Senate
kinsman
nobility
Second Constituent Assembly
The General Assembly is a legislature. It is elected by the people.
The assembly is where they discuss ideas and issues and settle issues.
Yes, that was the National Assembly.
They took away the rights
The assembly that represented the three classes—the clergy, the nobility, and the bourgeoisie—was the Estates-General in France. Convened in 1789, it was called to address the financial crisis facing the monarchy and involved representatives from each of the three estates: the First Estate (clergy), the Second Estate (nobility), and the Third Estate (commoners, including the bourgeoisie). The meeting ultimately led to the formation of the National Assembly and the beginning of the French Revolution.
The names of nobles in the other Latin cities is not known. The upper tier of the Roman nobility was the patricans and the lower tier was the equites (cavalrymen).
The root word of assembly is "assemble," which comes from the Latin word "assimulare," meaning "to bring together."
Dominance of Spanish-born nobility
In modern times, The language of nobility in England is English. Historically, it was Latin.
The National Assembly took the vast landholdings of the French nobility and sold them off. Nobles also lost their privileges such as the hunt on their land, seigneurial justice, and funeral honors.
Mary Bridget O'Brien has written: 'Title of address in Christian Latin epistolography to 543 A.D' -- subject(s): Early Christian literature, Forms of Address, History, History and criticism, Latin Authors, Latin Letter writing, Latin language, Latin letters, Semantics, Titles of honor and nobility
Robert B. Patterson has written: 'The Haskins Society Journal 4' 'The Scriptorium of Margam Abbey and the Scribes of Early Angevin Glamorgan' -- subject(s): History, Latin Paleography, Manuscripts, Latin (Medieval and modern), Margam Abbey, Nobility, Scriptoria, Sources 'Earldom of Gloucester charters' -- subject(s): Biography, Countesses, History, Nobility, Sources
The nobility and clergy were traditionally represented in the Estates-General in France, a legislative assembly that included three estates: the clergy (First Estate), the nobility (Second Estate), and the common people (Third Estate). In various other European countries, similar structures existed where these social classes had designated representatives in governance, often influencing political decisions and policies. The clergy and nobility often held significant power and privilege, influencing both the social and political landscape of their time.
its purpose was to get France a constitutional government and to give the Third Estate (commoners) as many votes as the First Estate (clergy) and Second Estate (nobility). Before this the clergy had two votes.