Patriarcha

E939161

Patriarcha is a 17th-century political treatise by Sir Robert Filmer that defends the divine right of kings and patriarchal authority against emerging theories of popular sovereignty.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Patriarcha canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf book
political treatise
arguesThat kings inherit authority from Adam
political authority derives from paternal authority
subjects owe obedience to kings as to fathers
author Sir Robert Filmer NERFINISHED
circulation became widely discussed in late 17th century political debates
countryOfOrigin England
criticizedBy John Locke NERFINISHED
Two Treatises of Government NERFINISHED
genre political philosophy
political theory
historicalContext English debates over monarchy and parliament
Stuart monarchy NERFINISHED
early modern England
influencedBy biblical interpretation of Genesis
intellectualTradition conservative political thought
royalist theory
keyConcept Adam’s patriarchal authority
filial obedience
paternal monarchy
language English
legacy central target of John Locke’s political critique
important foil for later liberal theories of government
mainSubject divine right of kings
patriarchal authority
political authority
sovereignty
opposes popular sovereignty
social contract theory
philosophicalPosition anti-democratic
anti-liberal
anti-republican
positionOnGovernment absolutist monarchy
publicationCentury 17th century
stanceOnParliament subordinates parliamentary power to royal authority
stanceOnResistance rejects right of resistance to the king
supports absolute monarchy
divinely ordained kingship
hereditary monarchy
theoreticalBasis biblical patriarchy
paternal authority
usedAs defense of royal prerogative
viewOnConsent rejects political authority based on consent
viewOnEquality denies natural equality of men
viewOnFamilyAndState equates political society with an extended family
viewOnNaturalLiberty denies natural liberty of individuals

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Sir Robert Filmer notableWork Patriarcha