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Response to “Authority and Power in Russia”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 December 2021

Anthony Kaldellis*
Affiliation:
The Ohio State University, [email protected]

Extract

An argument can perhaps be made that all monarchies, no matter how absolute or authoritarian, cannot function without the consent of their subjects, whether tacit or active; proclaim that they act for the welfare (however defined) of their subjects; agree to abide by rules or laws that reflect social norms (whether they actually do abide by them or not); and are vulnerable to popular dissatisfaction. I was aware of the potential for such a general argument when I wrote Byzantine Republic and so deliberately set a specific threshold for “republican monarchies” in the Roman tradition, a threshold defined by the following four criteria: (a) a robust conception of the public interest and public property to which the monarch is subordinated in normative texts issued both by the monarchy itself and its elites; (b) a conception of a legally- or ethnically-defined populace whose material wellbeing forms the sole legitimating factor for the operation of government, even if that populace lacks formal institutions by which to take direct political action itself; (c) historical instances of popular intervention in the sphere of politics that were accepted by elites as legitimate, indeed often as constitutive of their own power and positions; and (d) documented continuity between that polity and the ancient Roman res publica, coupled with awareness of that continuity.

Type
Critical Discussion Forum: Authority and Power in Russia
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies

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References

1. Fennell, J. L. Jr., ed., The Correspondence between Prince A.M. Kurbsky and Tsar Ivan IV of Russia, 1564–1579. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 1955Google Scholar.

2. Kharkhordin, Authority and Power in Russia (in this forum), 21–22.