Q. what was the Ancien Regime?
Ans-The Ancien Regime was the social and political system fine the kingdom of France from the 15th until the end of the 18th countries.
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Explanation:
the political and social system of the Kingdom of France from the Late Middle Ages (circa 15th century) until the French Revolution of 1789, which led to the abolition (1792) of hereditary monarchy and of the feudal system of the French nobility.[1] The Valois and Bourbon dynasties ruled during the Ancien Régime. The term is occasionally used to refer to the similar feudal systems of the time elsewhere in Europe such as that of Switzerland.
The administrative and social structures of the Ancien Régime in France resulted from years of state-building, legislative acts (like the Ordinance of Villers-Cotterêts), internal conflicts, and civil wars. The Valois dynasty's attempts at reform and at re-establishing control over the scattered political centres of the country were hindered by the Huguenot Wars, also called the Wars of Religion, from 1562 to 1598. Much of the reigns of Henry IV (r. 1589–1610) and Louis XIII (r. 1610–1643) and the early years of Louis XIV (r. 1643–1715) focused on administrative centralisation. Despite the notion of "absolute monarchy" (typified by the king's right to issue lettres de cachet) and efforts to create a centralized state, Ancien Régime France remained a country of systemic irregularities: administrative, legal, judicial, and ecclesiastic divisions and prerogatives frequently overlapped, while the French nobility struggled to maintain their rights in the matters of local government and justice, and powerful internal conflicts (like the Fronde) protested against this centralization.
The drive for centralisation related directly to questions of royal finances and the ability to wage war. The internal conflicts and dynastic crises of the 16th and the 17th centuries between Catholics and Protestants and the Habsburgs' internal family conflict and the territorial expansion of France in the 17th century all demanded great sums, which needed to be raised by taxes, such as the land tax (taille) and the tax on salt (gabelle), and by contributions of men and service from the nobility.
One key to the centralisation was the replacing of personal patronage systems, which had been organised around the king and other nobles by institutional systems that were constructed around the state.[2] The appointments of intendants, representatives of royal power in the provinces, greatly undermined the local control by regional nobles. The same was true of the greater reliance that was shown by the royal court on the noblesse de robe as judges and royal counselors. The creation of regional parlements had the same initial goal of facilitating the introduction of royal power into the newly-assimilated territories, but as the parlements gained in self-assurance, they started to become sources of disunity.