The government restructured the tax base to place greater emphasis on indirect taxes rather than on the peasant-based taille. |
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Nevertheless, in most provinces, nobles continued to escape the oldest basic direct tax, the taille, not to mention forced labour on the roads. |
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The main direct tax, the taille, was levied on persons in central provinces, but on land in peripheral ones like Languedoc. |
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The taille, which is produced by the second pressing, is sold off. |
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As early as 1439 the nobility had given the king the right to maintain a standing army and to raise the taille which was a tax to pay for the army. |
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He abandoned the countryside above all to escape the taille, a tax to which, unlike the nobles, he would have been subject if he had continued to live in rural France. |
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The taille was estimated in collection for 1551 at around 6 million livres. |
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In France, nobles were exempt from paying the taille, the major direct tax. |
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There was a new tax to be raised known as the taille that was to provide funding for a new Royal army. |
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French finances during the war were mainly financed by the increase in the taille tax, as well as indirect taxes like the gabelle and customs fees. |
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