Chapter 1 Page 2 - 2 views
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Brittany Alexis on 12 Apr 10The already set social classes, and inheritance of the social classes, caused a lack of social mobility.
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In addition to economic differences, early modern French society was legally stratified by birth. Its three traditional divisions, or "orders," were the clergy, the nobility, and the common people. Nobles ruled over commoners, but even among commoners, specific individuals (such as officeholders) or groups (such as a particular guild or an entire town) enjoyed privileges unavailable to outsiders
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When the King called for an Estates-General in 1789, the social tensions plaguing the old regime emerged as a central issue of the Revolution
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This source reveals a multitude of social, economic, political causes and effects of the French Revolution. The source describes the harsh daily lives of both rural and urban people and how they were affected by the government and the economy in everyday life, as well as the difficult strict "caste system". It also gives a perspective on the "social unrest" and the political responses of the government to those small revolts. It shows the mistrustful relationship between the government and the common people and the means for the government attempting to maintain the satisifaction of the people.