The group within the Third Estate that would suffer the most from an increase in the price of bread would be the urban poor, particularly wage laborers and artisans. These individuals often spent a significant portion of their limited income on basic necessities, such as bread, and any rise in prices would severely impact their ability to afford food. This economic strain could lead to increased discontent and unrest among the lower classes, exacerbating the already existing tensions in pre-revolutionary France.
bourgeois
The third estate consisted of the commoners/peasants.
He came from the Third Estate. He was not a Noble nor a Clergy man
The first estate of the Estate General represented the Clergy (which is the generic term used to describe the formal religious leadership within a given religion). The second estate represented the Nobility and the third the Commoners.How many members they had remains unknown.
The Third Estate.
bourgeois
The Third Estate was the estate in which the bourgeoisie belonged to.
the members of the third estate had to pay money
The third estate consisted of the commoners/peasants.
Written by Emmanuel Joseph Sieyes as a political pamphlet in 1789. The Third Estate were the common people of France and were a nation within themselves. As such, they had no need of the First and Second Estates, the Clergy and the Aristocracy
The Third Estate was the commons or the ordinary people, the First Estate being the clergy and the Second Estate the nobility .
He came from the Third Estate. He was not a Noble nor a Clergy man
The Third Estate
That was the third estate.
The first estate of the Estate General represented the Clergy (which is the generic term used to describe the formal religious leadership within a given religion). The second estate represented the Nobility and the third the Commoners.How many members they had remains unknown.
The belief in Enlightenment ideas such as equality, individual rights, and liberty, coupled with dissatisfaction among the Third Estate due to social and economic injustices, were major causes of the French Revolution. The inequalities within the French society, such as the heavy tax burden on the Third Estate and the lack of political representation for the common people, fueled the revolutionary fervor that eventually led to the overthrow of the French monarchy.
the wealthiest members in the third estate were the businessmen the lawyers, etc.