
French Revolution
Section: Origins of the Revolution
Related: French
History
Historians disagree in evaluating the factors that
brought about the Revolution. To some extent at least, it came not because
France was backward, but because the country's economic and intellectual
development was not matched by social and political change. In the fixed
order of the ancien régime, most bourgeois were unable to exercise commensurate
political and social influence. King Louis XIV, by consolidating absolute
monarchy, had destroyed the roots of feudalism; yet outward feudal forms
persisted and became increasingly burdensome.
France was still governed by privileged groupsthe
nobility and the clergywhile the productive classes were taxed heavily
to pay for foreign wars, court extravagance, and a rising national debt.
For the most part, peasants were small landholders or tenant farmers,
subject to feudal dues, to the royal agents indirect farming (collecting)
taxes, to the corvée (forced
labor), and to tithes and other impositions. Backward agricultural methods
and internal tariff barriers caused recurrent food shortages, which
netted fortunes to grain speculators, and rural overpopulation created
land hunger.
In addition to the economic and social difficulties,
the ancien régime was undermined intellectually by the apostles of the
Enlightenment
. Voltaire
attacked the church and absolutism; Denis Diderot and the
Encyclopédie
advocated social utility and attacked tradition; the baron de Montesquieu made
English constitutionalism fashionable; and the marquis de Condorcet preached
his faith in progress. Most direct in his influence on Revolutionary
thought was J. J. Rousseau ,
especially through his dogma of popular sovereignty. Economic reform,
advocated by the physiocrats
and attempted (1774-76) by A. R. J. Turgot , was
thwarted by the unwillingness of privileged groups to sacrifice any
privileges and by the king's failure to support strong measures.
The direct cause of the Revolution was the chaotic
state of government finance. Director general of finances Jacques Necker
vainly sought to restore public confidence. French participation in
the American Revolution had increased the huge debt, and Necker's successor,
Charles Alexandre de Calonne , called
an Assembly of Notables (1787), hoping to avert bankruptcy by inducing
the privileged classes to share in the financial burden. They refused
in an effort to protect economic privileges.
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