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The three estates divided the social classes of Revolution Era France. There was an estate that had the wealth nobles, there was an estate that had church people in it, such as priests and bishops, and there was an estate that had the common people in it. It was unequal as the nobles lived comfortable lives in their palaces and the common people sometimes had to steal bread just to live.
The estate system was division of three different groups. The first estate was made up of the clergy(Church). They made up 1% of the population and owned 10% of the land. They also taxed the peasants heavily to avoid paying taxes themselves. The second estate was made up of nobles and kings. They were about 4% of the population but owned 20% of the land. They lived rich lives and taxed peasants to avoid paying their taxes. The Third estate was everybody else. They were workers and farmers. some were rich but never went up to the 2nd or 1st estate. The third estate was taxed heavily making the poor poorer and this helped the rich stay rich.
The clergy could administer the sacraments, so everyone who hoped to gain salvation depended on clergy to help them.
From what or whom?
the answer is 1
Answer Some clergy e.g. monks are unpaid whilst others are paid. Clergy of Protestant denominations have salaries established by the church, diocese or individual parish. Catholic clergy receive much less than Protestant clergy as their lives are, in theory, meant to be simpler because there is no wife or children.
They were farmers .
They ruled the serfs/slaves ( serfs are slaves) and they lived well instead of in a dirt floor hut.
Lives in elegant homes and on the estates along the Nile River
It is impossible to settle the estate of anyone still living, regardless of where they or their "heirs" are living.
Regular clergy live in a communal setting and follow a specific rule or order, such as monks or nuns in a monastery. Secular clergy are ordained ministers who serve in a parish and engage with the wider community in their religious duties, such as priests in a church.
A cenobite is a monk or nun who lives as a member of a religious community. Some cenobites are Catholic clergy. For instance, most Benedictine choir monks are ordained priests. But, no, most Catholic clergy are not cenobites.