Aristocracies dominated political and economic power for most of the medieval and modern periods almost everywhere in Europe, using their wealth and land ownership to form a powerful political force. The
English Civil War involved the first sustained organised effort to reduce aristocratic power in Europe.
18th and 19th centuries In the 18th century, the rising
merchant class attempted to use money to buy into the aristocracy, with some success. However, the
French Revolution in the 1790s forced many
French aristocrats into exile and caused consternation and shock in the aristocratic families of neighbouring countries. After the defeat of
Napoleon in 1814, some of the surviving exiles returned, but their position within French society was not recovered. The
planter class, owners of large-scale plantations where enslaved Africans produced crops to create wealth for a white elite, dominated political and economic affairs in America for over a century. The
London School of Economics: "The dominant elite in the South before the
Civil War were the wealthy landowners who held people in slavery, the so-called "planter class". Their influence in politics before the war can best be illustrated by highlighting that of the 15 presidents before Abraham Lincoln, eight held people as slaves while in office." While many former slaveowners kept control of their land and remained politically influential, according to
C. Vann Woodward, the Civil War weakened and in some cases destroyed the planter aristocracy. Beginning in Britain, industrialization in the 19th century brought urbanization, with wealth increasingly concentrated in the cities, which absorbed political power. However, as late as 1900, aristocrats maintained political dominance in Britain,
Germany,
Denmark,
Sweden,
Austria and
Russia, but it was an increasingly-precarious dominion.
20th century The
First World War had the effect of dramatically reducing the power of aristocrats in all major countries. In Russia, aristocrats were
imprisoned and murdered by the communists. After 1900, liberal and socialist governments levied heavy taxes on landowners, spelling their loss of economic power.
Outside Europe In the
Chola dynasty, the local (village) administration included a
Sabha (meaning council or assembly in Tamil), which consisted entirely of
Brahmins from the
Brahmadeya villages—which were considered the "
elite" of the time (i.e., being the highest
caste in
India). == See also ==