The Original Influencers: How Royal Courts Shaped Culture and Taste
04/19/2026
Royal courts were the original systems for shaping cultural taste, controlling fashion, language, art, and etiquette through elite hierarchy and patronage. They functioned like early influencers, where proximity to power determined what became “in style” and socially accepted. Today’s media and digital platforms have replaced courts, but the same top-down logic of taste-making still shapes culture. Before algorithms optimized taste, courts did it with velvet gloves and absolute power. Royal courts were some of the earliest centralized “influencer hubs,” where fashion, language, food, and even posture were curated at the top and then trickled outward into society. If today’s trends feel top-down and strangely coordinated, that mechanism is older than modern media—it’s just that the feed used to be a throne room instead of a smartphone.


