On
the eve of the U.S. Elections, it is perhaps useful to reflect that
democracy didn't always look like this. Representative Democracy with
periodic elections is not even necessarily the most "perfect" from of
democracy. It is worthwhile considering the fact that in
Ancient Greece, for example, democracy was direct and participatory --
for that privileged male elite that were considered "citizens." More
surprising for most people living today, however, is that notion that
direct and participatory democracy played an important part in the
Middle Ages too. Indeed, one could argue that in the sense of individual
participation in daily decision-making affecting one's immediate life
"democracy" was more widespread in the Middle Ages than it is today.
In the Middle Ages society was communal and consensual as well as hierarchical. The medieval peasant was not a slave taking orders, but a member of society required to participate in consensus-building in daily life. At the village level, for example, every village was run by the residents who decided collectively — that is in a direct democracy — about a variety of issues in daily life such planting, crop rotation, and solving common problems from pests to drainage.
In the courts, judgments were reached by a jury, not handed down by the lord or judge, and those jurors were elected by their communities. Democracy was also practiced on a daily basis inside the various professional organizations such as the guilds. These again regulated their own affairs, approved and rejected members, set standards, terms of service, wages, and defined qualifications, dealt with crises, and elected their officials.
Finally, the crusades were run by committees and assemblies in which every participant had a voice. At these assemblies "the non-noble elements...periodically acted in concert to influence the decisions of the leaders who regularly consulted them." [Riley-Smith, 63] During the First Crusade, for example, the common soldiers threatened to elect their own leaders unless the princes agreed to leave Antioch and the march to Jerusalem. In the Third Crusade, the common soldiers twice forced Richard the Lionheart to undertake a march toward Jerusalem against his better judgment. Only with great difficulty was Richard able to dissuade them from making a costly attempt at an assault -- both times in an assembly of crusaders where every man had a voice. That too is a form of democracy. For more on this see: Commanding a Crusade
How often do you sit down to discuss with your neighbors, your colleagues or your fellow-soldiers to decide what to do next?
Dr. Schrader's novels set in the crusader states accurately reflect this and other aspects of medieval society. Find out more at: https://www.helenapschrader.com/crusades.html
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