Table Of ContentEurope  and  the 
Rise  of Capitalism
Edited by
; 
Jean Baechler John A.  Hall and 
Michael Mann
Basil Blackwell
Copyright© Basil Blackwell Ltd 1988
First published 1988 
Reprinted and first published in paperback 1989
Basil Blackwell Ltd 
108 Cowley Road, Oxford, 0X4 1J1  UK
Basil Blackwell Inc.
3 Cambridge Center 
Camhridge, MA 02142, USA
All rights reserved. Except for the quotation of short passages for the purposes of 
criticism and review, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a 
retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or hy any means, electronic, 
mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of
the publisher.
Except in the United States of America, this hook is sold subject to the condition 
that it shall not, hy way of trade or otherwise, he lent, re-sold, hired out, or 
otherwise circulated without the puhlisher’s prior consent in any form of hinding or 
cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition 
including this condition heing imposed on the suhsequent purchaser.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data 
Europe and the rise of capitalism.
1. Europe—Economic conditions  2. Asia 
—Economic conditions
I. Baechler, Jean  II. Hall, John A.
III. Mann, Michael, 1942- 
330.94'02  IIC240 
ISBN 0-631-15006-4 
ISBN 0-631-16942-3 Phk
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data 
Europe and the rise of capitalism.
Based on papers from a symposium organized in 
Septemher 1985 at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, under 
the title of “The European miracle”, sponsored bv the 
Economic and Social Research Council in co-operation 
with the Centre national de la recherche seientifique,
Paris.
Includes bibliographies and index.
1. Capitalism—Europe— I Iistory—Congresses.
2. Capitalism—Asia—I Iistoiy—Congresses.  3. Europe—
Economic conditions—Congresses.  4. Asia— Economic 
conditions—Congresses.  1. Baechler, lean.  II. I Iall,
John A., 1949- .  III. Mann, Michael,' 1942-  .
IV. Emmanuel College (University of Camhridge)
V. Economic and Social Research Council (Great Britain)
VI. Centre national de la recherche seientifique (France)
I IC240.9.C3E97  1987  330.94  87-12293
ISBN 0-631-15006-4
ISBN 0-631-16942-3 (phk.)
'Typeset in IOV2 on  12 pt Ehrhardt 
hy I lope Services, Abingdon, Oxon, UK 
Printed in Great Britain by T. J. Press, Padstow
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
(3 Introduction 
Ernest Gellner
(J)  European Development: Approaching a Historical 
^   Explanation 
Michael Mann
fly   States and Societies: The Miracle in Comparative Perspective 
^   John A. Hall
The Origins of Modernity: Caste and Feudality (India,
Europe and J^pan)
Jean Baechler
4  The Uniqueness of the East 
Chris Wickham
5  China as a Counterfactual 
Mark Elvin
6  The Mamluk Military System and the Blocking of Medieval 
Moslem Society
Jean-Clande Garcin
7  Islam: A Comment 
Michael Cook
8  The Modernization of Japan: Why has Japan Succeeded in its 
Modernization?
Jacques Mutel
9  The Russian Case 
Alain Besangon
10  Political and Social Structures of the West 
Karl Ferdinand Werner
iv Contents
11 The Cradle of Capitalism: The Case of England  185
Alan Macfarlane
12 The European Tradition in Movements of Insurrection  204
Rene Pillorget
13 Republics of Merchants in Early Modem Europe  220
Peter Burke
14 The European Family and Early Industrialization  234
Peter Laslett
Index  243
Preface
In  September  1985  we  organized  a  symposium  held  at  Emmanuel 
College,  Cambridge,  under  the  provocative  title  of ‘The  European 
Miracle’. This title -  borrowed from E. L. Jones’s book The European 
Miracle  (Cambridge,  1981)  -  indicated  our interest in  explaining the 
massive  and,  perhaps,  unique  development  of  medieval  and  early 
modern  Europe  towards  capitalism,  the  Industrial  Revolution  and 
modernity.  To  that  end  we  gathered  a  group  of  distinguished, 
international scholars from several academic disciplines. The Economic 
and  Social  Research  Council  generously  provided  funds  for  the 
symposium under its programme of Anglo-French co-operation with the 
Centre National de la Recherche Seientifique, Paris.
All but two of the chapters here presented were given in earlier form 
in either English or French at the symposium - the exceptions being 
invited contributions from Ernest Gellner and Chris Wickham.  (Chris 
Wickham’s chapter has also appeared in the Journal of Peasant Studies.) 
We would like to thank all those who participated in Cambridge for their 
contributions to our lively and stimulating discussions.
The  French  contributions  have  been  translated  into  English  by 
W. D. Halls.
Jean Baechler, Maison des Sciences de l’Homme, Paris 
John A. Hall, University of Southampton and Harvard University 
Michael Mann, London School of Economics
Acknowledgements for the illustrations in chapter 5
Figure
3 a  Reproduced by kind permission of Mark Elvin.
3b  Diderot, Encyclopedic, vol. XXVIII, plate VIII Sig. H, fol. Bs 459-486 
(K.5.221), is reproduced by kind permission of the Bodleian Library, 
Oxford.
3c  Diderot, Encyclopedic, vol. XXVIII, plate XII Sig. M, fol. Bs 459—486 
(K.5.221) is reproduced by kind permission of the Bodleian Library, 
Oxford.
4a  The Mansell Collection.
4b  Reproduced by kind permission of Mark Elvin.
5a  Reproduced by kind permission of Glasgow University Library.
Introduction
Ernest  Gellner
The conference on which this collection of essays is based was originally 
called  The European Miracle’, and the idea of the miraculousness of the 
European experience continues to haunt much of the argument.  The 
European Miracle  sounds like an extraordinary example  of European 
vainglory and vanity. We are the miracle. Le miracle, c’est moi. It is all a bit 
like the man who explained his failure to take part in the war by saying — 
/ am the civilization you are fighting to defend. The rest of you simply 
exemplify the ordinary condition of humanity, unblessed and unhallowed 
by any miraculous intervention.’ We need to be explained; you constitute a 
kind of unproblematic and unexciting baseline, a moral null hypothesis, 
which  invites  no  intellectual  exploration,  and  contains  no  valuable 
lesson.
That is what it sounds like.  The  truth of the matter is exactly the 
opposite. The phrase should not be read — the European miracle. It must 
be read -  the European miracle. We know not what we do, and we do not 
know what hit us. We cannot take credit for it.  Economic, social and 
cognitive development, like thought itself, cannot properly be spoken of 
in the first person. Just as one should always say ‘it thinks’ and never ‘I 
think’,  so  one  should  also  say  that  it  developed,  and  not  that  we 
developed.  The  underlying puzzlement,  the  perception  of a problem 
which inspires the question, is not any kind of Europocentric vision of 
history, but on the contrary, a sense of proportion, of the general and 
pervasive obstacles to progress, and a humility in face of the occasional 
rare surmounting of those impediments.
Europeans  had  indeed  once  been vainglorious  and  Europocentric. 
Then they equated their own history with human history as such, and 
lacked a sense of any specific miracle. They had only received what was
2  Ernest Gellner
their due. Their own fate was what was intended for humanity. Life or 
history itself had intended them to be the beneficiaries of what had come 
their way. They were and deserved to be at the head of the queue. Thus 
the new humanist faith in work was a covert glorification of one kind of 
man.
The period stretching roughly from the end of the eighteenth to the 
beginning of the twentieth century, the age of the faith in progress, was, 
of course,  also  the  time  of an  awareness  of fundamental  social  and 
intellectual  change.  It  was  linked,  in  most  cases,  to  an  optimistic 
conviction  that  this  change  was  for  the  better.  Global  change  was 
endowed with a systematic direction, and it was underwritten by some 
persistent  mechanism  or  force  which  guaranteed  that  this  overall 
direction should remain beneficial and operative. Basically there was but 
one principle and one mechanism of change. It manifested itself, in its 
most striking and best developed form, in European or Western history. 
The age whose thought had fused history and philosophy, which saw 
historic change as the manifestation of our collective salvation and as 
the clue to human destiny, focused on Western history. What of the rest 
of mankind?
The question was not always asked with very much insistence. What 
did the rest- of the world matter? But for those who did ask the question, 
the  answer was obvious.  The  rest of the world  exemplified the  same 
principles, the same mechanisms, the same destiny, as did the West. But 
these other cultures or races or civilizations exemplified them in feebler, 
slower and retarded forms. They could see their future in us. We could 
see our barbarous past in them. That indeed constitutes their scholarly 
significance. As late as the second half of the twentieth century, Claude 
Levi-Strauss could point out that for the Marxisant Jean-Paul  Sartre, 
backward  races  could  only  enter  history  proper  by  courtesy  of 
incorporation in the European dialectic. This was la mission civilisatrice 
in Marxist language.
So  the  Europocentric  nineteenth-century  philosophies  of  history 
tended to assume that the recent dramatic transformations, which had 
disturbed the earlier certainties and seeming stabilities of Europe, were 
firmly inscribed on a universal human agenda. These were issues facing 
mankind, not Europe as such. Their solutions were valid for humanity, 
not just for Europeans.  These problems and solutions had been  ever 
present, latent in the destiny of mankind. Europe attained them first, but 
they were not specifically European. Europe was the avant-garde model. 
It was through the European situation that the human condition as such 
was to be understood. The principles of human society were the same 
everywhere, but Europe, being most advanced, provided the norm.
Philosophy had become historical when it became manifest that radical
Introduction  3
social  change was  not an aberration,  but was inherent in the  human 
condition. Change ceased to be seen as part of social pathology, as it had 
been for Plato, and became, instead, the central theme and device of a 
new,  secular  soteriology.  But  the  vision  did  still  assume  that  the 
turbulence of European history revealed human destiny as such.
This assumption, so often tacitly accepted, has now been abandoned. 
The historical nature of philosophy (though repudiated or ignored by the 
academic trade) continues to be valid: change is the law of all things, and 
we cannot understand ourselves without understanding the patterns of 
change. But we no longer constitute the model which explains all else. 
We are an aberration, which can only be understood by investigating the 
other, more typical social forms. What has disappeared is the supposition 
that the changes which occurred here -  if only we can pick out their 
crucial features and their underlying principles — were inscribed into the 
order of things, into the very essence of human society, requiring nothing 
but time and maturation to reveal themselves generally.
Of course, nothing can happen unless it is possible. But a great deal 
can happen without being necessary. The emergence of a society without 
poverty, a society blessed with perpetual economic and cognitive growth, 
an egalitarian and/or fraternal society which incorporates everyone in a 
shared moral citizenship and a high culture, a society without oppression 
or arbitrariness -  whichever of these or similar features you consider to 
be central to an optimistic vision of social development -  is not inscribed 
into  any  historic  plan.  On  the  contrary,  it is  plausible  to  argue  that 
agrarian society as such is a trap, and moreover one from which it was 
almost impossible for mankind to escape. A stored surplus needs to be 
guarded  and  its  distribution  enforced.  No  principle  of distribution is 
either self-validating or self-enforcing. Conflict is inevitable, and victors 
have no interest in permitting a return match. They have every reason to 
prevent it by pre-emptive action. Herein lies, as Plato amongst others 
saw, the root cause of political coercion. Few agrarian societies escape 
this coercive destiny.
The consequences of the codification and storage of knowledge, in 
other words of the discovery and use of writing, are no better, as David 
Hume noted: the guardians of a centralized and codified doctrine are 
less  tolerant  than  the  priests  of  traditional,  non-scriptural  religion. 
Codification makes possible  the  definition of orthodoxy and hence of 
heresy, and hence the extension of social control to belief as well as of 
practice. The monopolists of truth are as jealous as the monopolists of 
power,  and  have  as  good  reasons  for  eliminating  competition.  So 
oppression and dogmatism which is, in diverse forms, the shared lot of 
agro-literate societies, is not an accident but a fatality.
How then did we manage to escape the dreadful regiment of kings and
4  Ernest Gellner
priests? Certainly not because we were any better than those who failed 
to escape. The miracle occurred, not in the West as such, nor even in 
Europe, but in one small part of Europe, and on one occasion only. It did 
not occur in other parts of the same continent, and was often suppressed 
when attempts were made to spread it. Those who achieved it once had 
not been able to perform it on earlier occasions. Had this one instance 
been suppressed, as it very nearly was, there is no evidence that they 
would have been able to repeat it later.  Of course we cannot be sure 
about this, as we do not know what would have happened: but that is 
what the evidence suggests.
So  the  sense  of miracle  is  not  inspired  by  the  vainglory  or  self
congratulation of those who were its first beneficiaries, but, rather, by a 
sense of its precariousness. This sense springs from a vivid perception of 
the difficulties of diffusing the benefits of the new order, but also from an 
awareness  of  its  fragility,  and  of  its  mysteriousness  in  its  original 
homeland. Looking at those caught in the agrarian trap, we know that but 
for the Grace of God, that would be our condition,. This is the switch 
from the entelechy, acorn-to-oak tree vision (exemplified, for instance, 
by Marxism), to the fortuitous, contingent opening of a normally shut 
gate, to the accidentally open gate model (exemplified by Max Weber).
When a great deal of twentieth-century philosophy turned its back on 
history and on any preoccupation with historic patterns, it did not do so 
because its nineteenth-century predecessors had been Europocentric. It 
did so because it claimed that history as such, whether ethnocentric or 
not, was irrelevant. In so doing, it became, in effect, essentialist, whether 
or not this was recognized. It assumed, or affirmed, that human nature, 
society, institutions, could be understood and/or evaluated by somehow 
approaching their given, inherent essences, which were independent of 
the  historically revealed  transformations.  R.  G.  Collingwood  saw  the 
absurdity of this clearly, but he was not heeded.
Nowadays, there is a variety of such fashionable von Munchhausen 
philosophies, whose practitioners would lift themselves, and the rest of 
us, by their own breeches  from the  ditch of contingent reality to  the 
heights  of  normative  essence.  These  trans-historical  essences  are 
allegedly approached by diverse patented methods -  linguistic, phenom
enological,  formal-logical,  contractarian  and  other.  In  fact,  their 
trascendence of history is spurious. Philosophy must become historical 
again, but it may not absolutize any one condition or pattern of change. 
It must explain how, against all odds, a dramatic transformation became 
possible  -   not  why  it  was  necessary.  It  can  illuminate  options,  not 
prescribe any one of them.
If we now return, as we must, to a concrete investigation of the historic 
constraints which define the range of our options, the manner in which