Online Encyclopedia

MACHAULT

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 233 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MACHAULT  D'ARNOUVILLE,

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JEAN
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BAPTISTE DE (1701-1794), French statesman, was a son of Louis Charles Machault d'Arnouville,
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lieutenant of police . In 1721 he was counsel to the parlement of Paris, in 1728 maitre
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des requetes, and ten years later was made president of the
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Great Council; although he had opposed the court in the Unigenitus dispute, he was appointed intendant of Hainaut in 1743 . From this position, through the influence at court of his old friend Rene Louis,
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Marquis d'
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Argenson, he was called to succeed Orry de Fulvy as controller-general of the finances in December 1745 . He found, on taking office, that in the four years of the War of the
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Austrian Succession the economies of Cardinal Fleury had been exhausted, and he was forced to develop the
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system of borrowings which was bringing French finances to bankruptcy . He attempted in 1749 a reform in the levying of
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direct taxes, which, if carried out, would have done much to prevent the later Revolutionary
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movement . He proposed to abolish the old tax of a tenth, which was evaded by the clergy and most of the
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nobility, and substitute a tax of one-twentieth which should be levied on all without exception . The cry for exceptions, however, began at once . The clergy stood in a
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body by their
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historical privileges, and the outcry of the nobility was too great for the minister to make headway against . Still he managed to retain his office until
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July 1754, when he exchanged the controllership for the
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ministry of marine . Foreseeing the disastrous results of the
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alliance with Austria, he was
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drawn to oppose more decidedly the schemes of Mme de Pompadour, whose
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personal
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ill-will he had gained . Louis XV. acquiesced in her demand for his disgrace on the 1st of
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February 1757 . Machault lived on his estate at Arnouville until the Revolution broke out, when, after a period of hiding, he was apprehended in 1794 at
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Rouen and brought to Paris as a suspect .

He was imprisoned in the Madelonnettes, where he succumbed in a few

weeks, at the age of ninety-three . His son, Louis CHARLES MACHAULT D'ARNOUVILLE (1737-1820), was bishop of
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Amiens from 1774 until the Revolution . He was famous for his charity; but proved to be a most uncompromising Conservative at the estates general of 1789, where he voted consistently against every reform . He emigrated in 1791, resigned his bishopric in 18o1 to facilitate the concordat, and retired to the ancestral chateau of Arnouville, where he died in 1820 .

End of Article: MACHAULT
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GUILLAUME DE MACHAUT (c. 1300-1377)

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