Answer:
ExplaMAIN IDEA WHY IT MATTERS NOW TERMS & NAMES 
ECONOMICS Economic and 
social inequalities in the Old 
Regime helped cause the 
French Revolution. 
Throughout history, economic 
and social inequalities have at 
times led peoples to revolt 
against their governments. 
• Old Regime 
• estate 
• Louis XVI 
• Marie Antoinette 
• Estates-General 
• National 
Assembly 
• Tennis Court 
Oath 
• Great Fear 
1 
SETTING THE STAGE In the 1700s, France was considered the most advanced 
country of Europe. It had a large population and a prosperous foreign trade. It 
was the center of the Enlightenment, and France’s culture was widely praised 
and imitated by the rest of the world. However, the appearance of success was 
deceiving. There was great unrest in France, caused by bad harvests, high 
prices, high taxes, and disturbing questions raised by the Enlightenment ideas 
of Locke, Rousseau, and Voltaire. 
The Old Order 
In the 1770s, the social and political system of France—the Old Regime— 
remained in place. Under this system, the people of France were divided into 
three large social classes, or estates. 
The Privileged Estates Two of the estates had privileges, including access to 
high offices and exemptions from paying taxes, that were not granted to the 
members of the third. The Roman Catholic Church, whose clergy formed the 
First Estate, owned 10 percent of the land in France. It provided education and 
relief services to the poor and contributed about 2 percent of its income to the 
government. The Second Estate was made up of rich nobles. Although they 
accounted for just 2 percent of the population, the nobles owned 20 percent of 
the land and paid almost no taxes. The majority of the clergy and the nobility 
scorned Enlightenment ideas as radical notions that threatened their status and 
power as privileged persons. 
The Third Estate About 97 percent of the people belonged to the Third Estate. The 
three groups that made up this estate differed greatly in their economic conditions. 
The first group—the bourgeoisie (BUR•zhwah•ZEE), or middle class—were 
bankers, factory owners, merchants, professionals, and skilled artisans. Often, they 
were well educated and believed strongly in the Enlightenment ideals of liberty and 
equality. Although some of the bourgeoisie were as rich as nobles, they paid high 
taxes and, like the rest of the Third Estate, lacked privileges. Many felt that their 
wealth entitled them to a greater degree of social status and political power. 
The workers of France’s cities formed the second, and poorest, group within 
the Third Estate. These urban workers included tradespeople, apprentices, laborers, 
and domestic servants. Paid low wages and frequently out of work, they often 
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