Intendants were
royal civil servants in France under the
Old Regime. A product of the centralization policies of the French crown, intendants were appointed "commissions," and not purchasable hereditary "offices," which thus prevented the abuse of sales of royal offices and made them more tractable and subservient emissaries of the king. Intendants were sent to supervise and enforce the king's will in the provinces and had jurisdiction over three areas: finances, policing and justice. Their missions were always temporary, which helped reduce favorable bias toward a province, and were focused on royal inspection. Article 54 of the
Code Michau described their functions as "to learn about all crimes, misdemeanors and financial misdealings committed by our officials and of other things concerning our service and the tranquility of our people" ("
informer de tous crimes, abus et malversations commises par nos officiers et autres choses concernant notre service et le soulagement de notre peuple"). In the 17th and 18th centuries, the intendants were chosen from the
noblesse de robe ("administrative nobility") or the upper-bourgeoisie. Generally, they were
masters of requests in the
Conseil des parties. They were chosen by the
Controller-General of Finances who asked the advice of the
Secretary of State for War for those who were to be sent in border provinces. They were often young:
Charles Alexandre de Calonne became an intendant at the age of 32,
Turgot and
Louis Bénigne François Berthier de Sauvigny at the age of 34, and
Louis-Urbain-Aubert de Tourny at the age of 40. A symbol of royal centralization and absolutism, the intendant had numerous adversaries. Those nostalgic for an administration based on noble lineage (such as
Saint-Simon) saw intendants as parvenus and usurpers of noble power. Partisans of a less absolute monarchy (such as
Fénelon) called for them to be abolished.
Jacques Necker, the only Minister of Finances since 1720 who had not himself been an intendant, accused them of incompetence because of their youth and social aspirations. The
cahiers de doléances of 1789 depicted them as over zealous agents of fiscal policies which weighed heavily on the people. The term
intendant was also used for certain positions close to the Controller-General of Finances (see this term for more information): • intendants of finance • intendants of commerce • intendants of the sovereign council In the same way, the term
intendant général was used for certain commissioned positions close to the
State Secretaries of War and of the Navy.
History As early as the 15th century, the French kings sent commissioners to the
provinces to report on royal and administrative issues and to undertake any necessary action. These agents of the king were recruited from among the masters of requests, the
Councillors of State and members of the
Parlements or the
Court of Accounts. Their mission was always for a specific mandate and lasted for a limited period. Along with these, there were also commissioners sent to the army, in charge of provisioning the army, policing and finances; they would supervise accountants, providers, merchants, and generals, and attend war councils and tribunals for military crimes. Such commissioners are found in
Corsica as early as 1553, in
Bourges in 1592, in
Troyes in 1594, and in
Limoges in 1596. When
Henry IV ascended the throne in 1589, one of his prime focuses was to reduce the privileges of the provincial governors who, in theory, represented "the presence of the king in his province" but had, during the civil wars of the early modern period, proven themselves to be highly intractable; these positions had long been held by only the highest ranked
noble families in the realm. The Intendants to the provinces —- the term "Intendant" appears around 1620 during the reign of
Louis XIII – became an effective tool of regional control. Under Louis XIII's minister
Cardinal Richelieu, with France's entry into the
Thirty Years' War in 1635, the Intendants became a permanent institution in France. No longer mere inspectors, their role became one of government administrators. During the
Fronde in 1648, the members of Parlement of the
Chambre Saint-Louis demanded that the Intendants be suppressed;
Mazarin and
Anne of Austria gave in to these demands except in the case of border provinces threatened by Spanish or Imperial attack. At the end of the Fronde, the Intendants were reinstated. When
Louis XIV (1643–1715) was in power, the
Marquis of Louvois,
War Secretary between 1677 and 1691, further expanded the power of the provincial intendants. They monitored Louis's refinements of the French military, including the institution of a merit promotion system and a policy of enlistment limited to single men for periods of four years. After 1680, Intendants in France had a permanent position in a fixed region (or "
généralité"); their official titles being
intendant de justice, police et finances, ''commissaires départis dans les généralités du royaume pour l'exécution des ordres du roi
(or de Sa Majesté''). The position of Intendant remained in existence until the
French Revolution. The title was maintained thereafter for military officers with responsibility for financial auditing at regimental level and above. A 2021 study, which used a dataset of 430 intendants from 1640 to 1789, found that less than half of these officials went through the legally-specified training path. The study raised questions about the impersonal nature of these bureaucrats, with evidence indicating that familial and marital ties were factors in appointments, and that appointment duration had wide variability.
Functions Appointed and revoked by the king and reporting to the
Controller-General of Finances, the Intendant in his "généralité" had at his service a small team of secretaries. In the 18th century, the "généralité" was subdivided into "subdelegations" at the head of which was placed a "subdelegate" (having also a team of secretaries) chosen by the Intendant. In this way, the Intendant was relatively understaffed given his large jurisdiction.
Notable intendants •
Claude-François Bertrand de Boucheporn, in
Corsica then
Pau,
Bayonne and
Auch •
Paul Esprit Marie de la Bourdonnaye in
Poitiers •
Charles Alexandre de Calonne in
Metz, then in
Lille, future
Controller-General of Finances •
Nicolas-François Dupré de Saint-Maur in
Bordeaux •
Antoine-Martin Chaumont de La Galaizière in
Soissons then in
Lorraine •
Jean-Baptiste Antoine Auget de Montyon in
Poitiers •
Louis-Urbain-Aubert de Tourny in
Limoges, then in
Bordeaux •
Anne-Robert-Jacques Turgot in
Limoges, future
Controller-General of Finances New France The French North American colony of
New France, which later became the Canadian province of
Quebec, also had a senior official called an
intendant, who was responsible to the French King. New France's first intendant was
Jean Talon, comte d'Orsainville in 1665, and the last one, at the time of the
British conquest of Quebec was
François Bigot. ==Spain and Spanish Empire==