The
Six Stages of the Creation of the State
by
Franz Oppenheimer
Excerpted
from chapter 1 of The
State: Its History and Development Viewed Sociologically
In the genesis
of the state, from the subjection of a peasant folk by a tribe of
herdsmen or by sea nomads, six stages may be distinguished.
In the following
discussion it should not be assumed that the actual historical development
must, in each particular case, climb the entire scale step by step.
Although, even here, the argument does not depend upon bare theoretical
construction, since every particular stage is found in numerous
examples, both in the world's history and in ethnology, and there
are states which have apparently progressed through them all. But
there are many more that have skipped one or more of these stages.
Stage 1:
Looting
The first stage
comprises robbery and killing in border fights, endless combats
broken neither by peace nor by armistice. It is marked by killing
of men, carrying away of children and women, looting of herds, and
burning of dwellings. Even if the offenders are defeated at first,
they return in stronger and stronger bodies, impelled by the duty
of blood feud. Sometimes the peasant group may assemble, may organize
its militia, and perhaps temporarily defeat the nimble enemy; but
mobilization is too slow and supplies to be brought into the desert
too costly for the peasants. The peasants' militia does not, as
does the enemy, carry its stock of food its herds
with it into the field.
In Southwest
Africa the Germans recently experienced the difficulties that a
well-disciplined and superior force, equipped with a supply train,
with a railway reaching back to its base of supply, and with millions
of the German Empire behind it, may have with a handful of herdsmen
warriors, who were able to give the Germans a decided setback. In
the case of primitive levies, this difficulty is increased by the
narrow spirit of the peasant, who considers only his own neighborhood,
and by the fact that while the war is going on the lands are uncultivated.
Therefore, in such cases, in the long run, the small but compact
and easily mobilized body constantly defeats the greater disjointed
mass, as the panther triumphs over the buffalo.
This is the
first stage in the formation of states. The state may remain stationary
at this point for centuries, for a thousand years. The following
is a thoroughly characteristic example:
Every range
of a Turkoman tribe formerly bordered upon a wide belt which might
be designated as its "looting district." Everything
north and east of Chorassan, though nominally under Persian dominion,
has for decades belonged more to the Turkomans, Jomudes, Goklenes,
and other tribes of the bordering plains, than to the Persians.
The Tekinzes, in a similar manner, looted all the stretches from
Kiwa to Bokhara, until other Turkoman tribes were successfully
rounded up either by force or by corruption to act as a buffer.
Numberless further instances can be found in the history of the
chain of oases which extends between Eastern and Western Asia
directly through the steppes of its central part, where since
ancient times the Chinese have exercised a predominant influence
through their possession of all important strategic centers, such
as the Oasis of Chami. The nomads, breaking through from north
and south, constantly tried to land on these islands of fertile
ground, which to them must have appeared like Islands of the Blessed.
And every horde, whether laden down with booty or fleeing after
defeat, was protected by the plains. Although the most immediate
threats were averted by the continued weakening of the Mongols,
and the actual dominion of Thibet, yet the last insurrection of
the Dunganes showed how easily the waves of a mobile tribe break
over these islands of civilization. Only after the destruction
of the nomads, impossible as long as there are open plains in
Central Asia, can their existence be definitely secured.
The entire
history of the old world is replete with well-known instances of
mass expeditions, which must be assigned to the first stage of state
development, inasmuch as they were intent, not upon conquest, but
directly on looting. Western Europe suffered through these expeditions
at the hands of the Celts, Germans, Huns, Avars, Arabs, Magyars,
Tartars, Mongolians and Turks by land; while the Vikings and the
Saracens harassed it on the waterways.
These hordes
inundated entire continents far beyond the limits of their accustomed
looting ground. They disappeared, returned, were absorbed, and left
behind them only wasted lands. In many cases, however, they advanced
in some part of the inundated district directly to the sixth and
last stage of state formation, in cases namely, where they established
a permanent dominion over the peasant population. Ratzel describes
these mass migrations excellently in the following:
The expeditions
of the great hordes of nomads contrast with this movement, drop
by drop and step by step, since they overflow with tremendous
power, especially Central Asia and all neighboring countries.
The nomads of this district, as of Arabia and Northern Africa,
unite mobility in their way of life with an organization holding
together their entire mass for one single object. It seems to
be a characteristic of the nomads that they easily develop despotic
power and far-reaching might from the patriarchal cohesion of
the tribe. Mass governments thereby come into being, which compare
with other movements among men in the same way that swollen streams
compare with the steady but diffused flow of a tributary. The
history of China, India, and Persia, no less than that of Europe,
shows their historical importance. Just as they moved about on
their ranges with their wives and children, slaves and carts,
herds and all their paraphernalia, so they inundated the borderlands.
While this ballast may have deprived them of speed it increased
their momentum. The frightened inhabitants were driven before
them, and like a wave they rolled over the conquered countries,
absorbing their wealth. Since they carried everything with them,
their new abodes were equipped with all their possessions, and
thus their final settlements were of an ethnographic importance.
After this manner, the Magyars flooded Hungary, the Manchus invaded
China, the Turks, the countries from Persia to the Adriatic.
What has been
said here of Hamites, Semites, and Mongolians may be said also,
at least in part, of the Aryan tribes of herdsmen. It applies also
to the true negroes, at least to those who live entirely from their
herds:
The mobile,
warlike tribes of the Kafirs possess a power of expansion which
needs only an enticing object in order to attain violent effects
and to overturn the ethnologic relations of vast districts. Eastern
Africa offers such an object. Here the climate did not forbid
stock raising, as in the countries of the interior, and did not
paralyze from the start, the power of impact of the nomads, while
nevertheless numerous peaceable agricultural peoples found room
for their development. Wandering tribes of Kafirs poured like
devastating streams into the fruitful lands of the Zambesi, and
up to the highlands between the Tanganyika and the coast. Here
they met the advance guard of the Watusi, a wave of Hamite eruption,
coming from the north. The former inhabitants of these districts
were either exterminated, or as serfs cultivated the lands which
they formerly owned; or they still continued to fight; or again,
they remained undisturbed in settlements left on one side by the
stream of conquest.
All this has
taken place before our eyes. Some of it is still going on. During
many thousands of years it has "jarred all Eastern Africa from
the Zambesi to the Mediterranean." The incursion of the Hyksos,
whereby for over 500 years Egypt was subject to the shepherd tribes
of the eastern and northern deserts "kinsmen of the
peoples who up to the present day herd their stock between the Nile
and the Red Sea" is the first authenticated foundation
of a state. These states were followed by many others both in the
country of the Nile itself, and farther southward, as far as the
Empire of Muata Jamvo on the southern rim of the central Congo district,
which Portuguese traders in Angola reported as early as the end
of the 16th century, and down to the Empire of Uganda, which only
in our own day has finally succumbed to the superior military organization
of Europe. "Desert land and civilization never lie peaceably
alongside one another; but their battles are alike and full of repetitions."
"Alike
and full of repetitions"! That may be said of universal history
on its basic lines. The human ego in its fundamental aspect is much
the same all the world over. It acts uniformly, in obedience to
the same influences of its environment, with races of all colors,
in all parts of the earth, in the tropics as in the temperate zones.
One must step back far enough and choose a point of view so high
that the variegated aspect of the details does not hide the great
movements of the mass. In such a case, our eye misses the "mode"
of fighting, wandering, laboring humanity, while its "substance,"
ever similar, ever new, ever enduring through change, reveals itself
under uniform laws.
Stage 2:
Truce
Gradually,
from this first stage, there develops the second, in which the peasant,
through thousands of unsuccessful attempts at revolt, has accepted
his fate and has ceased every resistance. About this time, it begins
to dawn on the consciousness of the wild herdsman that a murdered
peasant can no longer plow, and that a fruit tree hacked down will
no longer bear. In his own interest, then, wherever it is possible,
he lets the peasant live and the tree stand. The expedition of the
herdsmen comes just as before, every member bristling with arms,
but no longer intending nor expecting war and violent appropriation.
The raiders
burn and kill only so far as is necessary to enforce a wholesome
respect, or to break an isolated resistance. But in general, principally
in accordance with a developing customary right the first
germ of the development of all public law the herdsman now
appropriates only the surplus of the peasant. That is to say, he
leaves the peasant his house, his gear, and his provisions up to
the next crop.
The herdsman
in the first stage is like the bear, who for the purpose of robbing
the beehive, destroys it. In the second stage he is like the beekeeper,
who leaves the bees enough honey to carry them through the winter.
Great is the
progress between the first stage and the second. Long is the forward
step, both economically and politically. In the beginning, as we
have seen, the acquisition by the tribe of herdsmen was purely an
occupying one. Regardless of consequences, they destroyed the source
of future wealth for the enjoyment of the moment.
Henceforth
the acquisition becomes economical, because all economy is based
on wise housekeeping, or in other words, on restraining the enjoyment
of the moment in view of the needs of the future. The herdsman has
learned to "capitalize."
It is a vast
step forward in politics when an utterly strange human being, prey
heretofore like the wild animals, obtains a value and is recognized
as a source of wealth. Although this is the beginning of all slavery,
subjugation, and exploitation, it is at the same time the genesis
of a higher form of society, that reaches out beyond the family
based upon blood relationship.
We saw how,
between the robbers and the robbed, the first threads of a jural
relation were spun across the cleft which separated those who had
heretofore been only "mortal enemies." The peasant thus
obtains a semblance of right to the bare necessaries of life;
so that it comes to be regarded as wrong to kill an unresisting
man or to strip him of everything.
And better
than this, gradually more delicate and softer threads are woven
into a net very thin as yet, but which, nevertheless, brings about
more human relations than the customary arrangement of the division
of spoils. Since the herdsmen no longer meet the peasants in combat
only, they are likely now to grant a respectful request, or to remedy
a well-grounded grievance. "The categorical imperative"
of equity, "Do to others as you would have them do unto you,"
had heretofore ruled the herdsmen only in their dealings with their
own tribesmen and kind. Now for the first time it begins to speak,
shyly whispering in behalf of those who are alien to blood relationship.
In this, we find the germ of that magnificent process of external
amalgamation that, out of small hordes, has formed nations and unions
of nations and that, in the future, is to give life to the
concept of "humanity." We find also the germ of the internal
unification of tribes once separated, from which, in place of the
hatred of "barbarians," will come the all-comprising love
of humanity, of Christianity and Buddhism.
The moment
when first the conqueror spared his victim in order permanently
to exploit him in productive work, was of incomparable historical
importance. It gave birth to nation and state, to right and the
higher economics, with all the developments and ramifications that
have grown and that will hereafter grow out of them. The root
of everything human reaches down into the dark soil of the animal
love and art, no less than state, justice, and economics.
Still another
tendency knots yet more closely these psychic relations. To return
to the comparison of the herdsman and the bear, there are in the
desert, beside the bear who guards the bees, other bears who also
lust after honey. But our tribe of herdsmen blocks their way, and
protects its beehives by force of arms. The peasants become accustomed,
when danger threatens, to call on the herdsmen, whom they no longer
regard as robbers and murderers, but as protectors and saviors.
Imagine the joy of the peasants when the returning band of avengers
brings back to the village the looted women and children, with the
enemies' heads or scalps. These ties are no longer threads, but
strong and knotted bands.
Here is one
of the principal forces of that "integration," whereby
in the further development, those originally not of the same blood,
and often enough of different groups speaking different languages,
will in the end be welded together into one people, with one speech,
one custom, and one feeling of nationality. This unity grows by
degrees from common suffering and need, common victory and defeat,
common rejoicing and common sorrow. A new and vast domain is open
when master and slave serve the same interests; then arises a stream
of sympathy, a sense of common service. Both sides apprehend, and
gradually recognize, each other's common humanity. Gradually the
points of similarity are sensed, in place of the differences in
build and apparel, of language and religion, which had heretofore
brought about only antipathy and hatred. Gradually they learn to
understand one another, first through a common speech, and then
through a common mental habit. The net of the psychical interrelations
becomes stronger.
In this second
stage of the formation of states, the ground work, in its essentials,
has been mapped out. No further step can be compared in importance
to the transition whereby the bear becomes a beekeeper. For this
reason, short references must suffice.
Stage 3:
Tribute
The third stage
arrives when the "surplus" obtained by the peasantry is
brought by them regularly to the tents of the herdsmen as "tribute,"
a regulation that affords to both parties self-evident and considerable
advantages. By this means, the peasantry is relieved entirely from
the little irregularities connected with the former method of taxation,
such as a few men knocked on the head, women violated, or farmhouses
burned down. The herdsmen on the other hand, need no longer apply
to this "business" any "expense" and labor,
to use a mercantile expression, and they devote the time and energy
thus set free toward an "extension of the works," in other
words, to subjugating other peasants.
This form of
tribute is found in many well-known instances in history: Huns,
Magyars, Tartars, Turks, have derived their largest income from
their European tributes. Sometimes the character of the tribute
paid by the subjects to their master is more or less blurred, and
the act assumes the guise of payment for protection, or indeed,
of a subvention. The tale is well known whereby Attila was pictured
by the weakling emperor at Constantinople as a vassal prince; while
the tribute he paid to the Hun appeared as a fee.
Stage 4:
Occupation
The fourth
stage, once more, is of very great importance, since it adds the
decisive factor in the development of the state, as we are accustomed
to see it, namely, the union on one strip of land of both ethnic
groups. (It is well known that no jural definition of a state can
be arrived at without the concept of state territory.) From now
on, the relation of the two groups, which was originally international,
gradually becomes more and more intranational.
This territorial
union may be caused by foreign influences. It may be that stronger
hordes have crowded the herdsmen forward, or that their increase
in population has reached the limit set by the nutritive capacity
of the steppes or prairies; it may be that a great cattle plague
has forced the herdsmen to exchange the unlimited scope of the prairies
for the narrows of some river valley. In general, however, internal
causes alone suffice to bring it about that the herdsmen stay in
the neighborhood of their peasants.
The duty of
protecting their tributaries against other "bears" forces
them to keep a levy of young warriors in the neighborhood of their
subjects; and this is at the same time an excellent measure of defense
since it prevents the peasants from giving way to a desire to break
their bonds, or to let some other herdsmen become their overlords.
This latter occurrence is by no means rare, since, if tradition
is correct, it is the means whereby the sons of Rurik came to Russia.
As yet the
local juxtaposition does not mean a state community in its narrowest
sense; that is to say, a unital organization.
In case the
herdsmen are dealing with utterly unwarlike subjects, they carry
on their nomad life, peaceably wandering up and down and herding
their cattle among the perioike and helots. This is the case with
the light-colored Wahuma, "the handsomest men of the world"
(Kandt), in central Africa, or the Tuareg clan of the Hadanara of
the Asgars, "who have taken up their seats among the Imrad
and have become wandering freebooters. These Imrad are the serving
class of the Asgars, who live on them, although the Imrad could
put into the field ten times as many warriors; the situation is
analogous to that of the Spartans in relation to their Helots."
The same may
be said of the Teda among the neighboring Borku:
Just as
the land is divided into a semi-desert supporting the nomads,
and gardens with date groves, so the population is divided between
nomads and settled folk. Although about equal in number, ten to
twelve thousand altogether, it goes without saying that these
latter are subject to the others.
And the same
applies to the entire group of herdsmen known as the Galla Masi
and Wahuma.
Although
differences in possessions are considerable, they have few slaves,
as a serving class. These are represented by peoples of a lower
caste, who live separate and apart from them. It is herdsmanship
which is the basis of the family, of the state, and along with
these of the principle of political evolution. In this wide territory,
between Scehoa and its southernmost boundaries, on the one hand,
and Zanzibar on the other, there is found no strong political
power, in spite of the highly developed social articulation.
In case the
country is not adapted to herding cattle on a large scale
as was universally the case in Western Europe or where a
less unwarlike population might make attempts at insurrection, the
crowd of lords becomes more or less permanently settled, taking
either steep places or strategically important points for their
camps, castles, or towns. From these centers, they control their
"subjects," mainly for the purpose of gathering their
tribute, paying no attention to them in other respects. They let
them administer their affairs, carry on their religious worship,
settle their disputes, and adjust their methods of internal economy.
Their autochthonous constitution, their local officials, are, in
fact, not interfered with.
If Frants Buhl
reports correctly, that was the beginning of the rule of the Israelites
in Canaan. Abyssinia, that great military force, though at the first
glance it may appear to be a fully developed state, does not, however,
seem to have advanced beyond the fourth stage.
At least Ratzel
states,
The principal
care of the Abyssinians consists in the tribute, in which they
follow the method of oriental monarchs in olden and modern times,
which is not to interfere with the internal management and administration
of justice of their subject peoples.
The best example
of the fourth stage is found in the situation in ancient Mexico
before the Spanish conquest:
The confederation
under the leadership of the Mexicans had somewhat more progressive
ideas of conquest. Only those tribes were wiped out that offered
resistance. In other cases, the vanquished were merely plundered,
and then required to pay tribute. The defeated tribe governed
itself just as before, through its own officials. It was different
in Peru, where the formation of a compact empire followed the
first attack. In Mexico, intimidation and exploitation were the
only aims of the conquest. And so it came about that the so-called
Empire of Mexico at the time of the conquest represented merely
a group of intimidated Indian tribes, whose federation with one
another was prevented by their fear of plundering expeditions
from some unassailable fort in their midst.
It will be
observed that one can not speak of this as a state in any proper
sense. Ratzel shows this in the note following the above:
It is certain
that the various points held in subjection by the warriors of
Montezuma were separated from one another by stretches of territory
not yet conquered. A condition very like the rule of the Hova
in Madagascar. One would not say that scattering a few garrisons,
or better still, military colonies, over the land, is a mark of
absolute dominion, since these colonies, with great trouble, maintain
a strip of a few miles in subjection.
Stage 5:
Monopoly
The logic of
events presses quickly from the fourth to the fifth stage, and fashions
almost completely the full state. Quarrels arise between neighboring
villages or clans that the lords no longer permit to be fought out,
since by this the capacity of the peasants for service would be
impaired. The lords assume the right to arbitrate, and in case of
need, to enforce their judgment. In the end, it happens that at
each "court" of the village king or chief of the clan
there is an official deputy who exercises the power, while the chiefs
are permitted to retain the appearance of authority. The state of
the Incas shows, in a primitive condition, a typical example of
this arrangement.
Here we find
the Incas united at Cuzco where they had their patrimonial lands
and dwellings. A representative of the Incas, the Tucricuc, however,
resided in every district at the court of the native chieftain.
He
had supervision
over all affairs of his district; he raised the troops, superintended
the delivery of the tribute, ordered the forced labor on roads
and bridges, superintended the administration of justice, and
in short supervised everything in his district.
The same institutions
that have been developed by American huntsmen and Semite shepherds
are found also among African herdsmen. In Ashanti, the system of
the Tucricuc has been developed in a typical fashion; and the Dualla
have established for their subjects living in segregated villages
"an institution based on conquest midway between a feudal system
and slavery."
The same author
reports that the Barotse have a constitution corresponding to the
earliest stage of the mediaeval feudal organization:
Their villages
are
as a rule surrounded by a circle of hamlets where their
serfs live. These till the fields of their lords in the immediate
neighborhood, grow grain, or herd the cattle.
The only thing
that is not typical here consists in this, that the lords do not
live in isolated castles or halls, but are settled in villages among
their subjects.
Stage 6:
State
It is only
a very small step from the Incas to the Dorians in Lacedaemon, Messenia,
or Crete; and no greater distance separates the Fulbe, Dualla, and
Barotse from the comparatively rigidly organized feudal states of
the African Negro Empires of Uganda, Unyoro, etc.; and the corresponding
feudal empires of Eastern and Western Europe and of all Asia.
In all places,
the same results are brought about by force of the same sociopsychological
causes. The necessity of keeping the subjects in order and at the
same time of maintaining them at their full capacity for labor leads
step by step from the fifth to the sixth stage, in which the state,
by acquiring full intranationality and by the evolution of "Nationality,"
is developed in every sense.
The need becomes
more and more frequent to interfere, to allay difficulties, to punish,
or to coerce obedience; and thus develop the habit of rule and the
usages of government. The two groups, separated, to begin with,
and then united on one territory, are at first merely laid alongside
one another, then are scattered through one another like a mechanical
mixture, as the term is used in chemistry, until gradually they
become more and more of a "chemical combination." They
intermingle, unite, amalgamate to unity, in customs and habits,
in speech and worship.
Soon the bonds
of relationship unite the upper and the lower strata. In nearly
all cases the master class picks the handsomest virgins from the
subject races for its concubines. A race of bastards thus develops,
sometimes taken into the ruling class, sometimes rejected, and then
because of the blood of the masters in their veins, becoming the
born leaders of the subject race. In form and in content the primitive
state is completed.
Reprinted
from Mises.org.
Franz
Oppenheimer (1864–1943) was a German-Jewish sociologist
and political economist, best known for his work on the
fundamental sociology of the state. His book The
State: Its History and Development Viewed Sociologically
was the prototype for Albert Jay Nock's writing, for Frank
Chodorov's work, and even for the theoretical edifice that
later became Rothbardianism.
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