Anneke van Baalen, HIDDEN MASCULINITY, Max Weber's historical sociology of bureaucracy 
Amsterdam 1994. CONTENTS 
6. The patriciate: the breach with patrimonialism; the establishment of an administration by 
honoratiores - 119 
7. The breach with the patriciate: democracy and dictatorship; the establishment of formal-
rational law and administration - 120 
8. Demilitarization of medieval citizens: the citizen as 'homo economicus' - 122 
9. Transformation of patriarchy: from household to enterprise; individualization of household 
dependents - 123 
10. Excursus on the situation of city women: the contradictory developments of emancipation 
and domestication - 126 
11. The continuity of patriarchal domination and its contradiction with bourgeois freedom and 
equality - 128 
12. England: unmilitary cities and the development of a national burgher estate - 129  
13. Charismatic legitimacy for burgher status groups: financial success - 131 
14. The influence of the city on the rationalization of patrimonialism; the end of city autonomy 
on the Western European continent - 134 
 
Ch. 8. Connections between formal rationality and patriarchal-patrimonial domination 
over and through unfree men - 137    
 
1. The connections between Weber's universalist method and his conceptualization of 
bureaucratization as a linear  development from patriarchal-patrimonial administration - 137 
2. The Ständestaat as a compromise between patrimonial, feudal and city power - 138  
3. The development of capitalism: mercantilism and industrialization - 140 
4. Patriarchal patrimonialism as the destruction of the freedom and equality of the patrimonial 
landlords in Russia - 142 
5. Formal-rational legitimation of patrimonialism: reception of the formal structures of Roman 
Law - 144 
6. Material-rational legitimation of patrimonialism: the welfare state - 147 
7. Rationalization of patrimonial bureaucracy: central official, clerks and  
collegiate bodies - 148 
8. The victory of patrimonialism in Germany and its influence on German mentality - 151 
9. The mentality of 'the patriarchal-patrimonial official' - 152 
10. 'Staatsraison': the fusion of formal and patriarchal-material rationality into rationalized 
patriarchal patrimonialism - 154 
 
Ch. 9. Connections between formal rationality and charismatic domination over and 
through free men: the continuing role of magic in the construction of impersonal 
patriarchal fraternities; from Ständestaat to revolution - 157 
 
1. The continuing role of magic in the construction of impersonal patriarchal fraternities - 157 
2. Formalism: from magic to Roman conceptual juridical thought - 159 
3. Charisma of church and state offices - 161 
4. Rationalization of charismatic education into examinations of 'expertise' - 162 
5. Inner-worldly asceticism and its routinization: the protestant ethic and the 
new bourgeois - 164 
6. Rational discipline as inverted charisma - 168 
7. Formal rationality as a belief - 171 
 
Ch. 10. Hidden masculinity: impersonal bureaucracy as a result of the unsolvable 
conflict between fraternity and patriarchy - 173 
 
1. The revolutionary origins of bureaucracy: liberty, equality, fraternity and plebiscitary 
dictatorship - 173