History, asked by Black2004, 1 year ago

What was the state general? Which demanded of the third estate did loius 16 reject?

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
26
The estate general was a political group to which the three estates sent their representatives.
earlier each estate had one vote..
The third estate wanted to that each member of the estate general have one vote but Louis XVI rejected

Black2004: Thanks
Anonymous: Welcome
Answered by radhadevisinghpra
5

Answer:

Estates-General, also called States General, French États-Généraux, in France of the pre-Revolution monarchy, the representative assembly of the three “estates,” or orders of the realm: the clergy (First Estate) and nobility (Second Estate)—which were privileged minorities—and the Third Estate, which represented the majority of the people.

The origins of the Estates-General are to be found in traditions of counsel and aid and the development of corporate representation in the 13th century. The first national assembly of representatives of the three estates met at Notre-Dame in Paris on April 10, 1302, to discuss the conflict between Philip IV (the Fair) and Pope Boniface VIII. The assembly stood firmly by the king, and the meeting was followed by a nationwide survey of public opinion. In 1308 the three estates were assembled in Tours to consider the suppression of the Templars, and they were convened repeatedly over subsequent years, notably after Louis X’s death in 1316, when the royal succession and fiscal matters dominated the agenda. In 1320 the estates gathered at Pontoise and Poitiers, on both occasions refusing to grant Philip V a subsidy to bolster the royal coffers.

Hope u like it please Mark me as brainlest Answer.

Similar questions