|
From the Days of the Late Roman Republic (becomes the Roman Empire with the adoption of a Mercenary Army in 90 BC) to the Middle of the Middle ages (About 1300 AD), about 97% of the Population were peasants and 3% of the population were the "Upper Class" (Slavery was high during the Late Roman Republic but then started a slow but steady decline and excellent after the Fall of the Roman Empire in the West, about 476 AD, after about 500 you did have Slaves, but most people were serfs, who were free to everyone but the owner of the land they were on, and then had rights to the land, through not want we would call full ownership right).
When the term "Middle class" is first (about 1300) its is used to mean someone who is earning more than the peasants of the about time period, but less than the Nobility and Royalty of the Early Middle Ages. As time went on (i.e. from the 1300 onward) more and more people became Middle Class and given more and more wealth in tied in with the Middle class as opposed to the Peasants AND the Upper Classes. While more and more people became "Middle Class" by the 1800s the Middle Class was about 10% of the population. The Middle Class had more money then the Upper Class (but became more and more one "Class" after the English Civil War of the 1640s and the French Revolution of the late 1700s and early 1800s). One of the first aspects of this Change was the Spread of Protestantism during the 1500s and 1600s, than the "Enlightenment" of the 1700s. These movements had less to do with Religion than the expansion of the Power of the Middle Class from 1400 to the 1800s.
Now, the English Civil War demonstrate how these things worked out. Under the early years of King Henry VIII, England was Catholic fighting the spread of Lutheranism. Henry VIII then Broke With Rome to Marry his Second Wife, Anne. He destroyed the Catholic Church in England replacing it with what would become the Anglican Church under his Daughter Elizabeth I. Both Monarchs took the land of the Church and Gave it to their Nobility, make the Nobility loyal to them and the Church of England. The Middle Class of England (Headed in London) embraced Presbyterian/Congregation/Reform Churches. This spread to other middle class strongholds. The Peasants stayed Catholic but with no organization were controlled by the Church of England but were still loyal to the Pope as late as the late 1600s.
Thus by the time of the English Civil War (1640-1648) England was divided three ways, but only two had any organization, the Upper Class with the Church Of England and the Middle Class with the Reform Church. The Peasants were Catholic and except for one or two exceptions, the Peasants stayed out of the Civil War, for the English Civil war ended up being a fight between the Upper Class who backed the King and the Middle Class who backed Parliament. Now even the Puritans wanted to retain the King, and did so AFTER the King's forces had been defeated (The Puritans only decided to Kill the King only after the King opened negotiations with the Pope for troops, and support from the rural peasants, against the Puritans).
The French Revolution was similar, but the King and Nobility were about to defeat the Middle Class when the Working Class of Paris came out and destroyed the Bastille, showing that the working class of Paris were backing the Middle Class in the Middle Class fight against the Nobility. Now the Middle Class, once in power, were unable to rule effectively and you ended up with Napoleon (Like England had to restore the King after the Rule by Cromwell for no one else could control the Peasants who still were the most numerous and thus most powerful force in these Countries, through NOT organized).
After Napoleon's final defeat France Restored the French King (You had the Revolution of 1848 which Gave Power to Napoleon's nephew who became Known as "Napoleon III") but in this whole period The Middle Class became the main power in Europe and the Upper Class merged with it. The Working Class LOST power do to its lack of Organization.
My Point about this is to show how the Term "Middle Class" was used prior to around 1900. The Upper Class has always been about 3-5%, the Middle Class has been about 10% prior to 1900.
After 1900, the US (and the rest of the World ) had a severe problem with how to deal with the growing organization of the Working class population (The True Poor is about 10% of the Population and do to their lack of money and marginally organizational Skills and survivor skills tend to be NON-players in Politics). With the New invention of Pulp Paper and High Speed Presses (about 1850) religion tended NOT to be a way to control these population. People tend to forget you need to have news and information. Prior to about 1850 most people received their news from their church, for that is how news were spread. The Bishops would till his priests to tell their parishioners what is happening nationwide (and even WorldWide). Thus prior to 1850 if you wanted to do a coup you grabbed the Head of the Church to control the spread of information (Or had the Church on your side). After 1850 you grabbed the Newspapers, for the same reason, to control the spread of information. This changed in 1920 when you had to grabbed the Radios stations, and after 1950 the Television Stations, TO CONTROL THE SPREAD OF INFORMATION (And this is why Freedom of Religion really was NOT possible till about 1850, prior to that date any nation that had to spread news to its citizens had to do it through the State Church, thus to spread news one had to have a State Church, even the US did NOT abolished State Churches till After the Revolution and even then continued to spread news through the Churches till the US Civil War when the Newspapers took over that Function).
With the Decline of State Religion (do to the State having other means of Spreading Information after 1850) you get religious toleration (for Religion is no longer important to the state), but with it the Working Class started to get its information independent of the State (For the Newspapers can be spread INDEPENDENT of the controls of the State, unlike the previous State-Church Distribution which to work had to be controlled by one distributing systems, ie. the State Church). These new independent Newspapers provided news to the people both the Middle Class and the Working class and divide the people into two groups, the Middle Class and the Working Class (Which were the only two groups with enough members to buy enough papers to keep the newspapers in Business). After 1900 price of papers dropped as economy of scales kicks in, but this also means you have less and less newspapers (as the only way to support a newspaper at the price people were willing to pay, and to increase profits, you had to sell more and more newspaper, forcing massive merging of newspapers that continue to this day). We almost at the same level as the State and Church were in the 1700s, one state, one newspaper.
Anyway after 1900 you had more and more division in the US along the Class line of Middle Class and Working Class. This reversed after 1920 with the boom in the US and then the Great Depression (Which hit the Middle Class as much as the Working Class). Now with WWII the country under FDR worked together to defeat Hitler. Once Hitler was defeated (and the Democrats were in power in the US) you had a Government that while not hostile to the Middle Class, was supportive of the Working Class. Th Various NEw Deal programs and then the GI bill of the 1944, permitting many working class people to buy things that they could NOT have done so previously. Thus the old division between Middle Class who owned their Homes and Working Class who rented, tended to die out and with it most people started to say that the ability to own your home indicated you were Middle Class. Thus the Working Class started to call itself "Middle Class" which started spread the Term "Middle Class" to cover almost everyone in the US (and I have had some clients who are on Welfare but consider themselves "Middle Class" showing how spread the term has become since WWII).
Anyway, the reason I am mentioning the above, is to show you that since about 1850 you have had four groups in society, At the upper end the ruling elites of about 3% of the population (about the same as in the days of the Roman Empire) but below them are three groups, the Middle Class (as that term has been used since the 1300s, better to refer to this group as the "Upper Middle Class"), the Working Class (often also called "Middle Class" especially in the US after WWII and the expansion of the consumer society, and the "poor". The Poor take in about 10% of the population. Thus between the Poor and the Upper Class you have 13-15% of the population of the US. The Middle Class and Working Class split the remaining 85-87% of the population. Thus about 42% of the Population is "Middle Class" and about the same is "Working Class". Given that there is a huge overlap between these two groups, you have to see how their differ.
First the Upper Class provides most of the leadership in this Country, while they tend to be Republicans you have a number of Democrats in this group (In politics most politicians are NOT Upper Class, but Middle Class). The Upper Middle Class tend to be Republicans, professionals, income tend NOT to be wages and own not only their home but other properties (Second Homes, investment, businesses etc). The Working Class tend to be Democrats, income tend to be wages and while most own their homes, it is rare for them to own any real property other then their homes (Through these workers may own vacation homes, time shares and their own cars).
The main difference is more of altitude then the economic differences. Both Groups tend to be organized along Social and Community Groups (Including Churches). If you are a union member you tend to be Democratic, while members of Chambers of Commerce tend to be Republicans. The main difference is the Working Class tend to support Government programs that help them (Social Security, EPA, OSHA etc), while the Upper Middle Class tend to complain of many of those same regulations for theses regs cost them money (The Difference also tracks along Income line but the income divide is NOT absolute).
Just some thoughts about Class, and the Middle Class.
|