from Commune Life
In the last community that I lived in, one of the members turned me on to a book about history called The End of the Megamachine by Fabian Scheider. It’s a complex book that tries to document how we got into the mess that we’re in today. One of the things that I found fascinating in the book was the author’s description of what he terms “egalitarian movements” in the Middle Ages. Apparently there were a number of them in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, fueled by new biblical interpretations and the desire to be free of feudal yokes. These were called heresies by the church and rebellions by outraged (and scared) governments. I will quote extensively from Fabian Scheider’s book.

One of the earliest of the medieval egalitarian efforts may have been the “Bohemian Hussites” who (as the book says) “set out to create an egalitarian community. They founded the town of Tabor in 1420 and assumed control over large parts of Bohemia and Silesia for more than 10 years. The state and the church needed five crusades to suppress this uprising.”
There were many of these movements in the Middle Ages and they were almost always dealt with ruthlessly by the authorities when they managed to regain control and were crushed with extreme violence. I won’t repeat the gruesome details that are shared in the book but obviously they were trying to make sure these “experiments” weren’t repeated–but they were, for over a century.
One of the last of these “heresies”, was the Anabaptist movement which “spread out over large parts of Central Europe. … it called for the principles of non-violence, community of goods and self-determination… the Anabaptists… sought to build their own communities beyond the state and the church. In Münster the conflicts came to a dramatic climax… the Anabaptists declared property to be communal as it had been in the first Christian community in Jerusalem, then they burned the debt register in the city archives… the city was overpowered by troops in 1535. The leaders of the movement were publicly tortured and executed.”

Anabaptists in Münster
“Egalitarian community”, communal property, self-determination. No wonder leaders were terrified. The book talks a lot about the effects of this.
“Shocked by the force of egalitarian movements, they [the feudal elites] frantically sought ways to hold on to privileged positions. Their desperation must be taken into account in order to understand the emergence of the modern world-system… It was an endeavor by elites to stifle emerging egalitarian aspirations.”
Fabian Scheidler quotes Italian-American teacher, activist, and author Silvia Federici, from her book, Caliban and the Witch: “Capitalism is the response of the feudal lords, the patrician merchants, the bishops and popes, to a centuries-long social conflict… Capitalism was the counter-revolution that destroyed the possibilities that had emerged from the anti-feudal struggle.”
Fabian Scheidler goes on to say, “With the stimulation of the money-war complex, European elites could gradually shift the balance of power in their favor and crush egalitarian movements.” He concludes by saying, “Alongside colonial expansion, the second triumph of the monsters of modernity was to smash the internal resistance and egalitarian dreams across Europe.”
Or, as Silvia Federici puts it in Taliban and the Witch, “The social struggles of the Middle Ages must also be remembered because they wrote a new chapter in the history of liberation. At their best, they called for an egalitarian social order based on the sharing of wealth and the refusal of hierarchies and authoritarian rule.”

Although egalitarian dreams may have been smashed in continental Europe, they re-emerged in England in the seventeenth century. It seems that there is a human aspiration toward sharing and equality. I will write more about this in the future.