The Rest Is History - 674. The First World War: The Spy Who Took on the Germans (Part 4)
Episode Date: May 27, 2026Why did the British nurse, Edith Cavell, become a key player in the Belgian Resistance to German occupation? How did she carry out her mission? And, why was she ultimately executed, so controversially...? Join Dominic and Tom as they unfold the life of the remarkable Edith Cavell, her time as a nurse, her espionage, and ultimately her tragic fate, amidst the death and destruction of the First World War. _______ Lloyds. 250 years on and still backing the nation's aspirations. _______ Join The Rest Is History Club: Unlock the full experience of the show – with exclusive bonus episodes, ad-free listening, early access to every series and live show tickets, a members-only newsletter, discounted books from the show, and access to our private Discord chatroom. Sign up directly at therestishistory.com _______ To read our new newsletter, sign up at: therestishistory.com/newsletters _______ Advertise with us: Partnerships@goalhanger.com _______ Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Video Editors: Jack Meek, Harry Swan + Adam Thornton Social Producer: Harry Balden Producers: Tabby Syrett & Aaliyah Akude Senior Producer: Callum Hill Executive Producer: Dom Johnson Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey y'all, it's Kelly Clarkson with Wayfair.
Ever order furniture online and wonder what if?
Like, what if it doesn't hold up?
That sofa was four days old.
You should have ordered from Wayfair.
With Wayfair, there's no what if.
Just style you love and quality you can trust.
Visit Wayfair.ca.
Wayfair, every style, every home.
This episode is brought to you by Lloyd's,
which has been backing British ambition for over 250 years.
Now, when you think about it,
every dynasty in history has boiled down.
to two important elements.
Aspiration and action.
And a classic example of this from British history,
the rise of the House of Wessex,
the family of Alfred the Great and his heirs,
who between them established the United Kingdom of England.
Yeah, it's a great story, isn't it, Tom?
A great lesson in leadership, I think, for anybody.
So Alfred and his heirs, they marry idealism and pragmatism.
they're brilliant at alliances, they're brilliant at managing power,
their brilliance, of course, at managing their money, which is a key part of political leadership.
And of course, we are all reaping the rewards of their wisdom and foresight.
When it's time to make your next move, you can bank on Lloyd's to be ready when you are.
Because from new businesses to new homes and new life chapters, backed by generations of hope and ambition,
you can see, Tom, why 14 million people trust.
Lloyd's to help make their dreams a reality. Based on Lloyd's internal customer data from March
2026.
At the first grave dawn, it was a heavy heart. I got into the motor car and drove out to the prison.
I sent in my name to Miss Cavill. If I remember rightly, the soldier told me she
had just been kneeling at her table. In the cell, a flickering gas flame was burning. Two large bouquets
or visit flowers, which had been standing there for ten weeks, awakened the impression of a vault.
The condemned lady had packed all her little property, his greatest care in a handbag. I accompanied her
through the long corridors of the great prison. The Belgian prison official stood there and greeted her
silently with the highest respect.
She returned their greeting silently.
And we boarded the motor car which awaited us in the yard,
and I sat beside Edith Carval in order to accompany her to her own burial.
So that was the German pastor Paul Lassour, who was chaplain at the great prison of Saint-Gilles
in Brussels, and in that passage he is recalling the last hour.
of a British nurse called Edith Carville, who was about to be executed by a German firing squad for war treason on the 12th of October 1915.
And if you're wondering how a British nurse can be executed by the Germans for treason, well, we will be coming to that.
And Dominic, you think that her life and death is one of the most moving stories of the entire First World War.
and you were just saying how you wish that you had had the chance to talk about it with her.
She would be high on your list of dinner party guests because it is an amazing story, isn't it?
It's a story of spying and resistance and of courage and treachery and of patriotism and faith.
And she's such a fascinating character that it would make a really brilliant film, you'd said.
That's not right, Tom.
No, I was actually saying something very different about, I think I like a funster at a
a dinner party. And I don't think
Edith Cavill was, I don't think she
was one of life's funsters. But a remarkable
person. She was a remarkable person and it
is a truly remarkable story that we'll be
talking about today. So as you say, it's one of the
most colourful and controversial stories of the
whole First World War. And you say here
that she's probably the war's single, best
and casualty after Franz Ferdinand.
Well, if you think about people who were killed in the First World
War, especially people who were
killed while not fighting.
Which is true, both of Franz Ferdinand and
of Edith Cavill. There aren't that
many who have statues. Edith Kevel does, of course, have a statue. She has a statue of Trafalgar Square,
and every day, I guess, every year, hundreds of thousands of people must walk past that
statue. They probably barely give it a second's thought. Or they walk past the statue of her
in King's Domain in Melbourne, in Australia. Or they walk along one of the countless
Ru Edith Cavill in France or in Belgium. Or the schools and hospitals that are named after
her, you know, all over the world in Australia, New Zealand, in Canada, in the United States,
and here in Britain.
And there was a monument to her in Paris, which no longer stands for reasons that we will
be coming to in due course.
Yes.
So she became, I think, the great martyr of the First World War.
Perhaps she's not as well known now as she used to be.
But the story behind her martyrdom is an interesting one because it's a story, as we said,
of espionage and secret machinations.
And it's a complicated story, and let's get into it.
We'll start with the place where it all happens,
and that is plucky little Belgium.
So people who listened to our first series
about the Great War may recall
that at the beginning of the war,
Belgium resisted the German demands
for free passage in August 1914,
but within weeks, Belgium was absolutely steam-rollered.
These extraordinary scenes of the kind of grey ranks,
like a tide, like a kind of tide of teutonic,
militarism pouring through the streets of Brussels.
You really just say that.
A tide of Teutonic militarism.
I did, but you know me, Tom.
I do.
I said it in a proving way.
A tidal wave of Teutonic militarism.
I love a tidal wave of Teutonic.
I love a peaked helmet.
So the Germans occupied Belgium.
They executed infamously about 6,500 civilians in their reprisals against suspected
partisans.
And they burned the medieval core of the city of Lévin,
Library, which I know you were very shocked by, as somebody who loves libraries.
So, even before today's story begins, people in Britain and in neutral countries and the United
States and so on, are primed to see Belgium as a place where teutonic barbarians in these
kind of spiked helmets are carrying out dreadful atrocities against innocent women.
So already there are British posters that sort of say, remember Belgium.
and the image of Belgium as a sort of maiden being violated by slavering Huns.
Yeah, it's kind of a gorilla, isn't it, with a club holding a, like, almost like King Kong.
Completely, yeah.
Holding a maiden in its arms.
Yeah, exactly.
So by the end of 1914, almost all of Belgium is under military occupation.
It's been divided into three occupation zones, and the largest of these, which includes Brussels,
is called the general government, anticipating what's, of course, going to happen to Poland in the Second World War.
and here you have a German general and he leads a German-dominated administration.
And it's actually a pretty heavy-handed occupation.
So Belgium had been the world's sixth biggest economy before the war.
So much for plucky little Belgium.
But the Germans dismantle the Belgian economy.
They basically move loads of machinery and equipment to Germany
and they deport more than 100,000 Belgian workers to German war factories.
They even demand that the Belgians shift their time zone.
so by an hour from GMT to Central European time.
And for ordinary Belgians, these are grim years, the years of occupation.
It's maybe not like being occupied by Nazi Germany, but there's a sense of national humiliation,
there's an economic collapse, there are massive food shortages.
One way that Belgians deal with this, I mean, Belgium is a very Catholic country,
it's how they define themselves against their neighbours in the Netherlands.
And there's a sort of revival of Catholicism, which actually,
plays a part in today's story.
And the other way they respond, of course, is by resistance.
And we should be coming to this exactly how the Belgians resist.
But resistance is where today's heroine, Edith Cavill, comes in.
And she, I have to say, is a very, very unlikely Belgian resistance hero.
So she's a Victorian, born in 1865, in a village outside Norwich called Swadeston.
And her father was the vicar there.
He was called Frederick Cavill. He was the vicar there for almost half a century.
He was like Nelson's dad.
Yes, except he's more formidable.
Nelson's dad was a little bit, was mild-mannered and easygoing.
A bit wet, wasn't he?
This bloke's not wet at all.
He's sort of terrifying Victorian with massive sideburns.
I mean, an indication of what kind of man her father is.
When his father was training to become a parson, he fell in love with his housekeeper's daughter,
who was called Louise and he wanted to marry her.
But he said to her,
I will only marry you when you've educated yourself
to an appropriate level for a Parsons wife.
And depending, you know, some people may say,
that's unromantic of him.
Others may applaud his high standards.
I'll leave that to the listeners to decide.
But anyway, this bloke gets a living in Norfolk,
and that's where Edith is born, where she grows up.
It's obviously a austere kind of existence.
So they had servants, and one anecdote we have about the servants,
that a maid once scrawled in pencil on the wall of her attic bedroom.
The pay is small, the food is bad, I wonder why I don't go mad.
Which doesn't say much.
For the jollity and generosity of the Caval family.
Basically, we don't really know anything about Edith when she's growing up.
I mean, the accounts that you find, she liked dogs, she liked ice skating, she liked flowers.
But this is so generic.
This is so sort of generic, saintly Victorian child that I don't think you can,
extrapolate much from it. She's educated at home at first and she goes to a series of boarding schools.
Her big thing at boarding school apparently was French. She has a great gift for French.
And at her school in Peterborough, they do no fewer than 10 whole minutes of French conversation
every day. Unbelievable. I mean, people say that the British don't bother learning foreign languages.
Total fluency. Yeah. She's tremendous linguist. She's not learning Flemish, though.
This is not exactly, no. So she works as a governess. And then in 1890, she is recommended for a post in
Brussels, where she goes off to work for the Francois family.
And what is she like?
Now, you said at the beginning that she might be a fun person to talk to at a dinner
party.
I'm not so sure.
So the accounts that you have of her as a young woman, she's very short.
I mean, that's not a reason not to talk to her at a dinner party.
But she's not a one of life's funsters and japsters.
So a trainee nurse who's met her later said, her voice was low agreeable and cultured,
her French fluent, which she's done 10 minutes a day.
everything around her, the neatness of her attire, her attitude and poise, the words she used,
all conveyed her characteristic efficiency, thoroughness, serenity and kindness.
They're not attributes that I look for in a conversation list, frankly, but anyway.
Anglicanism at its best.
Obviously, she has this very, very sort of Christian sensibility.
She wrote to her cousin,
"'Someday I'm going to do something useful, something for people.
They're most of them so helpless, so hurt and so unhappy.'"
I mean, you bring her alive, you bring her alive.
and I frankly, however short she is, I would relish the chance to spend an evening, listening to her talk about flower arranging.
I think there's just a trace in her conversation of the Grantham grocer shop, no?
Of the Grantham Grammar School Girl who's going to lecture you about God's plans for you.
Anyway, in the 1890, she comes home from Brussels, and she ends up training as a nurse,
and she rises to become the assistant matron of a hospital in Shortwich.
Now, on the issue of her as a dinner party companion, I mean, I didn't think this would be such a theme of the episode, but there we are. She's very good at running this hospital, but she's not a bundle of laughs. So these are the reports of her from the late 1890s and 1900s.
A very strict person who demands obedience from others. Orderly, methodical and of kindly and gentle disposition. Unbelievably, unselfish with an almost fanatical sense of duty, rather withdraw.
drawn, uninterested in superficial friendships,
but thoughtful, pleasant and sympathetic to all her patients.
Does that tick your boxes, Tom?
Yeah.
But anyway, in 1907, she is recruited to go back to Belgium.
Now, she'd been working as a governess for the Francois family.
And they have a family friend with Dr. Antoine de Pages.
How familiar are you, Tom, with the history of Belgian nursing?
Pretty familiar.
I mean, everyone obviously has heard of Dr. Antoine de Page.
He's a name that trips off the tongue when discussing the history of Belgian.
nursing. I mean, if you want to go deeper into the weeds, then maybe not. But Dr. Antoine de Paj,
I know all about him. Doing a bonus, surely. Well, Dr. Antoine de Page. He's the Belgian
royal surgeon, isn't he? And he's also, he's founder of the Belgian Red Cross. And also,
he was co-founder of the Belgian Boy Scouts. And Dominic, here's an amazing fact about him,
which, of course, you will know, but probably listeners who,
know the outline of his life may not be aware of this.
His daughter Marie died on the Lusitania.
Probably everyone does know that, but just for the few who don't know anything about him,
it's an interesting fact.
And also, isn't it the case that he's very keen to set up Belgian's first nursing school
on the outskirts of Brussels?
Because up until this point, nursing has been largely controlled by Catholic nuns.
Yeah.
Dr. Antoine Departre thinks that nuns are backward and useless.
and so he wants to bring Edith Carville in as a matron and director.
So, Dominic, what about Edith?
How does she come in?
Dr. DePaschester, come and set up this nursing school.
She says, brilliant.
Can't wait.
She goes over to Belgium.
She goes to Brussels.
She sets up Belgium's first ever professional nursing journal.
Did you know that?
And she's so interesting, Dominic, isn't she,
that she gets the second job as matron of the big new secular hospital at Saint-Sangeel.
It's mad that some people say she's not interesting.
It doesn't get more interesting than that.
And then in 1914, she goes,
back in the summer, doesn't she, to Norfolk, to visit her elderly mother who's now widow?
So that's sad. The father's dead. She goes back to Norfolk.
Alan Partridge's heartland. And the story goes that she is weeding her mother's garden in
College Road Norwich when she hears the news of the German invasion of Belgium.
So if there was a film, this is the point at which a small child kicking a ball says,
Have you heard? Germany has invaded Belgium. She's like, what? And her mum says to her, don't go back.
Edith and Edith, because she's a saint, says,
My duty is with my nurses.
At a time like this, I am more needed than ever.
Now, as this might suggest, we are very dependent for all this
on incredibly treakly hagiographies that were written after her death.
So whether this really happened and whether she really said this,
you know, Listers can draw their own conclusions.
Anyway.
But why otherwise would she have gone back?
I mean, it seems plausible to me.
Maybe she wants to set up another nursing journal in Belgium,
might become the matron of a third hospital.
I don't know.
Not with a tidal wave of grey Prussian militarism descending on her.
Right, a tidal wave of Teutonic militarism.
Exactly.
Anyway, by the 3rd of August, she's gone back to Brussels.
She sends the German nurses that she's got home.
She says, you can go home.
She says to the other nurses,
your task is to care for any soldiers regardless of their nationality.
Any wounded soldier must be treated, friend or foe.
Every man is a father, husband or son.
As nurses, you must take no part in the quarrel.
Our work is for humanity.
the profession of nursing
there's no frontiers
so 20th of August
she's been back for two weeks
and Brussels falls
and you know
the German tidal wave
tramps into the city
and Edith writes in her journal
we were divided between pity
for those poor fellows
far from their country and their people
so she's talking about the Germans there
she's talking about the Germans
suffering the weariness and fatigue
of an arduous campaign
this is my kind of talk
and hate of a vindictive foe
bringing ruin and desolation on hundreds of happy homes
and to a prosperous and peaceful land.
Now, by this point, our training school and the sort of clinic
have been converted into a Red Cross hospital
and all English nurses have now been sent home.
But Edith stays on with her assistant who's called Miss Wilkins.
And would I be correct in assuming that Miss Wilkins is English as well?
Exactly, she is.
I imagine her as having steel-rimmed spectacles.
Prost-nay.
So then a few weeks later comes to the moment that changes her life.
Yeah, of course.
This is where Dr. DePage comes back.
So he's the guy who first brought her to Belgium.
Yes.
And he has his daughter, Marie, doesn't he?
Remember what happens to Marie?
What happens to Marie?
Oh, she ends up on the Lusitania.
But before she gets on the Lusitania, she comes to see Edith and says that a friend has come to ask her for help with two British soldiers, Lieutenant Colonel Dudley Bodger and Sergeant Major Frank Meachin.
I think it's Dudley Bogher.
No?
Oh, God, you know, all these years I've been reading about this and I thought it was Bodger.
So these two guys were both in the Cheshishers, and they both fought in the Battle of Mons.
Remember the Angels and Mons, Tom, the archers who saved the British.
So they were both badly wounded in the British retreat from Mons.
They were captured and they were taken to a temporary German hospital in a nearby convent, German military hospital.
Now, both of them incredibly managed to escape from the Germans in the night,
and they hid in a village where Belgian families took them in,
and now they need Edith's help, basically because they're still injured and they need to get out.
of Belgium.
And she says, yes, she will help them.
This is when Marie has come to ask her,
will she do it in principle?
And then on the evening of the 1st November 1914,
a guide brings these two blokes to Edith's Clinic,
which is at Rue du convent in Brussels.
And Bogor, or Bodger, as you call him,
is dressed as a factory worker,
and he's wearing what I read is a floppy Belgian black beret.
So he looks very entertaining.
and he's grown a beard to disguise himself.
No Britain, no British soldier would ever have a beard at this point.
And he's wounded, so he'd been hit in the hand and the thigh and the foot.
So he needs medical help.
And Meachin is dressed as a Belgian labourer,
but he's also disguised himself as a hunchback.
He's wearing like a comedy hunch.
That is always the mark of a bad actor, isn't it?
Someone who just goes that little bit too far, puts on a limp,
developed a hunchback.
Yeah, eyepatch, surely.
An eye patch.
But the rationale for this is that, you know, he's a man of fighting age.
So if the Germans say to him, why are you not in the army, he can gesture at his hunch.
And that will be the reason.
So Edith takes these two blokes in.
She keeps them hidden in the clinic and she personally tends to their wounds.
And then, after seven days, the Belgian guide returns to collect them.
And they're going to be passed from one person to another to escort the
towards the frontier with the neutral Netherlands,
so Holland, from where they would be able to escape back to Britain.
Now, Colonel Bojure or Bojure didn't make it.
He could barely walk, unfortunately,
because he'd been wounded in the thigh and the foot,
and he was captured on the outskirts of Brussels
when the Germans discovered that he was carrying a false passport.
But this boat Meachin, previously disguised as a hunchback,
has now disguised himself as a fish hawker.
So a man who sells fish, fish,
Fish.
Poisson.
Poisson.
It's an easy part to play, no?
I mean, yeah.
And I suppose if you smell very violent,
yeah, horrible.
Very violently of fish.
People won't approach you.
So he got to Holland, he went home,
he came back to France,
and he ended up winning a medal in 1917.
So that was nice.
So this is the beginning of Edith Cavill's
connections with the Belgian resistance.
Now, I mentioned,
we mentioned the occupation.
The Belgian resistance,
is not one big organized group.
I mean, this isn't the case with all resistance groups, really.
It's basically about 300 different kind of interlocking groups
that attract both men and women.
They're very informal.
You kind of come and go.
And they do some sabotage acts,
but by and large, what the Belgian resistance largely do
is they distribute underground newspapers and pamphlets,
and they get intelligence on what the Germans are up to.
So German troop movements,
and they send it across the border to the Allies.
And the other thing, of course, they do,
which these two blokes have just been the benefit,
fisheries of, they smuggle Allied soldiers to safety because there's a lot of Allied soldiers
that have been left behind enemy lines during the chaotic retreat at the end of 1914.
And so through her friend Marie de Page, the daughter of Top Belgian Dr. Antoine de Page,
Edith is now connected to one of these resistance groups.
And this is a resistance group that has very aristocratic leanings because it is centered on
Prince Reginal de Croix and his sister Princess Marie
and the Cois, the House of Cois,
a kind of Belgian aristocratic house,
dates back I read to medieval Burgundy.
Are they members of the Golden Fleece?
I don't think they are.
Okay, so they're not that posh.
They're not that posh, but quite posh.
And during the fighting at the Battle of Montes,
the Croix family had used their chateau at Bellini,
which is not that far from Mons.
They turned it into a hospital.
for wounded Allied soldiers.
And they're now using their chateau to hide allied soldiers
and to send them on to neutral Holland.
So the way it works is this.
Basically, if you have a British
and you've been hiding in someone's pig style or something
because you were left behind during the retreat from malls,
Belgians will take you to the chateau
and introduce you to the prince and princess
and they will give you forged papers.
I mean, how they are forging these papers, I do not know.
whether the Prince Reginald has kind of got a machine in his hand cranking a passport machine or something.
Anyway, they'll give you your forged papers,
and then they'll introduce you to a series of guides to take you to the Dutch frontier.
And the bloke is in charge of organizing the guides is an architect and Catholic social activist called Philippe Bouque.
And Boch is like a big resistance figure, because he also distributes 200 grand papers,
La Libre Belgique and Le Maud du Solda.
and there's about 200 people in this network.
They say they have safe houses
and there are people who are going to,
you'll take you from here to here,
then I'll pass you on to this person,
all of this.
And it's very informal.
A lot of them are actually just rich,
posh Belgians who've got big houses
so they can hide you in,
you know,
in one of their many bedrooms or something.
And there's a slight sense,
I think, about this,
of sort of rich people having fun,
having a little bit of an adventure.
Sure, I shall smuggle some British and French soldiers
to safety, all of this.
But, I mean, you do risk being shot, don't you if you're found out by the Germans?
It's sort of, on the one hand, you risk being shot.
On the other hand, it's a bit of a lark.
So their password, for example, is York, which is Y-O-R-C, which is quat backwards.
Which doesn't seem to me like the, it's a bit enablighton in terms of passwords.
I suppose it's the beginning of the war, so, you know.
Yeah, they're having fun.
So Edith's role in this is two-fold, I think.
One, medical, so they bring soldiers to training school in Brussels.
where she looks after them
and two, the clinic itself becomes an important safe house
so a link in the chain in the Belgian capital.
Now there probably also is an espionage dimension to all this.
It's impossible to say with any certainty.
She's a woman of mystery.
Yeah, but probably some of the men
who are coming through her clinic
are carrying intelligence for the Allies.
We don't know really how formalised this was
or whether this is just very informal, but anyway.
In total, between November,
1914, July 1915, Edith is thought to have helped about 60 British and 15 French soldiers.
So these are people who've been left behind in the retreat.
But she's also thought to have helped about 100 young Frenchmen or young Belgians
who want to get to Holland because they want to join the war on the Allied side.
So they can't go west, as it were.
So they go the long way around by going east to Holland, then to Britain, then back to France,
because they're desperate to fight.
And to give you just one example of the people she saved,
this is on, there's an Edith Cavill website,
and this is where I discovered this story.
I recommend it to people, just Google it.
And this is a bloke called Billy Mapes,
who was a private and came from a village outside Norwich.
So Edith's, neck of the woods.
Yeah, he is neck of the woods.
He fought in the first battalion of the Norfolk Regiment.
He was wounded in the British retreat.
He was cut off, like these other blokes,
captured by the Germans, taken to a Red Cross convent,
escapes.
He shelters in the home of the family called the Camus family, like the Le Tranger.
No relation.
At one point, the Germans actually searched the house of this family looking for British
soldiers, but they didn't find him.
The family put him in touch with this prince and princess to Croix.
They smuggled him to Brussels.
He's still minging the ankle, but he makes his way to eat his clinic.
She recognized his Norfolk accent straight away.
So loads of Norfolk bantz, which was great.
She knew his village.
She'd been to his village, so that was lovely.
She nursed him back to fitness,
and then she organised for him to escape to the Dutch border
with six other men.
Their first attempt to cross the border was a disaster.
It turned out that the Germans had reinforced the border
with electric wires and increased patrols.
Now that tells you something
that the Germans are kind of on to what's happening
and we'll come back to this.
But they made a second successful attempt to escape,
they got across, and they got back to England.
This bloke mapes.
he'd been listed by the army as missing presumed dead
and his local vicar in his Norfolk village
had offered to organise a memorial service for him
and his mother had said no I won't give up hope
and when he walked down the street into the village
everybody started crying because they were so
it was so moved to see him back from the dead
and when he was interviewed later
he had a Hollywood instinct this bloke
because he said that before he left
Edith Cattle made a point of kissing him on the cheek
and saying to him her final words were,
Dear old Norfolk, I'd do anything to help a Norfolk man.
Okay, and hold on.
So he's reporting this in a local newspaper in Norfolk.
Yeah, but years later.
Oh, okay, so not at the time.
Well, we should come to this because at the time,
some of the people that escaped do give interviews to their local newspapers,
although by and large they are quite circumspect about exactly how they got out.
But we'll come back to this point because it's an important one.
So as early as the spring of 1915, so just within months of really starting this operation, things are starting to go wrong.
And the process to qua is worried that the network has been compromised.
Now, part of this is because, you mentioned giving interviews, part of this is because of this issue about people giving interviews when they get home to the kind of, you know, I don't know, the non-eaten bugle or something to say, I hid in somebody in a barrel in a belt,
family's place. Then I went to a safe house. Then a kindly nurse helped me and then I got home.
So the Germans can, you know, it's not like the Germans can't read. There are many English nurses
working in Brussels. Some of the people actually write postcards to Edith, to thank her.
So that by Billy Makes gave an interview to an East Anglia newspaper. He didn't mention her. He
didn't mention the nursing school. But it was kind of obvious that somebody must have helped him.
And the prince, the prince de Croix, actually sent a message to the British and said,
could you please stop this appearing in your newspapers
because this is very dodgy for us if this keeps appearing.
Sometime around May 1915, Princess Marie actually goes to Brussels to see Edith
and to say, I'm worried that the Germans are going to find out.
And Edith was very alarmed and said you shouldn't have come.
Like, you know, this is too public.
And the princess said, we should think about shutting the operation down.
But then she mentioned almost casually there are 30 more men in the Combray area.
and either said, oh, we must save these men.
If one of them were caught and shot, it would be our fault.
And then one day, not long after that, a new fugitive arrives at her clinic.
And his name is George Gaston-Cillon.
And he says to her, I'm a French officer.
When the French captured my hometown, which is at Saint-Contin, I went into hiding,
and I need money and I need help to get to the Dutch border.
I needed this slightly puzzled by this story, because Kian,
unlike most of the fugitives, says to her, can I have 300 francs? I need 300 francs.
Now, it's not clear to her why he needs this, because if he is who he says he is,
then when he gets to Holland, he can go to the French consulate and they'll give him loads of money.
But anyway, you know, she gives him the money.
And the other thing that's weird is that he doesn't seem in a hurry to leave.
So when she says, I've got you a guide to take you to the Dutch frontier, he says,
I'm not really ready yet. I'd like to wait a few days longer.
And he's kind of watching her the whole time, as though he's,
He's observing everything.
Anyway, after about two weeks, he says,
OK, I'm ready to go now.
The truth is, of course, he's learned everything he needs.
And he is a spy.
He is, in fact, not a French officer.
He was a convicted criminal who was in prison
when the Germans captured his hometown, Saint-Contin.
He was short of money,
and he basically offered his services to the Germans as an informant.
And in this hometown, he befriended a girl called Jean Baligant,
and she was connected to the Kuan network.
and he sold her this story, Jeanne, about being a French officer and she fell for it.
Incredibly, she took him to the castle of the Prince and Princess, and they gave him false papers,
and then he was passed on to a school teacher, and then she took him to Brussels, and she took him to Edith's clinic.
So Edith has now fallen for his story as well.
She helps him to get to Holland.
He goes to Holland.
He goes to the French consulate.
They give him yet more money.
He's rolling, and he's got another 500 francs.
But once he's got this money, he goes straight back across the border all the way back to Brussels to report to his German handlers.
And so two days later, on the 31st of July 1915, the Germans spring into action.
First, they raid the house of this architect bloke who runs the network, Philippe Boug.
And they arrest him and they arrest this school teacher who'd been helping him, who was called Louise Tullier.
And when they search Bogue's house, they find a list of names.
And one of the names is Edith Cavill.
On the 4th of August, the Germans raid the nursing school.
And Edith is very calm.
She's hidden her journal inside a cushion,
and she's destroyed any incriminating papers,
and she and Miss Wilkins managed to keep the Germans talking,
while the British soldier they've gone in the clinic
escapes out through the garden.
The Germans go away, but the next day, the 5th of August, the Germans come back.
And this time, they come into the clinic, they look around,
but when they leave, they take Edith with them.
Not Miss Wilkins.
Not Miss Wilkins. Edith is under arrest. She is charged with war treason, and war treason is a crime punishable by death.
Oh my goodness. Well, let's find out what happens after the break.
Hello, it's Marina Hyde from The Resters Entertainment. Now, Tom, it's fair to say there isn't normally a huge amount of crossover between our podcasts.
Well, Marina, I know that we have both on our respective podcasts discussed Bin Diesel's ambition to play Hannibal.
I've always thought that perhaps there is potential here for the rest of history and the rest of
entertainment to combine and produce something beautiful. Yes, in a crossover, nobody saw
coming. The worlds of reality TV and historical high society collide live on the South Bank
centre stage. Yeah, the real housewives of Regency England will see us cast a TV reality show
eye onto the women of the early 19th century. And when we say the women of the early 19th century,
we are talking about some of the most extraordinary, most charismatic, most scandalous women
in the whole of British history. Exactly. Think Lady Hamilton, Jane Austen and my chaotic
queen, Caroline Lamb. Yeah, so Marina and I are planning to pull out all the stops for a reality
TV tour of Regency London, complete with superb dramatic recreations and unbelievable.
believably exciting, a special celebrity guest from the world of the real, real housewives.
The Restis Fest is running from the 4th to 6th of September at London's South Bank Centre.
Members of The Rest is History and The Rest is Entertainment can get tickets on the 28th of May.
General Sale goes live on the 2nd of June at 10am, visit southbankcenter.com.ukuk to find out more.
Hey, this is Michael and Hannah from Gollhangers. The Rest is Science.
This episode is brought to you by Cancer Research UK.
We often think of beating cancer as treatment, but imagine stopping it before it begins.
After years of work, Cancer Research UK scientists are launching a clinical trial of lung
Vax, the first vaccine designed to prevent lung cancer.
It builds on TracerX, the world's largest cancer evolution study, which tracked lung cancer
cells over many years to uncover the disease's earliest warning signs.
Lung Vax is designed to train the immune system to spot these signs early on, destroying 40 cells before cancer develops.
So it's not treatment, but preventative, with the potential to stop lung cancer before it starts.
The first stage of the trial starts this year, focusing on people at higher risk.
It shows what long-term research makes possible.
For more information about cancer research UK, their research breakthroughs and how you can support them,
visit cancerresearchuk.org forward slash the rest is science.
I saw my friend on the other side of the street.
I was heading to school with the kids.
I let go of mom's hand to wave.
I had already forgotten their lunches.
I ran over to hug her.
She came out of nowhere.
And then it stopped.
Sometimes the moments that never happen matter most.
Volvo's automatic emergency breaking helps ensure
a safe ending for everyone. Learn more at Volvocars.ca.ca.com slash safety.
Hello and welcome back to the rest is history. It is August 1915 and the Germans have finally
moved against the network of the Prince and Princess de Croix, these very posh belgians,
although Dominic is, you're anxious to make clear that they're not uber posh. They're quite posh. I mean,
pretty much. Yeah, posh enough. So the prince himself, he escapes to Holland, doesn't he? But his
sister, the princess de Croix, and some of the other key figures in their network, they get rounded
up. And among them, as you described, just before the break, is our heroine Edith. Yes. And so she
is taken to the prison at St. Gilles, and she's held in this prison for the next 10 weeks. And for much
of that time, she's in solitary confinement. And she's interrogated three times on the 8th, 18th, and 22nd
of August and she gives statements to the Germans.
And there's a slight complexity here.
Edith was interrogated in French, which she was very good at, remember, because she'd done
10 minutes a day at school in Peterborough.
But her answers were then translated into German.
And there's a biography of her by Diana Suhami.
And Diana Suhami says, she thinks that the answers were slightly mistranslated to make them
sound more incriminating.
So she thinks, though when Kavill was asked about her motivation,
she said that she was saving injured men from death.
If I hadn't saved them, they would have been shot.
But the German translation made it sound as though she was motivated by eagerness to help the allies,
which is a slightly different thing, and that's a subtle difference.
And that, of course, can mean, the difference between life and death.
I mean, you could be motivated by both, I think, and I think she probably is.
But there's an ambiguity that runs through this story.
Anyway, the important thing is she doesn't make any effort to deny what she's been doing.
And in fact, the figures that I quoted earlier for the number of men that she helped to smuggle to safety, they come from her own testimony.
She says to the Germans, I have helped almost 200 men, some of them soldiers, some of them civilians.
And her biographers and people have written about this case have often wondered why she was so candid.
So one explanation is obviously that she's a pious, Victorian Christian, and she can't.
tell her lie. You know, it's not in her repertoire to be dishonest. There's also people who think
she's just naive. She doesn't realize the gravity of her situation. And then there are also
people who say, well, the Germans told her that the other suspects had already confessed
and, you know, she was gullible and she fell for it. And so she thought, what if the others
have confessed, I might as well confess myself. I think there is definitely an unworldliness
to her. I don't think she quite realizes the severity.
of the situation.
Or do you think perhaps she does
and she is, I mean,
prepared to accept a form of martyrdom?
We would need to know more about her inner life
to get a sense of that.
I mean, that's obviously a possibility
that she willingly embraces martyrdom
and sacrifices herself almost deliberately.
But that can only be supposition
because we know so little
about what's going on behind the sort of,
you know, behind the slightly prim nursing facade.
I mean, she's clearly an unbelievably brave woman
Yeah, and very, very serious and earnest.
So she describes her time in prison, for example, as a solemn fast from earthly distractions.
If you're the kind of person who says that about your time in the German prison,
then you're not a very, I suspect you're not a very worldly person.
Or you're a person who is steeped in the narratives of Christian martyrs,
because that's exactly how they talk, you know, in the early martyrologies.
Of course, and I think she is.
She grew up in a vicarage.
She's a nurse.
Absolutely, she's part of all that.
I feel that she, you know, she is aware of the script in a situation like this.
Yeah, quite possibly.
Quite possibly.
I still don't think this makes her a brilliant dinner party companion.
You and I may differ on this.
After 10 weeks in prison, she's taken out on the 2nd of October to face the charges.
Now, this is not an ordinary court.
It is a court martial.
And it's a court martial because she's being charged with war treason under Section 58 of the German
military code.
And this reads as follows
that in time of war
anyone who with the intention
of aiding a hostile power
or out of causing harmed German troops
anyone who commits one of a series
of named crimes shall be punished
with death for war treason.
So even if she's English?
Even if she's English.
The code is absolutely explicit about this
that this applies to anybody
in the war zone or in the occupation zone
and her specific offence is
conveying troops to the enemy.
Now later,
you see it a lot in accounts of the trial,
sort of popular accounts and things,
it is described as a show trial.
It absolutely was not a show trial.
So she has a defence lawyer.
Miss Wilkins chose a lawyer for her who they knew,
and the Germans said, no, that person's not right.
That's just a mate of yours.
So Miss Wilkins is fine.
She's off the hook.
Yeah, Miss Wilkins is fine.
But the Germans found a replacement
who was a Brussels lawyer called Sadie Kirshan.
And there's no suggestion that this defense lawyer let her down
or, you know, was inadequate or anything like this.
Well, it's tricky, isn't it?
Because she's confessed everything.
She doesn't deny the charges.
So this is a report by a Belgian official.
In her oral statement before the court,
Ms. Cavill disclosed almost all the facts of the whole prosecution.
She was questioned in German,
an interpreter translating all the questions in French,
with which language Ms. Cavill was well acquainted.
She spoke without trembling and showed a clear mind.
Often she added some greater precision to her previous depositions.
When she was asked why she helped these socials,
soldiers to go to England. She replied that she thought that if she had not done so, they would
have been shot by the Germans, and that therefore she thought she only did her duty to her
country in saving their lives. But I think it's here that the issue of the translation is so
damaging, because the Germans say, well, hold on, are you doing this to save their lives, or are you
doing this to do your duty to your country? Those are two slightly different things. Are you helping
your country, or is this just about pure humanitarianism? Right, because she's saving Belgians as well,
isn't she, and getting them out to go and join the Allies.
Yes. So the military prosecutor said,
but you haven't just helped injured soldiers.
You have also helped young Belgians who are not in danger at all,
but wanted to get out of the country to join the Allied armies.
You're not saving their lives.
You're actually, you know, aiding and abetting them to take up arms against us,
against the Germans.
And because of that point, it's very hard for them, actually,
to pardon her.
I know this sounds like
I'm massively teamed Teuton.
Again.
The German military code, Tom,
is very clear.
I don't know how familiar you are with that.
They're only obeying orders.
Well, the penalty for her crime, right,
in the code is death.
And section, you asked about her being foreign.
I don't know how familiar you are
with section 160 of the German military code,
but this explicitly says
that in time of war,
the penalties will apply
to foreigners as well as to German military.
and nationals. Now, you might not want to take this unwelcome news from me, but surely you would
take it from Sir Horace Rowland of the Foreign Office, because Sir Horace Rowland, as we know now from
the classified files, wrote about this day's colleagues and said, she's in a mess and was nothing
we can do to save her. I am afraid it is likely to go hard with Ms. Cavill. I'm afraid we are
powerless. Now, he's right, because, you know, given the legal framework, conviction is a foregone
conclusion and a couple of days later on the afternoon of Monday the 11th of October the
sentences are handed down so nine people are found guilty four of them are sentenced to hard labor
five of them as condemned to death and the people who are condemned to death are edith
cavil this bloke balk the architect the school teacher tullier who was helping him and two other people
i mean the princess gets off doesn't she she gets off exactly and she then pops up in the second
world war doing exactly the same thing she's a very impressive
woman. You can't get enough for it. Tullier, the school teacher and two of the others are given reprieves,
but Philippe Bocke and Edith Cavill are seen as the worst offenders. Edith, because she has confessed
and made such a sort of, she's made no secret about what she's done. And she's unrepentant. And she's
unrepentant. And as a result of this, she is sentenced to death by firing squad. And the
German military commander in Brussels, who has the excellent name, General Traugott von Saubitzweig,
he says, I want the sentence carried out straight away, because otherwise there's going to be a
massive hullabaloo. Like, come on, we're not going to have a massive faff and a back and forth about this.
Let's just get this done. So that very night, 11 October, the German Lutheran chaplain of the prison,
who's called Paul Lassur, who you quoted at the beginning, he comes to see Edith, and he says to her,
you're going to be shot at dawn.
And he describes it.
For one moment her cheeks were flushed
and a moist film passed over her eyes,
but only for a few seconds.
I offered her my services as a pastor,
and I stated that I was at her disposal
at any hour of the day and night,
but she declined it politely, but definitely.
And then this bloke, Le Sur, says to her,
can I not offer you some kindness?
Please do not see me now the German,
but only the servant of our Lord and Savior
who places himself entirely at your disposal.
And she says, well, okay, fine.
Could you get word of what's happened to my mother?
My mother is 80 and she's back in Norwich.
And I don't want my mum to hear about this in the newspapers.
And he says, I will.
And actually he says in his account, I kept my promise.
I don't know how they, they must have sent a message somehow to the British.
Telegram or something.
Yeah, exactly.
And then he makes a pretty big offer to her, I think.
He says, I know that you're, you know, very pious and you're a big Christian.
And I know you'll want to take communion before you die.
But I know you also will find it difficult.
If it's coming from, and this is from his account,
a German in the uniform which she doubtless hated.
And he says, I know the Anglican chaplain in Brussels,
who you also know, who's a guy called Reverend Sterling Gahan,
and I'll bring him to your cell.
And he says, her eyes lighted up and with great joy she accepted.
I mean, I've got to say everyone is behaving very well.
Exactly.
And this bloke, the Reverend Sterling Gahan,
He arrives later that evening.
He already knew her.
The German authorities said, fine, you know, you can come.
He finds this very, very emotional.
To my astonishment and relief, I found my friend perfectly calm and resigned.
But this could not lessen the tenderness and intensity of Phileon either part.
And she says to this bloke,
please tell all my friends that I willingly gave my life for my country.
I have seen death so often it's not strange or fearful to me.
And then some very famous lines, which end up being on their statue.
They have all been very kind to me here, but this I would say, standing as I do in view of God and eternity, I realize that patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. And then they pray, they take communion together. And they talk quietly until the guards tell him, it's time to go. He says later, I said goodbye, and she smiled and said, we shall meet again. And then when he's gone, she writes a farewell letter to her nurses, very moving letter, actually.
When better days come, our work will again grow and resume all its power for doing good.
I told you that devotion would bring you true happiness and that the thought that before God
you've done your duty well and with a good heart will sustain you in the hard moments of life
and in the face of death. I may have been strict, but I have loved you more than you can know.
Oh, very sad. Now overnight, while she's doing all this, there is a chance of a lifeline.
And this comes from the Americans. People who listened to the last episode will
recall that despite the sinking of the Lusitania, the Americans have still not entered the war,
and the Germans are keen not to antagonize them. And the US ambassador in Brussels, of course he has a
US ambassador's name. He is called Brand Whitlock. And Brand Whitlock sends the German
Governor General a note asking him for mercy. And he says her career, Ms. Cavill's career as a
servant of humanity is such as to inspire the greatest sympathy.
and to call for pardon.
And Brand Whitlock, he's actually ill that evening.
He can't be bothered to go himself.
So he sends a delegation from the US embassy
and indeed some Spaniards, who are also neutral.
And they go to see the governor.
And at the head of this is a diplomat called Hugh Gibson,
American diplomat.
And he says,
we reminded him of the burning of Louvre
and of the sinking of the Lucitania.
And we told him, this is the German governor,
that this murder would rank with those two affairs
and would stir all civilized countries
with horror and discerting.
And one day a podcast series will do them in succession.
Exactly as we did.
And at that, one of the German officials, he's called Count Harach interrupts.
And he says, hold on, hold on.
I would rather see Miss Cavill shot than see any harm come to the humblest German soldier.
My only regret is that we don't have three or four more old English women to shoot.
Well, they've got Miss Wilkins.
Yeah, they could shoot.
Why aren't they shooting Miss Wilkins?
Yeah, she's the one that got away, no?
She is.
The Americans were really shocked by this.
So this book, Gibson went back and raised it down and said,
which is terrible form from the Germans.
Is it a joke?
I think it's obviously a joke.
It's German banter.
Very Farnarian quip.
It's Farnarian banter.
Plus, the Germans have been woken up at like one in the morning
by this group of people who aren't even in the war.
I think this bloke's just like, come on, leave us alone.
We're just, you know, we're not following orders.
they're just following the German military code.
Yeah, I'm glad that's very clear.
Yeah.
So now we come to the early hours at the 12th of October.
And there are different accounts to what happened,
but the most reliable is from that Lutheran pastor, Paul the Sir.
It's very evocative.
And that scene that you described,
so he goes to the prison.
She's been kneeling at her table, he's told.
She's been kneeling in prayer.
And he goes into the cell.
And she's packed up all her stuff.
And there's just a little sort of flame burning gas flame.
And she's got ready.
The two of them go out of the cell,
and they walk through the silent corridors of the prison,
the scene that you described at the beginning.
The Belgian prison guards have all lined up to sort of wish her well.
And as Le Ser says, they greeted her silently with the highest respect.
They get into a car, and then the Catholic chaplain comes out to the prison with Philippe Boug.
He gets into a car.
He also behaves spendedly.
Philippe Bogue, he says to all the German sentience in Dutch,
He says, let us bear no grudge.
And then he gets into the car and they drive off.
And they drive to the Tien Nacional, which is the national shooting range,
which is where the Germans usually hold their executions.
And there, a company of 250 German soldiers is lined up, waiting for them.
They present arms.
Edith and this architect Bulk are led to the front.
And the sentences are read out in French and German.
Bulk cries out at this point.
He says, comrades in the presence of death, we are all comrades.
And then someone says, pipe down, you know, stop talking.
Le Sur, the Lutheran, is allowed a last word with Edith.
And he so presses her hand.
And he says to her in English,
The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God
and the communion of the Holy Ghost be with you forever.
Amen.
And she says, ask Mr. Gahan to tell my loved ones later
that my soul, as I believe, is safe.
And that I'm glad to die for my country.
And then she's led to the pole.
She's loosely tied to this pole,
a bandage is put over her eyes
which the sir says
as the soldier who put it on told me
were full of tears
and then a few seconds passed
which appeared to me like eternity
immediately the sharp commands were given
two salvos crashed at the same time
each of eight men at a distance of six paces
and the two condemned persons sank to the ground
without a sound
now that makes it sound as that it's all very clean
and very clinical but actually that's not the case
Lassar goes on to say
My eyes were fixed exclusively on Miss Cavill
And what they now saw was terrible
With a face streaming with blood
One shot had gone through her forehead
Miss Cavill had sunk down forwards
But three times she raised herself up
Without a sound with a hands stretched upwards
And he runs forward with the doctor
And the doctor says to him
Don't worry
These are just the sort of last automatic reflexes
Before death
And then she does die
And Lassir said
the bullet holes as large as a fist in the back,
proved without any doubt that she was killed immediately.
I only mention this fact because untrue rumours have been connected with it.
We will come back to these rumours, so keep these rumours in your heads.
Then a few minutes later, he says the coffins were lowered into the graves,
and I prayed over Edith Cavill's grave,
and I invoked the Lord's blessing over her poor corpse.
Then I went home, almost sick in my soul.
So this is just one death, or two deaths, if you include,
the architect against the backdrop of a war in which thousands of people are dying every month
in the western and eastern fronts but it becomes a massive story on both sides of the atlantic
because edith cavil has turned immediately into a martyr into an innocent victim of german barbarism
so to quote sir arthur conan doyle who is very enthusiastically pouring out propaganda for the
british government at this point everybody must feel disgusted at the barbarous actions of the german soldier
in murdering this great and glorious specimen of womanhood.
The New York Herald.
The official report received today will cause a wave of horror to sweep over the world
at the thought of the possibility of a nation which will perpetrate such a terrible thing
succeeding in this war and dominating Europe.
And basically the newspaper goes on to say,
you know, the thought of the Germans winning must be complete anathema to any democratic American,
having read this story.
And the funny thing, of course, is that no.
Nobody up to this point had ever heard of either Covell.
It's not like she's a celebrity or something.
But in the way that works brilliantly, because it means that she's a blank slate and people
can project onto her this sort of idealised portrait of a kind of Christian womanhood.
She's a nurse.
So her kind of white, wheat uniform and the red cross on it and perfect.
Exactly.
So the British War Propaganda Bureau, which was operating to spread the word in America,
takes her story and it puts it alongside the Belgian atrocities
and the Lusitania in the sort of chamber of horrors of German crimes
and the newspapers, both in America and Britain,
print ever more lurid accounts of her final moments.
So this is what Lassir was talking about when he said
about untrue rumours.
So there were stories that German soldiers refused to fire on her
and that the officers had to do it.
Or the most common story, that she'd fainted,
before the firing squad, and then an officer stood over her with his revolver pressed against
her head and basically blew her brains out.
I mean, this is not true, but it becomes, again, a little bit like the stories that we talked
about last time about German school children being given the day off to celebrate the
Sinkie of the Lusitania.
It becomes a widely accepted urban legend.
And you can find, you know, you can see them online, loads of examples of posters and
postcards about the execution of Edith Cavill.
They always show her in a nurse's uniform, which she would not have worn at the execution, marked with a big red cross.
It does seem like the Lusitania in that you can see the military justification for it, if that is your perspective.
But it just seems insane to have done it.
Of course.
Insensitive.
It's not just insensitive.
I mean, it's worse than a crime.
It's a mistake.
Yeah, I think that's fair.
You know, you were shooting a nurse.
It's just mad.
Yeah, it is mad.
I mean, one last thing about the propaganda,
interestingly, the pictures always show her as young.
Yeah, and she's what, 49 or something?
Exactly.
So they always show her as young, maidenly, beautiful, you know,
and the fact that she was unknown meant to Cece to do that.
But also it's feeding into all those images that we were talking about earlier
of the kind of Simeon hum holding the kind of the maiden who has fainted
and is dressed in flowing white robe.
I mean, it's tapping into all of that.
But just on your thing about it being mistaken, Tom,
there is a counter argument to that, and this is as follows.
The German position at the time is,
this person is very, very clearly guilty.
There's no question of that.
And she confessed.
And their argument is this.
We have issued a lot of public proclamations telling people
that to help enemy soldiers escape is a crime punishable by death.
She knew this,
and one of the things that actually really condemned her was in court.
They said to her, did you know this?
Now, if she'd been sensible, she would have said,
I didn't actually know that it was a crime punishable by death?
Because some people did say that and they got off.
She said, yeah, I knew that perfectly well, but I did it anyway.
And at that point, they were like, oh, come on.
Now, the issue about her being a woman, right,
because this is the main thing, the fact that she's a woman.
It's not even the fact that she's a nurse.
the fact that she's a woman.
I think the fact that she's a nurse is massive.
Of course.
I know that,
but the Germans debated this internally.
We know that they debated this.
Should we let her off because she's a woman?
And their argument was,
well,
no,
our legal code makes no distinction between men and women.
That's not how the law works.
So this is a guy,
Alfred Zimmerman,
not the Zimmerman from the Zimmerman Telegram,
but another Zimmerman,
who was the Undersecretary for Foreign Affairs,
and he was briefing the press.
He said, it was a pity that Miss Cavill had to be executed, but it was necessary.
She was judged justly.
It's undoubtedly a terrible thing that a woman has been executed.
But consider what would happen to a state, particularly in war, if it left crimes aimed at the safety of its armies to go unpunished because they were committed by women.
Yeah, I understand that.
But I still think that you have to weigh, you know, if you're in the German high command, you have to weigh up, you know, which is the worst.
And I think you could, you know, send it a prison, whatever.
Yeah, I agree. I mean, deep down, I agree with you, of course.
It's a deep error, I think.
It's a political mistake rather than a moral mistake, I would say.
And it kind of reinforces the possibility that she knew what she was doing and she was consciously
marty herself.
Yeah, quite possibly.
I mean, all through the 20th century, the perception of her in Britain was as a sort of saintly martyr.
But actually, in the last, I don't know, 30, 40 years, the perception has slightly begun
to change.
So in 2015, Stella Rimmington, who used to run MI5, did a documentary on Radio 4.
looking at the, they went into the Belgian archives
and it looks as though
some of the fugitives that she was helping
were carrying information about trench systems
and munitions dumps and things like this.
Whether she knew about that is unclear
but there was definitely an espionage dimension
to the story which is still very murky
but it doesn't undermine her courage or anything like that
but perhaps it slightly strengthens the case
that the Germans, you know, didn't have that much choice.
And the other interesting thing I always think about it is that her, you know,
that what's written on the statue, patriotism is not enough.
This implies that she is a Christian heroine whose story kind of transcends the war
and the rivalry between nations.
But actually her last words to Paul the Sir,
I'm glad to die for my country.
There's a slight tension there, I think.
I don't think she would have necessarily recognized the tension herself.
of course, because she would have thought that her Christian duty and her country were the same thing because, you know, God was on Britain's side.
But I think there is a slight, not contradiction exactly. On the one hand, she says patriotism is not enough.
But on the other hand, she's doing this for Britain. So which is it? You know, you're doing it for the world or for Britain?
Well, I suppose she would say, I love my country, but I have no hard feeling against the country that's going to, you know, it's like the beginning when she sees the joke.
Germans, he says, oh, how sad that they're very tired, but equally they are invaders.
She was a tremendous cacist, no?
I mean, that would be an unsympathetic way of framing.
I'm never unsympathetic.
Anyway, what happened to her?
So she was buried at the prison initially under a plain wooden cross, but in 1919, when the war
was over, her body was brought back to Britain, a great honour.
And they had a memorial service at Westminster Abbey for her, attended by Queen Alexandra
and lots of bigwigs.
and then she was re-interred at Norwich Cathedral.
And in 1920, the statue, which you can see today, went up just off Trafalgar Square,
with the message,
Patriotism is not enough, I must have no hatred or bitterness for anyone.
Very similar message on the memorial unveiled in Melbourne, Australia, six years later.
And then you have all of these hospitals and schools and streets all over the world.
And actually, I think there's a case that she's more famous in Belgium and even France
than in Britain.
So I don't know whether you followed Tom,
the competition in 2005.
Les plus grand Belge,
the greatest Belgians.
So this was a big public vote in Belgium
to decide the greatest ever Belgians in history.
Did you follow this?
Who won?
I think it was some form of none.
Not King Leopold.
Do you know, he actually did quite well.
I think he...
Would you be allowed to have a Burgundian painter
or something?
Okay, we could forward out a massive rabbit hole
here. It's bizarrely interesting. So they held different versions of the program in different
languages. French and Flemish. So the bloke who won in the German speaking and
Flemish speaking bits of Belgium was a guy called Father Damien, who's some form of missionary,
Victorian missionary. Loads of people that I don't recognize at all. But one of them is Edith
Cavill. Edith Cavill. She came 48th. That's not bad, considering she's not
Belgian. I mean, she did well. She came ahead of the tennis player, Kim Kleisters. She came
ahead of Brogel. Well, I mean, it's an instance of our insularity in Britain, isn't it,
that in the 100 Greatest Britons, we didn't have a Belgian?
Urquil-Poero, no? Did we not have Urquil-Poero? No, I don't think we did.
So I said that she's very famous in Belgium, and what about France? Well, she's actually
incredibly famous in France, but in an indirect way. So, two months after she was shot on the
19th of December, 1915, a baby girl was born at the Opital Ternou in Paris. And this girl's
father was a circus performer and her mother was a cabaret singer and kind of performer as well.
And they had clearly been reading about the Edith Cavill case in the French newspapers. I mean,
it was a big story in France. Because even though the name Edith was at that point pretty unknown
in France, these two people chose it for their baby. And their baby, and their baby,
was Edith Giovanna Gassion, but Tom, we know her better by her stage name, Edith Piaf.
Can I just mention one other instance of her celebrity in France, which I think is fascinating
because it also demonstrates the consciousness that the Germans had of the damage that her
story had done to Germany's reputation. And this relates to Hitler's visit to Paris in the wake
of the fall of France in 1940.
You know, and he's a tourist.
He goes to the Eiffel Tower and Napoleon's tomb and all of that.
But he specifically orders the destruction of two monuments.
And one is to a general who had fought against the Germans in the First World War by the name of
Charlemagne.
And he had occupied the Rhineland in 1918.
And among the troops under his command had been Senegalese soldiers, so black soldiers.
and the story was among Germans that he had licensed these soldiers to rape German women
and had said that basically German women weren't good enough for his black soldiers.
And the statue to him in Paris showed him with a kind of a guard of honor formed up of Senegalese soldiers.
So you could see why Hitler would want that destroyed because it's a French statue celebrating French
aggression, as Hitler would see it, against Germany, you know, occupying the Rhineland.
There's the sense of the injustice of Versailles that he's there as, you know, in the wake of the armistice.
And also Hitler is obviously obsessed by the whole notion of miscegenation.
So he, he's an obvious baddie.
And so Hitler duly orders it to be destroyed and it's blown up.
And the other statue that he orders destroyed is of Edith Carvon.
and clearly her story is as offensive to him as the war record of this French general.
And it's a kind of amazing demonstration of how haunted by this story in the wake of the First World War, even Nazis were.
They wanted to erase all memory of it.
So interesting. So interesting.
Well, anyway, if you want to go and commune with her spirit, you can go to the statue in London.
or indeed in Melbourne, I suppose, or go to one of the streets named after her.
Or, I suppose, indirectly, you could listen to a song by Edith Piaf.
But next week, we will be going east.
We will be turning our attention to the Ottoman Empire, to the Straits of Constantinople,
and to one of the greatest military disasters of modern history.
And this is a story with a really tremendous cast.
So you've got Winston Churchill, you've got Clement Attlee, you've got Mustafa Kemal Ataturk,
and we welcome onto the show thousands upon thousands of Oswald.
Australians and New Zealanders, because great to have the Anzaks, as people no doubt said at the time, in the streets of Istanbul, because this is the story, the long-awaited story of the Allied attempt to seize Gallipoli.
Thank you, Dominic.
And listeners to The Rested History Club, of course, can hear both of them right now.
And to hear them and to get the full range of benefits that come with this sensational offer of membership, go to the Restit History.com.
Thank you, Dominic.
Ovo, everyone. See you soon.
Au-voir.
Hi, everybody.
We are back with another absolutely colossal update about the rest is history festival.
Well, it's massive.
So on the 4th and 5th of July, we will be at Hampton Court Palace.
We have a weekend of brilliant talks, live music, exclusive access to historic Royal Palace's collections.
And yes, Dominic, most exciting of all, this is the thing I have been pushing for.
And I'm so looking forward to it.
We have medieval combat, a terrifying, brutal, yet completely thrilling sport.
It is going to be an unforgettable two days.
It is indeed.
And at the core of the festival of these talks, we've got some more talks to add to the lineup.
So I will be talking to the brilliant Tudor historian Tracy Borman about the secrets of the six wives of Henry VIII.
I'll be talking to a friend of the show in Irish National Treasure, Paul Rouse, about whether there is an alternative.
universe in which islands could have remained part of the United Kingdom. We'll be talking to
Katja Hoyer about Weimar Germany and in particular the town of Weimar through history. And
Professor Adam Smith will be telling the story of America through three presidents. And on top of all
that, I'll be doing a special event with Ian Hizlop about the history of satire. And I will be on
stage with Mary Beard and we will be talking about just how strange, just how alien, just how
different to us Rome was or maybe it wasn't. I will be talking to Helen Castor about Elizabeth
the first and we'll be discussing whether she truly was England's greatest ruler or maybe whether
that title should still be claimed by Athelstan. I will be talking to Ali Ansari about
all things Persian with Dan Jackson about the pit of death. And I will be talking to
who, friend of the show, Willie Dalrymple, about the links between ancient India and Greece and Rome.
Absolutely incredible scenes.
And of course, on both days, Tom and I will be on stage doing a show together as well.
So on the first day, we'll be answering all our club members' questions.
And then to close the festival, we will do a definitive ranking of the all-time top friends of the show.
So lots to look forward to.
And beyond that, there is so much else that will be happening.
across the weekend. So think of it as the ultimate summer history hangout. And your tickets will
give you full access to explore the great Tudor Palace of Hampton Court and indeed the Royal
Tennis Court. So that would be very exciting. There'll be food and drink fit for a king,
which sounds very enticing. I picture the very glamorous people that are our club members
and their summer garb. They're on the lawn at Hampton Court Palace. They're chatting about
history and delightful surroundings, sipping on a refreshing gin and tonic.
And it's probably the most civilized festival there's ever been.
I mean, that's what I imagine anyway.
Just a reminder, the tickets are exclusive to club members.
And if you are not a member, now is the perfect time to join.
So head over to the rest ishistory.com to sign up and grab your tickets and, of course,
have access to a whole range of supplementary benefits.
Once you have signed up to the rest of history.com, all you do then is log into the members area and you select festival and it's all very obvious.
But you know what? There is a twist. If you do this, you will be entered into a genuinely unbelievable prize draw.
And that prize draw, if you win, you and three other people, it's like the golden tickets in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, because you will be given the chance to be upgraded to the premium.
And the premium experience will give you, among other things,
unlimited food and drink for free all day.
Do not miss it.
Can't wait to see you there.
