[Memoirs Of The Court Of Marie Antoinette<br> Queen Of France by Madame Campan]@TWC D-Link book
Memoirs Of The Court Of Marie Antoinette
Queen Of France

CHAPTER X
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The constitution planned for the new nation was digested at Paris, and while liberty, equality, and the rights of man were commented upon by the Condorcets, Baillys, Mirabeaus, etc., the minister Segur published the King's edict, which, by repealing that of 1st November, 1750, declared all officers not noble by four generations incapable of filling the rank of captain, and denied all military rank to the roturiers, excepting sons of the chevaliers de St.Louis.
["M.

de Segur," says Chamfort, "having published an ordinance which prohibited the admission of any other than gentlemen into the artillery corps, and, on the other hand, none but well-educated persons being proper for admission, a curious scene took place: the Abbe Bossat, examiner of the pupils, gave certificates only to plebeians, while Cherin gave them only to gentlemen.

Out of one hundred pupils, there were not above four or five who were qualified in both respects."] The injustice and absurdity of this law was no doubt a secondary cause of the Revolution.

To understand the despair and rage with which this law inspired the Tiers Etat one should have belonged to that honourable class.
The provinces were full of roturier families, who for ages had lived as people of property upon their own domains, and paid the taxes.

If these persons had several sons, they would place one in the King's service, one in the Church, another in the Order of Malta as a chevalier servant d'armes, and one in the magistracy; while the eldest preserved the paternal manor, and if he were situated in a country celebrated for wine, he would, besides selling his own produce, add a kind of commission trade in the wines of the canton.


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