Revolutionary debt: Attitudes of French political elites toward the domestic creditors of the state, 1787-1794

Item

Title
Revolutionary debt: Attitudes of French political elites toward the domestic creditors of the state, 1787-1794
Identifier
d_2009_2013:db30c07ab27a:11629
identifier
12233
Creator
Schiller, Raymond L.,
Contributor
David G. Troyansky
Date
2013
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
European history | Economic history | cahiers de doleances | creditors of the state | debt | French Revolution | nobility | Third Estate
Abstract
This dissertation examines the public debate surrounding the French national debt and the domestic creditors of the state during, and just prior to, the French Revolution. Focusing on stances expressed by a sample of the cahiers de doleances and by political leaders, it demonstrates how the debt and the creditors were among the chief concerns of revolutionaries from moderates to Jacobin radicals. Through a differential analysis of the cahiers, it shows that despite their often considerable differences on other matters, concerning the debt many -- but not all -- of the clergy, nobility and Third Estate were of a similarly protective opinion. I analyze the differences within, as well as between, the three orders relating to this issue. In part, the aim is to illuminate not only the role of the royal/national debt in this debate, but also that of its owners, the state creditors, as a crucial constituency embedded within most social groups of the Old Regime. Furthermore, underscoring both progressive and conservative stances among the privileged orders, the work contributes to historiography which examines their role in the Revolution. Finally, the work interprets the debt as a modern property type; the state creditors, as eighteenth-century capitalists; and it explicates their role in overthrowing the Old Regime in its entirety.
Type
dissertation
Source
2009_2013.csv
degree
Ph.D.
Program
History