Capitoul




The capitouls, sometimes
Name
The officials were originally known as consuls (consules) but were christened "capitouls" in 1295 as part of an effort to connect Toulouse with the greatness of such cities as Rome, Constantinople, and Jerusalem.[3]
Rival councils
In addition to the Capitoulate, Toulouse housed the rival Parliament, General Council, Town Council, and Council of Sixteen. Each included the reigning capitouls, but only as associate or junior members.[4]
The
The General or Common Council
The Town Council (counseil des bourgeoisie) was a smaller number of townsmen and capitouls who met more often to oversee the Capitoulate.[4]
The Council of Sixteen (counseil des seize) was formed of the present year's eight capitouls and the previous year's eight as well. It also met regularly in the 16th century.[4]
Election
The capitouls were elected annually from the city's eight districts, also called "capitoulates".
In 1683, the king began to appoint the capitouls from a slate of candidates provided by the city.[18] By 1701, the position was broadly venal, with prospective capitouls required to provide loans of at least 10,000 livres to the city upon their "election";[15] in 1734, a royal edict made four of the positions explicitly venal, "commissioned" offices that were purchased from the king.[18] Another edict in 1746 established eight permanent "titular" (titulaire) capitouls, pairs of which rotated in office each year with the six other capitouls, which were "elected" by the king from the town's slate of nominees.[18]
History
The

Initially, the council consisted of six men from the
The commune received many privileges from its
The Capetians accepted the need to preserve some local traditions,
Toulouse was free, with full rights, and will be without end;
If she is just and pious, she will be forever populous.
Toulouse is proud of its twelve consuls
Who govern her, fair, pious, and powerful.
As the office was ennobling after 1459,[13] it was attractive to many of the city's middle and lower upper class.[40] The Capitoulate was closed to the king's officers[7] and, while it was intended to represent the city's nobles, lawyers, and merchants, in practice the merchants were largely shut out of office after the mid-16th century.[13] The trappings of nobility enjoyed by the capitouls included a red and black silk ermine gown[7][n 6] and exemption from prosecution for both the office holder and his son.
In the early 16th century, the Capitoulate curtailed prostitution, oversaw poor relief, organized the local militia into a permanent force, established a health board to fight plague outbreaks,[14] and directed rebuilding from the devastation of the Hundred Years' War and a massive fire in 1463.[4] In 1505, they took the town's nine hospitals out of church hands and placed them under a single civil administration.[14] In 1514, they opened another hospital, the St-Sebastian, to quarantine and care for plague victims.[14] In 1518 and 1519, the town's archives were recopied and preserved.[41]
A new bridge was thrown across the Garonne and the Hôtel de Ville completely refurbished.[4]

Several royal edicts confirmed the Capitoulate's jurisdiction and, in 1554, they won the right to oversee all cases of heresy within the city walls.
The town annals subsequently cease to speak of the town's "municipal republic" and Parliament generally increased its control over the city thereafter.[16] In 1578, the capitouls were forbidden to appear before the members of Parliament in the town's general processions.[6] During a "shoving match" over which body should stand beside the eucharist during the Pentecostal procession of 1597, the capitouls were "manhandled, thrown onto the ground, and trampled".[45] The capitouls were placed in inferior positions at official functions: in 1644, a reviewing stand was demolished because it did not permit sufficient distance between the members of Parliament and the capitouls.[44] At the death of Archbishop Montchal in 1651, the capitouls were even forbidden from any participation in his funeral.[44] Individual members of Parliament also regularly made a point of insulting the capitouls at public and private functions.[44]
In the mid-17th century,
As
The capitouls were present at the laying of the foundation stone of the Garonne lock of the Canal du Midi near Toulouse in November, 1667.[49]

The supervision of the royal
In 1765, King Louis XV fired the then incumbent Capitoul over the trial of Jean Calas, sentenced to death and broken on the wheel - which the King ruled to have been a grave miscarriage of justice.
In the 1770s, a series of anonymous
- The capitouls were no longer to represent separate districts of the city;
- A Consistory Chief (chef de consistoire) was created, to be appointed by the king and charged with oversight of the capitouls;
- The capitouls were to be specifically proportioned among the town's classes, with two nobles, two former capitouls, and four townsmen; and
- The overlapping councils of the municipal government were recast.
See also
- Handwritten Annals of the City of Toulouse
- Capitole de Toulouse
- History of Toulouse
- French communes
- eschevin, consul, and jurat
- List of the mayors of Toulouse
- seneschal and bailiff
Notes
- ^ The character of these districts was maintained through parish festivals (fénétras) and their rivalry expressed through contests between local gangs of apprentices.[12]
- ^ One failed applicant even took his case to the regional parliament, being literally laughed out of court when he tearfully complained that his 4000 livres in bribes had brought him nothing.[15]
- Latin: Ego volo intrare Tholosam et facere me civem Tholose).[24]
- ^ In practice, the ecclesiastical court at Toulouse was lenient even to homicidal monks[35] and university students, who enjoyed clerical status.[36] The seneschal began arresting clerics found bearing illegal weapons and in 1275 was empowered by the regional parliament with sole authority over the determination of an accused's clerical status and given the ability to enforce canon law in his own right. The king did not nullify these provisions until 1289, restoring the bishop's jurisdiction with stern injunctions for him to pursue malefactors.[35] By 1292, the frustration at being forced to release criminals in lay garb upon their own claims of clerical status and at being forced by royal order—against the town's own traditions since the 12th century—to observe asylum even in the case of murderers and thieves led the bishop to complain that the seneschal and capitouls were arresting clerics indiscriminately, torturing them in the town hall, and then throwing them into the Garonne at night.[37]
- ^ The original is now lost but, according to Roschach, was preserved in a French translation in the records of an 18th-century court case.[39]
- ^ The robes were purchased for the capitouls by the city at a cost of 300 livres each.[13]
- ^ Despite greatly increasing local indebtedness, the creation of such offices in fact turned into an important source of revenue for Louis XIV and XV, as the local government was obliged to pay enormous sums to restore their control over them.[48]
References
Citations
- ^ a b c d e f Turning (2013), p. 22.
- ^ Raynal (1759).
- ^ Turning (2013), p. 39.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Schneider (1992), p. 198.
- ^ Mousnier (1980).
- ^ a b c Schneider (1992), p. 199.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Greengrass (1983).
- ^ a b Schneider (1989).
- ^ a b c d Turning (2013), p. 23.
- ^ a b Schneider (1992), pp. 198–199.
- ^ a b c Schneider (1992), p. 213.
- ^ Higgs (1973), p. 19.
- ^ a b c d e f Schneider (1992), p. 196.
- ^ a b c d e f g Schneider (1992), p. 197.
- ^ a b c d e f Schneider (1992), p. 210.
- ^ a b c d e f g Schneider (1992), p. 202.
- ^ a b c Schneider (1992), p. 206.
- ^ a b c Schneider (1992), p. 212.
- ^ de la Perrière (1555), p. 124.
- ^ ACT, BB 247, p. 50.[clarification needed]
- ^ ACT,[20] cited in Schneider.[16]
- ^ Mundy, Liberty and Political Power in Toulouse, pp. 149–158.
- ^ Tardif (1886), Le Droit Privé au XIIIe Siècle d'après les Coutumes de Toulouse et Montpellier, pp. 21–22. (in French)
- ^ Mundy[22] and Tardif,[23] cited by Turning.[9]
- ^ Turning (2013), pp. 24 & 31.
- ^ See Turning[25] for various examples of the town's legal code during this era.
- ^ Turning (2013), p. 24.
- ^ Turning (2013), p. 25.
- ^ Turning (2013), p. 28.
- ^ Turning (2013), p. 36.
- ^ Berman (1983), Law and Revolution, pp. 467–477.
- ^ Berman,[31] cited in Turning.
- ^ a b c Turning (2013), p. 29.
- ^ Turning (2013), p. 37.
- ^ a b c Turning (2013), p. 30.
- ^ Turning (2013), p. 32–33.
- ^ Turning (2013), pp. 30–32.
- ^ Schneider (1992), p. 215.
- ^ a b Turning (2013), p. 40.
- ^ Higgs (1973), p. 15.
- ^ Schneider (1989), p. 71.
- ^ Felice (1853).
- ^ Lafaille (1701), p. 515.
- ^ a b c d Schneider (1992), p. 204.
- ^ Lafaille,[43] cited in Schneider.[44]
- ^ Lamoignon (6 December 1689), Letter.
- ^ Lamoignon,[46] cited in Schneider.[15]
- ^ a b Schneider (1992), p. 211.
- ^ Riquet Bonrepos (1805), p. 79.
- ^ Schneider (1992), p. 216.
- ^ Schneider (1992), pp. 212–213.
Bibliography
- de la Perrière, G. (1555). Les Gestes des Tolosains & d'Autres Nations de l'Environ (in French).. Translation of Bertrandi, Nicolas (1517). Gesta Tholosanorum [Deeds of the Toulousians] (in Latin).
- Faille, Germain de la (1701), Annales de la Ville de Toulouse depuis la Réünion de la Comté de Toulouse à la Couronne: avec un Abrécé de l'Ancienne Histoire de Cette Ville, et un Recueil de Divers Titres et Actes pour Servir de Preuves ou d'Éclaircissement à Ces Annales (in French), vol. II, Toulouse: G.L. Colomyes.
- Felice, G. de (1853), History of the Protestants of France, from the Commencement of the Reformation to the Present Time, London: George Routledge.
- Greengrass, Mark (July 1983), "The Anatomy of a Religious Riot in Toulouse in May 1562", The Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 34 (3): 367–391, .
- Higgs, David (1973), Ultraroyalism in Toulouse: From its Origins to the Revolution of 1830, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
- Mousnier, Roland (1980), The Institutions of France Under the Absolute Monarchy, 1598–1789: The Organs of State and Society, vol. II, translated by Arthur Goldhammer, Presses Universitaires de France.
- Raynal, Jean (1759), Histoire de la ville de Toulouse, avec une notice des hommes illustres, une suite chronologique et historique des évêques et archevêques de cette ville, et une table générale des capitouls, depuis la réunion du Comté de Toulouse à la Couronne jusqu'à présent (in French).
- Riquet Bonrepos, Pierre-Paul (1805), History of the Canal of Languedoc (in French), Impr. de Crapelet, OCLC 38684880.
- Schneider, Robert Alan (1989), Public Life in Toulouse, 1463-1789: From Municipal Republic to Cosmopolitan City, Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
- Schneider, Robert Alan (1992), "Crown and Capitoulat: Municipal Government in Toulouse", in Benedict, Philip (ed.), Cities and Social Change in Early Modern France, Abingdon: Routledge, pp. 195–220, ISBN 978-1-134-89219-8.
- Turning, Patricia (2013), Municipal Officials, Their Public, and the Negotiation of Justice in Medieval Languedoc: Fear Not the Madness of the Raging Mob, Leiden: Brill, ISBN 978-90-04-23464-2.