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Title: Culture and Property
Author: Elisée Reclus
Date: 1905
Language: en
Topics: common property, property
Source: *Anarchy, Geography, Modernity: Selected Writings of Elisée Reclus.*
Notes: Some of Reclus’ most extensive comments on historical forms of property are found in “Culture and Property,” which is in volume 6 of L’Homme et la Terre (Paris: Librairie Universelle, 1905–8), 225–311. There he discusses the differences between large and small property holdings, individual and communal property, and cooperative and competitive practices. The following selections are taken from that chapter (268–71, 280–85). The text includes some of Reclus’ most eloquent encomiums to cooperation and stinging criticisms of concentrated economic power.

Elisée Reclus

Culture and Property

There is not a single European country in which the traditions of the

old communal property have entirely disappeared. In certain areas,

notably in the Ardennes and in the steep mountainous regions of

Switzerland, where the peasants did not have to submit to the kind of

oppression to which the German villagers were subjected after the wars

of the Reformation, communal property is still widespread enough to

constitute a considerable part of the territory.

In the Belgian Ardennes, the collective lands are composed of three

parts: the woods, the freshly cleared ground [sart], and the pastures.

They also often include arable land and quarries. The woods, which form

the largest part of the property, are divided into a certain number of

sections, generally twenty to twenty-two. Each year, one section is

divided by drawing lots among the various households of the commune, the

bark of the oaks having been previously stripped for the benefit of the

communal coffers. For the work with heavy wood, the families divide into

groups of five, whose members rotate the responsibility of cutting down

the trees, squaring the timber, and transporting it. After the cutting,

each person proceeds to clear the portion of the land that fell to his

lot and sows the rye that he will harvest the following year. Two and a

half years after harvesting the rye, the inhabitants apportion the broom

plants that have grown in the clearings, after which the section, in

which new growth has already begun, is left to itself until the same

operations recommence. The grazing is communal and without any special

organization, and takes place on the uncultivated lands, in the mature

woods, and in the brush six or seven years after a cutting. Stones may

be quarried freely, barring any previous notice to the contrary.

These customs clearly influence the moral character of individuals and

greatly develop their spirit of solidarity, mutual kindness, and

heartfelt friendliness. Thus it is customary to form voluntary work

crews for the benefit of those who need work done. The latter need only

to state their request by proceeding noisily through the village,

calling out, “So-and-so needs something done! Who wants to help out?”

Immediately a group appears and its members put their heads together to

figure out who can best undertake the job, and the service is

rendered.[1] Such stories also come to us from the Queyras.[2]

In all of Switzerland, two-thirds of the alpine prairies and forests

belong to the communes, which also own peat bogs, reed marshes, and

quarries, as well as fields, orchards, and vineyards. On many occasions

when the co-proprietors of the commune have to work together, they feel

as though they are at a festival rather than at work. The young men and

women climb to the high mountain pastures, driving their herds before

them to the harmonious clinking of the bells. At other times, the work

is more difficult. While the snow still covers the ground, the woodsmen,

armed with axes, cut the high pines in the communal forest. They strip

the sawlogs and slide them down the avalanche corridors to the torrent

that will carry them away in its bends and rapids.

Then there are the evening gatherings on winter nights, in which all are

summoned to the home of whoever has the most urgent work, whether it is

to shell corn, hull nuts, or make wedding gifts for a woman engaged to

be married. During these gatherings, the work is a pleasure. The

children want to participate, for everything is new to them. Instead of

going to bed, they stay up with the adults and are given the best of the

chestnuts roasting under the hot embers. When dreamtime is near, they

listen to songs and are told stories, adventures, and fables, which are

transformed by their imaginations into marvelous apparitions. It is

often during such nights of mutual good will that a child’s being

permanently takes shape. Here, one’s loves in life are kindled, and

life’s bitterness is made sweeter.

Thus the spirit of full association has by no means disappeared in the

communes, despite all the ill will of the rich and the state, who have

every interest in breaking apart these tightly bound bundles of

resistance to their greed or power and who attempt to reduce society to

a collection of isolated individuals. Traditional mutual aid occurs even

among people of different languages and nations. In Switzerland, it is

customary to exchange children from family to family, between the German

and the French cantons. Similarly, the country people of BĂ©arn send

their children to the Basque country, welcoming in turn young Basques as

farm boys. In this way, they will all soon learn the two languages

without the parents having to spend any money. Finally, all individuals

with a similar trade and common interests—whether they be coal

merchants, hunters, or sailors—have established virtual confraternities

having neither written constitutions nor signatures, but nevertheless

forming small, close-knit republics. Throughout the world, carnival

performers who meet by chance on the road are allied in a sort of

freemasonry that is far more solemn than that of the “brothers” who

gather in the temples of Hiram.[3]

It is evident that anyone who becomes master over his fellow man through

war, conquest, usury, or any other means thereby establishes private

property for his own advantage. For by appropriating the man, he also

takes possession of another’s labor and of the product of that labor,

and finally of that portion of the common soil on which his slave

produces crops. No matter how tenaciously the people may have sought to

maintain their ancient traditions, the power of kings has inevitably led

these rulers to indulge their caprice. They take men and land, and

dispense all according to their whims. The forms of gratitude, the

homage of vassals, and the circumstances of tenure have varied according

to the country and the age, but the essential fact is that ownership of

the land was no longer secured for those who worked it but was instead

granted to one who was incapable of handling a spade or driving a plow.

Just as common property and private property conflict, there is a

constantly raging battle between large and small property. Not only does

each create class groupings hostile to one another, but they also

collide as two different and enemy systems. Although each arises from

the appetites and passions of man, the two forms of property are

presented by their advocates as systems that should be maintained

permanently because of their essential virtues. First of all, small

ownership, which seems closer to natural equity, is vaunted as the ideal

state. It offers to the farming family a life of constant work and

regular employment to fill its hours and days. Even when the fields are

fallow, the members of the household must tend to the livestock and

prepare their produce. They also decorate their homes, and in this way

art plays a normal role in the life of the peasant. Novelists delight in

the rustic cottage, which becomes the charming setting for the idyll of

their dreams. But though the dream has been realized many times, it is

much more likely that a wretched poverty will inhabit the hearth. And

even if a humble family is lucky enough to enjoy modest comfort, what

can they do to enlarge their horizons, to expand their ideas, to renew

their intellectual resources, or even to increase their knowledge of

their own industry? The routine that binds them to the hereditary soil

also holds them tightly in the grip of the customs of the past. However

free they may appear to be, they nevertheless possess the souls of

slaves.

The owners of vast landholdings claim to be educators in the science of

agriculture in order to justify the usurpation of communal and private

lands due to their birth, hereditary wealth, or speculations. This claim

is particularly inappropriate in the case of those powerful lords who

are careful to live somewhere other than on their own lands, like most

of the nobility of Irish estates, who are well aware of the hatred their

tenant farmers feel for them. Is it not, then, simply ludicrous to speak

of them as “educators” of any sort? And what about those who might

otherwise be warmly received by serfs reconciled to the condition of

non-ownership, but who, concerned only with receiving their income, hand

over the entire burden of management to stewards, trustees, or lawyers,

for whom the management of the estate is also far from being a selfless

duty?

It is true that in certain countries renowned agronomists owning large

estates have instituted excellent methods of cultivating the soil,

managed their fields as scientifically as the chemical industries that

utilize the most up-to-date processes, introduced new species of plants

and animals, and adopted practices that were previously unknown. One

must not forget, however, that the latifundium[4] in its essence

inevitably requires that the vast majority be deprived of land. If a few

have much, it is because the majority no longer have any. Some large

owners are seized with a hunger for land and also desire to be admired

as local benefactors. But the devouring of the surrounding land by the

large estates is hardly less disastrous than fire and other

devastations. Moreover, it produces the same end result, which is the

ruin not only of populations but also frequently of the land itself.

Intelligent large landholders can no doubt train excellent farm hands,

and they will certainly have domestics of impeccable correctness. But

even assuming that the productive industry initiated by them provides

more than enough labor for the entire local population, is it not

inevitable that their authoritarian and absolutist manner of regimenting

labor will create subjects rather than produce dignified equals? They

make every effort to preserve the essentially monarchical character of

society. Moreover, they try to return to the past by destroying all

democratic elements in their milieu in order to reconstitute a feudal

world where power belongs to those they deem to be the most

deserving—that is to say, to themselves. And whether or not they are the

most deserving, they remain the most privileged. One need only study a

map of France to verify the influence exerted by large estates. Among

the reasons that certain cantons automatically fall into the hands of

reactionary representatives and masters, who are both clericalist and

militarist, none is more crucial than the influence of the large

landowners. They have no need to tell their flunkies and farm hands how

to vote, for they easily lead them so far down the path of moral

degradation that they willingly vote in favor of a regime of obedience

to the traditional master. The same spirit determines the voting of

lackeys and tradesmen in the elegant neighborhoods of the cities and in

the resorts.

Furthermore, is it not possible that if all its effects are considered,

large ownership actually produces less material improvement than does

small property, as divided up as the latter may be? If, taking the

economy of France as a whole, one were to make a detailed comparison of

the net profit produced by large estates under individual management and

the losses to the communes resulting from the parks reserved for the

privileged few, the hunting grounds, and the moors that displace small

property, it is quite possible that, on balance, the losses would be

greater. We would discover that large land ownership is for modern

peoples what it was for ancient ones—a fatal plague. Furthermore,

initiative has emerged not only among rich agronomists but also—though

with less ostentation and acclaim—in small holdings among truck farmers,

horticulturalists, and small farmers. The poor person is certainly a

slave to routine and risks his few pennies, eaten away by taxes and

usury, only with extreme prudence. But risk them he does. Some know how

to observe, experiment, and learn, so that over many generations and

centuries they carry out experiments of long-lasting value. The case is

clear: the land of the austere peasant today yields twice as much as it

did when Young traveled through the provinces of France and noted its

disheartening poverty.[5] Only through private initiative can there be

progress, but the union of forces that enjoys all the advantages of

large and small ownership has hardly begun to appear. There are only

signs of its coming.

In considering the consequences of large property ownership, we must not

forget the obstacles that it places in the way of free movement when the

surrounding populations do not know how to bypass restrictions. In Great

Britain, the “right of way” issue excites local opinion in twenty

different places at any given time. The inhabitants find themselves cut

off from the old roads, one after the other. Pity the communities that

appeal to a court of law if they lack indisputable titles! In many

districts in Scotland, landlords have forbidden by law all access to the

mountains, and pedestrians are reduced to using the same roadway at the

bottom of the valley as do bicycles and automobiles. The maps of the

Ordnance Survey even caution that “the existence of a road on a map does

not imply the right to use it.” And woe to the traveler who takes it

upon himself to enter the underbrush or to pass through a fallow field!

The last tollgates are now disappearing—as recently as 1893, 600,000

francs were paid for the removal of a turnpike that prevented livestock

from having free access to Gower Street in London (the equivalent of Rue

BergĂšre in Paris); however, numerous new prohibitive barriers have

replaced these old tollgates. The usual excuse given by the landowners

for closing the roads that cross their estate is the preservation of

game, so poaching becomes an inevitable corollary of large landholdings.

There is a stark contrast between the hunting trophies on which the

legally authorized hunter prides himself and the slaughter committed by

his nocturnal counterpart as well as the fishing by dynamite, which

depopulates a river in a few hours. Moreover, the legal consequences are

far from the same for these two sorts of hunters. Manhunting is

permitted in practice to the property owner and his guards. On the other

hand, one cannot begin to estimate how many during the nineteenth

century have spent years in prison or at hard labor, or have even gone

to the scaffold, as a result of hunting the rabbit and the “sacred

bird.”

Statesmen and economists are often interested in encouraging small

property ownership. In Denmark, notably, every opportunity is offered

for the easy acquisition of property of less than four hectares. Another

example that comes to mind is the homestead exemption found in the

United States, in which a small area of land per family as well as the

house that the family occupies are declared non-transferable and

unseizable, with conditions that vary somewhat from state to state. But

it is obvious that such a system must remain limited to a small segment

of the population. Otherwise, if each producer had access to the soil,

his independence would be assured, and the current conception of society

would be shaken to its very foundation. Also, one can be sure that

nothing like this will ever become law in France, unless restrictions

are imposed to make the effects illusory. Among European peoples, the

Icelanders are alone in taking precautions against the monopolization of

land. Since 1884, the property owner who does not cultivate the land

himself has been obliged to rent it to another.

[1] Paul Gille, SociĂ©tĂ© nouvelle, March 1988. [Reclus’ note]

[2] Briot, Etudes sur l’économie alpestre. [Reclus’ note]

[3] Hiram was king of Tyre and a contemporary of David and Solomon.

According to tradition, Hiram was “Grand Master of all Masons,” and

participated in the construction of Solomon’s Temple. For this reason,

he has been an important figure in the legendary history of Freemasonry.

[4] Large estate.

[5] Arthur Young, an English agronomist, traveled through France on the

eve of the French Revolution.