The 18th century saw the first scientific attempts to establish a racial divide between "masters" and "slaves", or the belief that a nation's ruling class is
biologically superior to its ruled subjects. In his book
History of the Ancient Government of France, published posthumously in 1727,
Henri de Boulainvilliers attempted to prove that in France, the nobility represented the descendants of the old
Frankish ruling class. In contrast, the majority of the population descended from the subject
Gauls. As a result, two qualitatively different races faced off, and the only way to abolish the Franks' superiority was to destroy their civilization.
Classical liberal theorists such as
Volney and
Sieyès refuted this theory by demonstrating that the
French nobility was primarily composed of
nouveaux riches from all over the country. Thus, the concept of a racially pure Frankish lineage was false. In 1855, French count
Arthur de Gobineau published his infamous work
An Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races. Expanding upon Boulainvilliers' use of
ethnography to defend the
Ancien Régime against the
Third Estate's claims, Gobineau divides the human species into three major groups: white, yellow and black, claiming that "history springs only from contact with the white races". He considers the
Aryan race to be the pinnacle of human development, serving as the basis of all European aristocracies. However, inevitable
miscegenation led to the "downfall of civilizations". Gobineau's influence was minimal at first. In his letters to
Alexis de Tocqueville, he complained that his book was getting little attention in France and was only having an impact in the United States. Despite his friendship with Gobineau, Tocqueville who rejected the book, explaining that it was in accordance with the interests of
slave owners in the
Southern United States. However, in the 1880s, the book gained popularity in Germany thanks to
Cosima Wagner's efforts. In 1899,
Houston Stewart Chamberlain, a
Germanophile Englishman and Cosima Wagner's son-in-law, published
The Foundations of the Nineteenth Century. Expanding on Gobineau's earlier theories, he argued that the
Teutonic peoples had a profound influence on
Western civilization. Chamberlain classified all European peoples, including Germans,
Celts,
Slavs,
Greeks, and
Latins, as the "
Aryan race", which was built on ancient
Proto-Indo-European culture. He saw the
Nordic or Teutonic peoples as the leaders of the Aryan race, and essentially all races. The German philosopher
Friedrich Nietzsche introduced the concept of
Übermensch, which translates to "Overman" or "Superman". In his 1883 book
Also Sprach Zarathustra: Ein Buch für Alle und Keinen (
Thus Spoke Zarathustra: A Book for All and None), he proposed the idea of the
Übermensch as a goal for humanity. However, Nietzsche never developed the concept based on race. Instead, the
Übermensch "seems to be the ideal aim of spiritual development more than a biological goal". Nazism distorted the concept's real meaning to suit its "master race" ideology. By the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, it was believed that Indo-Europeans (generally referred to as
Aryans) were the highest branch of humanity due to their technological advancement. This reasoning was simultaneously linked with
Nordicism, which claimed that the "
Nordic race" was the "purest" form of the Aryan race. Today, this view is regarded as a form of
scientific racism. It contradicts the belief in
racial equality by advocating the view that one race is superior to all other races.
Eugenics Eugenics came to play a prominent role in this racial thought as a way to improve and maintain the
purity of the Aryan master race. Many thinkers in the 1910s, 1920s, and 1930s adhered to Eugenics, such as
Margaret Sanger,
Marie Stopes,
H. G. Wells,
Woodrow Wilson,
Theodore Roosevelt,
Madison Grant,
Émile Zola,
George Bernard Shaw,
John Maynard Keynes,
John Harvey Kellogg,
Linus Pauling, and
Sidney Webb. In 1908, the Louisiana State Fair hosted the first "Better Babies" competition. Babies were judged based on livestock standards such as height, weight, unblemished skin, well-formed fingers, lack of excess fat, and cooperative behavior. The intent was to establish child-breeding health standards. Beginning in 1920, at the
Kansas State Fair, a "Fitter Family" contest, sponsored by the
American Eugenics Society's Committee on Popular Education, required family members to submit an "Abridged Records of Family Traits" and then undergo physical and psychological examinations to determine their "fitness", or eugenic health. Contests received letter grades, and the winners—almost always white and of Western and Northern European descent—were awarded trophies. Some years later, beginning in 1935, contestants in the Miss America contest were required to be "of the white race" and to submit a detailed account of their ancestry; those with backgrounds connected to the
Pilgrims' arrival on the
Mayflower or the
American Revolutionary War had an advantage. The Nazis took this concept to an extreme by establishing a
program to systematically genetically enhance the Nordic Aryans themselves through a program of
Nazi eugenics, based on the
eugenics laws of the US state of California, to create a
super race. !" In their attempt to scientifically prove the racial inferiority of
Slavs, German (and Austrian) racial scientists were forced to gloss over their findings which consistently proved that Early Slavs were
dolicocephalic and fair haired, i.e., "Nordic", while the South Slavic "Dinaric" sub-race was often viewed favourable. Nazis used the term "Slavic race", and considered Slavs to be non-Aryan. The concept of a Slavic "
Untermensch" accompanied their political goals, and it was particularly aimed at
Poles and
Russians. Germany's immediate goal was
Drang nach Osten or "push into the east", which was the first phase in its ultimate plan to conquer Europe, and
Ukraine's "
chernozem" (black earth) soil was regarded as a particularly desirable zone for colonization by the "
Herrenvolk" () ("master people"). In relation to the Nazis' belief in
racial purity, author and historian
Lucy Dawidowicz wrote: =="Master race" in the United States==