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Front Page Titles (by Subject) ANCIEN RÉGIME - Cyclopaedia of Political Science, Political Economy, and of the Political History of the United States, vol. 1 Abdication-Duty
ANCIEN RÉGIME - John Joseph Lalor, Cyclopaedia of Political Science, Political Economy, and of the Political History of the United States, vol. 1 Abdication-Duty [1881]Edition used:Cyclopaedia of Political Science, Political Economy, and of the Political History of the United States by the best American and European Authors, ed. John J. Lalor (New York: Maynard, Merrill, & Co., 1899). Vol 1 Abdication-Duty.
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- Preface
- Volume I: Abdication - Duty
- A
- Abdication
- Abolition and Abolitionists
- Absenteeism
- Absolute Power
- Absolutism
- Abstention
- Abuses In Politics
- Abyssinia
- Academies
- Academies
- Acclamation
- Accumulation of Wealth
- Act
- Adams
- Adams
- Adams
- Adams
- Adjournment
- Administration
- Administrations
- Africa
- Age
- Agent
- Agents
- Agio
- Agiotage
- Agriculture
- Alabama
- Alabama Claims
- Alaska
- Albany Plan of Union
- Albany Regency
- Alcalde
- Alcohol
- Algeria
- Algerine War
- Alien and Sedition Laws
- Aliens
- Allegiance
- Allegiance
- Alliance
- Alliance
- Alloyage
- Almanach De Gotha
- Alsace-lorraine
- Ambassador
- Ambition
- Amendments to the Constitution
- America
- American Merchant Marine
- American Party
- American Whigs
- Ames
- Amistad Case
- Amnesty
- Amnesty
- Anam
- Anarchy
- Ancien RÉgime
- Andorra
- Anhalt
- Annexation
- Annexations
- Anti-federal Party
- Anti-masonry
- Anti-nebraska Men
- Anti-renters
- Anti-slavery.
- Apportionment
- Appropriation.
- Appropriations
- Arbitrage
- Arbitrary Arrests
- Arbitrary Power
- Arbitration
- Archons
- Areopagus.
- Argentine Confederation
- Aristocracy.
- Aristocratic and Democratic Ideas.
- Arithmetic
- Arizona
- Arkansas
- Armistice
- Armies
- Army
- Arthur
- Artisans
- Aryan Races.
- Asia
- Assembly (in U. S. History)
- Assessments
- Assignats
- Association and Associations
- Asylum
- Ateliers Nationaux
- Attainder
- Attorneys General
- Australia
- Austria-hungary
- Authority
- Authors
- Autocrat
- Autonomy.
- Ayes and Noes
- B
- Baden
- Balance of Power
- Balance of Trade
- Ballot
- Bank Controversies
- Banking
- Bank Notes.
- Bankruptcy.
- Bankruptcy, National.
- Banks.
- Banks, Functions Of.
- Banks of Issue
- Banks, Advantages of Savings.
- Banks, History and Management of Savings,
- Bar
- Barnburners
- Barricade
- Barter.
- Bastille
- Bavaria
- Belgium
- Bell
- Belligerents
- Benton
- Berlin Decree
- Bill
- Bill of Exchange
- Bill of Rights
- Billion
- Bills
- Bi-metallism.
- Birney
- Black Cockade
- Black Code.
- Black Republican.
- Blaine
- Blair
- Blockade
- Bloody Bill
- Blue Laws
- Blue Light
- Board of Trade.
- Bolivia
- Booty
- Border Ruffians
- Border States
- Bourgeoisie
- Boutwell
- Brahmanism.
- Brazil
- Breckenridge
- Broad Seal War
- Brokers
- Brooks
- Brown
- Buchanan
- Buckshot War
- Bucktails
- Buddhism
- Budget
- Bull
- Bundesrath
- Bureaucracy
- Burgesses
- Burlingame
- Burr
- Butler, Benj. F.
- Butler, William Orlando
- C
- Cachet
- CÆsarism
- Calendar
- Calhoun
- California
- Canada
- Canals
- Canon Law
- Capital
- Capital
- Capitulation
- Caricature
- Carpet Baggers
- Cartel
- Cass
- Casus Belli
- Caucus
- Caucus System
- Cause and Effect In Politics.
- Celibacy, Clerical
- Celibacy, Political Aspects Of.
- Celts.
- Censure.
- Censure of Morals.
- Censures
- Census.
- Centralization and Decentralization.
- Ceremonial
- Chamber of Commerce.
- ChargÉ D'affaires.
- Charity, Private.
- Charity, Public.
- Charity, State.
- Chase
- Checks and Balances.
- Cherokee Case
- Chesapeake Case.
- Chili.
- China
- Chinese Immigration.
- Chivalry.
- Christianity.
- Church and State
- Church
- Church
- Church
- Churches and Religions
- Churches
- Cincinnati
- Cipher Dispatches and Decipherment
- Circulation of Wealth.
- Cities
- Cities and Towns.
- Civil Administration
- Civil List.
- Civil Rights Bill
- Civil Service Reform
- Civilization
- Clay
- Clearing, and Clearing Houses
- Clericalism
- ClientÈle and Custom
- Climate
- Climate
- Clinton
- Clinton, George
- ClȒture
- Coasting Trade
- Cochin China
- Coinage
- Colfax
- Colonization Society
- Colorado
- Colombia
- Commerce.
- Commercial Crises
- Commission
- Committees
- Common Law
- Commons
- Commune
- Communism
- Competition.
- Compromises
- Compulsory Circulation
- Compulsory Education
- Concession
- Conclave.
- Conclusum
- Concordat
- Confederate States
- Confederation
- Confederation
- Confederation
- Conference
- Conference
- Confirmation By the Senate
- Congregations
- Congress
- Congress (u. S.)
- Congress
- Congress
- Congress
- Congress
- Conkling
- Connecticut
- Conquest
- Conseils Des Prud'hommes
- Conservative
- Conservative
- Constitution of the United States
- Constitutions
- Constitutional Convention
- Constitutional Union Party
- Construction
- Consuls
- Consumption
- Consumption of Wealth
- Contempt
- Contested Elections
- Continental System
- Contraband of War
- Contract
- Contribution of War
- Convention
- Convention
- Convention
- Convention
- Convention of 1787
- Coodies
- Co-operation
- Co-operation
- Copperhead
- Copyright
- Corea
- Corn Laws.
- Corporal's Guard
- Corporations
- Corporations
- Corruption In Politics
- Cortes
- Cosmopolitanism
- Cost of Collection of Taxes.
- Cost of Production.
- Costa Rica
- Council
- Councils.
- Councils of War.
- Coups D'État
- Couriers
- Court Martial
- Courts, U. S.
- Covode Investigation
- Crawford
- Credentials
- Credit
- Credit
- CrÉdit Foncier
- CrÉdit Mobilier
- CrÉdit Mobilier
- Creole Case
- Crises Commercial
- Crittenden
- Crusades
- Cumberland Road
- Currency
- Cushing
- Customs Duties
- D
- Dakota
- Dallas
- Davis
- Davis
- Dayton
- Death Penalty
- Debt
- Debts
- Debts
- Decentralization.
- Declaration of Independence.
- Declaration of Paris
- Declaration of War
- Decline
- Definitions In Political Economy
- Delaware
- Demagogism.
- Demand and Supply
- Democracy.
- Democracy
- Democrat
- Democratic Clubs
- Democratic - Republican Party
- Denmark
- Deposits
- Descent of Property
- Despotism
- Dictator
- Diets and Dietines
- Diplomacy
- Diplomatic Agents
- Discount
- Disputed Elections
- Distilled Spirits
- Distribution Laws
- Distribution of Wealth
- District of Columbia
- Divide and Reign
- Divine Right
- Division of Labor
- Divorce
- Doctrinarians
- Dominion of Canada
- Dorr Rebellion
- Douglas
- Drafts
- Drawback
- Dred Scott Case
- Dueling
- Duty
ANCIEN RÉGIME
ANCIEN RÉGIME. The ancien régime, the old régime, might be defined feudalism in its decrepitude. So long as feudalism was a living reality, so long as it constituted a form of government, the people who were oppressed by it more or less, endured it as a necessary evil. They thought, perhaps, that the social order in which they were living, was the condition natural to man. But when gun-powder, the printing press, the discovery of America, and a thousand other inventions and discoveries, had raised the intellectual level of a great number of men and formed a class of citizens well-to-do and enlightened; when the concentration of political power in the hands of a sovereign had lowered his vassals to the rank of subjects, undistinguished from the masses except by a vain title, sometimes humiliating and sometimes detrimental to others, sentence of condemnation was passed on feudalism. The object of the revolution of 1789, was to wipe it out entirely.
—It was because the ancient political and social condition of things was destroyed at a single blow, and because the change was brusque, that the term ancien régime came into use. If, in France, as elsewhere, the abuses had disappeared one by one, in an almost imperceptible manner, the contrast between the past and the present would have been less striking, and there would scarcely have been occasion to say anything about it. The middle ages had been replaced in other countries than France by the modern era, but in them the transition was made without conflict. The result was that hatred between the representatives of the ancien régime and the modern order of things is less profound in those countries or, at least, has not had time to manifest itself in violence.
—The idea entertained at present, by the masses of the ancien régime is vague enough. It appears to them as a mist filled with nobles and privileged priests, tithes, duties and services, and with a number of other disagreeable things. The ancien régime is at present a scarecrow made use of in France, by parties, to influence ignorant minds. Enlightened men know that it is forever dead, and that it was but a corpse when the revolution buried it for all time. Humanity never retraces its steps.
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