Louis-René de Caradeuc de La Chalotais (born March 6, 1701, Rennes, France—died July 12, 1785, Rennes) was a French magistrate who led the Breton Parlement (high court of justice) in a protracted legal battle against the authority of the government of King Louis XV. The struggle resulted in the purging and suspensions (1771–74) of the Parlements.
La Chalotais became advocate general in the Breton Parlement at Rennes in 1730 and attorney general in 1752. In 1761 he emerged as a leader of a growing anti-Jesuit campaign by issuing an attack on Jesuit control of France’s secondary schools. The following year the Parlement of Paris, against the wishes of Louis XV, ordered the suppression of the Jesuits. La Chalotais’s Essai d’éducation nationale (1763; “Essay on National Education”) advanced proposals that helped the government overcome the ensuing educational crisis.
Although his anti-Jesuit activities had made him a hero to the Philosophes (French writers of the Enlightenment), he had earned the hatred of the governor of Brittany, the duc d’Aiguillon. In 1763 La Chalotais led his Parlement in challenging the government’s right to impose a corvée (statute of forced labour for public works) on Brittany. Aiguillon retaliated by depriving La Chalotais’s son of his right to inherit his father’s office. The conflict reached its climax when, in 1765, the Breton Parlementaires staged a judicial strike. La Chalotais was arrested and imprisoned (November 1765), and upon his release he was exiled to Saintes (1767). In 1771 the king’s chief minister, René-Nicolas de Maupeou, deprived the Parlements of their political powers, but, shortly after the accession of King Louis XVI in 1774, the authority of the Parlements was restored, and La Chalotais was reinstated in his judicial office.