Revolutions - Appendix 2- The Ancien Regime
Episode Date: September 13, 2022For tickets to the October dates: Oct. 3 Austin TX @ Paramount Theater Oct. 4 San Francisco @ Palace of Fine Arts Oct. 5 Seattle @ Town Hall Oct. 25 Chicago @ Vic Theater Oct. 26 Boston @ The Wilbu...r Oct. 27 Washington DC @ Lisner Auditorium Oct. 29 Newark NJ @ New Jersey Performing Arts Center
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And welcome to revolutions.
Appendix 2, the Ancian Regime.
One of the inspirations for the revolutions podcast is an old, old book called Anademy of Revolution by Crane Brinton.
It first came out in 1939, so it's an old, old book.
Brinton set out to compare and contrast four great revolutions, the English Revolution,
the American Revolution, the French Revolution, and the Russian Revolution,
and then attempt to identify enough structural similarities between them
to at least gesture in the direction of the existence of a uniform process for all revolutions.
I read Anatomy of Revolution once when I was young
and then came back around to it much later in life just as I was wrapping up the history of Rome.
And if you don't remember this story, what happened is I reread Anatomy of Revolution
because I was taking a class at the University of Texas
where I had to write a paper about Cesar Chavez in the United Farm Workers Movement.
The paper I wrote applied the patterns Brinton identified an anatomy of revolution to the United Farm Workers' Movement.
Writing that paper is when the idea for the Revolution's podcast first struck me.
So here we are about a decade later coming back around to follow in Brinton's footsteps,
not to copy his model, but to walk through the ten examples that we have at our disposal
to identify in our own way and to our own satisfaction what kind of identifiable patterns exist within the random chaos of revolutionary history.
Now, as we go through this process over the next several appendices, we will be sticking
tight to my boring thesis that major historical ruptures like revolutions are the result of individual
agency acting upon large structural conditions. Both factors need to be taken into account
when describing the development and unfolding of a revolution. But hopefully along the way,
we'll find some similarities both in the structures, the larger forces impacting events,
and also the decisions made by individual actors.
All revolutions, after all, must have at least a few things in common,
otherwise they wouldn't be recognizable as the same type of thing.
So I want to begin where all revolutions begin,
with an existing political structure.
You can't have a revolution without something to overthrow,
something to turn the regime into the Anseon regime.
If you've read around in revolutionary history,
you'll find historians and authors often using that term,
Anseon Regime, which was obviously first applied in terms of the French Revolution,
to any pre-revolutionary state,
whether we're talking about czarist Russia, the Mexican Porphyriato,
or the kingdoms of Charles Stewart.
And one thing English speakers need to always be aware of is that the word Ancian
can be a bit of a faux-amie, a false friend.
It looks very much like we're talking about an ancient regime,
something deeply rooted in the past,
a sovereign entity that has prevailed for time immemorial
and whose roots stretch deep into the misty past.
You know, an ancient regime.
But in point of fact, the French word,
Ancien, doesn't mean ancient.
And instead, it simply means old or former.
And so you'll see the word used like
L'Ancien Minister de la culture,
which means simply the former minister of culture.
that minister could have had their job for like a year and lost it last week, and they would still be
the ancient minister de la culture, the former minister of culture. They were never the ancient
minister of culture. Now, I bring this up because as we run through our various ancient regimes,
we find that they are not in fact very ancient at all, and most of them are a very recent vintage.
With the kingdoms of Charles Stewart, for example, we're talking about a dynasty that had been in place
for a mere 22 years when young Charles I took over from his late father James I in 1625.
And this arrival of a new form of government wasn't a small thing. The stewards represented the
unification of Scotland and England under a single crown and brought with them wholesale revisions
to the political order that had prevailed under the tutors. When the revolution broke out,
it was responding to something quite new, not very old. In the American Revolution,
we have a colonial regime that had been in place for 150 years,
which is quite old compared to many of our other Ancian regimes,
and it is worth noting in this context
that the American colonists were rising up as much in defense
of their traditional way of life as they were advancing something new and different.
In France, Louis XVIth inherited a kingdom that had been completely remade by Louis XIV,
less than a hundred years earlier.
The French Ancian regime par excellence bore little resemblance to the
truly ancient feudal modes of government. The royal absolutism of the 18th century was a very
recent innovation, and it is against that recent innovation that the French Revolution would be
staged. Like Anglo-America, the French colonial administration of San Domain had been around for 150-odd years,
but it also was not until the mid-18th century in the generation or two before the Haitian
revolution that the French government back home started to take a real interest in how the colony was
administered. Now, the Spanish Empire in the Americas was, of course, centuries old by the time
the independence movements break out. But remember that after the war of Spanish succession in 1714,
the Spanish crown passed from the Habsburgs to the Bourbons, and the colonial apparatus underwent
a top-to-bottom overhaul. When Francisco de Miranda was born in 1750, the colonial regime
against which he would set himself was barely a generation old. Now, moving on to the French
Revolution of 1830, we don't have to do much here, because
obviously it was staged against a regime that had been in place for a mere 15 years.
The same as during the French Revolution of 1848, which was staged against a regime that had
been in place for a mere 18 years. Now, of course, elsewhere in Europe in 1848, the Hapsburgs
and the Huns-Aulerns obviously had deep dynastic roots, but between the reforms initiated in
the 18th century by enlightened despots like Joseph II and Frederick the Great, and radical changes
imposed during the Napoleonic invasions, the legal structures and political alignments and methods
of statecraft in Central Europe were, in 1848, like 30 or 40 years old at best.
The Second French Empire then was less than 20 years old when it was overthrown and replaced
with the Third French Republic in 1871. The Mexican Porfariado had just celebrated its 30th
anniversary when it started to fall apart. And then finally we have Russia, and the Romanovs
had of course been in power for like 300 years, but much like the rest of Europe, the Tsarist regime
had been changed and changed again by figures like Peter and Catherine, and then the political
settlement was reorganized again after the Napoleonic Wars. This means that the revolution of
1905 was staged against a regime that was like a century old, and then 1917 obviously comes
against a post-1905 settlement, which had been in effect for a scant 12 years. So acknowledging that in general
our Aungian regimes are not very ancient, but in fact quite young, we must also note that they
started out life very successful. They must have. Now, given that the only reason we are talking
about these regimes is because they are on the verge of spectacular collapse, it's often
easy to forget that at some point these regimes must have worked. A regime does not last long
enough to become an Ancian regime, unless it was able at some point, to answer the political
questions of its own particular time and place.
Now, what I mean by that is that every time and place has its own way of assessing the legitimacy and solidity and resiliency of a sovereign regime, whoever or whatever that sovereign may be.
The political system might be grappling with clashes between regional interests, clashes between families or ideological factions, clashes between religions, all of these clashes ultimately about the basic question of who will wield power and who will not.
So let's take a random example.
the political question facing Porfirio Diaz in the mid-1870s.
In Diaz's case, the great political question facing Mexico
was how to balance the central power with regional powers,
balance conservative factions with liberal factions,
and then ensure that Mexico would keep up economically
in a rapidly industrializing world.
And Diaz was able to answer these questions
with the famous or infamous construction,
Panopalo, bread, or the stick.
with one hand he offered favorable inducements and with the other menaced deadly force in order
to achieve the political stability which had eluded Mexico since independence.
And initially, he was very good at this.
Perfiro Diaz would not have lasted long in power had he been bad at it.
And Louis XIV had a very similar thing in France in the late 1600s and early 1700s,
and though that theatrical trappings of court life at Versailles would eventually become an absurd joke
when they were first rolled out, Louis had to tame the unruly French nobility, and he successfully did it.
He answered the great political question of his era, and it's why his system of royal absolutism stuck.
Though before we move on, we should also apply the lessons of Greek drama, because we often find in these regimes that the very attributes that made them successful initially eventually become the liabilities that take them down.
But this brings us to the question of what makes a successful and stable regime.
Throughout history, most of what goes into forging political stability is about balancing
the interests of the ruling class. It is not until comparatively late in the game that
popular forces are invited into the political process. And even in our age of democratic rule,
we all know that to a huge degree, our political system is still shaped by the interests of our
ruling class. Now, satisfying the rule,
ruling class is critical because that ruling class are the ones who control enough wealth,
patronage, and resources to challenge the wealth patronage and resources of the sovereign itself.
And when we talk about the ruling class, we mean it in two different ways.
The wider definition covers everyone in the socioeconomic stratum from which political leaders are
drawn and who control large amounts of the polity's wealth and resources.
But within this wider ruling class, there is a more narrow definition that simply
includes those members of the ruling class who are actually ruling, those who hold the ministerial
offices and other influential positions, and who thus wield power. Not all members of the wider
ruling class can be members of this more narrow ruling class, and it creates the ever-present
conflict between those members of the ruling class in favor with the sovereign, and those members of
the ruling class out of favor with the sovereign. Who is in favor and who is out of favor?
or democratic elections, but no matter what, wherever you look throughout history,
there is always going to be a faction of the ruling classes in favor,
wielding actual authority, and a faction of the ruling classes out of favor
who do not have but would very much like to possess that authority.
The thing that makes a stable regime stable is not that it has eliminated all opposition
from this out of favor wing of the ruling class,
but rather that it has made those out of favor as small and ineffectual as possible,
unable to pose a real challenge to the regime.
For most of human history, that was the definition of political stability.
If we take a little detour back to the history of Rome,
we should remember that the two consuls per year structure of the Roman Republic
was yes about ensuring that one person could never build up or wield individual power for long,
but it was also about spreading the highest offices around
to ensure that every family in the ruling class got a cookie when it was their turn.
It was a big part of the structural stability of the Roman Republic because there was never a faction of the ruling class permanently out of favor.
A family could stand a rival clan holding a consulship for a year because they knew that next year it would be their turn.
Practically, the entire ruling class of the Roman Republic thus got their turn in their turn, so no one felt compelled to overthrow the system.
And it's a big reason why the Roman Republic lasted for 500 years.
But if we look beyond the bounds of the ruling class, a stable and successful sovereign must have
their legitimacy at least tacitly acknowledged by other key groups, demographics, and constituencies
within the society, educated professionals, intellectuals, writers, and journalists,
smaller-scale merchants, and artisans, rural peasants, and urban wage laborers.
Unless the Panopolo is in broad and wide effect, forces are going to emerge who feel no loyalty
to the regime whatsoever, and who might also think,
feel like they have a good shot at overthrowing that regime. And this is where the sovereign's imperative
to balance and satisfy the interests of the ruling class becomes so crucial, because all these
other social economic classes are usually influenced by or controlled by some faction or other
inside the ruling class. Forces that might be unleashed by an unhappy lord are easily kept in check
by a happy lord. And by lord, I hear me not just some landed aristocrat from feudal Europe,
but maybe a corporate employer or a media mogul or
a local political leader. A sovereign must ensure these ruling class elements use their power
and wealth and authority to support the regime and not, for example, go the full Duke Dorillon
and invite the dreaded rabble in to answer the political question for themselves.
Now, the last thing I want to discuss here on the political side is arguably the most important,
and that is that a stable sovereign must have a preponderance of force.
They must command and control armed forces that are superior to any other potential challenger.
The bread must be skillfully distributed and keep everybody happy, yes, but the stick must be
quick and strong. Anyone contemplating a challenge to the regime must be forced into the conclusion
that it's just not worth it. The regime's forces are simply too strong. Because if someone
contemplating such a challenge concludes, hey, maybe I can pull this off, the sovereign is already
in pretty big trouble. So all of our ASEAN regimes successfully displayed and deployed armed forces
that could overwhelm all potential challengers.
And of course, this is achieved partly by building up the sovereign's own forces,
but also by dismantling and disarming potential opposition groups.
Now, this needs to be done carefully with a lot of favors and privileges
and straight cash bribes to make it all go down easier,
but it is important to make sure that any potential challenger to your regime
cannot muster the resources or the forces necessary to actually do it.
As long as a regime maintains a preponderance of force,
no one will challenge them. But once people start to suspect that, hey, maybe the stick is not as
quick or as strong as it used to be, well, that's when revolutions happen. So, okay, moving on from
the political aspects of our Ancian regimes, let's hop over to economics. I think in general,
what we find in all of our Ancian regimes is that in the generation or two prior to the revolution,
we see a lot of dynamic economic growth. Now, we are talking here about the stable phase of our
ASEAN regimes, not about the moments we'll talk about next week when shortfalls or crop failures
or recessions throw the political equilibrium out of balance. What I'm talking about is before all of that.
And there, we typically find a generation or two's worth of economic growth and increasing wealth
rather than any kind of stagnation or decline. We see this from the advancing commercial prosperity
of Britain in the 1600s to the generally increasing fortunes of colonial elites, whether they be Anglo,
Spanish or French. Europe in the 19th century is obviously a story of rapid capitalist growth.
You can say a lot of different things about 19th century European economics, but one thing you cannot
say is that it was stagnant or declining. Later in the series, we found both Mexico and Russia
in very similar places in the latter bit of the 19th century. Found on the periphery of the capitalist
empires, they initiated rapid industrial growth to keep up. A critically, the fortunes made
during this period of economic growth are not necessarily distributed evenly, and thus create
two revolutionary forces that will act both in concert and contradiction. On the one hand, we have the
growing ambition and self-confidence of those who have benefited from dynamic economic growth,
and on the other, the growing anger and bitterness of those exploited and impoverished by new
economic modes of production. The fact that we find a lot of economic dynamism in pre-revolutionary
societies naturally lends itself to talking in Marxist terminology. A natural outgrowth of the sovereign's
imperative to maintain stable relations within the ruling class and the imperative of that ruling
class to have a reliable sovereign means that there is invariably a convergence of the economic
systems and political systems of a society. The socioeconomic base creates the political structure
which turns around and further entrenches the organization of that base. So a society where the
means of production are owned by major landowners in a medieval agrarian society,
means that the political system will naturally develop a stable equilibrium that accounts for
how wealth, influence, and authority are distributed in a feudal agrarian society.
This is going to be different from a heavily industrialized urban capitalist economy,
which will naturally draw in different units, corporations, banks, leaders of trade,
and industry and commerce, and their beliefs about what an acceptable political system looks like
need to be taken into account.
And so in the Marxist account of revolutionary history, a shift in the economic base, like the one from feudalism to capitalism, is going to trigger revolutionary energy when the old political arrangements of the superstructure no longer fit the base.
and the fact that we see shifts in economic activities and a lot of dynamic economic growth in pre-revolutionary Ancian regimes does lend some credence to the notion that a disconnect between the economic base and the political superstructure is a critical source of disequilibrium that will require a political response.
So everything we've spoken about thus far has had to do with the structures of these societies, their political, economic, and social arrangements, the structural backdrop for historical action.
But there is this whole other side of the revolutionary equation, and that is individual agency.
When the moment comes for a nimble political response, who's taking the call?
Two leaders might be given exactly the same set of structural conditions.
One leader is able to navigate the problem, the other triggers a revolution,
not because the structures they inherited made revolution inevitable, but because of their individual choices.
And one thing I am now willing to say, after all of the revolutions,
we've covered is that none of them had to happen. None of them were inevitable. All of them broke out
when and where they did partly because of the quality of the leadership at the moment of the crisis.
And even more to the point, the reason there was a crisis at all was because the quality of the
leadership was substandard. Individual agency is a key component of creating revolutions,
and there's nothing quite like incompetence to create a revolution. The roster of
leaders for our various Ancients regimes is an absolute rogues gallery of buffoons, blunderers,
and absolute fail sons. King Charles I of England, Scotland, and Ireland, the members of the
cabinets of George III in the 1760s and 1770s, Louis XVI, the Administrators of San Doming in the
1880s, Charles IV and Ferdinand the 7th of Spain, Charles the 10th, King of France, Louis-Philippe,
King of the French, Ferdinand I of Austria, Napoleon III, Porphyry
Dias and finally, Tsar Nicholas II.
These are some of the biggest dumbass leaders in history.
And from quite early in the process of making the revolution's podcast, I realize that there is a
great idiot theory that exists right alongside any great man theory of history.
That as often as history is made by the brilliant, the wise, and the bold, it's made by
the ignorant and the incompetent and the weak.
Every single ASEAN regime we have talked about on the show did not have to fall into a
revolution. It took the very special and unique incompetence of each member of our rogue's gallery
of dumbasses to make it happen. The single character trait that all of our great idiots seem to have
in common is a fundamental lack of imagination. And this lack of imagination usually manifests itself
as pig-headed inflexibility. If revolutionary energy is building, that means the regime is
facing new political questions that may not have the answer to. Successful leaders use their imagination to
dream up new answers to these new questions, instead of stubbornly insisting on sticking with
the old answers. And what I witnessed a lot in the run-up to revolutions is kings and emperors and
ministers being very insistent and demanding, where they should have been flexible and creative.
Tsar Nicholas could have easily forged a settlement within Russia's ruling class that would have
allowed him and his family to remain on the throne forever. There might still be a czar of Russia.
Instead, he refused to let in even the smallest shaft of imaginative light,
such that he could see a positive place for himself, his family, and his dynasty
in an ever-so-slightly reorganized political system
that acknowledged the existence of changes in economic intellectual and social currents.
A different leader making slightly different decisions
dies happy in a big, fancy bed instead of getting shot in a basement.
The great idiot theory of revolutionary history also has a very specific subset
to it. It's not just that our sovereigns and their ministers are doing a bad job and therefore
bad things happen, although that is very much the case. It's also that people around the
bumbling sovereign who are smart and ambitious and capable get extremely frustrated with the very
act of watching the bumbling sovereign make such a hash of things. It's offensive to their intellect
and their pride. Why is my great nation or kingdom being ruled by such an idiot? And thus offended,
these educated members of the ruling class start entertaining the idea that it might be necessary
to remove the incompetent sovereign. Incompetent rulers will always invite challenges to their rule,
and incompetent rulers presiding over society whose structural forces are generating discontented energy,
well, that's going to invite a revolution. So to sum this up, how do we define a stable regime?
We define it as one whose economic and social arrangements align with the political regime of the sovereign,
producing a general sense of the regime's legitimacy.
This consensus is forged with both bread and stick,
with bribes and inducements existing alongside brutal oppression and persecution.
These regimes must also have competent leaders in charge to grapple with the ever-changing set of political questions,
as the passage of time provokes new questions to be answered.
It was once the case for each of our ten pre-revolutionary regimes that we talked about on the show,
that they were stable, that they had equilibrium, that they were all once regimes and not
ancient regimes.
Next week, we will turn our attention to the moment when that transition starts to happen.
Everything we talked about today was about establishing and maintaining stable political
equilibrium, but what happens when elements start entering the system that create
disequilibrium?
when the old political settlements, agreements, privileges, and penalties are no longer enough to keep the discontentment, anger, and above all ambition contained.
When the structural forces of society begin grinding into one another and creating revolutionary friction,
deft leadership is required to find a new equilibrium.
And if, instead of deaf leadership, you have one of the great idiots of history running the show,
well, my friends, I think your regime is about to become Ancian.
Thank you.
