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CHAMILLART MICHEL (1652–1721)

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Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 825 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHAMILLART

MICHEL (1652–1721)  , French statesman, minister of Louis XIV., was born at Paris of a
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family of the noblesse of
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recent
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elevation . Following the usual career of a statesman of his time he became in turn councillor of the parlement of Paris (1676), master of requests (1686), and intendant of the generality of
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Rouen (
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January 1689) . Affable, of polished manners, modest and honest, Chamillart won the confidence of Madame de
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Maintenon and pleased the king . In 1690 he was made intendant of finances, and on the 5th of September 1699 the king appointed him controller-general of finances, to which he added on the following 7th of January the
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ministry of war . From the first Chamillart's position was a difficult one . The deficit amounted to more than 53 million livres, and the credit of the state was almost exhausted . He lacked the
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great intelligence and energy necessary for the situation, and was unable to moderate the king's warlike tastes, or to inaugurate economic reforms . He could only employ the usual expedients of the time—the immoderate sale of offices, the debasement of the coinage (five times in six years), reduction of the
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rate of
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interest on state debts, and increased taxation . He attempted to force into circulation a kind of paper
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money, billets de monnaie, but with disastrous results owing to the state of credit . He studied
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Vauban's project for the royal tithe and . Boisguillebert's
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pro-position for the taille, but did not adopt them . In
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October 1706 he showed the king that the debts immediately due amounted to 288 millions, and that the deficit already foreseen for 1707 was 16o millions .

In October 1707 he saw with consternation that the

revenue for 1708 was already entirely eaten up by anticipation, so that neither money nor credit remained for 1708 . In these conditions Chamillart, who had often complained of the overwhelming burden he was carrying, and who had already wished to retire in 1706, resigned his office of controller-general . Public opinion attributed to him the ruin of the country, though pe had tried in 1700 to improve the condition of commerce by the creation of a council of commerce . As secretary of state for war he had to place in the field the army for the War of the
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Spanish Succession, and to reorganize it three times, after the great defeats of 1704, 1706 and 1708 . With an empty
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treasury he succeeded only in
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part, and he frankly warned the king that the enemy would soon be able to dictate the terms of peace . He was reproached with having secured the command of the army which besieged
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Turin (1706) for his son-in-law, the incapable duc de la Feuillade . Madame de Maintenon even became hostile to him, and he abandoned his position on the loth of
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June 1709, retiring to his estates . He died on the 14th of
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April 1721 . Chamillart's papers have been published by G . Esnault, Michel Chamillart, contreleur general et secretaire d'etat de la guerre, correspondance et pa piers inedits (2 vols., Paris, 1885) ; and by A. de Bois-lisle in vol . 2 of his Correspondance
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des controleurs generaux (1883) . See D'Auvigny, Vies des hommes
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illustres (1739),tome vi. pp .

288-402 ; E . Moret, Quinze annees du reine de Louis XIV (Paris, 1851); and the new edition of the Memoires de St-

Simon, by A. de Boislisle .

End of Article: CHAMILLART MICHEL (1652–1721)
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