Milios. The Origin of Capitalism

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The Origins of Capitalism

as a Social System

Economists, historians and social scientists have offered a variety of conflict-


ing answers to the issue of the beginnings of capitalism, and these deviat-
ing answers imply different conceptualizations of what capitalism actually is.
This book provides a simultaneous inquiry into the origins of capitalism as
well as provides a theoretical treatise on capitalism.
The Origins of Capitalism as a Social System explores the line between what is
and is not capitalism, (re)producing a theory of capitalism as a system of class
domination and exploitation. Part I focuses on the monetary theory of value
and capital developed by Karl Marx, while at the same time critically reviews
an array of economic and historical literature, both Marxist and non-Marxist.
Following this, Part II expounds the first emergence of capitalism in Venice.
It highlights the historical contingencies that made capitalism in the Venetian
society possible, as well as the structural elements of the capitalist system and
their interconnectedness. Finally, Part III discusses the capitalist character of
the Venetian social formation from the end of the fourteenth century until
the fall of the republic to Napoleon in 1797. As part of this, the author inves-
tigates the significance of forms of governmentality beyond national cohesion
and territorialization.
Of great interest to economists, historians and both undergraduate and
postgraduate students, this book gives special emphasis to a critical evaluation
of the tensions and controversies among historians, economists and other
social scientists with regard to the character and role that money and trade
played in societies and economies.

John Milios is Professor of Political Economy and the History of Economic


Thought at the National Technical University of Athens (NTUA), Greece.
He is also Director of the quarterly journal of economic and political theory,
Theseis (published since 1982 in Greek).
In this grand style reconstruction of the genesis of capitalism, Milios brings
together Marx, Braudel, Weber, Lenin, and his own analysis of ‘money-­
begetting’ modes of production, under the aegis of the Althusserian ‘aleatory
encounter’ of social forces. In a path-breaking concrete analysis, he invents
the Venetian Paradigm of decalage between financialization and proletariani-
zation. It is impressive, convincing, and surprisingly actual.
Etienne Balibar,
co-author of Reading Capital

The publication of this book is a rather significant moment in the history


of reflections on capitalism, and moreover a turning point in the history of
the transformative present. Raising yet once again the question of what cap-
italism as a system actually is, John Milios reassembles his subject of study,
traversing centuries and places in history so as to identify and discern heter-
ogeneous practices being objectivised – or not – in the name of capitalism,
ultimately establishing a genealogy of a ‘capitalist state, beyond national ter-
ritorialisation’. This book, or shall we dare say this ‘machine-book’, offers the
bizarre completeness one might feel when reading an important book: full
and empty at the same time.
Marios Emmanouilidis,
Independent researcher

A fascinating book that provides us with an exciting new perspective on


the origins of capitalism. John Milios asks more precisely than usual what
distinguishes capitalism as a social system from precapitalist societies. Taking
seriously that the origin of capitalism is a singular process, he avoids any
deterministic approach to analyzing history. The – historically surprising –
ascent of Venice as a leading commercial and colonial power during the 13th
and 14th centuries, with its rather special form of original accumulation to-
wards the end of the 14th century, is demonstrated to be a capitalist social
formation which practically introduced capitalism to Western Europe. This
book really provides us with a fundamental and exciting new turn in the
long-lasting discussion about the origins of capitalism.
Michael Heinrich,
Author of An Introduction to the three Volumes of Karl Marx’s Capital
Routledge Frontiers of Political Economy

232 Political Economy as Natural Theology


Smith, Malthus and Their Followers
Paul Oslington

233 Sharing Economies in Times of Crisis


Practices, Politics and Possibilities
Edited by Anthony Ince and Sarah Marie Hall

234 Philosophy in the Time of Economic Crisis


Pragmatism and Economy
Edited by Kenneth W. Stikkers and Krzysztof Piotr Skowroński

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237 The Fascist Nature of Neoliberalism


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238 The Political Economy of Contemporary Spain


From Miracle to Mirage
Edited by Luis Buendía and Ricardo Molero-Simarro

239 The Origins of Capitalism as a Social System


The Prevalence of an Aleatory Encounter
John Milios

For a full list of titles in this series please visit www.routledge.com/books/


series/SE0345
The Origins of Capitalism
as a Social System
The Prevalence of an Aleatory Encounter

John Milios
First published 2018
by Routledge
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and by Routledge
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Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business
© 2018 John Milios
The right of John Milios to be identified as author of this work has
been asserted by him in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the
Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
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explanation without intent to infringe.
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Contents

Acknowledgements xi

Introduction 1

PArt I
Capitalism and its origins: the theoretical context 9

1 Marx’s notion of capitalism: a synoptic account 11

2 Marx’s two approaches to the genesis of capitalism:


the ‘productive forces – relations of production
dialectic’ vs. ‘so-called original accumulation’ 19
2.1  A note on the status of Marx’s theoretical oeuvre 19
2.2  A ‘philosophy of history’ and a ‘general law of human
development’? 20
2.3  ‘So-called original accumulation’ 24

3 Early forms of capitalism and wage labour: Lenin’s


polemic against the Narodniks 31
3.1  The historical context 31
3.2  Capitalism prevailed as pre-capitalist exploitation
forms dissolved 34
3.3  Production for the buyer-up as a form of capitalist 
manufacture 36
3.4  Maintenance or dissolution of indirect forms of capitalist
exploitation depending on class relation of forces 39
3.5  The theoretical importance of Lenin’s intervention 42
viii Contents
4 Capitalism and the agrarian sector: Karl Kautsky’s
theoretical intervention 45

5 Post-Second World War Marxist approaches to the


‘transition to capitalism’ question 52
5.1  The ‘agrarian origin of capitalism’ tradition 53
5.2  The ‘State-Feudalism’ tradition: revenge of the
Narodniks? 57
5.3  The persistent ‘theory of Production Forces’ tradition 62
5.4  The ‘world-capitalism’ tradition 64
5.5  T he birth of capitalism as an aleatory encounter: from Balibar
to Deleuze-Guattari and Althusser 67
5.6  T
 he ‘circulation question’: Is merchant capital
productive or not? 69

6 Non-Marxist approaches to the origins of capitalism 78


6.1  I ntroduction: the ‘spirit of capitalism’ and the riddle of monetary
profit forms in pre-capitalist societies 78
6.2  Werner Sombart’s Modern Capitalism and its critics
(1902–1916) 79
6.3  Max Weber and the ‘spirit of capitalism’ controversy 85
6.4  ‘Ancient capitalism’? 88
6.5  Fernand Braudel: market economy vs. capitalism 91

7 Modes of production and the pre-capitalist


money-owner 97
7.1 Modes of production and social classes: basic concepts and
definitions 97
7.2 Dominant pre-capitalist modes of production: relations of use
and possession in the hands of the labouring class 101
7.3  The money-begetting slave mode of production 103
7.4 A dominated non-capitalist mode of production persisting
through time 106
7.5 T he money-begetting slave mode of production and the capitalist
mode of production 109
7.6 Economic partnerships as forms of pre-capitalist money-begetting
activities 114
7.7  Concluding remarks 121
Contents  ix
PArt II
Venice and the Mediterranean: a discourse
on the birth of capitalism 129

8 From a Byzantine exarchate to a major colonial power


in the Mediterranean: a historical sketch of the rise of
Venice up to 1204 131
8.1  The emergence of the Italian maritime republics: an overview 131
8.2  Building a merchant tradition on salt, slaves and timber 133
8.3  Gaining power through alliance with Byzantium 136
8.4  T he new geopolitical landscape after the First Crusade:
phases of alliance and conflict up to the final clash of arms 139

9 The Venetian social formation until the end of the


thirteenth century: an unconsummated process of
original accumulation 148
9.1  The rule of a state-organized money-begetting oligarchy 148
9.2  The economic functions of the Venetian state 151
9.3  C
 omplex forms of class exploitation and domination
in a commercialized pre-capitalist society 154
9.4  Concluding remarks 160

10 War economics and the ascent of capitalism in the


fourteenth century 164
10.1 T he Venetian colonial system: countering tendencies of
disintegration after the Fourth Crusade 164
10.2  Fighting for trade supremacy in the Mediterranean 166
10.3  State power and the consolidation of the relation of capital 170

PArt III
After the encounter took hold: the reproduction
of capitalism on an expanded scale 185

11 Venice alongside the new capitalist powers 187


11.1  Venice and capitalism in historiography and Marxist
literature 187
11.2  Venice’s supremacy in the fifteenth century 192
x Contents
11.3  The Ottoman peril 193
11.4  T he spread of capitalism in Europe and Venice’s
economic restructuring 194
11.5  Crises and recoveries 199

12 Political power and social cohesion 204


12.1  The Venetian state as a capitalist state 204
12.2  State apparatuses and forms of representation 206
12.3  T
 he ‘national question’, Venice’s state and its colonial
territories 211

Bibliography 221
Index 235
Acknowledgements

I would like to thank Paul Auerbach (Kingston University, London), ­Dimitri


Dimoulis (Escola de direito de São Paulo da Fundação Getúlio Vargas,
Brazil), Vassilis Droucopoulos (University of Athens), George Economakis
(University of Patras), Marios Emmanouilidis (Independent Researcher,
­Thessaloniki), Dimitris Kyrtatas (University of Thessaly) and Dimitris P.
Sotiropoulos (The Open University, UK) for having read drafts of the book
and providing me with valuable observations that helped me to improve the
quality of my work.
I am also indebted to several people at the international conference “150
Years ~ Karl Marx’s Capital: Reflections for the 21st Century” (Athens, 14–15
January 2017) who, during discussions of my theses on Marx’s notion of
‘original accumulation’ and the pre-capitalist money-owner, raised questions
that assisted in the development of my arguments while the book was still in
the making.
A special mention is also owed to Barbara Santos for her valuable sugges-
tions and for having improved the style of the manuscript.
Introduction

When did capitalism start? Economists, historians and social scientists have
provided a wide variety of conflicting answers to this simple question. Let me
mention only a few examples.
According to the leading twentieth-century economist John Maynard
Keynes (1883–1946), capitalism was born in ancient Babylonia and thereafter
was adopted by, or adapted to, ancient Greece and Rome, only to be later
inherited by Western Europe (Keynes 2013). Prominent academic historians
like Lujo Brentano (1844–1931), member of the so-called ‘German Histori-
cal School’, or Patricia Crone, of Princeton University (1945–2015), shared
­similar views (see Chapter 6).
According to Max Weber (1864–1920), who is often referred to as a
‘founding father’ of sociology and responsible for the Weberian theoretical
tradition that followed, modern capitalism emerged from and was shaped in
accordance with a spirit of abstinence introduced in Western societies by
Calvinism, following the Reformation, which henceforth functioned as the
‘spirit of capitalism’ (Weber 2001; see also Chapter 6).
According to an enduring Marxist tradition, introduced shortly after the
Second World War by the distinguished British economist Maurice Dobb
(1900–1974) of Cambridge University, capitalism was first born in the
­agrarian sector of England in the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
through the transformation of existing production assets from the feudal to
the capitalist ownership form (see Chapter 5).
However, there have been totally divergent Marxist views as to whether
agriculture was the focal point of capitalism’s rise.
Karl Kautsky (1854–1938), probably the most influential Marxist at the
turn of the nineteenth to the twentieth century, wrote in The Agrarian Ques-
tion (first published in 1899), a book celebrated by V. I. Lenin as “the most
important event in present-day economic literature since the third volume of
Capital” (Lenin 1977, Vol. 4: 94), that capitalism, even if it succeeds in con-
quering the countryside (which was not the case in most capitalist countries),
does so only after it has been established in the city: “capitalist agriculture
only began to become significant once urban capital, and hence the credit
system, had become well developed” (Kautsky 1988: 88; see also Chapter 4).
2  Introduction
More recently, Oliver Cromwell Cox (1901–1974), a distinguished social
scientist from Lincoln University of Missouri and inspired by Marxist the-
ory, argued that it was not England, but “Venice, which nurtured the first
capitalist society” (Cox 1964: xi) centuries before it conquered England. The
eminent Marxist economist Ernest Mandel (1923–1995) also stressed the sig-
nificance of “the accumulation of money capital by the Italian merchants
who dominated European economic life from the eleventh to the fifteenth
centuries” (Mandel 1968: 103) as a factor in the emergence of capitalism.
The famous French historian Fernand Braudel (1902–1985), a leading fig-
ure of the second generation of the ‘Annales School’, reached similar con-
clusions in regard to the origins of capitalism. He argued that capitalism first
emerged as early as the thirteenth century, when “both Genoa and Venice”
were “merchant and colonial powers (and the colonial tells us that they had
already reached an advanced stage of capitalism)” (Braudel 1984: 118; see
Chapter 11).
How can one explain such divergence of views as to when (and how) cap-
italism was born? How is it that theoreticians belonging to the same school
of thought, as, for example, Marxism, reach totally conflicting conclusions?
This question, which has bothered me for quite some time as both a social
scientist and a Marxist, seems easier to answer if one contemplates the issue
of origins, or genesis, as follows: What was it that actually originated or was
born? In other words, what is capitalism, whose genesis can be traced as a
social process in history? Obviously, capitalism is a specific social structure,
or equivalently, a social system, a historically unique configuration of social
relations, which, according to the Marxist point of view, is built upon specific
forms of class domination and exploitation.
At first glance, capitalism is a completely comprehensible term for Marxists
(a system of exploitation of wage labour by capital), but to a great extent also
for non-Marxists (the ‘free market’ economic system). However, what seems
obvious at first glance is not at all obvious if one penetrates deeper into the
constituent elements of the system under investigation and their forms of in-
terconnectedness. Analyses on the ‘beginning’ or ‘birth’ of capitalism bring
to the fore the divergent understandings of what features and social relations
constitute the sine qua non of the capitalist system, with issues of money,
trade and finance always dividing Marxist (and non-Marxist) social scientists,
economists and historians.
It becomes clear that the differing approaches to the issue of the beginnings
of capitalism denote, or rather imply, different conceptualizations of what
capitalism actually is. This is because the theory of a system (or a structure) is
the indispensable presupposition for one to comprehend when and how (i.e.
through which processes) this system (or structure) was first formed – as a
unique social system (structure) possessing specific differences from the sys-
tems that preceded or coexisted with it.
We may therefore conclude that (i) we need a theory of capitalism as a so-
cial system in order to be able to understand when and how capitalism emerged
Introduction  3
and that (ii) the broad divergence of opinions regarding the origins of capi-
talism reveals an equally broad divergence of opinions as to what capitalism
as a system actually is.
Besides, what came to be was not destined to be. First, as Marcus Rediker
of the University of Pittsburgh remarked nearly thirty years ago, “capitalism
‘arrived in some parts of the production process much earlier than in others’”
(Rediker 1989: 341). In other words, the emergence of capitalism was initially
a singular historical process that subsequently played a catalytic role in the
spread of capitalist social relations in other territories. If one does not accept
the singularity of the process of the genesis of capitalism, then it is assumed
as if he/she accepts “that modes of production burst upon the historical scene
Minerva-like, fully-formed” (Rediker op.cit.). Second, a singular process is
always bound to a set of contingencies, i.e. it is by definition an aleatory pro-
cess. According to Marxist theory, which provides the scientific investigation
of social evolution, opposing trends and tendencies towards alternative paths
of evolution can be traced to nearly all conjunctures of historic significance,
reflecting in each and every case the dynamics of a particular balance of
class forces. An assortment of eventualities of historical evolution is therefore
repeatedly formed, and is not an ‘iron necessity’ of a predestined path of his-
torical continuity or change. A scientific study of history refers precisely to
the uncovering of these potentials and eventualities, and the understanding of
the specific conditions that favoured the ultimate prevalence of a specific trend,
which then materialized as a ‘historical event’.
The two epistemological premises stated above imply that the study of the
first traces of capitalism, or of its later dissemination in a social formation or
territory, presupposes, on the one hand, a theory of capitalism as a system,
and, on the other, a concrete analysis of the concrete situation under investi-
gation; as György Lukács wrote, “the concrete analysis of the concrete situation […]
is the culmination of all genuine theory, its consummation” (Lukács 2009: 41–42).
The present book, being an inquiry into the origins of capitalism, is si-
multaneously a theoretical treatise on capitalism. The whole analysis has Karl
Marx’s theory as a point of departure, especially as developed in Capital and
his other mature texts in the period between 1857 and 1881. As already stated,
by endeavouring an investigation of the origins of capitalism, my analysis fo-
cuses on the demarcation line between what is and what is not capitalism,
and in this sense presupposes, but also (re)produces, a theory of capitalism as a
system of class domination and exploitation, and its structural characteristics.
The book contains three parts.
Part I focuses on the monetary theory of value and capital developed by
Marx, at the same time critically reviewing an array of economic and his-
torical literature, Marxist and non-Marxist. On this basis, it also illuminates
historical forms of pre-capitalist money-begetting production and finance,
which are often confused with capitalism. The book thus investigates the ex-
tent to which these money-begetting production forms facilitated the emer-
gence of capitalism or coexisted with it. Part I comprises seven chapters.
4  Introduction
Chapter 1 highlights the fundamental characteristics that, in their inter-
connectedness, distinguish capitalism from all other social systems: (i) wage
labour, (ii) monetization of the whole economy (money-begetting money),
(iii) concentration of the means of production and dissociation of the capi-
talist from the labour process as such, (iv) free competition and the fusion
of individual capitals into aggregate-social capital, (v) the financial mode of
existence of capital and (vi) the formation of a specific juridical–political–­
ideological structure and a corresponding state form.
Chapter 2 deals with Marx’s own contradictions in regard to the genesis
of capitalism. Furthermore, the controversies and polemics among Marxists
around the two, albeit contradictory, theoretical schemes that Marx himself
formulated in his writings are discussed: on the one hand, the ‘production
forces – relations of production dialectic’ and on the other, the ‘so-called
original accumulation’ or the coming “face to face and into contact” (Marx
1887: 507) of the owners of money with the propertyless proletarians.
In Chapter 3, Lenin’s contribution to Marxist theory concerning preindus-
trial capitalist economic forms is discussed. Lenin’s analysis of the develop-
ment of capitalism in Russia in the late nineteenth century is rendered useful
in exploring arguments about the genesis of capitalism insofar as it sheds light
on forms of the formal subordination of labour to (commercial) capital, and
elucidates as capitalist, production processes that later Marxist theoreticians
would consider to be feudal or ‘pre-capitalist’.
In Chapter 4, Karl Kautsky’s analysis on the ‘agrarian question’ is presented
and critically assessed. According to Kautsky, capitalism first develops not
in the countryside, but in the non-agrarian sectors of a country’s economy,
and especially in trade and finance. Following the dissolution of feudal social
relations, the agricultural sector in a capitalist society is characterized by the
tendency towards the creation and preservation of small- and medium-scale
commercialized family farms. This form of simple commodity production
complements industrial capitalism, as it itself is embedded in the overall pro-
cess of capitalist reproduction: it provides agrarian commodities at relatively
low prices, as these prices do not contain absolute rent and profit, and at best
suffice for the subsistence of the farmer’s family.
Chapter 5 critically presents (on the basis of theses and arguments devel-
oped in Chapters 1–4) post-Second World War debates among Marxist schol-
ars on the ‘transition from feudalism to capitalism’: first, the debate initiated
by Paul Sweezy’s critique of Maurice Dobb’s book Studies in the Development
of Capitalism and the so-called ‘Brenner debate’. Subsequently, it discusses al-
ternative Marxist approaches on the rise of capitalism, such as the ‘world cap-
italism’ tradition and the ‘aleatory encounter’ between the money-owner and
the proletarian approach, the latter initially introduced by Étienne ­Balibar
in 1965, and later elaborated upon by Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, and
by Louis Althusser. The chapter culminates with an inquiry into an issue
that constitutes one of the most disputed subjects in Marxist literature: the
question of the productive or non-productive character of merchant capital, a
subject about which Marx himself is sometimes ambiguous.
Introduction  5
In Chapter 6, I start by critically delineating the main arguments of the
‘German Historical’ debate on the origins of capitalism during the period
1902–1935, as it may serve to lay the groundwork for reflections on the mon-
etary, ‘entrepreneurial’ and ideological–cultural origins of capitalism. The
starting point of this debate was Werner Sombart’s Modern Capitalism, a trea-
tise first published in 1902, in which the notion of ‘the spirit of capitalism’
was coined as the indispensable pre-existing premise that made the emergence
of capitalism possible. Soon after the publication of Sombart’s book, the de-
bate was fuelled, on the one hand, by its criticisms, and, on the other, by Max
Weber’s fully reshaping Sombart’s concept, which was now comprehended
in connection with the ideological climate allegedly brought to the fore by
the Reformation. The chapter continues by commenting on more recent
non-Marxist approaches to capitalism, which, like those of the ‘German His-
torical’ debate, substantially underestimate the structural role of wage labour
in the formation of capitalism. Finally, Fernand Braudel’s fruitful distinction
between market economy and capitalism is discussed in connection with the
lack of emphasis on class domination and exploitation, which characterizes
the distinguished historian’s oeuvre.
Concluding Part I, Chapter 7 utilizes the Marxist notion of the mode
of production to exploit the critical conclusions of all previous chapters
in an effort to provide the concept of the historical figure, which Marx
describes as the pre-capitalist money-owner. In this context, two no-
tions are introduced: (i) the money-begetting slave mode of production, exist-
ing since antiquity and clearly distinguishing itself from the classical (or
“patriarchal”, as Marx names it) slave mode of production and (ii) the con-
tractual money-begetting mode of production that emerged in the Middle Ages
in relation to financial schemes based on partnerships or associations. The
‘contract’ between the money-owner and the labourer, who in the latter
case was free from all forms of personal servitude or bondage, entailed a
complex form of exploitation. The labourer was in part a wage earner, but
also had (limited) access to the ownership of the means of production (of
‘capital’) through both ‘profit sharing’ and the right to trade merchandise
on voyages. In other words, he was not a proletarian, even if part of his
income came from wage payment. The taskmaster of each of these two
pre-capitalist modes of production is thus a pre-capitalist money-owner;
his latter coming “face to face and into contact” with the labourer who
has become a proletarian, that is, the emergence of capitalism, is discussed
mainly in Part II.
Part II comprises three chapters and focuses on the emergence of capitalism
in the city states on the Italian peninsula and more precisely in Venice, which
until the end of the fifteenth century prevailed as a political, economic and
colonial power in the broader Mediterranean area and beyond, and which
also remained an independent state for more than eight centuries. My point
of departure is not only existing historical research pointing to Venice’s pri-
macy as a money-begetting commercial and manufactural social formation,
but also Marx’s notion that “in Italy, where capitalistic production developed
6  Introduction
earliest, […] [the] free proletarian […] found his master ready waiting for him
in the towns” (Marx 1887: 508–509).
What differentiates my analysis from other approaches that stress the early
development of capitalism in Venice and other city states on the Italian
peninsula is my distinction between capitalist and non-capitalist forms of
­money-begetting ‘entrepreneurial’ activities. The most pronounced differ-
ence between capitalist and non-capitalist money-begetting activities is the
‘taking hold’ of the wage relationship as the main form of remuneration of
labourers subjected to the rule of money-owners, or, in other words, the final
incorporation of personal coercion into the economic relation as such.
In Chapter 8, I focus on the first phase of the history of Venice, up to 1204,
outlining the main historical events that allowed her to be transformed from
a former Byzantine province into an independent social formation, from an
ally of the Byzantine Empire to the conqueror of Constantinople and from
a provincial commercial town in the Adriatic into a major colonial power
across the Mediterranean. Despite the fact that the whole process was linked
to manifold historical contingencies – a concatenation of accidental circum-
stances and incidental causes – an explanation for this extraordinary ascent
is equally sought in the social character, or the internal structure and cohe-
siveness, of Venetian society and the thereof derived strength of the Venetian
state.
In Chapter 9, I analyze the historically unique class relations of power
in the Venetian social formation, which functioned as pre-requisites to her
success. The economic upswing of Venice never had as its ‘prime mover’ the
‘private initiative’ of certain ingenious merchants or any other ‘self-made’ and
‘risk-taking’ individuals. The ‘instigator’ of Venice’s economic rise was the
collectivity of a patrician class, having organized itself from the onset of the
eleventh century as a militarized naval state that functioned as both coordi-
nator and main undertaker of a multiplicity of money-begetting ‘ventures’:
trade, piracy, plunder, slave trade, war, etc. Venice remained a pre-­capitalist
economy and society under the economic, political and social rule of a class
of pre-capitalist merchants, ship-owners and directors of state-owned en-
terprises until the fourteenth century. The money-begetting activities of
the Venetian ruling class constituted an unsettled process of original accumula-
tion, in Marx’s context of the term. One pole of the process, the Venetian
­money-owners and their state, had already attained the clearly defined char-
acteristics of a spurious bourgeoisie. The other pole, however, the propertyless
proletarian, had not yet emerged, and this is precisely why the bourgeoisie
remained spurious. The wage-remunerated poor still participated in the own-
ership of the means of production through forms of ‘association’ mediated by
the very fact of their being wage earners.
In Chapter 10, I investigate the historical contingencies chiefly related to
economic antagonisms, the Venetian–Genoese wars beginning in the thir-
teenth century, the crises in the Venetian colonial system and the plague, all
of which ultimately led to the prevalence of the capitalist mode of production
Introduction  7
in the second half of the fourteenth century in the Venetian social formation.
These conditions led to the formation, in the late fourteenth century, of
huge, state-owned manufactures organized on the basis of the capital – wage
labour relation. It is clear that the encounter of the propertyless proletarian
with the collective money-owner of the Venetian Commune clearly took
hold in these manufactures. In parallel, all non-salaried sources of income
of the majority of seamen were drastically restricted, creating a proletariat of
wage-earning mariners. In this case as well, money-owners auctioning off
state-owned fleets, and ship-owners commanding private ships became cap-
italists, as their coming “face to face and into contact” with the emerging
proletariat took hold. In all instances where a lack of ‘free labour’ existed,
forms of coerced labour, and above all the money-begetting slave mode of
production, reappeared as a ‘necessary’ manifestation of ‘entrepreneurship’.
Finally, in order to support the wars, a huge internal public debt was created,
which nurtured both advanced budgetary management and fiscal policies,
and greatly expanded capitalist finance. By the end of the fourteenth century,
Venice emerged as a capitalist social formation, practically introducing capi-
talism in Europe.
Part III expounds the capitalist character of the Venetian social formation
from the end of the fourteenth century until the final subjugation of the re-
public to Napoleon in 1797. It comprises two chapters.
Chapter 11 mainly focuses on the economic restructuring and changing ge-
opolitical role of Venice after the spread of capitalism in Western Europe, the
expansion of the Ottoman Empire and the consolidation of large ­European
territorial states. It also reviews various historiographical treatises and Marx-
ist perspectives on the character of Venetian society. Venice remained a capi-
talist social formation until the last days of her existence, despite the fact that
her prominence in European economy and politics had been receding since
the sixteenth century, as capitalist social relations spread throughout Western
Europe and new economic and military powers emerged. From the late six-
teenth century, as Venetian commercial supremacy was challenged by new
competitors, a restructuring of the Venetian economy took place based on
the rapid growth of the manufacturing and financial spheres. Furthermore,
Venice succeeded in becoming a significant colonial power in the Mediterra-
nean with its colonial territory extending out into the eastern Mediterranean
and Aegean Seas, in Dalmatia and Istria (the Stato da Màr), and on the Italian
mainland (the Domini di Terraferma). Despite Ottoman expansion, which had
been gradually chipping away at Venice’s eastern colonies since the sixteenth
century, both colonial dominions were sustained until the republic’s demise,
being shaped as hybrid sovereignties, somewhere between a colonial realm
and a confederation of dominions.
Finally, Chapter 12 focuses on the Venetian state, highlighting its capitalist
features. At the same time, it criticizes certain views claiming that Venice (and
other city states on the Italian peninsula) ‘failed’ to become actual capitalist
social formations because they could not develop a ‘national political entity’.
8  Introduction
The capitalist state ‘condenses’ the overall rule of capital in a social for-
mation, at the same time presenting it as being in the ‘common interest’ of
society. In other words, the capitalist state must always homogenize every
community within its political territory into an indigenous population suppos-
edly possessing common interests and distinguish it from the ‘other’ (the pop-
ulations of other states or territories). This means that the strategic interests
of the capitalist class that are being ‘condensed’ by the state always entail a
compromise with the subaltern classes. Modern nation-building and nation-
alism have played an important role in the homogenization of a capitalist
state’s indigenous populations: the nation constitutes the historically shaped
and specifically capitalist unity (cohesion) of the antagonistic classes of a so-
cial formation, tending to unify the ‘internal’ and demarcate and distinguish
it from the ‘external’, i.e. the ‘non-national’. The process of nation-building,
however, was initiated in Europe centuries after capitalism had established its
rule in many social formations and parts of the continent. Nationalism and
national identity emerged in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries,
roughly in the wake of the French Revolution.
The Venetian state had acquired two basic characteristics of a capitalist
type of state as early as the fourteenth century: the impersonal functioning of
state apparatuses based on the ‘rule of law’ and ‘equal justice’ for all inhabit-
ants of Venetian territory, regardless of their special status (patricians, citizens
by birth, ‘popolari’, immigrants, servants or slaves) and the ‘relative auton-
omy’ of the state and its political and economic functions or interventions
from all fractions of the ruling class, so as to establish the strategic interests
of the Venetian bourgeoisie as being ‘common interests’ of the republic. Both
elements played a decisive role in creating consensus for political power by
the subaltern classes, and also by colonial populations and immigrants settling
in Venice from other parts of the Mediterranean and the Italian peninsula.
Being not just a city state but a colonial empire, Venice developed insti-
tutions and techniques through which heterogeneous populations were dealt
with on collective and statistical – on impersonal – terms. The Venetian
capitalist state, without being a national state, successfully created forms of
economic and social interaction, coercion, republican representation and loy-
alty to authorities, which facilitated the expanded reproduction of capitalist
relations of exploitation and domination, while simultaneously preserving a
multicultural society.
From this point of view, the lack of a national – Italian – identity (the
disastrous Venetian–Genoese wars never contained an element of civil war)
seems to me to be less an element of archaism and more a return to the future.
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