[The Origins of Contemporary France<br> Volume 1 (of 6) by Hippolyte A. Taine]@TWC D-Link book
The Origins of Contemporary France
Volume 1 (of 6)

CHAPTER IV
11/62

One fact alone shows the extent of these favors: I have counted eighty-three abbeys of men possessed by the almoners, chaplains, preceptors or readers to the king, queen, princes, and princesses; one of them, the abbe de Vermont, has 80,000 livres income in benefices.

In short, the fifteen hundred ecclesiastical sinecures under royal appointment, large or small, constitute a flow of money for the service of the great, whether they pour it out in golden rain to recompense the assiduity of their intimates and followers, or keep it in large reservoirs to maintain the dignity of their rank.

Besides, according to the fashion of giving more to those who have already enough, the richest prelates possess, above their episcopal revenues, the wealthiest abbeys.
According to the Almanac, M.d'Argentre, bishop of Seez,[1408] thus enjoys an extra income of 34,000 livres; M.de Suffren, bishop of Sisteron, 36,000; M.de Girac, bishop of Rennes, 40,000; M.de Bourdeille, bishop of Soissons, 42,000; M.d'Agout de Bonneval, bishop of Pamiers, 45,000; M.de Marboeuf bishop of Autun, 50,000; M.de Rohan, bishop of Strasbourg, 60,000; M.de Cice, archbishop of Bordeaux, 63,000; M.de Luynes, archbishop of Sens, 82,000; M.de Bernis, archbishop of Alby, 100,000; M.de Brienne, archbishop of Toulouse, l06,000; M.de Dillon, archbishop of Narbonne, 120,000; M.de Larochefoucauld, archbishop of Rouen, 130,000; that is to say, double and sometimes triple the sums stated, and quadruple, and often six times as much, according to the present standard.

M.de Rohan derived from his abbeys, not 60,000 livres but 400,000, and M.de Brienne, the most opulent of all, next to M.de Rohan, the 24th of August, 1788, at the time of leaving the ministry,[1409] sent to withdraw from the treasury "the 20,000 livres of his month's salary which had not yet fallen due, a punctuality the more remarkable that, without taking into account the salary of his place, with the 6,000 livres pension attached to his blue ribbon, he possessed, in benefices, 678,000 livres income, and that, still quite recently, a cutting of wood on one of his abbey domains yielded him a million." Let us pass on to the lay budget; here also are prolific sinecures, and almost all belong to the nobles.

Of this class there are in the provinces the thirty-seven great governments-general, the seven small governments-general, the sixty-six lieutenancies-general, the four hundred and seven special governments, the thirteen governorships of royal palaces, and a number of others, all of them for ostentation and empty honors.


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