France. Ferme générale
Enlarge text Shrink text- Azimi, V. Un modèle administratif de l'Ancien Régime, 1987:t.p. (Ferme générale) p. 4 of cover (tax collecting agency)
- GDEL(tax collecting agency of the French monarchy, created in 1681 and abolished during the Revolution)
- Bail des Fermes royales-unies, 1739:p. [1] (caption title: Bail des Fermes generales ...)
- RLIN, 11-16-95(hdgs.: Fermiers généraux des fermes royales unies (France); France. Ferme générale)
- LC in NUC pre-56(hdg.: Fermiers généraux des fermes royales unies; ref. from: France. Fermes générales)
- Chronique de la Révolution, c1989:p. 203 (Ferme générale; private company that leased the right to levy taxes for six-year periods; consisted of 40 "fermiers généraux"; abolished by vote of the Assemblée constituante, Mar. 20, 1791)
- BL S&C, 21 November 2013(access point: France. Fermes Royales-Unies (1598-1680). It was the predecessor organisation of France. Ferme générale (n89622446))
The ferme générale (French pronunciation: [fɛʁm ʒeneʁal], "general farm") was, in ancien régime France, essentially an outsourced customs, excise and indirect tax operation. It collected duties on behalf of the King (plus hefty bonus fees for themselves), under renewable six-year contracts. The major tax collectors in that highly unpopular tax farming system were known as the fermiers généraux (singular fermier général), which would be tax farmers-general in English. In the 17th and 18th centuries the fermiers généraux became immensely rich and figure prominently in the history of cultural patronage, as supporters of French music, major collectors of paintings and sculpture, patrons of the marchands-merciers and consumers of the luxury arts in the vanguard of Parisian fashions. In his 1833 novel Ferragus, writer Honoré de Balzac attributes the sad air that hangs about the Île Saint-Louis in central Paris to the many houses there owned by fermiers généraux. Their sons or grandsons purchased patents of nobility and their daughters often married into the aristocracy. Especially members of impoverished aristocratic families were eager to marry daughters of the fermiers généraux in order to restore the wealth they had prior to their ruin. This was called in popular French redorer son blason (literally "to re-gild one's coat of arms").
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