The National Assembly, considering that it
has been summoned to establish the constitution of the kingdom, to effect
the regeneration of the public order, and to maintain the true principles
of monarchy; that nothing can prevent it from continuing its deliberations
in whatever place it may be forced to establish itself; and, finally, that
wheresoever its members are assembled, there is the National Assembly;
Decrees that all members of this Assembly shall
immediately take a solemn oath not to separate, and to reassemble wherever
circumstances require, until the constitution of the kingdom is established
and consolidated upon firm foundations; and that, the said oath taken,
all members and each one of them individually shall ratify this steadfast
resolution by signature.
ARTICLE I. The National Assembly hereby completely
abolishes the feudal system. It decrees that, among the existing rights
and dues, both feudal and censuel, all those
originating in or representing real or personal serfdom shall be abolished
without
indemnification. All other dues are declared
redeemable, the terms and mode of redemption to be fixed by the National
Assembly. Those of the said dues which are not
extinguished by this decree shall continue to be collected until indemnification
shall take place.
II. The exclusive right to maintain pigeon houses
and dovecotes is abolished. The pigeons shall be confined during the seasons
fixed by the community. During such periods they
shall be looked upon as game, and every one shall have the right to kill
them
upon his own land.
III. The exclusive right to hunt and to maintain
uninclosed warrens is likewise abolished, and every landowner shall have
the
right to kill, or to have destroyed on his own
land, all kinds of game, observing, however, such police regulations as
may be
established with a view to the safety of the
public.
All hunting capitaineries, including the royal
forests, and all hunting rights under whatever denomination, are likewise
abolished. Provision shall be made, however,
in a manner compatible with the regard due to property and liberty, for
maintaining the personal pleasures of the king.
The president of the Assemby shall be commissioned
to ask of the king the recall of those sent to the galleys or exiled,
simply for violations of the hunting regulations,
as well as for the release of those at present imprisoned for offenses
of this kind,
and the dismissal of such cases as are now pending.
IV. All manorial courts are hereby suppressed
without indemnification. But the magistrates of these courts shall continue
to
perform their functions until such time as the
National Assembly shall provide for the establishment of a new judicial
system.
V. Tithes of every description, as well as the
dues which have been substituted for them, under whatever denomination
they are
known or collected (even when compounded for),
possessed by secular or regular congregations, by holders of benefices,
members of corporations (including the Order
of Malta and other religious and military orders), as well as those devoted
to the
maintenance of churches, those impropriated to
lay persons, and those substituted for the portion congrue, are abolished,
on condition, however, that some other method
be devised to provide for the expenses of divine worship, the support of
the
officiating clergy, for the assistance of the
poor, for repairs and rebuilding of churches and parsonages, and for the
maintenance
of all institutions, seminaries, schools, academies,
asylums, and organizations to which the present funds are devoted. Until
such
provision shall be made and the former possessors
shall enter upon the enjoyment of an income on the new system, the
National Assembly decrees that the said tithes
shall continue to be collected according to law and in the customary manner.
Other tithes, of whatever nature they may be,
shall be redeemable in such manner as the Assembly shall determine. Until
this
matter is adjusted, the National Assembly decrees
that these, too, shall continue to be collected.
VI. All perpetual ground rents, payable either
in money or in kind, of whatever nature they may be, whatever their
origin and to whomsoever they may be due, . .
. shall be redeemable at a rate fixed by the Assembly. No due shall in
the future
be created which is not redeemable.
VII. The sale of judicial and municipal offices
shall be abolished forthwith. Justice shall be dispensed gratis. Nevertheless
the
magistrates at present holding such offices shall
continue to exercise their functions and to receive their emoluments until
the
Assembly shall have made provision for indemnifying
them.
VIII. The fees of the country priests are abolished,
and shall be discontinued so soon as provision shall be made for increasing
the minimum salary of the parish priests and
the payment to the curates. A regulation shall be drawn up to determine
the status of the priests in the towns.
IX. Pecuniary privileges, personal or real, in
the payment of taxes are abolished forever. Taxes shall be collected from
all the
citizens, and from all property, in the same
manner and in the same form. Plans shall be considered by which the taxes
shall be
paid proportionally by all, even for the last
six months of the current year.
X. Inasmuch as a national constitution and public
liberty are of more advantage to the provinces than the privileges which
some
of these enjoy, and inasmuch as the surrender
of such privileges is essential to the intimate union of all parts of the
realm, it is
decreed that all the peculiar privileges, pecuniary
or otherwise, of the provinces, principalities, districts, cantons, cities,
and
communes, are once for all abolished and are
absorbed into the law common to all Frenchmen.
XI. All citizens, without distinction of birth,
are eligible to any office or dignity, whether ecclesiastical, civil, or
military; and no
profession shall imply any derogation.
XII. Hereafter no remittances shall be made for
annates or for any other purpose to the court of Rome, the vice legation
at
Avignon, or to the nunciature at Lucerne. The
(p. 408) clergy of the diocese shall apply to their bishops in regard to
the filling of
benefices and dispensations, the which shall
be granted gratis without regard to reservations, expectancies, and papal
months,
all the churches of France enjoying the same
freedom.
XIII. [This article abolishes various ecclesiastical dues.]
XIV. Pluralities shall not be permitted hereafter
in cases where the revenue from the benefice or benefices held shall exceed
the
sum of three thousand livres. Nor shall any individual
be allowed to enjoy several pensions from benefices, or a pension and a
benefice, if the revenue which he already enjoys
from such sources exceeds the same sum of three thousand livres.
XV. The National Assembly shall consider, in conjunction
with the king, the report which is to be submitted to it relating to
pensions, favors, and salaries, with a view to
suppressing all such as are not deserved, and reducing those which shall
prove
excessive; and the amount shall be fixed which
the king may in the future disburse for this purpose.
XVI. The National Assembly decrees that a medal
shall be struck in memory of the recent grave and important deliberations
for the welfare of France, and that a Te Deum
shall be chanted in gratitude in all the parishes and the churches of France.
XVII. The National Assembly solemnly proclaims the king, Louis XVI, the Restorer of French Liberty.
XVIII. The National Assembly shall present itself
in a body before the king, in order to submit to him the decrees which
have
just been passed, to tender to him the tokens
of its most respectful gratitude, and to pray him to permit the Te Deum
to be
chanted in his chapel, and to be present himself
at this service.
XIX. The National Assembly shall consider, immediately
after the constitution, the drawing up of the laws necessary for the
development of the principles which it has laid
down in the present decree. The latter shall be transmitted by the deputies
without delay to all the provinces, together
with (p. 409) the decree of the 10th of this month, in order that it may
be printed,
published, read from the parish pulpits, and
posted up wherever it shall be deemed necessary.