QAA Podcast - Premium Episode 107: Conspiracy Theories in Revolutionary & Napoleonic France w Everett Rummage smpl
Episode Date: January 15, 2021A new perspective on the storming of the Bastille. Conspiracies weaponized by savvy political advisors. A series of beheadings. Pamphlets filled with cartoons of people farting on the king. Everett Ru...mmage of the Age of Napoleon Podcast has written an episode that might help you contextualize recent history. ↓↓↓↓ SUBSCRIBE FOR $5 A MONTH SO YOU DON'T MISS THE SECOND WEEKLY EPISODE ↓↓↓↓ www.patreon.com/QAnonAnonymous Follow Everett Rummage: http://twitter.com/trillburne Merch / Join the Discord Community / Find the Lost Episodes / Etc: http://qanonanonymous.com Episode music by Hasufel (http://hasufel.bandcamp.com), Pontus Berghe & GRKZGL (http://soundcloud.com/grkzgl)
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Citizens, citizen, I arrive to Versailles.
The royal has re-voyed an equer.
Citoyan, it's the sign of a saint-martilemi for the patriots.
This night, even, the battalions, Swiss and German,
will be out of the chan to us egregor.
A bad news the quare!
We have only resource.
the arms
On arms
To Paris
Will bring the arms
Welcome to
Premium Chapter 107
of the Q&on Anonymous podcast
The Conspiracy theories
In Revolutionary and Napoleonic France episode
As always we are your host
Jake Rockatansky
Everett Rummage
Julian Fields
And Travis View
Let them eat Jake
It's what I've always said
When the unwashed crowds gather
neath the palace window, complaining that bread prices are just too damn high.
I lecture them with the wisdom of my God-appointed brain, untouched by syphilis,
and crowned with a beautiful powdered wig.
And yet Jake remains uneaten sitting across from me.
This week, our guest is Everett Rummage from the Age of Napoleon podcast.
He has written a segment on conspiracy theories in revolutionary and Napoleonic France.
In an era where bona fide conspiracies rocked the nation regularly,
Did a pamphlet exist on Frazel Drip?
Or were most of the stories just about royals doing poos on each other?
And what of the French Gitmo?
La Bastille.
We'll learn on more with our invite special, Everett Romage,
which the name rappel a scientific English alcoholic,
traversing a jungle who will kill us certainly.
Certain of you know probably already Everett for these super tweets
or the pseudonym Trilburn or even The Discourse Lover.
Welcome on the podcast, Mr. Romage.
Thank you very.
Frenches into Napoleon.
Conspiracy theories thrive in times of uncertainty and of evil.
The period of the French Revolution and the rise of Napoleon Bonaparte were no exception.
Before we delve into the conspiracy theories of revolutionary and Napoleonic France,
it is worth mentioning that this was a golden age for actual conspiracies.
During this era, words like Emigre and Terrorist entered wide usage for the first time.
Coos and counter-coos became a regular feature of revolution.
revolutionary politics.
One of the most famous leaders of the early stages of the revolution, the Compt de Mirabeau,
turned out to be an ancient provocateur in the pay of the king.
The suicide car bomb was invented for an assassination attempt on Napoleon, on Christmas Eve 1800.
It's a good story.
They actually built it in an old abandoned monastery, and they built like a prototype.
And when they blew it up, the guys who built it were so terrified, they just ran out.
of the monastery. And so, like, they didn't actually, like, do the proper, because they were so
scared by their own creation. They didn't actually do the proper, like, investigation. Like,
did it go off right? Would it have killed Napoleon? Anyway, before his execution, it had come to
light that Louis XVIth had been working in secret with France's enemies to ensure his own
country's defeat on the battlefield. These are just a few examples. One big reason people in
this era seemed convinced they were surrounded by secret plots, is that there really was a lot
of secret plotting going on.
So basically, yeah, not a mirror for our age at all.
On top of these real conspiracies, there were imagined ones, produced by the anxiety of changing
times. During this period, European states mobilized their people and their economies for total
war in unprecedented ways. The abstract forces of politics, finance, and international trade became
far more powerful and encroached on spheres of life where they had never been present before.
Many people found this experience disruptive and alienating, and some naturally looked for someone
to blame. This is also the period when we see something like modern public opinion emerging
in Western countries for the first time. It is still too early to talk about.
about something like mass media, as we know it, but there was an active print culture which
held real influence, particularly in big cities with relatively literate populations, like
London and Paris. You could almost compare the press in the 18th century to the internet today.
People who read it, or listened to someone else reading it out loud, had access to far more
information and news than previous generations. However, a lot of that information was bad,
a mix of polemic, entertainment, and gossip, which privileged sensationalism over accuracy.
Worse, societies and political systems had no real way to deal with this new class of informed, or misinformed, members of the public.
Just one moment before you go on, did you just mention that people would read the kind of like pamphlets or even the news out loud, so non-literate people would go and listen to somebody?
Oh, yeah, that was actually, like, probably the people in Paris who knew, like, you know, what was going on in the world, probably more of them.
It was from hearing someone else than from reading it themselves because of illiteracy and just because, you know, with the level of technology, these pamphlets, they're not producing very many of them.
So they're changing hands, people are gathering around to hear them read out loud, that kind of thing.
So, yeah, you guys are, you guys would have been right in the zeit guys.
So there were podcasters back then.
Exactly.
They were like local, you would have your local regional podcaster.
he would read Wikipedia for you
and he would make a podcast episode.
One important phenomenon of this era
was a process historians
called desacralization
in which something formerly considered sacred,
the monarchy,
was rendered profane and ordinary.
In past centuries,
European monarchs were viewed with great reference,
not quite as gods,
but so favored by God
that they were nearly superhuman.
To take one example,
well into the 18th century,
it was believed that the touch of a king could cure certain diseases.
By the time of the French Revolution, this image of divine monarchy was fading away.
Kings, queens, and emperors were increasingly seen as more or less normal people
who just happened to be born into lives of power and privilege.
Print culture was a major driver of this process.
In early eras of history, people only really had contact with their monarchs
through public displays of state power, but by the mid-18th century, it was relatively easy for
someone in Paris to find a newspaper or a pamphlet full of court gossip, or even speculation about
the king's private life, or the sex lives of the royal family. Saterical songs, stories, and
cartoons were very popular, and their favorite targets were the royals and their relatives
and friends. For whatever reason, people farting or shitting on each other,
Seems to have been the most popular motif in these caricatures.
Hey, we, you know, we're too, we ename la mer?
I'm not kidding, you guys.
Like, I would guess probably 40% of the ones I've seen have someone farting.
That's right, because that's it.
You very literally just want to see someone throw shit at the king.
And so you're like, ah, what if the queen was propelling it from her asshole on top of it all?
Yeah, it's just the most basic, like, you know, that impulse that we all have to see, you know,
someone in authority gets shot on, and these guys were the pioneers of it, so that's what they've depicted.
Obviously, none of these pamphlets were very politically important in and of themselves.
But over the course of decades, they helped erode the mystique of the monarchy.
Quite simply, it's hard to think of the king as a nearly divine figure when you know all about
his sexual affairs and drunken debauchery and have had a good chuckle at the idea of someone
farting on him. Without this shift in public attitudes, it never would have been possible
for people to rise up and directly challenge the monarchy. So to sum up, this was an era of
unprecedented ideological and geopolitical turbulence, rife with real conspiracies. It was also
an era of profound social and political change, exactly the type of phenomena people are tempted
to explain with conspiracism. And the emerging popular press provided the
perfect conduit for conspiracy theories to reach a wide audience. If you were deliberately working
to create a perfect environment to foster the growth of conspiracy theories, these are exactly
the type of conditions you would want to create. You have been listening to a sample of a
premium episode of Q&on Anonymous. We don't run any advertising on the show and we'd like to keep it that
way. For five bucks a month, you'll get access to this episode, a new one each week, and our entire library
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Thank you. Thanks. I love you. Jake loves you.