. . . . . . "1708"^^ . . . "Le Cours des aides (lett. \"Corti di aiuto\") erano una delle assemblee sovrane esistenti durante l'Ancien R\u00E9gime in Francia. La loro funzione era quella di esprimersi relativamente a scelte di finanza straordinaria (in materia fiscale) e ordinaria (cosiddetta \"domaniale\"). La loro opinione veniva quindi riportata alla chambre du Tr\u00E9sor (tesoreria)."@it . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Court of Aids"@en . "Les cours des aides sont en France, sous l'Ancien R\u00E9gime, des cours souveraines d'appel cr\u00E9\u00E9es au XIVe si\u00E8cle pour traiter les contentieux fiscaux, ayant exist\u00E9, en discontinu, de 1355 \u00E0 1791 \u00E0 Paris et en province."@fr . . . "Cour des aides"@fr . . "Le Cours des aides (lett. \"Corti di aiuto\") erano una delle assemblee sovrane esistenti durante l'Ancien R\u00E9gime in Francia. La loro funzione era quella di esprimersi relativamente a scelte di finanza straordinaria (in materia fiscale) e ordinaria (cosiddetta \"domaniale\"). La loro opinione veniva quindi riportata alla chambre du Tr\u00E9sor (tesoreria)."@it . . "Cour des Aides"@de . "The Courts of Aids (French: Cours des aides) were sovereign courts in Ancien R\u00E9gime France, primarily concerned with customs, but also other matters of public finance. They exercised some control over certain excise taxes and octroi duties, which were regarded as of a different nature from the taille, the gabelle, and the general imposts of the kingdom. The Paris court sat in the , of which a monumental door can still be seen in the . It was set up to judge appeal-cases of extraordinary (i.e. fiscal) and ordinary (i.e. \"domaniale\") financial matters relating to the (treasury)."@en . . . . "Les cours des aides sont en France, sous l'Ancien R\u00E9gime, des cours souveraines d'appel cr\u00E9\u00E9es au XIVe si\u00E8cle pour traiter les contentieux fiscaux, ayant exist\u00E9, en discontinu, de 1355 \u00E0 1791 \u00E0 Paris et en province."@fr . "1113849116"^^ . "Cours des aides"@it . . . . "29472234"^^ . . . . . . "The Courts of Aids (French: Cours des aides) were sovereign courts in Ancien R\u00E9gime France, primarily concerned with customs, but also other matters of public finance. They exercised some control over certain excise taxes and octroi duties, which were regarded as of a different nature from the taille, the gabelle, and the general imposts of the kingdom. The Paris court sat in the , of which a monumental door can still be seen in the . It was set up to judge appeal-cases of extraordinary (i.e. fiscal) and ordinary (i.e. \"domaniale\") financial matters relating to the (treasury). Guillaume de Lamoignon de Blancmesnil was \"premier pr\u00E9sident\" of the Paris Court of Aids from 1746 to 1749. Guillaume-Chr\u00E9tien de Lamoignon de Malesherbes, his son, succeeded him and served from 1750 to 1775. (According to an etching from 1655 Jacques Amelot was the \"premier pr\u00E9sident\" of the Cour des Aydes or, in English, Court of Aids. See the Metropolitan Museum of Art Gallery Images for his portrait of 1655 and its inscription.)"@en .