February-May 1787.
Consisted of 144 men, included 7 princes of the blood.
Last used 1626.
• Louis XVI chose same composition in 1787, despite Turgot and Necker’s reform attempts (neither of the two new provincial assemblies sent body).
• Also all senior judges from the parlement, important ‘notables’ representing provincial estates, and 14 representatives of the church.
• Turned out to be far from a docile rubber stamp, as Louis and Calonne had hoped.
• When presented with Calonne’s proposals, threw up obstacles.
The clergy hostile to plans to tax the church, led by Etienne-Charles de Loménie de Brienne, the archbishop of Toulouse.
Other notables not convinced the situation was bad enough to warrant reform.
When Calonne revealed the Comte Redu was in error, it only made matters worse.
Necker responded by publishing an attack on Calonne, and the assembly accused Calonne of incompetence and trying to shift blame to others.
• The duc d’Orléans had already spoken out vociferously against Louis in the Assembly of Notables.
• Such hostility provoked Louis to react as his grandfather had done: in August, the Paris Parlement were banished to Troyes (to get it away from the baying crowds).
• However, the provincial parlement unanimously declared their refusal to register the edicts.
• The Edicts said…