Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Potemkin Villages

Episode Date: May 27, 2021

In 1787, Russian Empress Catherine the Great took a six-month trip to visit her newly acquired territories in the Crimean. Along the way, she sailed down the Dnieper River and saw many of the shiny vi...llages in the new Russian Crimean. However, there was a problem. The villages were all fake. Learn more about Potemkin Villages, and how they still exist in the modern world, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 In 1787, Russian Empress Catherine the Great took a six-month trip to visit her newly acquired territories in the Crimean, which had been taken from the Ottoman Empire. Along the way, she sailed down the Nipa River and saw many of the shiny villages in the new Russian Crimean. There was a problem, however. All the villages were fake. Learn more about Potemkin villages and how they still exist in the modern world on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. What if your perceptions about the past were wrong? ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed. It effectively turned day into night. And how it shaped the world now.
Starting point is 00:00:55 Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR. This episode is sponsored by the Restoration Depot. I've told you before about the Restoration Depot and how they provide a one-stop virtual wellness service that supports the social, emotional, physical. and intellectual well-being of individuals. They offer a multitude of live courses with instructors you can interact with online. Courses like Mindful Meditation with Kristen Doherty, a certified mindfulness meditation instructor, or Dance Fitness with the Karzai method with its inventor, Evan Karzai. Check out all of the options at the Restoration Depot.com
Starting point is 00:01:35 and try your first class for only $5 by selecting first class special at checkout. Once again, that is the Restoration Depot.com. The legend of the Potemkin villages dates back to the reign of the Empress Catherine the Great. In 1784, she annexed the Crimean Peninsula, which had formerly been part of the territory of the Ottoman Empire. She assigned as governor to this newly acquired region, one of her senior advisors, and, rumor had it, her lover, Raguori Potemkin.
Starting point is 00:02:07 Potemkin had been assigned the viceroy of the region of southern Russia 10 years earlier, and the Crimea was just added to his territory. Potemkin ruled these lands in Catherine's name as basically an absolute dictator. He was a builder and established many cities in the region. The city of Simferpole, which is the second largest city in the Crimea, was built by Potemkin. Potemkin was very hands-on, personally approving everything about the new cities he built. He was also responsible for building a black sea fleet for the Russian Navy, and he was responsible for the brutal repression of the Cossacks in the region.
Starting point is 00:02:39 He threw a lot of money at the development of the cities and new villages in the Crimean, and his spending became legendary, even before the events which made his name famous. Empress Catherine wanted to see the new lands for herself, so she went on a grand tour of southern Russia and the Crimean in 1787. From January 2nd to July 11th, she inspected her lands which were governed by her favorite Grigory Potemkin. Potemkin was born to a middling noble family, but thanks to Catherine, he had been elevated to a prince of the Holy Roman Empire, a prince of Russia, a Russian field marshal, and of course, the viceroy of southern Russia. He really wanted to impress Catherine, who was the source of all of his power, not to mention the fact that they were intimate. However, despite all the funding, many of the villages along
Starting point is 00:03:24 the way were not what you would call in good condition. Moreover, they were not necessarily that fond of Catherine. At this stage in the tour, Catherine and her entourage were traveling down the Nipa River. The boats weren't close enough to most of the villages to actually see them closely, and Catherine wasn't going to stop at every village. Potemkin, and again this is according to legend, created an elaborate ruse to fool Catherine into thinking that everything was great. He supposedly built buildings with facades on wheels. These were just the fronts of the buildings like you'd see on the set of a motion pitcher. He also had a herd of cattle and well-dressed villagers. The building facades, the cattle, and the people would move from village to village to give Catherine the impression
Starting point is 00:04:05 that things were better than they actually were. These fake building facades, villages and cattle herds became known as Potemkin Villages. The phrase Potemkin Village has become a metaphor for putting up a false front. Miriam Upster defines it as, quote, an impressive facadeshatter show designed to hide an undesirable fact or condition, unquote. There have been dozens of cases, both literal and figurative, of Potemkin villages over the years. Perhaps the best known example is a literal village known as Kijong Dong.
Starting point is 00:04:36 It's in North Korea just beyond the demilitarized zone within sight of South Korea. The entire village, which the North Koreans call the Peace Village, is actually uninhabited. It was created in the 1950s to look appealing to South Koreans to encourage them to defect to the north. Technically, it's not uninhabited per se. There are military units that have barracks there, and the buildings hide artillery guns. In World War II, the Nazis created the Theresean stat ghetto, which was a concentration camp that was built to show the Red Cross that conditions in German concentration camps weren't actually that bad. In reality, it was just a way station for Jewish prisoners who were being sent to Auschwitz.
Starting point is 00:05:15 In 1998, the failed company Enron built an entire trading floor in their corporate headquarters in Houston. The only purpose of the trading floor was to impress Wall Street analysts who came to Houston for the company shareholder meeting. In 1944, United States President Henry Wallace took a trip to the Soviet Union. There he visited a camp called Megadan on the Soviet Pacific coast. He thought the people there were volunteers, when in reality they were prisoners engaged in forced labor. The idea behind a Potemkin village extends beyond just physical structures. It happens all of the time on the Internet. So-called influencers will buy thousands and sometimes millions of followers, as well as buying likes,
Starting point is 00:05:55 to make it appear as if they are actually popular when in fact they are not. They will spend hours setting up elaborately staged shots to give the impression that their life is much more glamorous than it is. I've seen this firsthand. I was climbing up a mountain in Sri Lanka and there was an influencer with us who climbed the mountain in an evening gown and heels, which no one does. They also might rent expensive cars for a day just so they can take photos in them to make people think that they actually own the car. And likewise, some private jet companies will rent out jets that never go anywhere so that influencers can take photos in and around it. Occasionally, Instagram will purge fake accounts, and the truth will be seen. After one fake follower purge, one influencer went from having over a half million followers to under 5,000.
Starting point is 00:06:40 They deleted their account the next day. The metaphor of the Potemkin village is a great one, and if it didn't exist, we'd probably have to invent something like it. However, here is where I need to pop the bubble on the historical story. Most historians think that the fake village stories of Gregori Potemkin were probably fabricated. Almost everything about the story is true. Catherine did annex the Crimea, and she did take a tour, and Potemkin did want to impress her. However, the reality is that he spent a lot of money on fireworks and decorations. He did spend a lot of money to spruce up the villages, but he wasn't secretive about it.
Starting point is 00:07:15 He openly bragged about spending the money to impress Catherine. He was like, hey, Catherine, look at all the money I spent on this. The rumor of the Potemkin villages was first spread by a Finnish politician, and the rumor then spread throughout the rest of Europe. It became an urban legend for Europeans who wanted to spread the idea that Russia was poor and backward. People who were on the tour later remarked how the rumors were absurd and it wasn't true, but by this time it was too late. In a way, it's too bad that the stories aren't true, because it really is a great story. Nonetheless, true or not, the idea of the Potemkin Village is something that's with us and probably will be for quite some time.
Starting point is 00:07:56 The associate producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Thor Thompson. If you'd like to support the show, please donate over. at patreon.com. There is content only available to supporters, merchandise, and even opportunities for a show producer credit. If you know someone you think would enjoy the show, please share it with them. Also remember, if you leave a five-stop review, I'll read your review on the show.

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