The term '
in reference to a position of royal accounting and financial oversight had existed in various forms prior to 1547, but the direct predecessor to the 17th century "Controller-General" was created in 1547, with two position-holders whose job was to verify the accounts of the Royal Treasurer ('), then the head of the royal financial system. The name of the charge of the controllers came from their account book, or '''' (literally "counter-roll", meaning scroll copy), in which they kept their accounts in order to compare them with those of the Royal Treasurer. The office was thus, in the beginning, not a senior rank governmental position, but merely an accounting audit charge. In the period following 1547, the financial administration in France continued to evolve, resulting in 1552 in the creation of
Intendants of Finances ('
), of which one was to become in 1561 the leading Superintendent of Finances (') with cabinet rank. In 1661, the last Superintendent of Finances,
Nicolas Fouquet, was arrested by order of King
Louis XIV and charged with embezzlement, so that subsequently
Jean-Baptiste Colbert became head of the royal financial and tax collection administration, at first with the title of '
, then, from 1665, with the title of '. The title Superintendent of Finances was abolished. Under Colbert's competent and dynamic administration, the Controller-General's responsibilities were greatly redefined. Louis XIV suppressed the two already existing positions holding the title of Controller-General as he wanted to replace these with a sole homonym office with cabinet rank in charge of all the finances and taxes of France. Furthermore, this new position was no longer transmissible as the head of state could revoke the respective commission at his pleasure at any time. In addition, the new position was far better connected with the Royal Finance Counsel ('
) than the previous charge of Superintendent. In these ways, the ' became a true senior governmental post. The function of Controller-General would continue until 1791, with an interruption at the era of the
Polysynody (1715–1718) under the regency of Philippe d'Orléans during the childhood of King
Louis XV, when all ministerial offices were replaced by councils composed of members of the high aristocracy. Occasionally, the
de facto Minister of Finance served instead as President of the Royal Council of Finance, who had a superior rank to a mere Controller-General of Finances, or, in the case of
Jacques Necker, who, being a
Protestant, could not serve as Controller-General, as Director-General of Finances and of the Treasury ('
and ' from 1776 to 1781 and again from 1788 until 1790), in ceremonial terms a position ranked below the previous two. The position was renamed
Minister of Finances in 1791 which, along with all other ministerial positions, was abolished in 1794, but restored with the advent of the
French Directory in 1795. Nowadays the position is called (with exceptions) '''' (Minister of the Economy and Finance). ==Responsibilities==