## Aristocracy
**From Greek** *aristokratia* (ἀριστοκρατία): *aristos* (best, most excellent) + *kratos* (power, rule, strength)
The Greek *aristos* almost certainly descends from Proto-Indo-European *\*h₂er-*, a root meaning "to fit together, to join." This is the same root behind Latin *arma* (weapons, literally "fittings" — the gear that equips a man) and Greek *harmonia* (a joining, a fitting — before it meant musical harmony, it meant carpentry). From *arma* came *armata*, *armée*, and the English words *arm*, *army*, and *armament*. The semantic path is striking: to be *aristos* was
### Kratos: Power as Grip
The second element, *kratos*, appears across the Greek political vocabulary — *demokratia* (people-power), *theokratia* (god-power), *autokratōr* (self-ruler, from which we get *autocrat*). The root carries a sense of muscular, physical holding: *kratos* is strength that grips. Combined with *aristos*, it produces a word meaning "the grip of the best."
### Aristotle's Constitutional Map
The philosophical precision of the word owes everything to Aristotle's *Politics*, written in the fourth century BCE. Aristotle organized governments into a grid of six: three correct forms, each paired with a corrupt counterpart.
| Correct Form | Corrupt Form | Who Rules | |---|---|---| | Monarchy | Tyranny | One | | Aristocracy | Oligarchy | Few | | Polity | Democracy | Many |
The distinction between aristocracy and oligarchy was not a question of numbers but of *intention*. Aristocracy is rule by the few who are genuinely virtuous, governing for the common good. Oligarchy is rule by the few who are merely wealthy, governing for their own benefit. Aristotle was unsparing: the word *oligarchy* comes from *oligos* (few) and implied
Aristocracy, in Aristotle's usage, was an aspirational category. He doubted it could exist in pure form. A city of genuinely virtuous rulers was rare enough to be almost theoretical. He preferred *polity* — a mixed constitution — as the most practically stable form.
### The Semantic Slide
What happened to the word between Aristotle and the French Revolution is one of the cleaner examples of how political language legitimizes what it names. The Greek philosophical ideal — rule by those who are truly excellent — was translated into Latin *aristocratia*, and then borrowed into medieval European political writing to describe something quite different: rule by hereditary nobility.
The movement from virtue to blood is the move. In Aristotle's framework, aristocracy was descriptive of character. In medieval and early modern Europe, it became descriptive of birth. The nobility did not abandon the ethical claim — they said, "we rule because the best rule, and we are the best, demonstrated by our lineage." The inherited class absorbed
This is semantic drift as political strategy: take a word that means *virtue justifies rule*, and slowly move the referent from *virtue* to *bloodline*, while keeping the moral prestige of the original intact.
### The Revolution Inverts the Word
The French Revolution completed the inversion. *Aristocrate* became the accusation. During the Terror, to be called an aristocrat was grounds for execution. The word had traveled from a Greek philosophical ideal of virtue-based governance to a hereditary claim of natural superiority to a revolutionary death sentence — each stage built on the previous one's vocabulary while destroying its values.
### Cognate Connections
*Aristos* survives in names: *Aristotle* (ἀριστοτέλης, "best purpose") and *Aristophanes* ("showing the best"). The PIE root *\*h₂er-* also underlies *harmony*, *arm*, *army*, and *article* through its Latin and Greek branches — all connected by the concept of proper fitting and arrangement.