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Ancien R é gime France. 1661-1789. Ancien R égime Monarchs. Louis XIV ruled 1642-1715 Marie Therese of Spain Louis XV ruled 1715-1774 Marie of Poland Louis XVI ruled 1774-1792 (ex. 1793) Marie Antoinette of Austria. Louis XIV. Louis XV. Louis XV and Marie. Madame du Pompadour.
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Ancien Régime France 1661-1789
Ancien Régime Monarchs • Louis XIV ruled 1642-1715 • Marie Therese of Spain • Louis XV ruled 1715-1774 • Marie of Poland • Louis XVI ruled 1774-1792 (ex. 1793) • Marie Antoinette of Austria
Society of Orders(or ‘Estates’) • First Estate: Clergy: about 100,000 people • Parish priests • Monks and nuns • About 0.5% of population • Paid no taxes; gave ‘donation’ to monarchy
Second Estate: Nobility • About 350,000 people; about 1.5% of population • Two Groups: • Nobility of Sword: old, inherited titles • Nobility of Robe: newer, purchased titles • Owned 25% of land • Exempt from most taxes
Third Estate: Everyone Else • 98% of population: • Bourgeoisie: • merchants, bankers, professionals • some wealthier than most nobles • Lesser Bourgeoisie (‘petit’): • small shopkeepers, artisans, craftsmen • Urban poor: • junk dealers, washerwomen, water carriers, unemployed • Peasants (farmers): • 85% of population • about half owned some land
Privilege, not Equality • All had privileges, no one had ‘rights’ • First & Second estates: • Exemption from most taxes • Legal privileges • Access to King • Third Estate: depended on status • Poor: gleaning, berries on roadside, candle drippings in church
‘Absolutism of Façade’ • Vast, confusing Bureaucracy • Parlements vs. Intendants: overlapping responsibilities • Many offices sold to the highest bidder • King isolated at Versailles, surrounded by sycophants and court intrigue • Ministers served at pleasure of King • King intervened at highest levels, but not to reconstruct the system
Finances • Royal Finances • Government spent more than revenues • Borrowed heavily to meet expenses • Sold offices/titles to raise cash • No budget or public accounting until 1780s • French Economy • Richest in Europe but: • Enormous tax burden on 3rd Estate
BeaumarchaisPierre-Augustin Caron • Born 1732, son of a master clock maker • Only surviving son in a family of six • Educated to follow his father’s profession • 1753: Invents a new escapement for watches • Invention presented by King’s official watchmaker as his own; Caron sues and wins
Career at Court • 1754: Caron presented at court • 1755: Meets Franquet, an officer at court • 1756: Franquet dies, leaving office to Caron • 1756: Caron marries Widow Franquet • Caron adds name of a farm to his: Caron de Beaumarchais • 1757: Wife dies unexpectedly; Caron embroiled in a lawsuit with her family
Career at Court • 1757: Enters Business arrangement with a prominent banker (and husband to Madame de Pompadour) • 1759: Teaches Music to Royal daughters • 1761: Buys office of Secretary to the King for 55,000 livres; office confers nobility • 1760s: Business prospers; he becomes wealthy
1768: Marries again; wife dies a few years later leaving substantial annuity • 1771: Business partner dies; heir sues for alleged debts • 1770s: Beaumarchais in dispute with a duke over Mlle. Menard, an actress; both men imprisoned • Various lawsuits and court actions • Makes reputation as a writer and dramatist
Marriage of Figaro • Sequel to 1775 Barber of Seville • Written by 1778 but not performed until 1784 • Gave private readings and performances at homes of nobility, even at court • 1784 Debut was a smashing success