Taxes are one of the three causes of the French Revolution. Taxes are one of the Three causes of the French revolution because. The rich had a much lower taxille , a tax on land, than the poor. This made the poor angry because, They could not afford to pay the tax which left “poor people very poor and their children terribly ragged.” Between 1787 in 1789 it was very good To be nobility and a bad time to be poor.…
The French Revolution was a quest for liberty, and centered on people who wanted their freedom. They wanted to be treated as equal participants in the community, not as slaves for the royals or nobles. The peasants who represents more than 90% of France’s population, were working for their own families and everyone else as they paid much more in taxes. Brotherhood was the way of everyone coming together as one. Hubris is excessive pride in one’s self, people during the French Revolution did not want to admit they were wrong for what they were doing and that they did not want less entitlement then they had. Fiscal irresponsibility was brought on by the higher debts, and taxes were raised so the government could get out of the finical hole they were in. The democracy was a new construction of power where the politics were giving everyone the chance to be heard and to be equal. Technology at the beginning of the French Revolution was lacking, but as it continued throughout the years it became a resource at war.…
The Social causes for the French Revolution were varied. One such problem was the well being of the 3rd estate. According to Travels in France by Arthur Young the conditions of the 3rd estate were terrible as people could not purchase bread due to the high prices and the ragged conditions of the children (Document #1). Because of these factors the people were forced to fight each other for a piece of bread alone. Another problem was the middle class’ knowledge of the Enlightenment. According to The French Revolution historian Albert Mathiez, the middle class’ knowledge of the Enlightenment made them start the revolution rather than the unintelligent working class (Document #3). The social world of France was a front for the revolution to begin because of the people who were mistreated by the government.…
The French Revolution began in 1789 due to the inequality of French society. The French society was divided into three estates. The first two consisted of clergy and nobility respectively. The third was made up of merchants, businessmen, lawyers, and peasants. They had the least rights and privileges compared with the other estates. The third estate had to pay all the taxes imposed by the king, King Louis XVI, whereas the other estates were excused from it. This made life harder for the peasants, but also sparked the French revolution when the Third Estate began to demand more rights.…
The French Revolution was caused by the fiscal irresponsibility if the monarch (The Silver Bear Cafe) The Clergy and the nobles did not have to pay taxes. This hurt the finances tremendously. France was still hurting from the seven year war. Due to the bad weather, the fields were in poor condition for the harvest. The Government was broke and people were starving.…
On top of this, the king of France while this occurred, Louis XIV, pursued his own pleasure with his riches rather than using them to save the country from their impending economic crisis. His contribution to the country’s deficit spending did not help France. In addition to the debt caused by war and careless deficit spending, “bad harvests sent food prices soaring” bringing “hunger to the poorer peasants and [the Third Estate]” (Esler 213). This describes how the entire Third Estate further suffered for a small population of France, causing fury among them. On top of being the only people that paid taxes, they had to pay extra for small portions of food or they starved.…
France was in a state of a very unstable economy before and during the Revolution. There was an inequality in taxation and economic deflation. So, naturally, the goals of the Revolution were to develop equal taxation and inflation in the economy. When Napoleon came to power, his first order of business was to get the economy on a solid footing. In order to do so, he set up a well-organized tax-collecting system. Under his leadership, the first -ever national bank in France was also opened. This led to a better control in managing the financial problems and resulted in a better, more stabilized economy.…
The French revolution started when France went far into debt because they have spent too much money on wars like the Seven Years War, and the king was not able to fund the country. He tried raising the taxes on the lower class of peasants, they were even taxed for…
There were many issues that led up to the French Revolution. For example, the unfair tax burden. According to Document two, the Third Estate paid all of the government taxes. There were three estates. The 1st estate was all of the clergy; they had wealth because they collected taxes from the 3rd estate and they also owned land. They had power, food, liberty, and freedom. The 2nd estate was the rich titled nobility. They derived their wealth from land ownership, and they collected some taxes. They also had power, food, and freedom. The 3rd estate was separated into three different classes. The Bourgeoisie was the highest of the third estate; they had cash wealth since they were made up of the merchants, bankers, and artisans. The Bourgeoisie paid very high taxes, and had very little power, they had a food supply, but they had no power. The peasant farmers, and the city workers had no wealth, power, or liberty, and they had to pay taxes. The 1st and 2nd estate only took up about 3% of the population. The Bourgeoisie thought that the taxes were unfair to the entire 3rd estate. Document three explained how a peasant had 7 children, and couldn’t support her family, but she still had to pay taxes. This shows how unfair the tax burden was.…
Economy was the dominant factor concerning the Revolution. It was the main and the most influential issue that was continuously an explosive element through much of the French Revolution. The French had collected a huge national debt, which they had no means of taking care of. France had the option to declare bankruptcy, lessening their overall payment on their debt, but the once powerful country was too weak and maybe even too prideful to go through with the action. Along with having an increased financial obligation, France had little to no way of paying off the debt. Even though half of France’s annual budget went to paying off debt, it still wasn’t enough. France had no central bank, no paper currency, and no means of creating…
The start of the French Revolution was directly in French society. Society was constantly dominated by nobles, or a social group that was primarily made up of: aristocrats, officeholders, professionals, merchants and businessmen. The French society was broken up into three social classes, or better known as “Estates.”. The First Estate was comprised of all the clergy; the Second Estate was comprised of the nobility, and the Third Estate was comprised of everyone else, including wealthy lawyers, businessmen, urban laborers and poor peasants. The Third Estate was by far the largest social class. All of these classes had one thing in common, and that was a want for an economy that would serve their interests. The nobility depended on a constant infusion of talent and economic power form the wealthy social groups represented in the Third Estate. Less prosperous lawyers were jealous of the privileged position very few had in their profession. Over the course of the century the price of offices rose, making it more difficult to buy one’s way into nobility, and creating tensions between middling members of the Third Estate and the very rich in trade and commerce who were the only group able to afford to climb the social ladder. Several fault lines ran through the elite and the middle classes which led to resentment of the government and a need for change.…
Before the Revolution, France was divided socially in a structure known as the Old Regime. It consisted of three estates. The First Estate was the clergy, who owned ten percent of the land but comprised of only one percent of the population. The Second Estate, with nobility, included two percent of the population but owned thirty-five percent of the land. The largest was the Third Estate, which was made up of the middle class, peasants, and city workers, owned only fifty-five percent of the land but made up ninety-seven percent of the population (Doc. 2). The Third Estate was taxed in extreme proportions so much so that bread, which was a necessity and the base of all meals, became very difficult to pay and obtain. It was becoming increasingly difficult to survive on so little (Doc 1). However, the first two Estates lived easily with no taxes. Even the bourgeoisie, the middle class, became as wealthy as the preceding Estate, but because of where they were born, they were still burdened by taxes. This led to restlessness in the Third Estate. Since they comprised most of France, they joined together and planned a revolt.…
The French Revolution began just as any other. France was spiraling into bankruptcy, mostly due to extravagant military spending in the American Revolution and the Seven Years’ War, much to the frustration of the French people. Taxes were raised to support France in the New World, while New World battles were paid for in debt. Taxes could not be raised high enough to erase the massive debt that was engulfing the country. The clergy and nobility were apparently unfazed by the debt, with the commoners carrying the massive taxes.…
During the eighteenth century France was going through heavy financial hardships. The financial situation France was in at the time strongly influenced the people to take part in supporting The French Revolution with all the problems it came with and the negative revealing light it shed on the government. The tax system they had in place was extremely unfair all the tax burden was placed on the shoulders of the middle class and the peasants. This was immensely arbitrary due to the fact that these two classes do not have a lot of money. Even though the aristocrats and clergy may have by far been the smallest group of people in number, but they easily still had more money than all the rest of…
The late 1700's were a period of great social and political revolution in Western civilization. The French Revolution was a major part of this sweeping change in the way Europeans (and the newborn Americans) perceived the function of government and the most effective ways of governing. The French Revolution had many long term and short term causes and effects, and was one of the most violent periods in the history of the country. There were many factors that contributed to the spark of the revolution. There were three main causes of the French Revolution: gross mishandling of governing duties and incompetence in the leadership of King Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, the large and very unjust social and economic gap between the first two privileged estates and the poor third estate, and finally the revolutionary ideas of the enlightenment and their influence on the philosophies of the people.…