Crown and Succession: The Politics of Legitimacy in Dynastic Rule
MTA
How laws, rituals, and rivalries decided rulers and shaped nations
2nd Edition
*Crown and Succession: The Politics of Legitimacy in Dynastic Rule* explores the complex legal, ritual, and strategic mechanisms societies have used to manage the transfer of power. The book posits that legitimacy is not an inherent quality of bloodlines but a carefully constructed claim anchored in law, myth, and public performance. By examining diverse systems—including primogeniture, elective monarchy, tanistry, and adoption—the text reveals how dynasties attempted to reduce the inherent instability of transitions while navigating the biological unpredictability of heirs.
The narrative details the "machinery of legitimacy," highlighting the essential role of coronations, anointings, and documentary arts such as charters and genealogies in making authority visible and believable. It examines how succession crises often acted as catalysts for state formation, forcing the creation of regency protocols, treason laws, and parliamentary bodies to maintain order during power vacuums. These institutions were designed to discipline ambition and channel rivalry into predictable legal frameworks, though they were frequently tested by usurpation, civil war, and international arbitration.
In its later chapters, the book traces the evolution of these practices into the modern era, discussing the shift toward gender-neutral absolute primogeniture and the impact of mass media on royal branding. It also compares monarchical succession to the transition of power in republics, suggesting that modern constitutional procedures and electoral rituals are secular descendants of dynastic logic. Ultimately, the book concludes that political stability depends on balancing rigid rules with institutional flexibility, ensuring that the state remains a continuous entity even as its individual leaders change.
This book is ideal for students and scholars of political history, medieval and early modern studies, political science, and comparative politics who seek to understand how leadership transitions have shaped state formation across cultures and eras. It will particularly benefit readers interested in the institutional development of monarchy, the construction of political legitimacy, and the historical roots of modern succession practices in both monarchical and republican systems. The comparative approach spanning Europe, Africa, and Asia makes it valuable for anyone studying how societies solve the fundamental problem of transferring power peacefully while maintaining institutional continuity.
May 2, 2026
64,515 words
4 hours 31 minutes
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