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3 - Formless Kinship in Formless Polities

Europe c.400–c.1000

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 March 2020

Peter Haldén
Affiliation:
Swedish Defence University
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Summary

The early Middle Ages is often portrayed as a time when families, not political structures, ruled. In contrast, I demonstrate that noble kinship groups and networks were integrated into institutions and ideas of a common political order. Dependence worked both ways. Kings were dependent upon major noble networks and nobles were legitimated by their roles as public actors and public warriors. Towards the end of this period, we also see the growth of a sense of responsibility for the common polity, the realm, even in the absence of kings. The chapter concludes that there was no principled opposition between kinship groups and the polity, between the aristocracy and the king – rather they were mutually dependent. However, since kinship groups were so informal, political institutions were also very informal and elusive. This teaches us that formalization of families was a key to the formalization of political structures.

Type
Chapter
Information
Family Power
Kinship, War and Political Orders in Eurasia, 500–2018
, pp. 42 - 80
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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