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Violence and Legitimacy : European Monarchy in the Age of Revolutions

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Benjamin Constant distinguished two kinds of government: unlawful government based on violence, and legitimate government based on the general will.

In Europe monarchy was for over a thousand years considered the natural form of legitimate government.

The sources of its legitimacy were the dynastic principle, religion, and the ability to protect against foreign aggression.

At the end of the eighteenth century the revolutions in America and France called into question the traditional legitimacy of monarchy, but Volker Sellin shows that in response to this challenge monarchy opened up new sources of legitimacy by concluding alliances with constitutionalism, nationalism, and social reform.

In some cases the age of revolution brought on a new type of leader, basing his claim to power on charisma.

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Product Details
de Gruyter Oldenbourg
3110558394 / 9783110558395
Hardback
18/12/2017
Germany
346 pages, 16 Illustrations, black and white
155 x 230 mm, 616 grams
Professional & Vocational Learn More