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II.12 - How, Despite the Progress of Civilization, the Condition of the French Peasant Was Sometimes Worse in the Eighteenth Century Than It Had Been in the Thirteenth

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Jon Elster
Affiliation:
Columbia University, New York
Arthur Goldhammer
Affiliation:
Harvard University, Massachusetts
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Summary

In the eighteenth century, the French peasant may no longer have been prey to petty feudal despots; he was only rarely the target of violence by the government. He enjoyed civil liberty and owned a portion of land. But all the other classes had drawn apart from him, and he lived more isolated, perhaps, than had ever been the case anywhere else in the world. His oppression was of a new and singular sort, and the effects of this deserve close and particular attention.

Early in the seventeenth century, Henri IV complained, according to Péréfixe, that nobles were abandoning the countryside. By the middle of the eighteenth century, this desertion had become almost general. All contemporary sources mention this fact and deplore it: economists in their books, intendants in their correspondence, and agricultural societies in their reports. Incontrovertible proof can be found in the records of the capitation, which was collected at the actual place of residence. Receipts from all of the upper nobility and a portion of the middling nobility were collected in Paris.

Scarcely any nobles remained in the countryside except those with fortunes too small to enable them to leave. These found themselves, relative to their peasant neighbors, in a position in which I do not believe any wealthy landowner had ever found himself before. Since the noble was no longer the peasants' leader, he did not have the interest he once had in getting on with them, helping them out, and showing them the way forward.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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