About This Book
An extended historical study traces how privileges and institutions developed under the old social order, analyzing the roles, revenues, immunities, and feudal rights of clergy, nobility, and crown, and the uneven performance of local and public obligations. It then depicts elite social life—court ceremony, household routines, provincial nobility, and drawing-room pursuits—and their moral and psychological effects. Finally it examines intellectual developments, including scientific advances, classical aesthetics, and an emerging analytical method, arguing that their interaction produced doctrines that confronted inherited traditions and reshaped political ideas.
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