Politics of Aristocratic Empires

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A01=John H. Kautsky
Aristocrat's Castle
Aristocratic Empires
Aristocratic Exploitation
Aristocratic Ideology
Aristocratic Institutions
Aristocratic Politics
Aristocrat’s Castle
Author_John H. Kautsky
Bureaucratic Empires
Category=JPF
Central Aristocracy
Central Government
Chou Period
comparative political systems
comparative study of aristocratic rule
Eighth Century Japan
elite governance structures
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Feudal Western Europe
High Aristocrats
Ibn Saud
Inca Peru
Individual Aristocrat
Interclass Mobility
Intraaristocratic Conflicts
Late Medieval Western Europe
Lower Aristocracy
modernization in historical societies
peasant
peasant class dynamics
Peasant Revolts
Primitive Cultivators
revolts
Sixteenth Century Ottoman Empire
social stratification theory
state formation analysis
traditional
Traditional Aristocratic Empires
Traditional Aristocratic Order

Product details

  • ISBN 9781560009139
  • Weight: 820g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Jan 1997
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Politics of Aristocratic Empires is a study of a political order that prevailed throughout much of the world for many centuries without any major social conflict or change and with hardly any government in the modern sense. Although previously ignored by political science, powerful remnants of this old order still persist in modern politics.

The historical literature on aristocratic empires typically is descriptive and treats each empire as unique. By contrast, this work adopts an analytical, explanatory, and comparative approach and clearly distinguishes aristocratic empires from both primitive and more modern, commercialized societies. It develops generalizations that are supported and richly illustrated by data from many empires and demonstrates that a pattern of politics prevailed across time, space, and cultures from ancient Egypt five millennia ago to Saudi Arabia five decades ago, from China and Japan to Europe, from the Incas and the Aztecs to the Tutsi. Kautsky argues that aristocrats, because they live off the labor of peasants, must perform the primary governmental functions of taxation and warfare. Their performance is linked to particular values and beliefs, and both functions and ideologies in turn condition the stakes, the forms, and the arenas of intra-aristocratic conflict—the politics of the aristocracy.

The author also analyzes the roles of the peasantry and the townspeople in aristocratic politics and shows that peasant revolts on any large scale occur only after commercial modernization. He concludes with chapters on the modernization of aristocratic empires and on the importance in modern politics of institutional and ideological remnants of the old aristocratic order.