formerly also -cratie, -crasie, a. F. -cratie (-krasi), ad. med.L. -cratia, a. Gr. -κρατία, in composition power, rule, f. κράτος strength, might, rule, authority. Already used in Greek in ἀριστοκρατία aristocracy, rule of the best-born, δημοκρατία democracy, popular government, ὀχλοκρατία ochlocracy, mob-rule, πλουτοκρατία plutocracy, an oligarchy of wealth, θεοκρατία theocracy, rule of God; whence ANGELOCRACY, government by angels, bestiocracy (The Times, 21 Nov., 1863), the rule of beasts. All these have a preceding o belonging to or representing the stem vowel of the first element, but which tends to be viewed as part of the suffix, as if this were -ocracy. The word aristocracy has in modern times, in Fr. and Eng., passed into the senses of a ruling body of nobles, the nobles as a ruling class, political power, or upper class, after which democracy has received the sense of the people or lower class as a political power or element, and plutocracy that of a class ruling or influential by virtue of its wealth.
Hence the suffix, in the form -ocracy, has been added to English words, to designate in mockery or ridicule any dominant, superior, or aspiring class, as in the following (mostly colloquial or newspaper words); barristerocracy, brokerocracy, capocracy, millocracy, shipocracy, shoddyocracy (barristers, brokers, cap-setting women, mill-owners, ship-owners, shoddy-manufacturers, as classes of social standing or pretensions); see also BEEROCRACY, CLUBOCRACY, COTTONOCRACY, COUNTYOCRACY, MOBOCRACY, SNOBOCRACY, SHOPOCRACY, SLAVEOCRACY, etc.
1866. Lond. Rev., 6 Jan., 6/1. The Lord Lieutenant holds a court for the barristerocracy of Dublin to wear periodical pumps in.
1860. Lit. Churchman, VI. 270/1. The demoralising influence of a slipper-working capocracy, upon the minds especially of the younger clergy.
1838. Northern Star, 14 April, 2/5. A shallow young fellow at the fag-end of the millocracy of the town.
1850. Lpool Merc., 29 Oct., 3/6. The present estrangement which is continually manifesting itself between the shipocracy and the shopocracy.
1853. M. Grimshaw, in Preston Chron., 15 Oct., 3/4. Let the shoddyocracy of Preston swallow that pill as best they could.
1887. P. Kropotkin, in 19th Cent., Aug., 159. Anarchy is obviously as incompatible with plutocracy as with any other kind of cracy.