Research topic:States-General

Click to see an enlarged picture
States-General. Wikimedia Commons (Public Domain)
Find more facts and information on our topic page about States-General

States-General

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition

States-General or Estates-General, diet or national assembly in which the chief estates (see estate ) of a nation—usually clergy, nobles, and towns (or commons)—were represented as separate bodies. The name survives in the Netherlands, where the two houses of parliament are known as States-General; however, only the name has been preserved there, for the lower house represents the entire nation by direct election, and the upper house represents the provincial estates, which are also elected democratically. Like the English Parliament , the States-General of France and other European assemblies had their origin in the king's council, or curia regis. The Cortes of the Spanish kingdoms, the diet of the Holy Roman Empire, and the diets of Bohemia, Hungary, Poland, and the Scandinavian countries all originated as royal councils and all represented, in varying degrees, the principal estates of the realm. They are generally said to have grown out of the earlier Germanic assemblies. Whatever their origin, they developed along entirely different lines in the various countries, and by the 16th cent. there was little or no resemblance between the English Parliament, the States-General of France, and the States-General of the United Provinces of the Netherlands.

The States-General of France

Origins

The French States-General owes its fame less to its importance than to the mode of its creation and the manner of its demise. The first French assembly known by that name was summoned in 1302 at Paris, by King Philip IV , in order to obtain national approval for his anticlerical policy. Philip may be said to have created the body only in the sense that he assembled a larger and more regular council than had before been assembled. From 1302 to 1789 its constitution retained the same division into the first, second, and third estates, i.e., the clergy, nobles, and commons. Its powers, never clearly defined, tended to vary inversely with those of the royal authority. The States-General of 1302 and 1308 dutifully approved, respectively, Philip's measures against Pope Boniface VIII and those against the Knights Templars ; that of 1314 granted the king subsidies, but the grant was more or less nominal, with the king dictating his orders.

An Ineffective Counterweight to Royal Power

The French States-General never obtained the financial control that made the English Parliament a powerful institution. It did not always meet as a single body, but often convened separately as the States-General of Langue d'Oïl (N France) and the States-General of Langue d'Oc (S France). The more important of these, the States-General of Langue d'Oïl, made a strong bid for power in 1355-57, during the captivity of King John II in England. Under the leadership of Étienne Marcel it forced the dauphin (later King Charles V ) to promulgate the Grande Ordonnance, which would have greatly expanded its financial and administrative powers and made it the virtual legislature of France. The dauphin, however, revoked his concessions almost as soon as he had made them and called a rival assembly at Compiègne. Although later States-General often opposed the king and even won temporary concessions, the continuous consolidation of the royal power prevented the emergence of a truly parliamentary body.

The States-General regained some importance in the chaotic period of the Wars of Religion (16th cent.). However, the opposing factions used it merely as an instrument for their own aims. The States-General of Paris of 1614 accomplished nothing, and the estates were not convoked again until 1789. Under the guidance of the chief ministers of state, Cardinals Richelieu and Mazarin, and under the firm hand of King Louis XIV, royal absolutism reached its apex in the 17th cent. The only serious check to the royal power was the Parlement of Paris (see parlement ), which was a judicial rather than a representative body. Provincial estates, however, continued to function in the so-called pays d'états, i.e., the provinces of Brittany, Flanders, Artois, Lorraine, Alsace, Burgundy, Franche-Comté, Dauphiné, Provence, Languedoc, Béarn and Navarre, and several others. The major part of France, however, was more directly subject to the central administration.

The French Revolution

When in 1788 the Assembly of Notables (a meeting of the chief nobles, clerics, and magistrates) failed to solve the financial crisis of the French government, King Louis XVI ordered elections for the States-General as his last resort. Although no official pronouncement indicated that the assembly was to act as a truly deliberative body, its convocation was thus interpreted by the third estate and by the liberals among the nobility and clergy, who hoped to introduce English parliamentary government into France. At the same time, the government ordered the compilation of lists of grievances in the various provinces; these were to serve as a basis for discussing the necessary reforms. The preparation of the lists contributed to the impression that a general reform was impending and that the States-General was to act as a national assembly representing the sovereign will of the people.

On May 5, 1789, the States-General assembled at Versailles. Almost immediately the crucial issue of voting procedure came under debate. If the three estates adhered to tradition and voted as separate bodies, the third estate was bound to be continually outvoted. If voting was by head, the third estate (whose deputies equaled in number those of the combined clergy and nobility) was bound to win on most points, for many clerics and nobles sympathized with its aspirations. In June, 1789, the third estate, joined by a number of deputies from the clergy, forced the issue and declared itself the National Assembly. With this act of defiance the French Revolution may be said to have begun; and with Louis XVI's recognition of the fait accompli, the States-General ceased to exist.

Bibliography

See G. M. Picot, Histoire des États Généraux (5 vol., 2d ed. 1888, repr. 1969).


Find more facts and information related to the .
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Channon takes Power on Classic route; INTERNATIONAL ZONE PREVIEW: ITALY Premio Parioli G2 Capannelle 1m.(Sports)
; ...first Classic runner this season when Royal Power contests the Premio Parioli, the Italian...at Kempton on April 1. Channon said: Royal Power is a very nice horse. He had nowhere...quite a handy type, so I'm hopeful. Royal Power will be ridden by Ted Durcan in the... Read more
Horse Racing: Powering to victory.(Sport)
; ROYAL POWER battled to victory for trainer Mick Channon...in the Italian equivalent last month, Royal Power made no mistake this time as he hit the...place with Sovereign Dancer. Catlin said: Royal Power is a very good horse, I thought I had... Read more
Royal Power working smartly
; Go-Ram New Straits Times 05-05-2006 Royal Power working smartly Byline: Go-Ram Edition: Main/Lifestyle ROYAL Power wrapped up his preparation for his...6 seconds. The going was yielding. Royal Power, who arrived unraced in March 2003... Read more
Channon claims German glory.(News)
; Royal power battled to victory for trainer Mick Channon...in the Italian equivalent last month, Royal Power made no mistake this time as he hit the...place with Sovereign Dancer. Catlin said: Royal Power is a very good horse, I thought I had... Read more
Power and the glory for Mick.(Sport Racing)
; Byline: Racing Round-up Royal Power battled to victory for trainer...Italian equivalent last month, Royal Power made no mistake this time as he...Sovereign Dancer. Catlin said: Royal Power is a very good horse, I thought... Read more
Horse Racing: Catlin wins first Classic on Power.(Sports)
; REPORT: GERMANY Mehl-Mulhens-Rennen G2 Cologne, 1m ROYAL POWER gave Chris Catlin his first Classic with an all-out...Of England ran on well it was too late. Catlin said: Royal Power was a bit unlucky in the Italian Guineas and deserved... Read more
Horse Racing: INTERNATIONAL ZONE - Royal Power attempts to continue fine British record.(Sports)
; ...G2 (German 2,000 Guineas) Cologne 1m (live on SIS, 4.10pm) ROYAL POWER does the honours for Mick Channon today in the Mehl-Ml-hens-Renn...Chapple-Hyam-trained Chief Commander - but the pair face a strong home team. Royal Power was runner-up to Rattle And Hum in the Italian version three... Read more
Royal Power maintaining form
; Go-Ram New Straits Times 12-08-2005 Royal Power maintaining form Byline: Go-Ram Edition: Main/Lifestyle ROYAL Power who won his last race showed further...good. Arriving unraced in March 2003, Royal Power has two wins and two thirds in 18... Read more
Horse Racing: Rattle And Hum denies Channon in Guineas; INTERNATIONAL ZONE REPORT: ITALY Premio Parioli G2 Capannelle 1m Overall winner Thomas Reed's poignant tale of betting shop life.(Sports)
; ...the Capannelle yesterday, beating the Mick Channon-trained Royal Power by a length and a quarter. The winner, a 19-10 shot, was scoring...over this same course on May 21. Ted Durcan, the rider of Royal Power, said: He kept on in good style. We had every chance but could... Read more
Fairman proves the better horse
; ...Visuanathan, Osman Sidek and Francis Nathan . Visuanathan saddled Royal Power (Race 3), Osman Fortune Star (Race 7) and Nathan was successful with Caribbean Time (Race 8). Royal Power, ridden by apprentice Mohammad Nizam, paid RM38 and RM15 while... Read more

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

States-General
States-General (or Estates-General) Usually a gathering of representatives of the three...throughout the 14th century it was rarely convoked and the first proper States-General in France was in 1484 in the reign of Louis XI. Read more
States-General
States-General National assembly composed of separate divisions, or ‘estates’, each historically representing a different social... Read more
Dutch West India Company
trading and colonizing company, chartered by the States-General of the Dutch republic in 1621 and organized in 1623...company's permission. The company was responsible to the States-General in larger matters, such as declaring war, but otherwise... Read more
Étienne Marcel
...leader, provost of the merchants of Paris. In the States-General of 1355 he and Robert Le Coq bargained for governmental...agree to the Grande Ordonnance, which granted the States-General far-reaching powers. Shortly afterward, Charles managed... Read more
Estates-General
see States-General . Read more

Related research topics

Online videos

UFO Area 51 - The Alien Interview 01

For Students and teachers!

HighBeam Encyclopedia provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

HighBeam Encyclopedia provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: