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Amicus's avatar

> A concept like feudalism may have needed to have been taken down a peg or two in the 1970s. But this does not mean that we should be barred from using it today. Indeed, reading Brown’s 1974 essay, one gets the sense that she is fighting battles against foes who simply don’t exist in 2025:

Among historians, probably not. But the popular concept is alive and well. My general impression is - as someone who is neither - that historians tend to see educating the general public as a core responsibility of their field, while political scientists tend to see it as a separate activity which shouldn't really shape insider discourse.

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P Thomson's avatar

This deserves a longer comment, but one major thing missing from the referenced model (and from much similar theorising) is that a certain amounts and kinds of violence can be - and were - integral to political processes. They were often legitimated by custom or simple forbearance. One thinks of Georgian governance as 'oligarchy tempered by riot', or the refusal of the US federal government over many decades to rule against lynching.

More specifically, medieval elites (and the commoners who shared many of their attitudes, especially about honour) valued violence, were proud of their capacity for violence and saw nothing wrong with exercising it in the right cause. Rulers shared this outlook, so violent 'rebellion' was regarded as a legitimate form of protest, the outcomes validating divine judgement. The religious who provide much of our sources had a more nuanced attitude but even they are mostly concerned to limit it to the right occasions.

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