Jean Orry

Jean Louis Orry (Paris, 4 September 1652 Paris, 29 September 1719) was a French economist.[1]

Jean Orry
Born(1652-09-04)September 4, 1652.
DiedSeptember 29, 1719(1719-09-29) (aged 67)

Life

Early career

Jean Orry was born in Paris on 4 September 1652 to Charles Orry, a merchant, and Madelaine le Cosquyno.[2]

Orry studied law and entered Royal service as a lawyer, becoming a munitioneer for the army of Italy between 1690 and 1698, where he was able to demonstrate his skill at planning and organisation.[3] In 1701, at the start of the Spanish War of Succession, Orry purchased his nobility and became an adviser to Louis XIV of France.[3]

Work in Spain

Orry was sent to Spain by King Louis in 1701.[4] There, Orry joined the self-styled Princesse des Ursins as the de facto rulers of Spain.[5] Towards the end of his term there, by a royal decree composed by Orry on 23 December 1713, traditional local governments (the Cortes) were centralized by the creation of twenty-one provinces. These Consejos Territoriales were superseded by an intendant directly responsible to Orry. Some of the local councils, such as the Council of Castile retained influence through less direct channels.

Dismissal from Spain

Orry was dismissed through pressures brought to bear by the Parmesan contingent round the new queen, Elisabetta Farnese, and Giulio Alberoni.[6] Orry was ordered from Spain on 7 February 1715. The King signed the Decreto de Nueva Planta later that year, revoking most of the historical rights and privileges of the different kingdoms that conformed the Spanish Crown, unifying them under the laws of Castile, where the Cortes regained some of its power.[5]

Legacy

Giulio Alberoni, the cardinal who succeeded him in power, continued the main lines of his financial reorganization and his repression of the power of the royal councils in favour of a bureaucracy wholly dependent upon the central power. Orry's creation of secretaries of state and intendants continued as a significant element in Spanish governmental administration.[7]

gollark: Sure, but it should still be feared.
gollark: https://openai.com/blog/vpt/
gollark: There was a government program to fund fibre connectivity, but it doesn't seem to have worked well.
gollark: A lot of developed countries seem to have issues like this because the old stuff technically works and has tons of inertia and regulatory nonsense and nobody cares enough to replace it, but developing ones which didn't have big telephone networks or whatever presumably just installed fibre and did fine.
gollark: The UK isn't very good at infrastructure.

See also

References

  1. Hargreaves-Mawdsley (1979), p. 17.
  2. "Jean Orry Family Tree". Geneanet. Retrieved 9 July 2019.
  3. Ozanam (1989).
  4. Crowley (2002), p. 58.
  5. Kuethe & Andrien (2014), p. 41.
  6. Frey & Frey (1995), p. 153.
  7. Sanchez (2016), p. 32.

Further reading

  • Anne Dubet, 2006. Jean Orry et la réforme du gouvernement de l'Espagne (1701-1706) (Clermont-Ferrand)

Bibliography

  • Crowley, Patrick (2002). Before and beyond EMU historical lessons and future prospects. Routledge. ISBN 1134458053.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Frey, Linda; Frey, Marsha (1995). The treaties of the War of the Spanish Succession : an historical and critical dictionary. Greenwood Press. ISBN 0313278849.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Kuethe, Allan; Andrien, Kenneth (2014). The Spanish Atlantic world in the eighteenth century : war and the Bourbon reforms, 1713-1796. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 1107043573.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Hargreaves-Mawdsley, W.N. (1979). Eighteenth-Century Spain 1700–1788: A Political, Diplomatic and Institutional History. Springer Publishing. ISBN 1349018031.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Ozanam, Denise (1989). Jean Orry, munitionnaire du roi, 1690-1698. Imprimerie Nationale.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Sanchez, Rafael (2016). Military entrepreneurs and the Spanish contractor state in the eighteenth century. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198784112.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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