------------ EH.NET BOOK REVIEW --------------
Published by EH.NET (March 2007)
Paul Janssens and Bartolom??? Yun-Casalilla, editors, _European
Aristocracies and Colonial Elites: Patrimonial Management Strategies
and Economic Development, 15th-18th Centuries_. London: Ashgate
Publishing, 2005. x + 282 pp. $100 (hardcover), ISBN: 0-7546-5459-1.
Reviewed for EH.NET by Carlos ???lvarez-Nogal, Department of Economic
History, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid.
The aristocracy does not normally appear in analyses of economic
growth for the pre-industrial period. More attention has usually been
paid to the peasantry, a much larger and more homogeneous group.
Before the Industrial Revolution, agriculture was the dominant
activity employing most of the population. Historians interested in
social or political areas had studied the nobility but little
attention had been paid to its economic dimension. This may have been
because the aristocracy was seen as a parasitic class or a
rent-seeking group whose mere existence stood in the way of economic
growth.
Paul Janssens, Professor at the Katholieke Universiteit, Brussels,
and Bartolom??? Yun-Casalilla, Professor at the European University
Institute, Florence, remind us, in this magnificent collection of
essays written by experts in the field, that the economic importance
of the aristocracy under the ancien r???gime was due to their
influential position in the institutional framework of society rather
than simply to the number of aristocrats. Aside from the way in which
wealth was distributed in that period, the aristocracy controlled
most of the factors of production and, in addition, enjoyed a
dominant position in the political institutions of the young European
states. This meant that they were able to play a vital role in the
development or lack of development of these societies.
This book brings this important social class into the debate
surrounding economic growth and the prerequisites of the Industrial
Revolution. It focuses on various European aristocracies and colonial
elites and evaluates the strategies behind the decisions taken. The
point of view adopted is that of supply, seeing aristocrats as
investors in agriculture and other sectors or as innovators in the
field of management of patrimonies, rather than taking the angle of
demand and considering the aristocracy as wealthy consumers. Their
contribution to economic growth is studied as if they were
entrepreneurs taking or missing opportunities. Their influence in the
establishment of property rights and behind advances in the workings
of the market is also analyzed.
The book addresses three large questions. Were these large fortunes
managed with maximization of profits or with socio-political criteria
in mind? Did this situation change over the period under study? How
and to what extent did change or lack of change affect economic
performance in these societies?
One of the most interesting aspects of this book, despite the
enormous difficulties involved, is the attempt to address these
questions from a comparative point of view including as many
countries and regions as possible. This approach leads to the
conclusion that no single aristocratic model in the pre-industrial
period existed and neither is it possible to offer a general model to
explain its behavior.
Institutions are central to all the studies in this volume. There is
no doubt about the influence of the aristocracy on the workings and
development of the states during the ancien r???gime but, at the same
time, the huge effect which the norms and traditions present in each
society had on their behavior cannot be denied. For example,
aristocracies became more important where crown estates and
ecclesiastical properties were sold or redistributed as happened in
England, France, Holland, Poland and Venice compared to regions like
Portugal, Austria, Spain, Naples and Prussia where royal and
ecclesiastical properties survived. On the other hand, the
accumulation of national stocks of capital in the hands of commercial
and industrial elites instead of in aristocratic hands would diminish
the macro-economic significance of the aristocracy and lead the
privileged group to make strategic changes.
Patrick O'Brien highlights three main areas present in many of the
studies included in this book: the share of capital stock under noble
control, the strategies and policies pursued by rich families for
managing their patrimonies and the openness of aristocracies to
talent and enterprise from outside their traditional networks.
The differences between the different European aristocracies in each
of these areas are vital in an understanding of the influences of
these groups on the economy. For example, the high proportion of real
estate in the hands of the English aristocracy during the Industrial
Revolution, noted by Robert Allen, allowed access to cheaper finance
than that enjoyed by the rest of society. This explains the active
investment of the landed classes in the non-agricultural sector,
paving the way for a rapid industrialization of the island.
The book invites the reader to draw his or her own conclusions, in
the light of the studies included, regarding the question of whether
the differences between European aristocracies and ruling elites can
explain the paths towards success or failure followed by each country
before and during the Industrial Revolution.
The studies included in the book are organized geographically:
Northern, Southern, Central and Eastern Europe and Colonial America
(British North American, Peruvian and Brazilian colonial elites). The
collection contains an introduction and fifteen chapters, each of
which would deserve a review in its own right. The first is a general
approach by Yun-Casalilla and the book closes with some
considerations by O'Brien. While acknowledging the significant role
played by the European aristocracy, the book avoids the error of
"overcoming the prejudices by making the ancient r???gime nobles into
standard-bearers of progress, modernization and economic growth."
This collection of essays is an excellent first step but it also
reveals that further research, measurement and analysis is needed
before economic historians can begin to evaluate possible positive or
negative contributions of the aristocracy to variations in national
growth rates across Europe.
Carlos ???lvarez-Nogal is Assistant Professor of Economic History at
the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. His research spans the areas of
early modern economic history, monetary and financial topics. His
books include _El cr???dito de la Monarqu???a Hisp???nica durante el
reinado de Felipe IV_ (Junta de Castilla-Le???n, 1997) and _Los
banqueros de Felipe IV y los metales preciosos americanos,
(1621-1665)_ (Banco de Espa???a, 1997). He is currently working on
international networks of bankers in the seventeenth century.
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Published by EH.Net (March 2007). All EH.Net reviews are archived at
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