Aristokrasi: Perbedaan antara revisi

Konten dihapus Konten ditambahkan
k +interwiki
Stephensuleeman (bicara | kontrib)
Tidak ada ringkasan suntingan
Baris 1:
'''Aristokrasi''' berasal dari [[bahasa Yunani|bahasa Yunani kuno]] ''aristo'' yang berarti "terbaik" dan ''kratia'' yang berarti "untuk memimpin". Aristokrasi dapat diterjemahkan menjadi sebuah sistimsistem pemerintahan yang dipimpin oleh individu yang terbaik.
 
Sebagai salah satu istilah bentuk pemerintahan, aristokrasi dapat dibandingkan dengan:
* [[otokrasi]] - "dipimpinpemerintahan oleh seorang individu".
* [[meritokrasi]] - "dipimpinpemerintahan oleh individu yang paling pantas untuk memimpin".
* [[plutokrasi]] - "dipimpinpemerintahan oleh individuorang-orang yang terkayakaya".
* [[oligarki]] - "dipimpinpemerintahan oleh beberapasegelintir individu".
* [[monarki]] - "dipimpinpemerintahan oleh seorang individu".
* [[demokrasi]] - "dipimpinpemerintahan oleh rakyat".
 
{{stub}}
 
<!--The linguistic conflict between them began with the [[American Revolution]] ideal of all men being "created equal", quickly followed by the [[French Revolution]] (the first in [[Europe]]), and continued throughout the [[19th century]], occasionally flaring up in violent episodes such as the [[revolutions of 1848]]. Arguably, the end of the [[First World War]] in [[1918]] marked the final linguistic victory of "democracy" over "aristocracy" as a preferred term for government.
 
==History==
The term "aristocracy" was first given in Athens to young [[citizens]] who led armies from the front line with their swords up. Since [[military]] bravery was such a highly regarded [[virtue]] in ancient Greece, the armies were being led by "the best". From the ancient Greeks, the term passed on to the European [[Middle Ages]] for a similar hereditary class of military leaders often referred to as the "[[Nobility#Western_nobility|nobility]]". As in ancient Greece, this was a slave holding class of privileged men whose military role made them see themselves as the most "noble", or "best". Both aristocracies relied upon an established [[church]] to back up their claims of being "best" in the society.
 
One of the key causes of the [[French Revolution]] was the idea that the traditional aristocracy no longer represented the "best" of its society. The army had been modernized by Louis XIV to a degree that aristocrats no longer rode at the front of their troops, but directed movements from a safe distance in many cases. It was difficult to abide the aristocracy's traditional privileges when they didn't earn them in the traditional way.
 
The French Revolution focused on aristocrats as people who had achieved their status by birth rather than by merit, such unearned status being considered an affront to the [[bourgeoisie]] and new [[liberalism|liberal]] norms. The term thus became symbolic of people who claim luxuries and privileges as a birthright, rather than people who claim the chance to die on the front lines as a birthright, a far cry from the original meaning of the term. In the [[United Kingdom]] and other European countries in which [[hereditary titles]] are still recognized, "aristocrat" still refers to the descendant of one of approximately 7,000 families with hereditary titles, usually still in possession of considerable wealth, though not necessarily so.
 
In the [[United States]] and other nations without a history of a hereditary military [[caste]], '''aristocracy''' has taken on a more stylistic meaning. It also can refer to those whose families came to the United States early on in its history. For example blue bloods or yankees from the northeast who over time have accumulated wealth by means of being upper class. In the American south, particularly in former Confederate states, the term southern aristocracy refers to those families that have been associated with the Civil and Revolutionary Wars and remain wealthy landowners to this day. In most cases, the usage is pejorative and refers to purveryors of [[snobbery]], but "aristocrat" can also refer to an elegant person with a gracious lifestyle and strong sense of duty. This last meaning can be seen as taking the term back to its original roots.
 
==See also==
* [[Elite]]
* [[High culture]]
* [[Landed gentry]]
* [[Upper class]]
* [[White collar]]
* [[Patrician]]
 
==External links==
*[http://www.bbcfactual.co.uk/aristocracy.htm BBC series on recent history of European aristocracy]
 
==Further reading==
*[[Max Beerbohm|Beerbohm, Max]], ''Zuleika Dobson.''
*Bence-Jones, Mark. ''The Viceroys of India''. Curzon family.
*Brough, James. ''Consuelo: Portrait of an American Heiress'' Consuelo Vanderbilt's marriage to the Duke of Marlborough. Marlborough family.
*Bush, Michael L. ''The English Aristocracy: a Comparative Synthesis''. Manchester University Press, 1984. Concise comparative historical treatment.
*Bush, Michael L. ''Noble Privilege''. (The European Nobility, vol. 1) Manchester University Press, 1983.
*Cannadine, David, 1998 ''Aspects of Aristocracy'' (series ''Penguin History'') ISBN 0140249532. Essays on class issues, aristocratic family norms, careers.
*Cannadine, David. ''The Decline and Fall of the British Aristocracy''. Yale University Press, 1990.
*Channon, Sir Henry. ''Chips: The Diaries of Sir Henry Channon'' Robert Rhodes James, editor. Excerpts from the diaries of a privileged observer, 1934&ndash;53.
*''[[Country Life (magazine)|Country Life]] Magazine'', Documenting houses, gardens, pictures, horses, local history, debutantes since 1897.
*[[E.M.Forster|Forster, E. M., ''Howard's End]]''.
*[[John Galsworthy|Galsworthy, John]]. ''The Forsyte Saga''
*Girouard, Mark. ''Life in the English Country House : A Social and Architectural History''
*Halperin, John. ''Eminent Georgians: The Lives of King George V, Elizabeth Bowen, St. John Philby, & Nancy Astor''
*[[Henry James|James, Henry]]. The novels.
*Jullian, Philippe. ''Prince of aesthetes: Count Robert de Montesquiou, 1855-1921''. Montesquiou family; the Decadent movement and the original of Proust's Baron de Charlus.
*Lacey, Robert. ''Aristocrats''. Little, Brown, 1983.
*Lovell, Mary S. ''The Sisters: The Saga of the Mitford Family''.
*Mitford, Jessica. ''Hons and Rebels''. ISBN 1590171101
*[[Nancy Mitford|Mitford, Nancy]], ''Love in a Cold Climate''
*Montagu of Beaulieu, Lord (Edward John Barrington Douglas-Scott-Montagu). ''More equal than others: The changing fortunes of the British and European aristocracies''. St. Martin, 1970.
*Morton, Henry. ''The Rothschilds''.
*Nicholson, Nigel. ''Portrait of a Marriage : Vita Sackville-West and Harold Nicolson''
*Pearson, John. ''The Sitwells: A Family's Biography''
*Pine, Leslie G. ''Tales of the British Aristocracy''. Burke Publishing Co. 1956.
*Prochaska, F. K., editor, 2002. ''Royal Lives'' ISBN 0198605307 (''Lives'' series) Excerpted official biographies from the ''[[Dictionary_of_National_Biography]]''
*Proust, Marcel, ''The Guermantes' Way''', ''Sodom and Gomorrah''. The closed circle of French aristocracy after 1870.
*Sutherland, Douglas, ''The Fourth Man: The story of Blunt, Philby, Burgess, and Maclean'' The double career of Sir Anthony Blunt, Keeper of the Queen's Works of Art and spy.
*''[[The Tatler]]'' Magazine.
*[[Anthony Trollope|Trollope, Anthony]] The Plantagenet Palliser series of Parliamentary novels.
*[[Evelyn Waugh|Waugh, Evelyn]]. ''Brideshead Revisited''
*Waugh, Evelyn, ''Decline and Fall.''
*Winchester, Simon. ''Their Noble Lordships: Class and Power in Modern Britain''. Faber & Faber, 1981.
 
*BBC/PBS series, ''[[Upstairs, Downstairs]]'', ''[[The Jewel in the Crown]]'', ''[[Brideshead Revisited]]'', ''[[The Aristocracy: Born to Rule]] 1875-1914'' (1997)
Film: ''[[Gosford Park]]'', ''[[The Perfect Husband]]'', ''[[A Room with a View]]''-->
 
 
{{stub}}