РефератыИностранный языкThThe Move From Aristocracy To Bureaucracy

The Move From Aristocracy To Bureaucracy

? Discuss This View Of The Development Of States Within Thi Essay, Research Paper


This question assumes much about the nature of an


aristocracy in a Europe that saw countries such as Turkey where, until around


1570, the aristocracy was almost negligible to Russia, where the boyars of Ivan


IV are believed by some to have replaced the Tsar himself. In a continent of


such diversity, there is bound to be a different reasoning for each form of


aristocracy and the development of each state.?


The schism is particularly strong between Western and Eastern Europe.In the fifteenth century, the Papal schism, the


accession of such characters as Charles VI of France, the repeated minorities


in Scotland and the limited constitutional power of the Holy Roman Emperor lent


western rulers a dependence on their nobles who started the period as the best


educated large class of lay people reliable for use at court, but this would


soon change, aided by the growth of educational institutes, founded on the spur


of the Renaissance and the Reformation.?


The death of the feudal army or fyrd was vital in decreasing the


importance of the nobility.? Experienced


mercenaries were hired across Europe with their experienced veteran


captains.? Henry VIII hired ?Scots,


Spaniards, Gascons, Portuguese, Italians, Albanians, Greeks, Tatars, Germans,


Burgundians and Flemings? according to one contemporary whilst Michael Romanov


kept 17,400 mercenaries in his service.?


His son, Alexis, employed 60,000 by 1663.? Until the Treaty of Cateau-Cambresis, the French border along the


Spanish Road was guarded by 10,000 Swiss pikemen.? Removing the need to rely on the aristocracy as one?s source of


military power removed a vital part of the nobility?s hold on the monarchy and


took away all of their power to insist on political influence.? The destruction of nobility in battle, such


as that of the Scots at Flodden not only reinforced the need for professional


soldiers but reaffirmed the decline of the soldier-noble as a class, and set the


tone for an era of downsizing and demoting the old noblesse d?epee.? The


muzzling of the aristocracy and the power to patronise the lower nobility


increased the power of monarchies through this age . Bodin wrote that the only ?truly royal? states in


Early Modern Europe were England, Spain and France, and it is with these


category of states that we will start. France was a strongly monarchical state that, from


the reign of Francis I, openly held venal offices.? The growth of offices throughout the period and of the


office-holding class was more advanced in the French kingdom than elsewhere.


Between 1515 and 1665, the number of venal offices rose from 4,000 to 46,000


and the amount of revenue they produced was reckoned to be about 419 million


livres ? five times the annual royal budget.?


As a result of ennoblement through these channels, the noblesse de robe emerged to challenge


the three ancient estates (leading some historians to suggest, probably


mistakenly, that the gentry wished to form a fourth estate), and in line with


the increase in the sale of offices, they increased the power of their class.


Whereas Henri II and Francois I had courts filled with princes of the blood,


dukes, peers and great officers (reflecting the roots of the noblesse d??p?e), by the late sixteenth


century, the power of the old aristocrats even at the highest levels was being


eroded.? In 1594, the Constable


Montmorency-Damville sat on the Royal Financial Commission with three other


great nobles, but by 1598, with the exception of the Protestant Sully, the


King?s council was a representation of the noblesse


de robe. The accumulation of offices in France in some cases


did reinforce the aristocracy as they bought they way to influence, and in some


cases, wealthier aristocrats amassed such a number of offices of such influence


that they could become local sovereigns.?


This is paradoxical, given that a strong argument for the cultivation of


the culture of venality was as a means to counter the growing irritation of the


local Parlements and estates that


were enforcing forms of local independence.?


However, in general, this era saw a usurping of the great nobles by the


gentry. The growth of the influence of the gentry was not


just recognition of the growth of their numerical strength and improved status


as noblesse de robe, but as a result


of the faction and intrigue that pervaded France?s old nobility throughout the


Wars of Religion.? As a result, the


nobility tended only to return to favour as regards appointments during


exceptional cases of excellence or during times of royal weakness.? (For example, Gaston and Conde were recalled


to the royal chambers during the minority of Louis XIV.)? Louis XIV?s reign, starting in 1661,


typifies the trend: of his seventeen councillors, just two were from old


aristocratic houses.? Not only were the


old nobility racked with ancient grudges and prone to faction, but they almost


universally lacked the legal training necessary to maintain a seventeenth


century administrative position.? By the


advent of the seventeenth century, all that the nobility were fit for were


regional posts and army or ecclesiastical positions. Whilst the high nobility suffered, the robins (lawyers) gained a monopoly over


the sercretaryships in all of the sections of royal affairs requiring routine


administration and in the sovereign courts.?


It must be realised that the old system of old families dominating the


court had neither stigma nor problem for Early Modern Europe.? It was the order in which things lay.? As such, the growth of legal and financial


noblesse de robe dynasties was a hallmark of this era.? The Phelypeaux family provided nine


secretaries of state without a break between 1610 and 1777 whilst the Nicolay


family provided the nine first presidents of the Chambre des Comptes of Paris


between 1506 and 1791. By 1521, Francois I was complaining that ?most of the


offices of the kingdom, of all types, are owned in expectancy?.? Paradoxically, given their nouveau riche


means, the old hereditary principle of office was actually reinforced by the


noblesse de robe, who having bought offices, saw them as bought property and as


a means of reinforcing their membership of the second estate. Although Francois insisted that one had to survive


the changeover of office by forty days in order to prevent the establishment of


new dynasties and to allow the reversion of offices back to the Crown for their


resale, the droit annuel was later


adopted in exchange for the forty days rule, as a means of extracting money


from the offices.? Time-shared offices


were opposed at every turn, and eventually the format for the retention of


offices was of offices that could be inherited, but which were taxed.? The price of offices was hit by inflation,


which although reflected by the tied-in droit annuel, made offices unobtainable


by the royalty, so the crown could not benefit from the rise in values. As


another consequence of the inflation, the Crown could not afford to buy any


offices and so could not reform them.?


The growth in offices occurred at all levels. Offices, such as the


businesses of urban fishmongers, were soon acquired by the government in an


attempt to raise more revenue, but they succeeded only in confusing the


convoluted societal structure further.?


With offices out of the price range of the government, reform of the


system was impossible.? Revenue was


raised by the sale of new offices, created by adding layers upon layers were


added to the state administrative system.?


The Parlements recorded feelings of being threatened by a new executive


justice across the kingdom. The French bureaucratic class grew massively,


though most of the posts were redundant (the old taille office found itself monitoring the activities of a new


office in charge of all taxes and levies) and so reduced the number of bureaucrats


without increasing the active power of the government.? However, it is important to remember that


with the bought offices, many of the supposed bureaucrats were almost of


amateur status, and can not really be judged to be bureaucrats in the spirit of


the question. The growth of venal government never extended as


high as the kings? Chief Ministers.? The


ministries were never purchasable offices and they relied on personal contact


with the King for their appointment.? At


this level, it is fair to say that a professional bureaucracy rose up, although


whether one can regard the attitude of Richelieu as being any different to his


predecessors is debatable.? Not a


?professional,? in the modern sense of the word, he did use the position for


personal financial gain (to the tune of three million livres per annum) as did


his predecessors. Indeed, the nature of the post might suggest that although


the post was meritocratic, it had always been so.? This was not modernisation on the part of the Renaissance kings,


so much as royal common sense? Louis


XIV?s decision to rule alone reflects that the king?s advisers needed to be


suitably meritorious and that they were just a help to pragmatic kings? (it is


hard to believe that the egocentric Sun King would have found anyone that he


trusted more than himself.)? Had there


ever been more than pragmatic realism to the post, then the ceremony-obsessed


Louis would probably have had one.??


Richelieu and de Mazarin were France?s two most illustrious Ministers


and royal friendship was their sole qualification. The importance of the royal ministries was the power


to appoint, sack and reform ministers and ministries.? Richelieu was able to clear the court of redundant offices (such


as Admiral and Constable) by 1627, reflecting the diminishing of the importance


of the old hierarchy in favour of a new system. The King?s Council was rapidly


becoming less noble, as typified by the afore-mentioned selection preferences


of Louis XIV, and ministers of state were therefore less subservient to the


Council.? The Council of State, formed


in 1643, met passing statutes in the presence of the king and decrees in his


absence. Ministers for individual areas emerged, and foreign affairs ministers,


financial ministers and military ministers were all mandated by the rise of


Louis XIV.? Vitally, this system not


only reserved the king the power of appointment taken away by the venal


offices, but also allowed a meritocracy to emerge at the highest levels of


government.? Although the French system was more open to


newcomers than its formality might suggest, it is important to remember that by


the eighteenth century, the noblesse de robe and the noblesse d?epee were


indistinguishable, and that although the later system was more competent,


excluding those lacking judicial training, it was by no means a


bureaucracy.? Indeed, it was with the


aim of joining the aristocracy that bureaucrats emerged.? Although the venality of the French system was very


extreme, it is a good example of the muzzling of the aristocracy and the rise


of the educated lower gentry and noblesse


de robe.? A pattern that occurs


elsewhere, although for different reasons. In Spain, similar diminuation of the great offices


was occurring although the extensive scale of venal offices was not so great.? As such, in 1520 the Constable and Admiral


were given joint regency with Adrian of Utrecht, a deviation from the normal


path of Spanish government made in order to win over the rapidly weakening


Castilian nobility.? Charles V had


stopped having a Secretary of State by 1530, and instead deferred such


responsibility to a pair of secretaries of state.? The movement from these secretaries to real ministries only came


under Olivares who set up a Junta de


Ejecucion to make a centralised policy to circumvent the twelve Cortes.?


The Juntas were sabotaged and abolished by 1643 and Spain once more


became a politically fragmented and regionalist country, closer to a monarquia than a monarchy. Olivares was attempting to cripple the Cortes system


and the regional assemblies because it was precisely counter to the


meritocratic system that had produced him.?


The royal council of Castile had been dominated by the great nobility


theoughout the fifteenth century and faction had overruled real political


questions.? As such, after 1480, the


nobles lost the right to vote on affairs of state.? Although the 1504-6 and 1516-22 crises demonstrated their


continued power, by the 1530s they were finally reduced to the position that


Olivares wanted them.? The replacement


of the Spanish aristocracy required the intake of large numbers of letrados (University trained jurists)


and they soon came to dominate the corregidores


? the posts of administration and justice.?


They brought about a rapid improvement in the general standard of justice


in Spain, but they were soon corrupted and by the seventeenth century they


represented the interests of local grandees.?


Murcia?s official in 1647 protected bandits and promoted smuggling out


of Portugal. The era saw the rise of the educated lesser nobility,


in accordance with the rise of education in Spain.? The two Castilian universities became twenty by 1620, making


Spain one of the best educated countries in Europe.? The thirteen Aragonite universities and twenty Castilian


institutions supplied all of the twenty-four judges in the Chancelleria of


Valladolid, and fifty of Philip IV?s hundred councillors were university


professors.? Most were from northern


Spanish families who had been ennobled within three generations.?? Philip IV?s council of Castile was entirely


run by letrados whilst the Audencias (Courts


of Appeal) were also effectively run by the letrados. Due to the improvement in the education of the


judges and magistrates, there was no real control of the lawyers by the


monarchy, which meant that, in Olivares? words justice fell into ?total


abandon?, as the justices went unmonitored.?


As such, hereditary posts developed and a venal culture developed.? Carlos II?s reign (1665) saw a commentator


observe that ?there are those who occupy their offices as though they bought


them? and that dignities were made into ?inheritances or sales?.? The Castilian crown started to sell offices


formally and raised 90 million ducats between 1619 and 1640.? Important positions for the localities


became semi-hereditary posts and cities were almost self-governing by the


1700s.? Although Charles V halted


further ennoblements through offices, this period saw the growth of the lower


aristocracy, replacing the grandees as the real power-base in Spain. ??????????? In England, a similar pattern occurs, but it is not due


to the growth of lay education so much as the faction of the English


aristocracy.? Within two generations of


the end of the War of the Roses, no Tudor was likely to allow the build up of


any more dynastic rivals, especially given their own inability to get


heirs.? Henry VIII?s reliance on


mercernaries over domestic troops was another aspect of his emasculation of the


nobility.? Equally, the need to exclude


the monasteries from the royal administration encouraged the growth of the


lower noble bureaucracy.? Although there


was no Eltonian ?New Monarchy? in this time, it is fair to say that we do see


an improved recognition for educated ordinary men in the English court.? Wolsey was the son of an Ipswich butcher,


and according to Elton, Cromwell was a ?Putney wide-boy.???? Although the era brings a new opportunity


for the advancements of ordinary people at the court, this was the result of


the development from chamber finance to exchequer economics and the subsequent


movement from arrogance about the rights of noble to a marginally more


egalitarian arrogance about the rights of the educated man. ??????????? In France and Spain, we see the growth of the lower


nobility and upper gentry into a class of administrators that in many cases


bought their way into the state structure, and then passed their position on,


so creating not a bureaucracy, but a new elite.? The old oligarchy that relied on the financial and military power


of nobles and used the church?s resources, especially after Martin V?s drive


for ecclesiastical administrative power following the schism to restore papal


prestige, was replaced by an oligarchy of lay clerks drawn from the bloated


?educated? class. ??????????? This is a pattern repeated in other western states.? In Germany, the rights and privileges of the


nobility were well recorded.? The


Imperial Knights (Ritterschaft) formed leagues and contested their position


with their local dukes and electors constantly throughout the period.? Their protests were in reference to the


growth of a new class that the Spanish and French would have recognised.? The educated lower castes being churned out


by the masses of newly formed universities (there were just five universities


in 1400, there were 18 by 1520) were taking posts in local governments previously


held by men of their calibre.? In ?The Order of Knights? by v. Guenzberg,


the author claims that ?any Tom, Dick and Harry, any drunks, clerks and


financiers? were running the Empire.?


Their protests continued until 1522-3 when the Knight?s War brought the


elector of Triers in to crush them.?


Their defeat did not diminish their importance and their Imperial rights


remained intact until the nineteenth century, but the trend of recruiting


educated men over noblemen continued. ??????????? Meanwhile, in Eastern Europe, there is a very different


story.? In Russia, the lack of trained


personnel kept the nobility, with their military and economic power, firmly in


control.? Ivan IV?s government has been


criticised for the weakness of the throne, since the Duma was so aristocratic


and so powerful.? The provision of


ambassadors, generals and governors, as well as policies, administrative


structure and day to day government was left in the hands of the Duma, and the


Duma?s size reflected the size of the boyar class.? Vasili III left a group of boyars the regency after his


death.? Only 28 of the 62 families


represented in the pre-1645 council were left in the Duma in 1668 such was the


vulnerability of the boyars to autocratic rulers, as well as demography.? The Muscovites were effectively running a


medieval government throughout this period, and the strongly feudal structure,


the lack of educational establishments and the dominance of the boyars


prevented any social mobility whatsoever, and the system of Muscovite government


remained unaffected by the upheavals of education, society, religion and art


going on elsewhere. ??????????? In Poland, the nobility were technically all equal,


although the rights of the lesser nobility were sometimes compromised by the


stronger nobility.? Ladislas IV hoped to


weaken the large noble class by playing on these gradations and creating a


royal bloc in the gentry.? Culminating


in a scheme to build a chivalric order, he did not succeed, and the large noble


class remained as powerful as before.?


The king?s power came from his right to appoint the sixteen officers of


state.? These offices were ministries,


but due to the faction of the nobles had to be appointed within the noble


class, and due to the life-ministries that were conferred, turnover was


slow.? Grandee families could thus build


up power within the court easily simply by taking two or three of the key


posts.? The permeation of the nobility


from these posts right down through the judicial system and local government.? Magnates possessing large private armies and


massive financial power were easily in a position to threaten the crown if


reform was attempted and the elite nature of the nobles was protected by the


magnates.? As such, the king was stuck


with choosing and appointing within the noble pool. ??????????? Entrenched nobility was not prevalent just across the


?unroyal? states.? Sweden was run by an


aristocratic class with a monopoly on the important posts of state and the rad (council) was run by the same


families for generations.? Gustav Bonde


was called in 1727 to sit in the Royal Council, and sat as the twentieth


successive member of his family to serve in that role.? The Oxenstierna family and Bielke family had


a lawsuit that was abandoned for want of impartial jurors, simply thanks to the


power of the two families. Queen Christina made attempts to break the grip of


these families.? Selling off masses of


Crown land to anyone who could afford them, sextupling the number of counts and


doubling the number of noble families, Christina cynically tried to dilute the


old order.? The lower nobility protested


louder than the conceited grandees, and appointments were soon constitutionally


bound to be on grounds of merit as opposed to rewards for service in war (the


pretext for Chrsitina?s sell-off).?


However, the new nobility had expanded to take in a great number of new


families and until the 1650s, the government ran many venal posts.? The new nobility was thus able to buy posts


in the government with their new titles.?


Like Muscovy and Poland, there was a lack of trained personnel, and the


nobles, despite their lack of education and Christina?s best efforts, continued


to dominate Swedish government. ??????????? In Ottoman Turkey, there is an inverse situation to


Western Europe.? Whereas the Westerners


moved from an uneducated class of noblemen running the country, the devshirme (child tribute system) of


Turkey maintained the prowess of the Turkish civil service throughout.? The Sultan?s council of muftis ensured the religious purity of royal actions and could


demand tyrannicide, and this was performed once during the fourteenth


century.? The devotion of the Empire to


Islam protected it from tyrants who were debauched at the Empire?s


expense.? Although Suleiman wore silks


and committed other infringements, the muftis were never discontented enough


with him to demand tyrannicide, as the Sultan knew that should he cross the


line dividing service of the Empire from service of one?s service, then the


professional muftis would order his death.?


The throwing of a previous from a tower by a Janissary guardsman was


warning enough for anyone.? However, the


weakening old Sultan?s long reign saw decay in the Empire.? Without a young king to monitor all of its


affairs, the masterful Grand Vizier Sokollu started to sell offices for his own


personal profit, and when the inept Selim II came to power, the Empire had


already begun to sell itself away.?


Although key roles were never for sale, he set a precedent followed by


Selim?s drinking partner and doctor, who succeeded him.? When preparing to aid the Morisco?s revolt,


Sokollu was redirected to take Cyprus, a great source of wine, for the drunkard


Sultan.? The absolute naval defeat


following the conquest at Lepanto required massive rebuilding that would bankrupt


a previous plentiful treasury.? In order


to raise funds, the devshirme stopped supplying candidates for certain posts,


and Moslem boys were admitted to the devshirme.? By the 1630s, the Civil Service was actually less well educated


than previously, and an aristocracy had developed.? Admiralties and Vizierships were held in families for


generations, despite there not being an official principle of hereditary


ownership outside the House of Osman in the Empire. To conclude, in the west, this era saw the growth of


professionals as an elite class.? Both


warfare and administration reached levels of complication at which it was


necessary to have specific training and experience in order to function. Fed by


the new universities, a new elite sprung up and established itself in positions


once held by the old families, in some cases with a greater degree of


entrenchment.? Despite this new


egalitarianism, this was no social revolution and was certainly the start of no


?New Monarchy? as Elton claimed. This era merely saw the aristocracy augmented


by a new class of professional administrators.?


In effect, a new educated element was allowed accession to the


aristocracy.? Social mobility was


marginally increased, but there was no real bureaucracy anywhere.? The idea of professional civil services was


some way off. In the east, stagnation occurred, and countries


failing to keep up with the modernisation of government soon fell behind.? Sweden and Turkey in particular would have a


hard time repeating the successes of Osman, Suleiman and Gustavus Adop

hus


unless they reformed quickly. This question assumes much about the nature of an


aristocracy in a Europe that saw countries such as Turkey where, until around


1570, the aristocracy was almost negligible to Russia, where the boyars of Ivan


IV are believed by some to have replaced the Tsar himself. In a continent of


such diversity, there is bound to be a different reasoning for each form of


aristocracy and the development of each state.?


The schism is particularly strong between Western and Eastern Europe.In the fifteenth century, the Papal schism, the


accession of such characters as Charles VI of France, the repeated minorities


in Scotland and the limited constitutional power of the Holy Roman Emperor lent


western rulers a dependence on their nobles who started the period as the best


educated large class of lay people reliable for use at court, but this would


soon change, aided by the growth of educational institutes, founded on the spur


of the Renaissance and the Reformation.?


The death of the feudal army or fyrd was vital in decreasing the


importance of the nobility.? Experienced


mercenaries were hired across Europe with their experienced veteran


captains.? Henry VIII hired ?Scots,


Spaniards, Gascons, Portuguese, Italians, Albanians, Greeks, Tatars, Germans,


Burgundians and Flemings? according to one contemporary whilst Michael Romanov


kept 17,400 mercenaries in his service.?


His son, Alexis, employed 60,000 by 1663.? Until the Treaty of Cateau-Cambresis, the French border along the


Spanish Road was guarded by 10,000 Swiss pikemen.? Removing the need to rely on the aristocracy as one?s source of


military power removed a vital part of the nobility?s hold on the monarchy and


took away all of their power to insist on political influence.? The destruction of nobility in battle, such


as that of the Scots at Flodden not only reinforced the need for professional


soldiers but reaffirmed the decline of the soldier-noble as a class, and set the


tone for an era of downsizing and demoting the old noblesse d?epee.? The


muzzling of the aristocracy and the power to patronise the lower nobility


increased the power of monarchies through this age . Bodin wrote that the only ?truly royal? states in


Early Modern Europe were England, Spain and France, and it is with these


category of states that we will start. France was a strongly monarchical state that, from


the reign of Francis I, openly held venal offices.? The growth of offices throughout the period and of the


office-holding class was more advanced in the French kingdom than elsewhere.


Between 1515 and 1665, the number of venal offices rose from 4,000 to 46,000


and the amount of revenue they produced was reckoned to be about 419 million


livres ? five times the annual royal budget.?


As a result of ennoblement through these channels, the noblesse de robe emerged to challenge


the three ancient estates (leading some historians to suggest, probably


mistakenly, that the gentry wished to form a fourth estate), and in line with


the increase in the sale of offices, they increased the power of their class.


Whereas Henri II and Francois I had courts filled with princes of the blood,


dukes, peers and great officers (reflecting the roots of the noblesse d??p?e), by the late sixteenth


century, the power of the old aristocrats even at the highest levels was being


eroded.? In 1594, the Constable


Montmorency-Damville sat on the Royal Financial Commission with three other


great nobles, but by 1598, with the exception of the Protestant Sully, the


King?s council was a representation of the noblesse


de robe. The accumulation of offices in France in some cases


did reinforce the aristocracy as they bought they way to influence, and in some


cases, wealthier aristocrats amassed such a number of offices of such influence


that they could become local sovereigns.?


This is paradoxical, given that a strong argument for the cultivation of


the culture of venality was as a means to counter the growing irritation of the


local Parlements and estates that


were enforcing forms of local independence.?


However, in general, this era saw a usurping of the great nobles by the


gentry. The growth of the influence of the gentry was not


just recognition of the growth of their numerical strength and improved status


as noblesse de robe, but as a result


of the faction and intrigue that pervaded France?s old nobility throughout the


Wars of Religion.? As a result, the


nobility tended only to return to favour as regards appointments during


exceptional cases of excellence or during times of royal weakness.? (For example, Gaston and Conde were recalled


to the royal chambers during the minority of Louis XIV.)? Louis XIV?s reign, starting in 1661,


typifies the trend: of his seventeen councillors, just two were from old


aristocratic houses.? Not only were the


old nobility racked with ancient grudges and prone to faction, but they almost


universally lacked the legal training necessary to maintain a seventeenth


century administrative position.? By the


advent of the seventeenth century, all that the nobility were fit for were


regional posts and army or ecclesiastical positions. Whilst the high nobility suffered, the robins (lawyers) gained a monopoly over


the sercretaryships in all of the sections of royal affairs requiring routine


administration and in the sovereign courts.?


It must be realised that the old system of old families dominating the


court had neither stigma nor problem for Early Modern Europe.? It was the order in which things lay.? As such, the growth of legal and financial


noblesse de robe dynasties was a hallmark of this era.? The Phelypeaux family provided nine


secretaries of state without a break between 1610 and 1777 whilst the Nicolay


family provided the nine first presidents of the Chambre des Comptes of Paris


between 1506 and 1791. By 1521, Francois I was complaining that ?most of the


offices of the kingdom, of all types, are owned in expectancy?.? Paradoxically, given their nouveau riche


means, the old hereditary principle of office was actually reinforced by the


noblesse de robe, who having bought offices, saw them as bought property and as


a means of reinforcing their membership of the second estate. Although Francois insisted that one had to survive


the changeover of office by forty days in order to prevent the establishment of


new dynasties and to allow the reversion of offices back to the Crown for their


resale, the droit annuel was later


adopted in exchange for the forty days rule, as a means of extracting money


from the offices.? Time-shared offices


were opposed at every turn, and eventually the format for the retention of


offices was of offices that could be inherited, but which were taxed.? The price of offices was hit by inflation,


which although reflected by the tied-in droit annuel, made offices unobtainable


by the royalty, so the crown could not benefit from the rise in values. As


another consequence of the inflation, the Crown could not afford to buy any


offices and so could not reform them.?


The growth in offices occurred at all levels. Offices, such as the


businesses of urban fishmongers, were soon acquired by the government in an


attempt to raise more revenue, but they succeeded only in confusing the


convoluted societal structure further.?


With offices out of the price range of the government, reform of the


system was impossible.? Revenue was


raised by the sale of new offices, created by adding layers upon layers were


added to the state administrative system.?


The Parlements recorded feelings of being threatened by a new executive


justice across the kingdom. The French bureaucratic class grew massively,


though most of the posts were redundant (the old taille office found itself monitoring the activities of a new


office in charge of all taxes and levies) and so reduced the number of bureaucrats


without increasing the active power of the government.? However, it is important to remember that


with the bought offices, many of the supposed bureaucrats were almost of


amateur status, and can not really be judged to be bureaucrats in the spirit of


the question. The growth of venal government never extended as


high as the kings? Chief Ministers.? The


ministries were never purchasable offices and they relied on personal contact


with the King for their appointment.? At


this level, it is fair to say that a professional bureaucracy rose up, although


whether one can regard the attitude of Richelieu as being any different to his


predecessors is debatable.? Not a


?professional,? in the modern sense of the word, he did use the position for


personal financial gain (to the tune of three million livres per annum) as did


his predecessors. Indeed, the nature of the post might suggest that although


the post was meritocratic, it had always been so.? This was not modernisation on the part of the Renaissance kings,


so much as royal common sense? Louis


XIV?s decision to rule alone reflects that the king?s advisers needed to be


suitably meritorious and that they were just a help to pragmatic kings? (it is


hard to believe that the egocentric Sun King would have found anyone that he


trusted more than himself.)? Had there


ever been more than pragmatic realism to the post, then the ceremony-obsessed


Louis would probably have had one.??


Richelieu and de Mazarin were France?s two most illustrious Ministers


and royal friendship was their sole qualification. The importance of the royal ministries was the power


to appoint, sack and reform ministers and ministries.? Richelieu was able to clear the court of redundant offices (such


as Admiral and Constable) by 1627, reflecting the diminishing of the importance


of the old hierarchy in favour of a new system. The King?s Council was rapidly


becoming less noble, as typified by the afore-mentioned selection preferences


of Louis XIV, and ministers of state were therefore less subservient to the


Council.? The Council of State, formed


in 1643, met passing statutes in the presence of the king and decrees in his


absence. Ministers for individual areas emerged, and foreign affairs ministers,


financial ministers and military ministers were all mandated by the rise of


Louis XIV.? Vitally, this system not


only reserved the king the power of appointment taken away by the venal


offices, but also allowed a meritocracy to emerge at the highest levels of


government.? Although the French system was more open to


newcomers than its formality might suggest, it is important to remember that by


the eighteenth century, the noblesse de robe and the noblesse d?epee were


indistinguishable, and that although the later system was more competent,


excluding those lacking judicial training, it was by no means a


bureaucracy.? Indeed, it was with the


aim of joining the aristocracy that bureaucrats emerged.? Although the venality of the French system was very


extreme, it is a good example of the muzzling of the aristocracy and the rise


of the educated lower gentry and noblesse


de robe.? A pattern that occurs


elsewhere, although for different reasons. In Spain, similar diminuation of the great offices


was occurring although the extensive scale of venal offices was not so great.? As such, in 1520 the Constable and Admiral


were given joint regency with Adrian of Utrecht, a deviation from the normal


path of Spanish government made in order to win over the rapidly weakening


Castilian nobility.? Charles V had


stopped having a Secretary of State by 1530, and instead deferred such


responsibility to a pair of secretaries of state.? The movement from these secretaries to real ministries only came


under Olivares who set up a Junta de


Ejecucion to make a centralised policy to circumvent the twelve Cortes.?


The Juntas were sabotaged and abolished by 1643 and Spain once more


became a politically fragmented and regionalist country, closer to a monarquia than a monarchy. Olivares was attempting to cripple the Cortes system


and the regional assemblies because it was precisely counter to the


meritocratic system that had produced him.?


The royal council of Castile had been dominated by the great nobility


theoughout the fifteenth century and faction had overruled real political


questions.? As such, after 1480, the


nobles lost the right to vote on affairs of state.? Although the 1504-6 and 1516-22 crises demonstrated their


continued power, by the 1530s they were finally reduced to the position that


Olivares wanted them.? The replacement


of the Spanish aristocracy required the intake of large numbers of letrados (University trained jurists)


and they soon came to dominate the corregidores


? the posts of administration and justice.?


They brought about a rapid improvement in the general standard of justice


in Spain, but they were soon corrupted and by the seventeenth century they


represented the interests of local grandees.?


Murcia?s official in 1647 protected bandits and promoted smuggling out


of Portugal. The era saw the rise of the educated lesser nobility,


in accordance with the rise of education in Spain.? The two Castilian universities became twenty by 1620, making


Spain one of the best educated countries in Europe.? The thirteen Aragonite universities and twenty Castilian


institutions supplied all of the twenty-four judges in the Chancelleria of


Valladolid, and fifty of Philip IV?s hundred councillors were university


professors.? Most were from northern


Spanish families who had been ennobled within three generations.?? Philip IV?s council of Castile was entirely


run by letrados whilst the Audencias (Courts


of Appeal) were also effectively run by the letrados. Due to the improvement in the education of the


judges and magistrates, there was no real control of the lawyers by the


monarchy, which meant that, in Olivares? words justice fell into ?total


abandon?, as the justices went unmonitored.?


As such, hereditary posts developed and a venal culture developed.? Carlos II?s reign (1665) saw a commentator


observe that ?there are those who occupy their offices as though they bought


them? and that dignities were made into ?inheritances or sales?.? The Castilian crown started to sell offices


formally and raised 90 million ducats between 1619 and 1640.? Important positions for the localities


became semi-hereditary posts and cities were almost self-governing by the


1700s.? Although Charles V halted


further ennoblements through offices, this period saw the growth of the lower


aristocracy, replacing the grandees as the real power-base in Spain. ??????????? In England, a similar pattern occurs, but it is not due


to the growth of lay education so much as the faction of the English


aristocracy.? Within two generations of


the end of the War of the Roses, no Tudor was likely to allow the build up of


any more dynastic rivals, especially given their own inability to get


heirs.? Henry VIII?s reliance on


mercernaries over domestic troops was another aspect of his emasculation of the


nobility.? Equally, the need to exclude


the monasteries from the royal administration encouraged the growth of the


lower noble bureaucracy.? Although there


was no Eltonian ?New Monarchy? in this time, it is fair to say that we do see


an improved recognition for educated ordinary men in the English court.? Wolsey was the son of an Ipswich butcher,


and according to Elton, Cromwell was a ?Putney wide-boy.???? Although the era brings a new opportunity


for the advancements of ordinary people at the court, this was the result of


the development from chamber finance to exchequer economics and the subsequent


movement from arrogance about the rights of noble to a marginally more


egalitarian arrogance about the rights of the educated man. ??????????? In France and Spain, we see the growth of the lower


nobility and upper gentry into a class of administrators that in many cases


bought their way into the state structure, and then passed their position on,


so creating not a bureaucracy, but a new elite.? The old oligarchy that relied on the financial and military power


of nobles and used the church?s resources, especially after Martin V?s drive


for ecclesiastical administrative power following the schism to restore papal


prestige, was replaced by an oligarchy of lay clerks drawn from the bloated


?educated? class. ??????????? This is a pattern repeated in other western states.? In Germany, the rights and privileges of the


nobility were well recorded.? The


Imperial Knights (Ritterschaft) formed leagues and contested their position


with their local dukes and electors constantly throughout the period.? Their protests were in reference to the


growth of a new class that the Spanish and French would have recognised.? The educated lower castes being churned out


by the masses of newly formed universities (there were just five universities


in 1400, there were 18 by 1520) were taking posts in local governments previously


held by men of their calibre.? In ?The Order of Knights? by v. Guenzberg,


the author claims that ?any Tom, Dick and Harry, any drunks, clerks and


financiers? were running the Empire.?


Their protests continued until 1522-3 when the Knight?s War brought the


elector of Triers in to crush them.?


Their defeat did not diminish their importance and their Imperial rights


remained intact until the nineteenth century, but the trend of recruiting


educated men over noblemen continued. ??????????? Meanwhile, in Eastern Europe, there is a very different


story.? In Russia, the lack of trained


personnel kept the nobility, with their military and economic power, firmly in


control.? Ivan IV?s government has been


criticised for the weakness of the throne, since the Duma was so aristocratic


and so powerful.? The provision of


ambassadors, generals and governors, as well as policies, administrative


structure and day to day government was left in the hands of the Duma, and the


Duma?s size reflected the size of the boyar class.? Vasili III left a group of boyars the regency after his


death.? Only 28 of the 62 families


represented in the pre-1645 council were left in the Duma in 1668 such was the


vulnerability of the boyars to autocratic rulers, as well as demography.? The Muscovites were effectively running a


medieval government throughout this period, and the strongly feudal structure,


the lack of educational establishments and the dominance of the boyars


prevented any social mobility whatsoever, and the system of Muscovite government


remained unaffected by the upheavals of education, society, religion and art


going on elsewhere. ??????????? In Poland, the nobility were technically all equal,


although the rights of the lesser nobility were sometimes compromised by the


stronger nobility.? Ladislas IV hoped to


weaken the large noble class by playing on these gradations and creating a


royal bloc in the gentry.? Culminating


in a scheme to build a chivalric order, he did not succeed, and the large noble


class remained as powerful as before.?


The king?s power came from his right to appoint the sixteen officers of


state.? These offices were ministries,


but due to the faction of the nobles had to be appointed within the noble


class, and due to the life-ministries that were conferred, turnover was


slow.? Grandee families could thus build


up power within the court easily simply by taking two or three of the key


posts.? The permeation of the nobility


from these posts right down through the judicial system and local government.? Magnates possessing large private armies and


massive financial power were easily in a position to threaten the crown if


reform was attempted and the elite nature of the nobles was protected by the


magnates.? As such, the king was stuck


with choosing and appointing within the noble pool. ??????????? Entrenched nobility was not prevalent just across the


?unroyal? states.? Sweden was run by an


aristocratic class with a monopoly on the important posts of state and the rad (council) was run by the same


families for generations.? Gustav Bonde


was called in 1727 to sit in the Royal Council, and sat as the twentieth


successive member of his family to serve in that role.? The Oxenstierna family and Bielke family had


a lawsuit that was abandoned for want of impartial jurors, simply thanks to the


power of the two families. Queen Christina made attempts to break the grip of


these families.? Selling off masses of


Crown land to anyone who could afford them, sextupling the number of counts and


doubling the number of noble families, Christina cynically tried to dilute the


old order.? The lower nobility protested


louder than the conceited grandees, and appointments were soon constitutionally


bound to be on grounds of merit as opposed to rewards for service in war (the


pretext for Chrsitina?s sell-off).?


However, the new nobility had expanded to take in a great number of new


families and until the 1650s, the government ran many venal posts.? The new nobility was thus able to buy posts


in the government with their new titles.?


Like Muscovy and Poland, there was a lack of trained personnel, and the


nobles, despite their lack of education and Christina?s best efforts, continued


to dominate Swedish government. ??????????? In Ottoman Turkey, there is an inverse situation to


Western Europe.? Whereas the Westerners


moved from an uneducated class of noblemen running the country, the devshirme (child tribute system) of


Turkey maintained the prowess of the Turkish civil service throughout.? The Sultan?s council of muftis ensured the religious purity of royal actions and could


demand tyrannicide, and this was performed once during the fourteenth


century.? The devotion of the Empire to


Islam protected it from tyrants who were debauched at the Empire?s


expense.? Although Suleiman wore silks


and committed other infringements, the muftis were never discontented enough


with him to demand tyrannicide, as the Sultan knew that should he cross the


line dividing service of the Empire from service of one?s service, then the


professional muftis would order his death.?


The throwing of a previous from a tower by a Janissary guardsman was


warning enough for anyone.? However, the


weakening old Sultan?s long reign saw decay in the Empire.? Without a young king to monitor all of its


affairs, the masterful Grand Vizier Sokollu started to sell offices for his own


personal profit, and when the inept Selim II came to power, the Empire had


already begun to sell itself away.?


Although key roles were never for sale, he set a precedent followed by


Selim?s drinking partner and doctor, who succeeded him.? When preparing to aid the Morisco?s revolt,


Sokollu was redirected to take Cyprus, a great source of wine, for the drunkard


Sultan.? The absolute naval defeat


following the conquest at Lepanto required massive rebuilding that would bankrupt


a previous plentiful treasury.? In order


to raise funds, the devshirme stopped supplying candidates for certain posts,


and Moslem boys were admitted to the devshirme.? By the 1630s, the Civil Service was actually less well educated


than previously, and an aristocracy had developed.? Admiralties and Vizierships were held in families for


generations, despite there not being an official principle of hereditary


ownership outside the House of Osman in the Empire. To conclude, in the west, this era saw the growth of


professionals as an elite class.? Both


warfare and administration reached levels of complication at which it was


necessary to have specific training and experience in order to function. Fed by


the new universities, a new elite sprung up and established itself in positions


once held by the old families, in some cases with a greater degree of


entrenchment.? Despite this new


egalitarianism, this was no social revolution and was certainly the start of no


?New Monarchy? as Elton claimed. This era merely saw the aristocracy augmented


by a new class of professional administrators.?


In effect, a new educated element was allowed accession to the


aristocracy.? Social mobility was


marginally increased, but there was no real bureaucracy anywhere.? The idea of professional civil services was


some way off. In the east, stagnation occurred, and countries


failing to keep up with the modernisation of government soon fell behind.? Sweden and Turkey in particular would have a


hard time repeating the successes of Osman, Suleiman and Gustavus Adophus


unless they reformed quickly.

Сохранить в соц. сетях:
Обсуждение:
comments powered by Disqus

Название реферата: The Move From Aristocracy To Bureaucracy

Слов:8565
Символов:57972
Размер:113.23 Кб.