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Third Estate was the generality of people which were not part of the other estates, or commoners. Bourgeoisie were middle class.
Many people think an estate only has something to do with the death of a person. But your estate is the sum and total of everything you own at any given point in your life, from the clothes on your back, to the money in your pocket, to a car, a house, your investments, etc. During your lifetime, you can deal with any part of your estate yourself. But after the death of someone, that person's estate has to be dealt with according to the terms of the person's will or, if there is no will, by the law relating to the distribution of estates.
An estate sale can be a way to get rid of a significant part of the property owned by someone who deceased. Moving can also be a reason for an estate sale. Other reasons are divorce and retirement.
The rental income becomes part of the estate and will be distributed according to the terms of the will to the beneficiaries or to the next of kin if there was no will.
Real estate is land and everything permanently attached to it -- so a house is real estate, but a mobile home is personal property. Infrastructure is roads, bridges, sewer lines, etc. Since these items are permanently attached to the land, they are part of the real estate (a subset of real estate).
Third Estate was the generality of people which were not part of the other estates, or commoners. Bourgeoisie were middle class.
The 1st estate was represented by the Clergy. The 2nd estate was represented by the Nobility. The 3rd estate was represented by the Bourgeoisie Meaning, the 3rd estate WAS the bourgeoisie.
The high bourgeoisie. The poorer elements of the Third Estate had no time to worry about such things.
The French working class. It includes the peasants, the bourgeois, and the merchants. Essentially, the Third Estate was everyone who was not a part of the noble class (Second Estate) or the clergy (First Estate).
The Bourgeois The revolutionaries
It meant the urban middle class, meaning lawyers, factory owners, doctors, etc. Basically, people who were doing well but weren't noble. The bourgeoisie made up approximately 8% of France's population at this time.
The middle class.In Marxist theory, the social group opposed to the proletariat in the class struggle.Read more: bourgeoisie
The Enlightment there were 3 classes: 1. The first class made up about 1% of the population and was made up of clergy 2. The Sencond class made up about 2% of the population and was comprised of the Nobility 3. The third or lower class made up 97% of the population, this was everyone else, this class had the peasants, the bourgeoisie( the upper part of the lower class) which were people such as artisans and merchants.
Richest members of the lowest class. The Bourgeoisie was made up primarily of educated professionals, such as bankers, lawyers, doctors, capitalists, merchants, academicians, etc. These individuals made their wealth and contributed greatly to development of France, but did not have titles of nobility (so they could not be part of the Second Estate) nor were they members of the clergy (so they could not be part of the First Estate).
The third estate in France was the overwhelming majority of the citizenry and included everyone who was NOT part of the clergy or the nobility. The group of the Third Estate with the largest population was the peasantry and farmers. The group of the Third Estate which was the most politically astute was the bourgeoisie, made of lawyers, doctors, bankers, public officials.
No, quite the opposite. The bourgeoisie would be overthrown by the communist revolution.
No, they were a class unto themselves.