Read Reinterpreting the French Revolution: A global-historical perspective Online
Authors: BAILEY STONE
Russia to be a means for increasing Louis XVI’s leverage with Catherine
in precisely such matters as attempting to moderate her ambitions against
Constantinople, and not an instrument for facilitating the subversion or
breakup of the Ottoman Empire. In other respects, however, the Franco-
Russian commercial treaty of January 1787 “represented Louis XVI’s
recognition that Russia was now a permanent part of the European in-
ternational system.”106 Just four decades before, the disdainful French had
refused to allow Russian participation in the talks at Aix-la-Chapelle ending
the War of the Austrian Succession; now, as war once again loomed (and, six
months after Vergennes’s death, broke out) in the contested Balkans,
Versailles’s inability to affect events there was an arresting indicator of how
the power relationship between Bourbon France and Romanov Russia had
changed.
Yet, although Russia’s integration into European high politics was prob-
ably of more fundamental significance than that of Frederician and post-
Frederician Prussia, it was Prussia’s defeat of the Dutch Patriot forces in
1787 that most immediately jolted the French. The war minister, Ségur,
seconded by the naval minister, Castries, urged the mobilization of twenty-
five battalions under the command of Lieutenant General Rochambeau for
possible action in defense of the Patriots; but Calonne’s successor in the
finance ministry, Etienne-Charles Loménie de Brienne, obsessed by the
state’s deepening financial crisis, vetoed this suggestion. Ségur and Castries
thereupon resigned in disgust. The latter, notably, had “never ceased
predicting resumption of the war with England after what he felt was
the premature signing of the Treaty of Versailles in 1783.”107 He probably
would have agreed with others in his class – Alexandre de Lameth, the baron
de Bésenval, and the duc de Montmorency-Luxembourg, for example –
that war in 1787 could have rallied army and people to the king and
quenched the fires of domestic revolt. As it was, abandoning the Patriots
served (in Montmorency-Luxembourg’s words) to demonstrate “the inex-
perience, the weakness, and the incompetence” of Vergennes’s successors,
“prompting scorn for alliances with France and disgust with her conduct;
she was the plaything of . . . others.”108
106 Murphy,
Charles Gravier, comte de Vergennes
, pp. 453–54. See also on these issues, Blanning,
Origins
, pp. 57–59; and Fox, “Negotiating with the Russians,” pp. 70–71.
107 Jean Egret,
The French Prerevolution, 1787–1788
, trans. Wesley D. Camp (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1977), pp. 40–42.
108 Ibid., p. 41.
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Reinterpreting the French Revolution
What made this derisive commentary even worse for the government
was that it came on top of a withering critique of commercial policies which
allegedly subordinated France’s economic interests to those of the British.
Radical men of letters, aggrieved merchants, and patriotic provincial par-
lementaires all lashed out at London and condemned their own leaders’
impotence in connection with issues of trade in the West Indies, the Near
East, and the Baltic. Moreover, we have already noted how the Anglo-
French or “Eden” Treaty of 1786 multiplied the government’s detractors.109
But even more significantly, perhaps, a number of these observers drew
revealing parallels between overseas and continental affairs, excoriating
French statesmen who would immolate the interests of Dutch Patriots and
Gallic entrepreneurs alike on the bloodstained altars of British and Prussian
greed.
All of this could only ratchet up the pressure on a government already
wrestling with the onerous costs of its global policies. Louis XVI might
wistfully hope in April 1787 that his finance minister could curb expenses
“without cutting the army or the navy.” Loménie de Brienne himself might
reassure Sweden’s anxious ambassador to France in September of that year
that his reforms would eventually permit France to “play the role that be-
comes her” in the world’s affairs. And Keeper of the Seals Chrétien Franc¸ois
Lamoignon might try to comfort the Paris Parlement just two months later
with images of “a formidable navy, of the army regenerated . . . , of . . . a new
port built on the Channel to insure the glory of the French flag.”110 But the
realities confronting France were more accurately indicated by the Austrian
ambassador, Mercy-Argenteau, in a comment upon Dutch developments
confided to Vienna: “It is not credible that the Versailles ministry, in such
straits, would risk getting involved in a war that would make bankruptcy
inevitable.”111 And in 1788 matters would (if possible) only deteriorate fur-
ther, as the new foreign minister, Montmorin, found himself compelled to
desert both Sweden and Turkey in their struggle with avaricious Romanov
Russia.
It is crucial to stress these facts, because only by doing so can we appre-
ciate the sense of urgency motivating Calonne’s and then Brienne’s efforts
to restore the crown’s solvency. Despite their efforts, however, geopolitical,
constitutional, and social issues became fused in such a way as ultimately
to bring about the collapse of the ancien régime.
Actually, these matters were inextricably intertwined well before the
“prerevolution” of 1787–88, as we have already seen. That this was the
case explains why, by August 1786, Calonne was reduced to suggesting to
109 This commentary on trade issues is discussed by Frances Acomb in
Anglophobia in France,
1763–1789
(Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 1950), pp. 117–20.
110 Citations from Egret,
French Prerevolution
, pp. 32, 42, 107.
111 Ibid., p. 41. A letter of 15 September 1787.
The ancien régime
53
Louis XVI the convocation of an Assembly of Notables to tackle the king-
dom’s mounting problems. Necker’s strategy to manage the enormous cost
of Vergennes’s foreign policy had been allowed to lapse after 1781. Some in
the government understood the need for strict accounting procedures, but
the authorities were less sensitive to the equally pressing need to cut back
venal officeholding in the financial administration and to curb concessions
of special favors to parasitical figures at court and to privileged tax-paying
nobles in the countryside. The result was predictable: the crown’s care-
fully nurtured – and publicized – ability to maintain a balance between
“ordinary” income and “ordinary” expenditure, and thus pay the interest
on its loans
out of a surplus in its ordinary income
, began to slip away. By 1786, Calonne found it impossible, whatever expedients he employed, to
bridge an annual gap between fixed expenses and fixed income that – even
in peacetime! – was inexorably passing beyond 100 million livres.112
What made this so serious a problem for the crown was its constitutional
ramifications. Calonne was now discovering, tardily, that, failing the main-
tenance of something like a Neckerite regime of fiscal-administrative aus-
terity and accountability, globally competitive absolutism in France would
have to risk consulting its own subjects on public issues. There was simply
no other way to maintain the state’s credibility in the financial markets
both inside and outside the country; hence the finance minister’s advice to
Louis XVI in August 1786 to convene an Assembly of Notables. Such
a forum, in which (according to Calonne) “it is the most important and
enlightened magnates of the realm to whom the king is pleased to com-
municate his views,” would be less dangerous to royal authority than the
dread Estates General, in which “it is the representatives of the nation who
remonstrate, petition, and consent.” Yet, given the power of public opinion,
and the literate nation’s “memory” of the Estates General meeting sporad-
ically in earlier centuries, how likely was it that the consultative process
initiated by the controller-general could have stopped with a summons to
an Assembly of Notables?113
As it turned out, Calonne almost immediately became caught up in
an uncontrollable dialectic of ministerial proposals and public response.
The proposals themselves, first submitted to the Notables in February
1787, were provocative from the start insofar as they were designed to
strengthen, not mitigate, the sway of bellicose absolutism in France. What
might landed proprietors not fear from a “territorial subvention” (i.e., a
land tax) whose yield and duration were as yet unlimited? What useful
112 On these points, see Eugene N. White, “Was There a Solution to the Ancien Régime’s Financial Dilemma?”
Journal of Economic History
49 (1989): 545–68; and Robert D. Harris,
Necker and the Revolution of 1789
(Lanham, Md.: University Press of America, 1986).
113 Cited in Egret,
French Prerevolution
, p. 4.
54
Reinterpreting the French Revolution
public purposes could provincial, district, and municipal assemblies serve
if, in apportioning taxes fixed arbitrarily at Versailles, they would have to
obey those minions of “ministerial despotism” the intendants? How could
Frenchmen effectually resist the extended stamp tax of such a rejuvenated
state? And why should they enthuse over the abolition of internal tolls
and duties, the reduction of the various salt imposts, the liberation of the
internal commerce in grain, and the conversion of the peasants’ obligatory
road work into cash payments, if such measures, by stimulating taxable
agriculture and trade, merely refilled the coffers of the old absolutism?114
Calonne, attuned narrowly to that old absolutism, had failed to antici-
pate how quickly the Notables would perceive constitutional issues behind
the government’s reforms. He had also miscalculated on the more immedi-
ate question of the government’s solvency. Inevitably, the Notables rejected
his assertion that Necker’s reported budgetary surplus of 1781 had now
become a running deficit; just as inevitably, they demanded access to the
state’s financial accounts, and found their examination of those accounts,
and of the controller-general’s proposed reforms, to be radicalizing their
thinking on all public questions. They may have assumed their duties ini-
tially as advisers to their monarch in a more or less traditional role; but
with the passage of time they became little less than representatives of the
nation, and their convocation little less than a legislature. Yet, when put to
the ultimate test of deciding whether or not to endorse the crown’s legis-
lation, the Notables could only shuffle the awesome responsibility for this
onto “other institutions, other instruments of the nation already estab-
lished or to be called into existence.”115 And could there be much mystery
in the final analysis as to what “institution” or “instrument” would be
indicated? In fact, early on in the Notables’ deliberations a distinguished
jurist from Provence, Leblanc de Castillon, had declared that the Estates
General would have to sanction any new taxes; and Lafayette was to issue a
clarion call for the revival of the historic Estates on the eve of the Notables’
dissolution. The warring Bourbon state could not, even now, lay the ghosts
of venerable constitutional precedent.
It was equally powerless to prevent its argument with the Notables from
being taken up by a “public opinion” to which both parties to the dispute
then found themselves appealing. “A slight fever has gripped the country,”
wrote abbé Morellet to Britain’s Lord Shelburne. “As soon as the public has
seen the Notables . . . occupied with its interests, opinion has given them
a power which they [otherwise] would not have had. . . . by reason of the
confidence acquired they have become like the deputies of our old States
114 For details on Calonne’s proposals, refer to ibid., chap. 1.
115 Gruder, “Paths to Political Consciousness: The Assembly of Notables of 1787 and the
‘Pre-Revolution’ in France,”
French Historical Studies
13 (1984): 348–50.
The ancien régime
55
General.”116 And in fact the Notables’ final referral of the pivotal question
of taxation to either the parlements or the Estates General stemmed, at
least in part, from their sensitivity to popular cartoons painting them as
guileless geese about to be devoured by the ministers.
Yet the government, too, found itself courting the public. Calonne, in
fact, precipitated his own disgrace in March by appealing over the heads
of his adversaries to the literate citizenry with a vehement indictment of
“privileges” and of all royal administration shrouded in “darkness.” This
was, understandably, too much for Louis XVI; yet, significantly, the king
himself handed over to the Notables the fiscal accounts they had been de-
manding. Furthermore, the new steward of the crown’s finances, Loménie
de Brienne, chosen in a conciliatory gesture from among the Notables
themselves, tried – though unavailingly – to satisfy his former colleagues by