The Aristocracy/Nobility made up the second estate in the French Revolution.
Their main goal was to kill the nobles, so the Second Estate.
The first estate consisted of the members of clergy. The second estate was made of the nobility classes, and the third estate was what contained the peasants, Parisians (or urban workers), and the bourgeoisie who were the upper middle class and were the richest of this estate.
the wealthiest members in the third estate were the businessmen the lawyers, etc.
The Third Estate was the commons or the ordinary people, the First Estate being the clergy and the Second Estate the nobility .
A wealthy nobleman
The Aristocracy/Nobility made up the second estate in the French Revolution.
By making the First estate and the Second estate pay taxes and thus contribute to France's budget.
The second estate was the Nobility.
Three. The First Estate consisted of members of the Catholic Churh. The Clergy. The Second Estate consisted of Noblemen. The Third Estate consisted of peasents.
Their main goal was to kill the nobles, so the Second 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 members of the third estate had to pay money
In colonial Mexico the groups that did not have to pay taxes and had their own court system were the "First Estate" and the "Second Estate". (The First Estate was the clergy members and the Second Estate was the nobility.)
The first estate consisted of the members of clergy. The second estate was made of the nobility classes, and the third estate was what contained the peasants, Parisians (or urban workers), and the bourgeoisie who were the upper middle class and were the richest of this estate.
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.
First Estate and Second Estate