Before the ‘European Miracles’. Four Essays on Swedish Preconditions for Conquest, Growth, and Voice
Abstract
Abstract
Before the ‘European Miracles’. Four Essays on Swedish Preconditions for Conquest, Growth, and
Voice. (Publications of the Department of Economic History, School of Economics and
Commercial Law, Göteborg university no 93)
ISSN 1403-2864. ISBN 91-85196-61-4 Göteborg 2005
Author: Erik Örjan Emilsson
Doctoral Dissertation at the Department of Economic History, Göteborg University. (Written in
English).
Distribution: the Department of Economic History, Göteborg University, Box 720, SE-405 30
Göteborg, Sweden.
This thesis consists of four studies that further develop the perspectives introduced in the
author’s licential dissertation, Sweden and the European Miracles: Conquest, Growth and Voice
(1996). The dynamic properties of the European system of independent but interacting societies
are traced back to the institutional polystruc-turality of European feudalism and the peculiarities
of Sweden’s historical experience are asserted to be part of this intersocietal heritage. Sweden’s
contributions to the developments resulting in (World) Conquest, (sustained economic) Growth
and (extensive political) Voice are discussed, and the Medieval roots of the social configurations
that make possible military expansionism, growing peasant affluence, and institutionalized
political negotiations are explored.
The almost permanent power struggles between oligarchic and monarchic regimes that
characterize medieval Sweden are viewed as a crucial factor behind the survival of communal
self-rule and the resultant compromise is interpreted as a form of parallel, competitive statebuilding,
predicated upon the institutional separation of the land and the peasantry into two
‘separate economic bases’: a public and a private (noble) sector. The so called Engelbrekt
rebellion is seen as a crucial watershed in these developments, and the role of the regional
judges – the lawspeakers (lagmän) are emphasized.
In the second study, the Swedish peasantry is discussed: its subdivision according to nature of
land tenure and manner of political representation, and its economic stratification; also trends in
peasant wealth and in the degree of inequality. Evidence from property taxations is used in
order to resolve these questions for sample parishes and the results of earlier research are
scrutinized and criticized. Different kinds of economic dynamics are discussed and a change
from ‘feudal’ to modern economic dynamics is inferred. The ‘shortcut’ explanation where the
free Swedish peasantry is interpreted as a survival from the Viking Age is also rejected. Peasant
self-representation and affluence were in the main independent of tenure, and the strong
position of peasant proprietors in 19th century Sweden is a late development connected to the
rise of market production and to the extraneous interest in freehold property rights, leading tax
peasants to political standpoints and alliances that eventually would fracture the peasantry.
The role of lagmän (‘lawspeakers’) in medieval Swedish society is explored in the final chapter,
arguing their central role in state-building and in the formation of oligarchic factions opposing
absolutist tendencies. The ‘lawspeaker myth’ of independent regional spokesmen risen from the
local peasantries is shown to have no foundation in known facts – on the contrary all of the
earlylawspeaker whose families we know anything about were closely related to the royal and
ducal dynasties.
University
Göteborg University. School of Business, Economics and Law
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Date
2005Author
Emilsson, Erik Örjan
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
91-85196-61-4
ISSN
1403-2864
Series/Report no.
Meddelanden från Ekonomisk-historiska institutionen, nr 93
Language
en