True but would they care even if they knew that "male dominated societies" would be the rule?
They were fanatics about "protecting Mankind from the Gbaba by keeping Mankind low-tech".
They may have seen "male dominated societies" as an acceptable price to pay for keeping Mankind low-tech.
Mind you, I wonder how the fact that the Devil figure on Safehold was female influenced the Church and society especially the Church.
It's possible that the original setup of the Church allowed for higher ranking female members of the Clergy but after the last Archangels died, the Church decided that because the "Greatest Of The Fallen" was female, then females should not reach be allowed in the higher ranks of the Clergy.
PeterZ wrote:It was inferred that Langhorne and Bedard were not very well versed in history. I suspect neither were the well versed in economics. If their primary areas of expertise were politics, psychology and management, they might well not realize how inevitably patriarchy would from their plan.
eldrwyrm wrote:The implication of the first book is that Safehold was originally established as an egalitarian, literate society. Because power seeks it's own, and because control is a necessary component of power, divisions in society are contrasted more sharply as those in power highlight those differences to create class warfare. The needs of a pre-industrial, agrarian society presented obvious divisions in labor that promoted a patriarchal society. As literacy rates drop, women become "less useful" than men. This accelerates the move toward partiarchy. Someone then realizes that not only are men "superior" to women, but that some men are superior to others. This leads to greater class division, which leads to indentured servitude which leads to the slavery/serfdom practiced in Harchong.
Surely Bedard realized that this would be the logical conclusion of their plans, but it was unavoidable without significant DNA tampering or industrialization.