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Uppkomlingarna : Kanslitjänstemännen i 1600-talets Sverige och Europa

Norrhem, Svante LU (1993) In Acta Universitatis Umensis. Umeå Studies in the Humanities 117.
Abstract
Civil servants with close access to monarchs have often been seen as influential advisers. A specific group of civil servants were the Royal Secretaries in Sweden and Spain, and the Secretaries of State in England and France. They all held offices which gave them close and continuous access to their masters.

In all the above-mentioned countries these civil servants were recruited from among groups divergent from the political, social and economic elite. This discrepancy in social status was most apparent in Sweden and Spain. In Spain this led to a political conflict between secretaries and the aristocracy, which in turn led to the marginalization of the secretaries; in Sweden a similar political conflict remained unresolved... (More)
Civil servants with close access to monarchs have often been seen as influential advisers. A specific group of civil servants were the Royal Secretaries in Sweden and Spain, and the Secretaries of State in England and France. They all held offices which gave them close and continuous access to their masters.

In all the above-mentioned countries these civil servants were recruited from among groups divergent from the political, social and economic elite. This discrepancy in social status was most apparent in Sweden and Spain. In Spain this led to a political conflict between secretaries and the aristocracy, which in turn led to the marginalization of the secretaries; in Sweden a similar political conflict remained unresolved throughout the century.

In England and France the old establishment was able to enclose both the administration and its members. In Sweden the aristocracy failed to integrate this new office-holding nobility, thus laying the foundations for the strengthening of a homogeneous group which politically was strongly supportive of the monarchs.

In France, England and Sweden the secretaries could use their offices to influence political decisions. This became a problem in Sweden since the Royal Secretaries within their own group were well-integrated by family and friendship connections. By supporting the monarchs, they themselves gained support and towards the end of the century these socially inferior civil servants had grown in importance and formed a politically important group alongside the established nobility. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Early modern Sweden, Administration, Bureaucracy, secretaries of state, Administration, Secretary of State, secretary, civil servants, Sweden-History, Europe-History, 17th Century
in
Acta Universitatis Umensis. Umeå Studies in the Humanities
volume
117
pages
200 pages
publisher
Almqvist & Wiksell
ISSN
0345-0155
ISBN
91-7174-837-7
language
Swedish
LU publication?
no
id
51064d4a-185b-4a26-b907-5d77b3894b0c
alternative location
http://umu.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:605262/FULLTEXT02.pdf
date added to LUP
2021-06-03 15:36:44
date last changed
2021-06-21 16:18:30
@phdthesis{51064d4a-185b-4a26-b907-5d77b3894b0c,
  abstract     = {{Civil servants with close access to monarchs have often been seen as influential advisers. A specific group of civil servants were the Royal Secretaries in Sweden and Spain, and the Secretaries of State in England and France. They all held offices which gave them close and continuous access to their masters.<br/><br/>In all the above-mentioned countries these civil servants were recruited from among groups divergent from the political, social and economic elite. This discrepancy in social status was most apparent in Sweden and Spain. In Spain this led to a political conflict between secretaries and the aristocracy, which in turn led to the marginalization of the secretaries; in Sweden a similar political conflict remained unresolved throughout the century.<br/><br/>In England and France the old establishment was able to enclose both the administration and its members. In Sweden the aristocracy failed to integrate this new office-holding nobility, thus laying the foundations for the strengthening of a homogeneous group which politically was strongly supportive of the monarchs.<br/><br/>In France, England and Sweden the secretaries could use their offices to influence political decisions. This became a problem in Sweden since the Royal Secretaries within their own group were well-integrated by family and friendship connections. By supporting the monarchs, they themselves gained support and towards the end of the century these socially inferior civil servants had grown in importance and formed a politically important group alongside the established nobility.}},
  author       = {{Norrhem, Svante}},
  isbn         = {{91-7174-837-7}},
  issn         = {{0345-0155}},
  keywords     = {{Early modern Sweden; Administration; Bureaucracy; secretaries of state; Administration; Secretary of State; secretary; civil servants; Sweden-History; Europe-History; 17th Century}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  publisher    = {{Almqvist & Wiksell}},
  series       = {{Acta Universitatis Umensis. Umeå Studies in the Humanities}},
  title        = {{Uppkomlingarna : Kanslitjänstemännen i 1600-talets Sverige och Europa}},
  url          = {{http://umu.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:605262/FULLTEXT02.pdf}},
  volume       = {{117}},
  year         = {{1993}},
}