We study the effect of royal status-a historically rooted legal privilege enjoyed by hereditary monarchs and their families-on human longevity, a proxy of individuals' health capital. We disentangle the effect of royal status that encompassed serving as heads of state, and hence being subject to status, from that of other family members and compare it to their contemporary countrymen. We have constructed and exploited a dataset containing relevant demographic data and specifically the lifespan (age at death) of European royals and their families spanning the past three centuries (1669-2022) from the sixteen European countries. The dataset includes information records of 845 high-status nobility and alongside monarchs, which we compare to otherwise similar countrymen by adjusting for relevant confounders. We document robust evidence of a statistically significant longevity advantage, showing that monarchs live, on average, 5.2 to 7.1 years longer than both other members of the royal family and the general population of their time. However, while such longevity advantage between royals and the population has narrowed, the advantage of ruling monarchs persists over time. These effects persist despite improvements in population health, and the role of major sociopolitical transformations including the emergence of both liberal democracy and the advent of Constitutional monarchies in Europe. The latter suggests that "power status" - and specifically the so-called eustress or positive stress - may be driving the longevity advantage of ruling monarchs.
The survival of the Royals / Batinti, A.; Costa-Font, J.; Shandar, V.. - In: KYKLOS. - ISSN 0023-5962. - (2025). [10.1111/kykl.70010]
The survival of the Royals
Batinti A.;
2025
Abstract
We study the effect of royal status-a historically rooted legal privilege enjoyed by hereditary monarchs and their families-on human longevity, a proxy of individuals' health capital. We disentangle the effect of royal status that encompassed serving as heads of state, and hence being subject to status, from that of other family members and compare it to their contemporary countrymen. We have constructed and exploited a dataset containing relevant demographic data and specifically the lifespan (age at death) of European royals and their families spanning the past three centuries (1669-2022) from the sixteen European countries. The dataset includes information records of 845 high-status nobility and alongside monarchs, which we compare to otherwise similar countrymen by adjusting for relevant confounders. We document robust evidence of a statistically significant longevity advantage, showing that monarchs live, on average, 5.2 to 7.1 years longer than both other members of the royal family and the general population of their time. However, while such longevity advantage between royals and the population has narrowed, the advantage of ruling monarchs persists over time. These effects persist despite improvements in population health, and the role of major sociopolitical transformations including the emergence of both liberal democracy and the advent of Constitutional monarchies in Europe. The latter suggests that "power status" - and specifically the so-called eustress or positive stress - may be driving the longevity advantage of ruling monarchs.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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