy was replaced by a new form of feudal state - an estate-representative monarchy. The formation of an estate-representative monarchy here is inextricably linked with the process of political centralization, which was progressive for this period (already by the beginning of the 14th century, the country’s territories were united), the further rise of royal power, and the elimination of the arbitrariness of individual feudal lords.
In the XIV-XV centuries, the restructuring of the estate system was completed in France, which was expressed in the internal consolidation of estates.
The clergy was considered the first estate in France. It was recognized that the French clergy should live by the laws of the kingdom and be considered an integral part of the French nation.
The second estate in the state was the nobility, although in fact in the XIV-XV centuries it played a leading role in the social and political life of France. This class united all secular feudal lords, who were now considered not just as vassals of the king, but as his servants.
By the 14th-15th centuries, the formation of the “third estate” was basically completed, which was replenished due to the rapidly growing urban population and the increase in peasant censenaries. This class was very diverse in class composition, and practically united the entire working population and the emerging bourgeoisie.
There are three main reasons for strengthening royal power and overcoming fragmentation. This support for cities, the small and middle nobility and the need to fight the enemy,
Seigneurial legislation gradually disappeared, and by expanding the range of cases constituting a “royal case,” feudal jurisdiction was significantly limited. In the 14th century, the possibility of appealing against any decision of the courts of individual feudal lords to the Parisian Parliament was provided for, and this finally destroyed the principle according to which seigneurial justice was considered sovereign.
Along with the exercise of purely judicial functions, parliament in the first half of the 14th century acquired the right to register royal ordinances and other royal documents. Since 1350, registration of royal acts has become mandatory. The lower courts and parliaments of other cities could only use registered royal ordinances when making their decisions.
A major role in the legal justification for the elimination of the seignorial rights of feudal lords and the increase in the authority and political weight of the king was played by legalists - graduates of law faculties of medieval universities who actively supported the power of the king. With reference to the principles of Roman law, the legalists argued that the king himself was the supreme law, and therefore could create legislation at his own will.
By the beginning of the 14th century, the alliance of the king and representatives of different classes, including the third, was finally formed, built on a political compromise, and therefore not always strong. The political expression of the union of the king and representatives of various classes, in which each party had its own specific interests, became special class-representative institutions (class representative meetings) - the General States and the provincial states.
The beginning of the work of representative assemblies from the estates made it possible to consolidate all social forces advocating the unification of the country. Kings were able to turn to the estates for support, bypassing the rulers of the largest seigneuries. At these meetings, issues of domestic and foreign policy were discussed, but, above all, the introduction of new taxes. The introduction of permanent national taxes allowed the royal power to create a permanent professional army to replace the knightly militia and a bureaucratic administrative apparatus.
The first all-French meeting of the estates was convened in 1302. It began to be called the Estates General, in contrast to the states (assemblies) in individual provinces.
Each estate was represented by a separate chamber. The first chamber consisted of the highest clergy. In the second, elected representatives of the nobility sat. Moreover, the most notable were not included in the chamber, but took part in the work of the royal curia. The third estate, as a rule, consisted of representatives of city councils (eshvens). Each chamber had one vote, and since decisions were made by majority vote, the privileged classes had an advantage.
All issues were considered by the States General separately in chambers. The decision was made by a simple majority of votes. The final approval of the decision was carried out at a joint meeting of all chambers, with each chamber having only one vote. Thus, the privileged classes (clergy and nobility) always had a guaranteed majority.
The frequency of convening the States General was not established. This issue was decided by the king himself, depending on circumstances and political considerations. The issues submitted for consideration by the States General and the duration of their meetings were determined by the king. They convened to express the position of the estates in connection with the king's declaration of war, negotiations about the mile, the conclusion of treaties, the escalation of conflicts with the Pope, and so on. The king sought the opinion of the States General on a number of bills, although formally their consent to the adoption of royal laws was not required.
But most often the reason for convening the States General was the king's need for money, and he turned to the estates with a request for financial assistance or permission for the next tax, which could only be collected within one year.
The Estates General were convened on the initiative of the king, and he had the opportunity to impose the decision they needed. But in 1357, during a period of deep political crisis, the royal government was forced to issue a decree called the Great March Ordinance. According to it, the Estates General met twice a year without the prior sanction of the king, had the exclusive right to introduce new taxes and control government spending, gave consent to declare war or make peace, and appointed advisers to the king.
The king's power extended over an area almost equal to modern France. From the point of view of the ruling circles, the Estates General fulfilled their intended role. After the end of the Hundred Years' War with England, the importance of the Estates General declined, and from the 15th century they ceased to be convened.
The emergence of an estate-representative monarchy and the gradual concentration of political power in the hands of the king did not subject the central governing bodies to significant reorganization. An important place in the central government system was occupied by the Council of Notables, created on the basis of the royal curia (from 1413 to 1497). This council included legalists, as well as 24 representatives of the highest secular and spiritual nobility (princes, peers of France, archbishops, etc.). The Council met once a month, but its powers were purely advisory.
Formally, the decision of the Council of Notables was not binding on the king. However, he was forced to take into account the opinion of the nobility. With the consent of the notables, new taxes began to be introduced, which were collected by the king's officials. A large army appeared. As the power of royalty increased, the system of local government was centralized.
Locally, the country was divided into bailies and prevotages, led by bailies and provosts, who carried out day-to-day administration, collection of taxes and supervision of the judiciary.
In an effort to centralize local government, the king introduces new positions of governors. They were appointed to the baileys, replacing the bailiffs and receiving broader powers: to prohibit the construction of new castles, to prevent private wars, etc.
In the 15th century, officials such as lieutenant generals appeared, usually appointed from among the princes of the blood and noble nobility. They usually ruled over a group of balyages or an administrative district, which at the end of the 15th century began to be called a province.
Local centralization also affected city life. Kings often deprived cities of the status of communes, changed previously issued charters, and limited the rights of citizens. A system of administrative guardianship was established over the cities.
In 1445, having the opportunity to levy a permanent tax (royal tag), King Charles VII organized a regular royal army with centralized leadership and a clear system of organization. Permanent garrisons were stationed throughout the state, which were called upon to suppress any attempts at feudal unrest.
The royal administration pursued a policy of unification in judicial matters, somewhat limiting ecclesiastical jurisdiction and displacing seigneurial jurisdiction.
Activities of the Estates General.

STATES GENERAL (French: Etats Generaux) in France, the highest estate-representative institution in 1302-1789, which had the character of an advisory body. The Estates General were convened by the king at critical moments in French history and were supposed to provide public support for the royal will. In its classical form, the French Estates General consisted of three chambers: representatives of the nobility, the clergy and the third, tax-paying estate. Each estate sat separately in the Estates General and issued a separate opinion on the issue under discussion. Most often, the Estates General approved decisions on the collection of taxes.
The Estates General in France (French îtats Généraux) became the highest class representative institution in 1302–1789.
The emergence of the Estates General was associated with the growth of cities, the aggravation of social contradictions and class struggle, which necessitated the strengthening of the feudal state.
The predecessors of the states general were extended meetings of the royal council (with the involvement of city leaders), as well as provincial assemblies of estates (which laid the foundation for the provincial states). The first Estates General was convened in 1302, during the conflict between Philip IV and Pope Boniface VIII.
The Estates General was an advisory body convened at the initiative of the royal power at critical moments to assist the government. Their main function was voting taxes. Each estate sat in the Estates General separately from the others and had one vote (regardless of the number of representatives). The third estate was represented by the elite of the townspeople.
The importance of the Estates General increased during the Hundred Years' War of 1337 to 1453, when the royal power was especially in need of money. During the period of popular uprisings of the 14th century (the Parisian uprising of 1357–58, the Jacquerie of 1358), the Estates General claimed an active participation in governing the country (similar demands were expressed by the Estates General of 1357 in the “Great March Ordinance”). However, the lack of unity between the cities and their irreconcilable enmity with the nobility made the attempts of the French Estates General fruitless to achieve the rights that the English parliament managed to win.
At the end of the 14th century, the Estates General were convened less and less often and were often replaced by meetings of notables. From the end of the 15th century, the institution of the Estates General fell into decline due to the beginning of the development of absolutism; during 1484–1560 they were not convened at all (a certain revival of their activities was observed during the period of the Religious Wars; the Estates General were convened in 1560, 1576, 1588, and 1593) .
From 1614 to 1789, the Estates General never met again. Only on May 5, 1789, in conditions of an acute political crisis on the eve of the Great French Revolution, the king convened the Estates General. On June 17, 1789, deputies of the third estate declared themselves the National Assembly, on July 9, the National Assembly proclaimed itself the Constituent Assembly, which became the highest representative and legislative body of revolutionary France.
In the 20th century, the name Estates General was adopted by some representative assemblies that considered current political issues and expressed broad public opinion (for example, the Assembly of the Estates General for Disarmament, May 1963).
Great Ordinance of March 1357
In 1357, a Parisian uprising forced the heir to the throne, the Dauphin Charles, to agree to the publication of the Great March Ordinance. The Estates General received the right to meet twice or more a year, without waiting for royal permission, to appoint royal advisers and authorize at their own will. “The decisions of the Council of the Three Estates have fully and forever entered into force. Aids and subsidies were used exclusively for military needs. The collection and distribution of taxes are not the king’s people, but reasonable, honest and independent people, empowered, elected and appointed for this purpose by the three estates.” Karl's consent was forced. Having fled from Paris, he began to gather forces to deal with him. The great peasant uprising of 1358, the Jacquerie, came to the aid of Paris, pursuing anti-feudal chains. Meanwhile, the urban patriciate, who led Paris, opposed the Jacquerie. Deprived of the support of the cities, the peasants were defeated. Then it was Paris's turn. With the victorious end of the Hundred Years' War, the importance of the states general declines. One of the reforms of King Charles VII (1439) - shpora.su - introduced a direct permanent tax levied without the consent of the states (taglia). Another reform created a regular army, supported by this tax. The Estates General were not abolished, but they met rarely. There is no longer a need for them.

STATES GENERAL in France STATES GENERAL in France

GENERAL STATES (French: Etats Generaux) in France, the highest estate-representative institution in 1302-1789, which had the character of an advisory body. The Estates General were convened by the king at critical moments in French history and were supposed to provide public support for the royal will. In its classical form, the French Estates General consisted of three chambers: representatives of the nobility, the clergy and the third, tax-paying estate. Each estate sat separately in the Estates General and issued a separate opinion on the issue under discussion. Most often, the Estates General approved decisions on the collection of taxes.
Hundred Years' War period
The predecessors of the French Estates General were extended meetings of the royal council with the involvement of city leaders, as well as assemblies of representatives from various classes in the provinces, which laid the foundation for the provincial states. The emergence of the institution of the Estates General was due to the situation that arose after the creation of the French centralized state. In addition to the royal domain, the state included vast lands of secular and spiritual feudal lords, as well as cities that had numerous and traditional liberties and rights. For all his power, the king did not yet have enough rights and authority to make decisions alone affecting these traditional liberties. In addition, the still fragile royal power on a number of issues, including foreign policy, needed visible support from the entire French society.
The first Estates General of a national scale were convened in April 1302, during the conflict of Philip IV the Fair (cm. PHILIP IV the Handsome) with Pope Boniface VIII (cm. BONIFACE VIII). This assembly rejected the pope's claim to be the supreme arbiter, declaring that the king in secular affairs depended only on God. In 1308, preparing reprisals against the Templars (cm. TEMPLIERS), the king again considered it necessary to rely on the support of the Estates General. On August 1, 1314, Philip IV the Fair convened the Estates General to approve the decision to collect taxes to finance a military campaign in Flanders. Then the nobility attempted to unite with the townspeople to resist the king’s excessive monetary demands.
During the fading years of the Capetian dynasty (cm. CAPETINGS) the importance of the Estates General increases. It was they who decided to remove the daughter of King Louis X from the throne in 1317, and after the death of Charles IV the Fair and the suppression of the Capetian dynasty, they transferred the crown to Philip VI of Valois.
Under the first Valois (cm. VALOIS) and especially during the Hundred Years' War (cm. HUNDRED YEARS WAR) 1337-1453, when the royal power needed emergency financial support and the consolidation of all the forces of France, the Estates General achieved its greatest influence. Using the right to approve taxes, they tried to initiate the adoption of new laws. In 1355, under King John II the Brave (cm. JOHN II THE BRAVE), The Estates General agreed to allocate funds to the king only if a number of conditions were met. In an effort to avoid abuse, the Estates General themselves began to appoint proxies to collect taxes.
After the Battle of Poitiers (cm. BATTLE OF POITIERS)(1356) King John II the Brave was captured by the British. Taking advantage of the situation, the Estates General, led by the Provost (cm. PREVOT (official)) Paris by Etienne Marcel (cm. ETHIENNE MARSEILLE) and the Lansky bishop Robert Lecoq came up with a reform program. They demanded that the Dauphin Charles of Valois (the future Charles V the Wise) take over control of France. (cm. CHARLES V the Wise)), replaced his advisers with representatives from the three estates and did not dare to make independent decisions. These demands were supported by the provincial states. The Estates General expressed their claims to power in the Great March Ordinance of 1357. According to its provisions, only those taxes and fees that were approved by the Estates General were recognized as legal. The Ordinance proclaimed the strictness of the principle of class courts (according to feudal norms, everyone could be convicted only by those equal in status), which narrowed the prerogatives of royal power in the judicial sphere.
The Dauphin Charles was forced to accept the terms of the Great March Ordinance, but immediately began to fight for its abolition. A cunning and resourceful politician, he managed to win over the majority of the nobles and clergy to his side. Already in 1358, the Dauphin announced the abolition of the ordinance, which caused indignation among the Parisian townspeople led by Etienne Marcel (see Parisian uprising of 1357-1358 (cm. PARIS UPRISING 1357-58)). The Parisians were supported by some other cities and detachments of peasants (participants of the Jacquerie (cm. JACQUERIE)). But the new staff of the Estates General, assembled in Compiegne, supported the Dauphin, and the Paris uprising was suppressed.
Having achieved the obedience of the classes, the Dauphin Charles, who became the king of France in 1364, preferred to solve financial problems with meetings of notables (cm. NOTABLES), leaving to the Estates General only the problems of consolidating the forces of France in the fight against the British. His successors followed a similar policy. However, during the period of rivalry between the Bourguignons and the Armagnacs, it was the Estates General that supported Charles VII of Valois (cm. CHARLES VII) in strengthening royal power. In the 1420s and 1430s they again played an active political role. Of particular importance were the states of 1439, meeting in Orleans. They forbade the lords to have their own army, recognizing such a right only for the king; established a tax tag (cm. TALIA) for the maintenance of the king's standing army.
At the same time, the enmity of the townspeople with the nobles, the disunity of the cities did not allow the States General to achieve the expansion of their rights, like the English Parliament. Moreover, by the mid-15th century, most of French society agreed that the king had the right to introduce new taxes and fees without asking the permission of the Estates General. The widespread introduction of the tag (a permanent direct tax) provided the treasury with a solid source of income and relieved kings of the need to coordinate financial policies with representatives of the estates. Charles VII did not fail to take advantage of this. Having established himself on the throne, from 1439 until the very end of his reign in 1461, he never assembled the Estates General.
During the Huguenot Wars
Having lost the right to vote taxes, the Estates General lose real political significance and enter a time of decline. During his reign, King Louis XI of Valois (cm. LOUIS XI) assembled the Estates General only once in 1467, and then only to receive formal authority to make any decisions for the benefit of France without convening the Estates General. In 1484, the states were convened due to the minority of King Charles VIII of Valois. They are interesting because for the first time, not only the urban, but also the rural tax-paying population was represented among the deputies of the third estate. These Estates General made a number of decisions about the control of royal power, but all of them remained well-intentioned. Subsequently, Charles VIII never convened the Estates General until the end of his reign.
From the end of the 15th century, the system of absolute monarchy finally took shape in France. (cm. ABSOLUTISM), and the very thought of limiting the prerogatives of royal power becomes blasphemous. Accordingly, the institution of the Estates General fell into complete decline. Louis XII Valois (cm. LOUIS XII Valois) collected them only once in 1506, Francis I of Valois (cm. FRANCIS I Valois)- never at all, Henry II of Valois (cm. HENRY II Valois)- also once in 1548, and then he appointed many deputies of his own free will.
The importance of the Estates General increases again during the Huguenot Wars (cm. HUGUENOT WARS). And the weakened royal power, and both hostile religious camps, and the estates themselves were interested in using the authority of the states in their own interests. But the split in the country was so deep that it did not allow the assembly of deputies whose decisions would be legitimate for the warring parties. However, Chancellor L'Hopital in 1560 assembled the Estates General in Orleans. The following year they continued their work in Pontoise, but without deputies from the clergy, who sat separately in Poissy at the religious dispute between Catholics and Huguenots. As a result of the work of the deputies, the “Orleans Ordinance” was developed, based on which L'Hopital tried to begin reforms in France. In general, the deputies spoke in favor of turning the Estates General into a permanent body of state power supervising the activities of the king.
It is not surprising that the royal power avoided convening new states. But, nevertheless, in 1576 King Henry III of Valois (cm. HENRY III Valois) was forced to reassemble the Estates General in Blois. Most deputies supported the Catholic League formed in May 1574 (cm. CATHOLIC LEAGUE in France), which sought to limit royal power. In the legislative sphere, the Estates General demanded that the laws of the kingdom be placed above the decrees of the king; the decrees of the Estates General could only be repealed by the Estates General themselves, and if the law received the unanimous support of all classes, then it came into force without royal approval. Deputies also demanded participation in the appointment of ministers. Representatives of the third estate demanded the restoration of traditional municipal rights and liberties, constrained by the royal administration over the previous decades. With the Ordinance of Blois, Henry III expressed solidarity with the demands of the Estates General, but this step had no real significance due to the general chaos in France during the Huguenot Wars.
In 1588, the Catholic League regained strength and achieved the convening of new Estates General in Blois. And this time the majority of the deputies belonged to the Catholic camp. Under the slogans of limiting royal power and recognizing the supreme sovereignty of the Estates General, they sought to take power from Henry III and transfer it to the Catholic leader Henry Guise (cm. GIZY). This rivalry ended with the tragic deaths of both Henrys, and the former leader of the Huguenot camp, Henry IV Bourbon, became king. (cm. HENRY IV Bourbon). In 1593 in Paris, opponents of the new king convened the Estates General, but its deputies did not represent the political forces of all of France and were unable to prevent Henry IV from taking all power into his own hands.
The reign of absolutism
The rise to power of Henry IV was largely the result of a compromise between the warring sectors of French society. Having taken an openly pro-Catholic position during the Huguenot Wars, the Estates General found themselves out of work in the new political situation. Henry IV ruled as an absolute monarch. Only at the beginning of his reign did he convene a meeting of notables, whose deputies he appointed himself. The notables approved taxes for three years in advance and later asked the king to rule independently.
During the minority of King Louis XIII of Bourbon, in 1614, the penultimate Estates General in the history of France took place. They revealed serious contradictions between the interests of the third estate and the upper classes. Representatives of the clergy and nobility insisted on exemption from taxes, the provision of new and consolidation of old privileges, that is, they defended not national, but narrow-class interests. They refused to see the deputies of the third estate as equal partners, treating them as servants. The humiliated position of the third estate was also supported by the court. If the nobles and clergy could sit in hats in the presence of the king, then representatives of the third estate were obliged to kneel before the monarch and with their heads uncovered. The complaints of the third estate about the severity of taxes and legal insecurity did not find understanding. As a result, the states did not make a single significant decision. The only thing the estates could agree on was the wish for the king to assemble the Estates General once every ten years. At the beginning of 1615 the states were dissolved.
In 1617 and 1626, meetings of notables were convened, and subsequently, until the Great French Revolution, the state managed without a national representative institution. Nevertheless, representative institutions continued to operate locally - provincial states and parliaments, although not in all provinces. And the very idea of ​​the Estates General was not forgotten and was revived during the deep crisis of royal power at the end of the 18th century.
Only an acute political crisis forced King Louis XVI of Bourbon to convene new Estates General. They began their work on May 5, 1789. And already on June 17, deputies of the third estate declared themselves the National Assembly, responsible for the formation of legislative power in the country. At the request of King Louis XVI of Bourbon, deputies from the nobility and clergy also joined the National Assembly. On July 9, 1789, the National Assembly proclaimed itself the Constituent Assembly with the aim of developing new legislative foundations for the French state. The events of the first stage of the Great French Revolution are closely related to the activities of the Estates General of 1789.
In the subsequent history of France, the name of the Estates General was adopted by some representative assemblies that considered current problems and expressed broad public opinion (for example, the Assembly of the Estates General for general disarmament in May 1963).


encyclopedic Dictionary. 2009 .

  • Wikipedia - (States General or Estates General), usually a meeting of representatives of the three estates of the kingdom: clergy, nobles and commoners (third estate representatives of the city, corporations). They were convened by the sovereign for political consultations. G.sh.... ... The World History
  • Legal Dictionary

    1) in France, the highest class representative institution in 1302–1789, consisting of deputies of the clergy, nobility and the 3rd estate. They were convened by kings mainly to obtain their consent to collect taxes. Deputies of the 3rd estate... ... Big Encyclopedic Dictionary

    1) in France, the highest class representative institution in 1302-1789, consisting of deputies of the clergy, nobility and the third estate. They were convened by kings mainly to obtain their consent to collect taxes. Deputies of the third... ... Historical Dictionary

    STATES GENERAL- 1) in France, the highest class representative institution in 1302-1789, consisting of deputies of the clergy, nobility and the third estate. They were convened by kings mainly to obtain their consent to collect taxes. Deputies of the third... ... Legal encyclopedia

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