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  2. Ferme générale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferme_générale

    The day before the French Revolution in 1789, almost all the rights of indirect drafts and rights (like the gabelle, the tax on tobacco, and a number of local taxes) were awarded. On the other hand, the Royal Treasury's income from the Ferme générale represented more than half of the total public revenue.

  3. Charles Alexandre de Calonne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Alexandre_de_Calonne

    A French statesman and Louis XVI's Controller-General of Finances who tried to reform the fiscal crisis and the privileges of the nobility and the clergy. He failed due to popular opposition and was dismissed and exiled in 1787.

  4. Taille - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taille

    Efficient tax collection was one of the major causes for French administrative and royal centralization in the Early Modern period.The taille became a major source of royal income (roughly half in the 1570s), the most important direct tax of pre-Revolutionary France, and provided for the growing cost of warfare in the 15th and 16th centuries.

  5. List of historical acts of tax resistance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_historical_acts_of...

    During the French Revolution and its aftermath, customs houses were burned by mobs; tax rolls were destroyed; excise collectors were made to renounce their jobs, then were run out of town (or in some cases killed). Popular tax resistance was directed both against the toppling monarchy and against the governments that would try to replace it.

  6. Louis Mandrin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Mandrin

    During 1754 he organised six military-style campaigns. He and his men targeted only the most unpopular tax collectors, which gained them huge support from the local population. Mandrin bought goods (cloth, hides, tobacco, canvas and spices) in Switzerland, which he then resold in French towns without paying the Ferme Générale any of the tax due.

  7. Taxation in France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxation_in_France

    Until 1789, taxes were collected by the state, the church and lords. After the French revolution, taxes consisted of taxes on wealth and on incomes. The current tax system was shaped during the 20th century. All taxes created under the French Revolution were abolished, the last being the patentes, abolished in 1974. Whereas taxation aimed at ...

  8. Jean-Baptiste-Joseph Gobel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Baptiste-Joseph_Gobel

    Gobel was born in the town of Thann in Alsace to a lawyer to the Sovereign Council of Alsace and tax collector for the Seigneury of Thann. After outstanding success in his early schooling in Porrentruy, he studied at the Jesuit college in Colmar, then theology in the German College in Rome, from which he graduated in 1743.

  9. Wall of the Ferme générale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wall_of_the_Ferme_générale

    In the early years of the French Revolution, with the Wall scarcely finished, tax farming and the toll on goods were abolished. But in 1798 French municipalities were granted the octroi, which soon became their primary source of revenue. The city of Paris consequently took responsibility for maintaining the Wall and staffing its revenue officials.