MikeKardec
One Too Many
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Yes and no on European history.
I was kinda thinkin' that the conditions I mentioned began to alter severely between the time market towns started acquiring power that was competitive to the land owning nobility (obviously there were some cities that were seats of power long before others!) and say when England started to enter the Industrial Revolution in the late 18th century.
Assets shifted into the more fluid form of cash and suddenly the money could move. I don't think that it even HAD to move, just the fact that it could was scary. There were also, for the first time, people who really only had cash, their assets that tied them to the area were minimal. People who can disconnect from local power are free in a way others are not. If, over 50 years, a merchant settled younger generations of his family in a city 200 miles away, that was pretty rapid movement ... and they were probably out from under the thumb of the local lord.
I suspect there has always been distrust of people who say: "I don't need you." Whether they are vagrants who can scoop up whatever is loose and disappear in a night or a corporation that moves to another state, if they haven't bought into the local tribe they can't be controlled by it. We can all trust the people who own property around us to have certain things in common that the renters don't ... I was just trying to imagine someone's state of mind about mobility in a time when people hadn't even imagined moving since they'd given up hunting and gathering.