Chief minister of France


The chief minister of France or, closer to the French term, chief minister of state, or prime minister of France were and are informal titles given to various personages who received various degrees of power to rule the Kingdom of France on behalf of the monarch during the Ancien Régime. The appellation was not a position, but rather a job description for a royal favourite given wide-ranging powers as head of government. The chief minister was always a high official, often a secretary of state, or sometimes chancellor of France. When the monarch was a minor, the regent held this role.

History

Like the title of chief minister was unofficial, the monarch maintained all his powers, giving to the chief minister the task to make effective his orders. However, during moments where the king was absent from the country, highly sick, indifferent or unfit to govern, the chief minister had a strong role, becoming the real mind behind the state's operating.
Usually, the chief ministers were members of the Conseil [du Roi|King's Council] or high members of the French nobility or the Catholic clergy.
From 1661, Louis XIV and his successors, with varying degrees of success, sought to prevent any of their ministers from achieving supremacy over the others. The title of 'First Minister of State' was used, however the old title was not brought back after Louis XIV.
With the eruption of the French Revolution in 1789, the first minister of state progressively lost importance and influence inside national politics. Finally, with the coming of the constitutional monarchy in 1791, the title of first minister ceased to exist; executive power was vested elsewhere.

List

Before 1792

First French Empire (1804–1814)

Kingdom of France (1814–1815)

Hundred Days (1815)