monarchy

monarchy
/mon"euhr kee/, n., pl. monarchies.
1. a state or nation in which the supreme power is actually or nominally lodged in a monarch. Cf. absolute monarchy, limited monarchy.
2. supreme power or sovereignty held by a single person.
[1300-50; ME monarchie < LL monarchia < Gk monarchía. See MONARCH, -Y3]
Syn. 1. See kingdom.

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Undivided sovereignty or rule by a single person, who is the permanent head of state.

The term is now used to refer to countries with hereditary sovereigns. The monarch was the ideal head of the new nation-states of the 16th and 17th centuries; his powers were nearly unlimited (see absolutism), though in Britain Parliament was able to restrict the sovereign's freedom of action, particularly through the Magna Carta (1215) and the Bill of Rights (1689). The old idea that the monarch represented (within the limits of his dominions) the rule of God over all things culminated in the 17th century in the doctrine of the divine right of kings (see divine kingship), exemplified by Louis XIV. Monarchical absolutism adapted to the Enlightenment by evolving into "benevolent despotism," as typified by the rule of Catherine II of Russia. The French Revolution dealt absolute monarchy a crushing blow, and World War I effectively destroyed what remained of it, the rulers of Russia, Germany, and Austria-Hungary being held responsible for the war and postwar misery. The institution developed into the constitutional monarchy in western Europe, though absolute (or near-absolute) monarchies continue to exist in the Middle East.

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Introduction

       political system based upon the undivided sovereignty or rule of a single person. The term applies to states in which supreme authority is vested in the monarch, an individual ruler who functions as the head of state and who achieves his position through heredity. Succession usually passes from father to son or follows other arrangements within the family or the monarchical dynasty.

Functions of monarchies
      A monarchy consists of distinct but interdependent institutions—a government and a state administration on the one hand, and a court and a variety of ceremonies on the other—that provide for the social life of the members of the dynasty, their friends, and the associated elite. Monarchy thus entails not only a political-administrative organization but also a “court society,” a term coined by the 20th-century German-born sociologist Norbert Elias (Elias, Norbert) to designate various groups of nobility that are linked to the monarchical dynasty (or “royal” house) through a web of personal bonds. All such bonds are evident in symbolic and ceremonial proprieties.

 During a given society's history there are certain changes and processes that create conditions conducive to the rise of monarchy. Because warfare was the main means of acquiring fertile land and trade routes, some of the most prominent monarchs in the ancient world made their initial mark as warrior-leaders. Thus, the military accomplishments of Octavian (later Augustus) led to his position as emperor and to the institution of monarchy in the Roman Empire (ancient Rome). Infrastructural programs and state-building also contributed to the development of monarchies. The need, common in arid cultures, to allocate fertile land and manage a regime of fresh water distribution (what the German-American historian Karl Wittfogel called hydraulic civilization) accounted for the founding of the ancient Chinese, Egyptian, and Babylonian monarchies on the banks of rivers. The monarchs also had to prove themselves as state-builders.

 Monarchy also results from the wish of a society—be it a city population, tribe, or multi-tribal “people”—to groom an indigenous leader who will properly represent its historical goals and advance its interests. Monarchy, therefore, rests on the cultural identity and symbolism of the society it represents, and in so doing it reifies that identity within the society while also projecting it to outsiders. Perhaps most importantly, successful and popular monarchs were believed to have a sacred right (divine right of kings) to rule: some were regarded as gods (as in the case of the Egyptian pharaohs (pharaoh) or the Japanese monarchs), some were crowned by priests, others were designated by prophets (King David of Israel), and still others were theocrats, leading both the religious and political spheres of their society—as did the caliphs (caliph) of the Islamic state from the 7th century AD. Coming from these varying backgrounds, leaders first rose to power on the grounds of their abilities and charisma. Accordingly, monarchies proved capable of adapting to various social structures while also enduring dynamic cultural and geopolitical conditions. Thus, some ancient monarchies evolved as small city-states while others became large empires, the Roman Empire being the most conspicuous example.

Premodern monarchies
 During the Middle Ages, European monarchies underwent a process of evolution and transformation. Traditions of theocratic kingship, which were based on Roman and Christian precedents, emerged in the early centuries of the period, leading kings to assume their status as God's representatives on earth. Early medieval monarchs functioned as rulers of their people (rather than as territorial lords), and each was responsible for their people's protection. In the 11th century, however, the Gregorian Reform, and the Investiture Controversy associated with it, undermined the claims of theocratic kingship, and monarchs—most notably the emperors—looked to Roman law for new justification of their right to rule. Throughout the Middle Ages, kings had come to power through conquest, acclamation, election, or inheritance. Medieval monarchs ruled through their courts, which were at first private households but from the 12th century developed into more formal and institutional bureaucratic structures. It was during the 12th century as well that kings evolved into rulers of people and of territories with defined borders. By the end of the Middle Ages, the development of the territorial monarchies had laid the foundation for the idea of the modern nation-state.

      Unlike in Europe, the Islamic monarchy, the Caliphate, remained unified and theocratic, combining religious and lay functions. In Japan, the monarchy conceded real power to the shogunate, which was technically controlled by the emperor but in practice dominated by the shogun, a supreme warlord. Attempts to attain this position often resulted in inter-dynastic conflict. In China, the monarchy evolved as a centralized bureaucratic body, held by a succession of various dynasties.

      The Renaissance and early modern period led to a newly adapted type of monarchy in Europe, with monarchs initiating voyages of discovery to other continents, developing new forms of mercantile trade, and, most of all, building mass armies and large government bureaucracies that represented innovative forms of political administration. Compared to their predecessors, the monarchs of this era were better able to monitor and manage their own societies, to exact more taxes, and to decide on interstate war and conquest. The Renaissance monarchs, such as Charles V (reigned 1519–56), Francis I (1515–47), and Elizabeth I (1558–1603), unified their realms and strengthened their bureaucracies. However, later monarchs, such as Catherine the Great (Catherine II) of Russia (reigned 1762–96), Louis XIV of France (1643–1715), and Frederick the Great (Frederick II) of Prussia (1740–86), symbolized “absolutist (absolutism)” rule, as exemplified by Louis XIV's declaration, “L'état, c'est moi” (“I am the state”). Possessing complete administrative and military power, an absolute monarch could bypass the feudal lords or subjugate independent city-states and run his kingdom with individual autonomy or arbitrariness.

 Yet in most cases absolute monarchy was absolutist only in appearance. In practice, most monarchs remained dependent upon chosen administrators to whom they had delegated the authority to govern their states, as was the case in France. These officials were checked by institutions such as Great Britain's Parliament, or balanced by factions of the landed aristocracy, as in Russia and Poland. Monarchs were thus able to exploit their power, adding onto their traditional legitimacies while allowing for certain checks on their regimes, all of which seemed to portend continuous stability, had changes in the prevailing social and economic order not challenged the future of absolutist monarchies. One force of change, the Reformation (and the factionalism associated with it), triggered protracted religious conflicts, while the Industrial Revolution unleashed social unrest and class conflict—all of which occurred amid ongoing developments in international trade, investments, and other complex financial transactions that provoked economic problems such as inflation.

      Most importantly, new perceptions emerged, first in Europe and then in the Middle East, Asia, and Africa, that reduced the monarchs' authority. The concept of “divine right (divine right of kings)” was often eroded by the spread of secularism. Emerging ideas of the individual's natural rights (as espoused by the philosophers John Locke (Locke, John) and Jean-Jacques Rousseau (Rousseau, Jean-Jacques) and further evidenced by the Declaration of Independence of the United States) and those of nations' rights (particularly regarding independence and self-determination) gained prominence. Moreover, the monarchs' traditional supremacy, anchored in their lineage as descendants of war heroes and of leading notables, gradually weakened in favour of what the German-born American sociologist Reinhard Bendix called “a mandate of the people.” Thus, a society's “ sovereignty,” or its principles of independence, cohesion, and leadership, rested with its people as a whole and not with an individual and his dynasty.

      Monarchies were therefore challenged by various opposition movements. Although the British monarchy was able to cope with religious strife as well as social unrest among the rural and urban lower classes, the monarchies in France (beginning in 1789), Russia (1917), and China (1911) were swept away by popular social revolutions. The Austrian, German, and Ottoman monarchies also collapsed after World War I, having been defeated militarily and replaced by indigenous nationalist movements. It then became evident that monarchies could survive only if they were built upon a foundation of broad, nationalist-popular support, benefiting from a majority coalition of social forces. (See nationalism.)

Monarchy in the modern era
      When he crowned himself Emperor of France in 1804 (and ratified the act by a people's referendum), Napoleon Bonaparte (Napoleon I) instituted a new type of monarchy. This was the “nationalist monarchy,” whereby the monarch ruled on behalf of his society's nationalist aspirations (nationalism) and drive for independence (as opposed to the earlier types of legitimacy). Napoleon based his rule on the instruments of the French Revolution, such as the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen. He was also, however, an absolutist monarch who installed his family members as rulers in several European states that had fallen under his control.

      Having taken root in Europe, nationalist monarchies spread to other parts of the world.In the 19th and early 20th centuries, new monarchs came to power in Greece and the Arab provinces (notably Egypt and Syria) and in states that had gained independence from the Ottoman Empire and the Austro-Hungarian Empire (see Austria-Hungary). The monarchs of this era wished to emphasize the modern identity of their nations, and in so doing they attempted to use their imperial titles as proof of modernity, even as they aspired to achieve equal footing with established, prominent monarchs such as the British royalty. Their ultimate political influence, however, was limited: under their leadership political institutions failed to root themselves in society, and economies remained relatively underdeveloped. Unable to meet the needs of mass societies, the nationalist monarchs could not withstand the waves of major opposition movements, typical of the mid-20th century, which were either anticolonial, nationalist, or Marxist. These movements regarded all monarchies as bastions of an old, obsolete order that had to be eradicated. Monarchs were blamed for social injustice, political corruption, and economic backwardness, and they were consequently overthrown. Monarchies had acquired an image of a defeated, outdated system.

      This mainly typified the absolutist monarchies led by rulers who exercised full authority as heads of states. In the midst of this, however, emerged a group of European monarchies that adapted to the new challenges. These became the “constitutional monarchies,” the leading contemporary examples of which are the United Kingdom, Belgium, The Netherlands (Netherlands, The), Norway, Sweden, and Denmark. In these states, a legacy of political bargaining has existed, witnessing the monarch's gradual transfer of authority to various societal groups. Although the monarch remains the head of state and the emblem of state authority, the sovereign accepts that this authority has been transposed to that of a formal position, and the monarch waives actual political power, which is assumed by the people. In such monarchies political authority is exercised by elected politicians, and the political process runs according to democratic procedures. Hence, the monarch functions as a unifying and symbolic head of state who performs ceremonial duties, while the monarchical traditions and ceremonies have become national assets that symbolize historical continuity.

      By the early 21st century, examples of traditional monarchies were largely limited to the Arab world. These included the six oil-rich states, located along the Persian Gulf— Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, and Oman—as well as Jordan and Morocco. Their longevity can only partially be accounted for by the abundance of oil revenues that made it possible for their monarchs to overpower any opposition groups. Jordan and Morocco, after all, were not awash in oil wealth but were among the most stable regimes in the region. The fact that many of these states benefited from U.S. and British military support certainly accounts for some of their perseverance in the face of external threats, as was the case for Kuwait in 1960–61 and more overtly in the Persian Gulf War (1990–91).

      The stability of Arab monarchies has rested largely upon their political and cultural underpinnings, where the idea of a single hereditary ruler—or, rather, a single hereditary ruling family—has maintained a high degree of social currency. In the case of the Persian Gulf states, local monarchies have thrived by grafting themselves to the existing tribal framework. Such a system differs significantly from the concept of monarchy found in other parts of the world inasmuch as power lies in the hands of a ruling family—an extended entity whose members can number in the thousands—rather than in the hands of a single individual. In that system, the king is merely the head of the ruling family, a situation that early European orientalists described by recycling the phrase primus inter pares. Just as the monarch is the first among equals (primus inter pares) in the ruling family, the ruling family itself is the first among equals among the tribes of a given country. In such a situation, the ruling family maintains its position by mollifying dissenting opinions, addressing grievances, distributing largesse, and, when necessary, squelching extreme views through the selective use of coercive power. (In Saudi Arabia, the monarchy also relies to a great extent on religious legitimacy.) Such political systems can be loosely described as pluralistic, since membership in any extended family group or tribe grants one a voice in ongoing events. Those outside the tribal system, however, often have little political voice. The monarch and his family maintain political stability by managing events and by building political alliances. Stability is further advanced in the Persian Gulf monarchies by the fact that a significant portion of the population belongs to the royal family. Under rare circumstances, the royal family will dethrone a monarch if his inattention or incompetence threaten the family's place at the head of society. Such an event occurred when Saʿūd, king of Saudi Arabia, was dethroned in 1964.

      The monarchies of Morocco and Jordan, both of which resemble traditional monarchies, have thrived for different reasons. In Morocco, the king is also a religious figure of great importance. In Jordan, the Hashemite monarchy owes its longevity to the exceptional political acumen of Hussein (Ḥussein) ibn Ṭalāl (reigned 1953–99), which secured political power for the family.

      The ruling families of the gulf Arab states have proved themselves effective state-builders by introducing technological innovations and social modernity into their societies while enforcing a conservative political atmosphere. Such monarchies have proved to be effective integrators of their societies. They did not achieve this by enforcing a new, socialist, Arab-nationalist, and revolutionary character on society—as did revolutionary states such as Syria and Egypt. Instead they waived that pretension to create a uniform society and permitted socio-cultural variety, intended to befit traditional sentiments.

Joseph Kostiner

Additional Reading
The conditions that gave rise to monarchies are portrayed in Fernand Braudel, A History of Civilizations (1994; originally published in French, 1987); Karl A. Wittfogel, Oriental Despotism: A Comparative Study of Total Power (1957, reprinted 1981); and C. Northcote Parkinson, The Evolution of Political Thought (1958). Theoretical discussions appear in S.N. Eisenstadt, The Political Systems of Empires (1963, reprinted 1993), which analyzes the political systems of the Classical empire-monarchies. J.H. Burns (ed.), The Cambridge History of Medieval Political Thought, c. 350–c. 1450 (1988, reissued 1991); and J.H. Burns and Mark Goldie (eds.), The Cambridge History of Political Thought, 1450–1700 (1991), include valuable articles about the ideologies legitimizing European monarchies.Richard Bonney (ed.), The Rise of the Fiscal State in Europe, c. 1200–1815 (1999); Catherine Mulgan, The Renaissance Monarchies, 1469–1558 (1998); Michael S. Kimmel, “The Ambivalence of Absolutism: State and Nobility in 17th Century France and England,” Journal of Political and Military Sociology, 14(1)55–74 (Fall 1986); and Max Beloff, The Age of Absolutism, 1660–1815 (1954, reissued 1971), explain how monarchs used new technological, administrative, and propaganda tools to strengthen their rule while reaching compromises with nobility.Discussions of monarchy and revolution are presented in Theda Skocpol, States and Social Revolutions (1979), one of the most convincing analyses of the fall of the absolutist French, Russian, and Chinese monarchies; Guglielmo Ferrero, The Principles of Power: The Great Political Crises of History, trans. by Theodore R. Jaeckel (1942; originally published in French, 1942), a classic about monarchies' attempts to cope with revolutionary tides, mostly in the 19th century; and Arno J. Mayer, The Persistence of the Old Regime, Europe to the Great War (1981), which advances the view that the social and cultural fabric of monarchical regimes remained intact until World War I.Social and ceremonial aspects of monarchy are covered in Reinhard Bendix, Kings or People: Power and the Mandate to Rule (1978); and Norbert Elias, The Court Society, rev. ed. (2006; originally published in German, 1969). Samuel P. Huntington, Political Order in Changing Societies (1968, reprinted 2006), explains the collapse of colonial and ancient regimes in the Third World and how traditional monarchies are challenged by new forces. Joseph Kostiner (ed.), Middle East Monarchies: The Challenge of Modernity (2000), stresses how monarchy prevailed as the most popular political regime in the Arab world.Joseph Kostiner

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Universalium. 2010.

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