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Blood is Thicker Than Water: Family Assets and Leader Deposition in Medieval and Early Modern Europe

Comparative Politics
Elites
Political Leadership
Political Violence
Family
Power
State Power
Andrej Kokkonen
University of Gothenburg
Andrej Kokkonen
University of Gothenburg
Suthan Krishnarajan
Aarhus Universitet
Jorgen Moller
Aarhus Universitet
Anders Sundell
University of Gothenburg

Abstract

A large literature in comparative politics revolves around autocratic stability in general and irregular leader removal in particular. In this paper, we show that in medieval and early modern Europe, family was a key asset for monarchs. Sons and daughters as well as brothers and sisters offered a way of bolstering the position of the lineage, thereby shielding monarchs from challenges from their elite groups or from foreign powers. This is demonstrated in a statistical analysis of 27 major European monarchies spanning the time period 1000-1799, which enlists new, unique data on royal offspring and siblings. The analysis shows that the number of family relations mattered until the advent of the military revolution and modern states seemingly undercut the importance of offspring and siblings in the 16th and 17th centuries. These findings not only elucidate power dynamics in the medieval and early modern world of dynastic politics, they also have implications for present-day patterns of autocratic stability in countries where impersonal modern states have not made headway and kinship ties therefore retain their historical functions and importance.