Want this question answered?
u i am asking answer from u and u are asking answer from me
National Assembly
The third estate consisted of the commoners/peasants.
He came from the Third Estate. He was not a Noble nor a Clergy man
Originally, at a tennis court at Versailles. The National Assembly consisted of the members of the third estate, who were one day locked out of a Estate General meeting by the first and second estate members. They were angry, and went to a nearby tennis court at the palace where they swore an oath that they would not disband until a constitution was formed. They also took up a new name for themselves: The National Assembly.
Yes and no. The representatives of the Third Estate were middle class, but the Thirtd Estate itself was everyb ody who wasn't noble or a priest.
u i am asking answer from u and u are asking answer from me
National Assembly
The new constitution limited the power of the monarch. Third Estate got more autonomy and France converted to constitutional monarchy. The Constitution of 1791 vested the power to make laws in the National Assembly, which was indirectly elected. The citizens voted for a group of electors, who in turn chose the Assembly. Third Estate which was ignored earlier became a major political force.
The First Estate was the clergy. The Second Estate was the nobility. The Third Estate was basically everyone else in France, but its representatives in the Estates General were typically wealthy members from the commercial and professional middle classes.
That was the date that the Tennis Court Oath was taken by the representatives of the Third Estate.
The vow was not made by the National Assembly. The Third Estate solemnly swore they would not disband until they were recognised as a National Assembly and a constitution was drawn up and accepted by King Louis XVI. They vowed not to part or disband until they had written a Constitution.
For a long time, the Third Estate had been unhappy. As the Third Estate grew in numbers and became more influential, they began to resent the special privileges that the nobles had and they didn't, such as exemption from taxation. They wanted a political voice and an abolition of the feudal system, which favored the lords based on tradition, which was completely irrational to them. The turning point was when the king, Louis XVI, refused the Third Estate equal representation in the Estates General. When Louis XVI completely shut the Third Estate's representatives out of the meetings, the representatives met in a nearby tennis court and proclaimed themselves the National Assembly, taking matters into their own hands and starting the French Revolution.
The Third Estate was the estate in which the bourgeoisie belonged to.
The Tennis Court Oath vowing to remain in session or on call until a workable Constitution had been created.
The Tennis Court Oath vowing to remain in session or on call until a workable Constitution had been created.
the members of the third estate had to pay money