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cover of episode 545. The French Revolution: The First Feminist (Part 2)

545. The French Revolution: The First Feminist (Part 2)

2025/3/6
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The Rest Is History

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多米尼克
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主持著名true crime播客《Crime Junkie》的播音员和创始人。
汤姆
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汤姆:玛丽安娜作为法国共和国的象征,代表着自由、平等、博爱等核心价值观。她的形象出现在1792年夏秋之际,当时普鲁士军队正在逼近巴黎,她成为法国新的象征,与马赛曲的出现同时,体现了革命时期乐观与希望并存的复杂性。玛丽安娜的形象是古典的,体现了法国革命者对罗马的影响,她是一个抽象的象征,人们可以将各种期望投射到她身上。玛丽安娜既不是基督教的圣母,也不是世俗的王后,更不是玛丽·安托瓦内特,她的阶级属性不明确,不代表法国任何特定群体,具有普遍性。 然而,玛丽安娜的形象是否对经历法国大革命的女性有共鸣?这值得我们深思。虽然女性在革命中扮演了重要角色,例如参加凡尔赛宫妇女进军,但大多数女性革命者的名字并未流传下来。马拉等革命者将女性描绘成受某种激励力量驱使的大众,而非个体。巴黎的女性是革命活动的积极旁观者,她们经常出席公开会议,但她们通常不被允许参与公共辩论。罗兰夫人是革命中具有实际政治影响力的女性,她经营着革命沙龙,对革命活动施加影响,但她也并不认为女性应该参与公共政治。 奥兰普·德·古热是一位重要的女性权利倡导者,她对法国大革命持有独特的观点。她揭示了革命的虚伪性:如果男性拥有权利,女性为什么没有?她发表了《妇女和女公民权利宣言》,呼吁女性享有平等权利,这在当时具有革命性。 多米尼克:法国大革命实现了接近现代民主理想的全民男性普选,玛丽安娜成为其象征。然而,我认为并非每个人都应该拥有投票权。法国大革命实现了几乎全民男性普选,这在当时是具有开创性的。女性也积极参与了革命,例如无套裤汉中的女性。由于女性在1789年将国王和王后从凡尔赛带回巴黎以及1792年攻占杜乐丽宫中的作用,她们被尊为“民族之母”。 然而,与男性革命者不同,大多数女性革命者的名字并未流传下来。马拉将女性描绘成受某种激励力量驱使的大众,而非个体。巴黎的女性是革命活动的积极旁观者,她们经常出席公开会议。罗伯斯庇尔因其古典风格的形象而受到女性的喜爱。罗兰夫人是革命中具有实际政治影响力的女性,她经营着革命沙龙,对革命活动施加影响,但她不认为女性应该参与公共政治,她痛恨玛丽·安托瓦内特,认为她是国王和政治的坏影响。罗兰夫人成为山岳派的目标,被描绘成唠叨、依附丈夫的女性。山岳派,即那些最致力于自由、平等和博爱理想的人,最容易将女性对革命的领导作用视为反革命的。他们认同古希腊和罗马的价值观,反对女性参与政治。 特雷兹·德·梅里库尔是一位激进的女性革命者,她因被奥地利特工逮捕而声名鹊起,她试图建立妇女俱乐部,但未能成功,这反映了当时女性参与政治的困境。她试图组建妇女营,但遭到拒绝,这体现了当时社会对女性参与战争的矛盾态度。保利娜·莱昂的请愿书呼吁女性参与战争,但被立法议会忽视。奥兰普·德·古热对1791年法国宪法中没有赋予女性权利感到震惊,她发表了《妇女权利宣言》,呼吁女性享有平等权利,但她的观点大多遭到嘲笑或蔑视,这反映了当时社会观念的根深蒂固。

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The symbol of Marianne emerged during the French Revolution as an embodiment of liberty, equality, and fraternity. Initially depicted as a woman with a Phrygian cap, she represented Republican ideals and became a significant national emblem.
  • Marianne symbolizes the French Republic's values: liberty, equality, and fraternity.
  • The symbol emerged during the summer and autumn of 1792.
  • The Phrygian cap is a key feature of Marianne's iconography.
  • Marianne gradually became a universal symbol of liberty in the 19th century.

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exactly what kind of a lawyer i am

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Marianne is the embodiment of the French Republic. Marianne represents the permanent values that found her citizens' attachment to the Republic, liberty, equality, fraternity. The earliest representation of a woman wearing a Phrygian cap, an allegorical figure of liberty and the Republic, made their appearance at the time of the French Revolution.

The origins of the name Marianne are uncertain. Marianne was a very common first name in the 18th century, and she thus came to represent the people. The counter-revolutionaries used the name derisively when referring to the Republic. So, Tom, that was the website of the Élysée Palace talking about the great symbol of the French Republic.

So this is a symbol that emerges at the point that we've just got to in the great narrative of the French Revolution, the summer and autumn of 1792. We heard last time about the terrible September massacres that took place as the Prussians were advancing on Paris. And

And it's, of course, at this point that people are singing the Marseillaise, the marching song of the Army of the Rhine that has swept through the capital. But it's also at this point that people alight upon a new symbol of France, which is this figure of Marianne. Marianne, who is this woman wearing the Phrygian cap, the liberty cap.

long flowing hair will become the emblem of France itself. I think it's really striking that two of the emblematic embodiments of modern France, the Marseillaise, its national anthem, and the figure of Marianne, the embodiment of France herself,

emerging precisely these months, the summer going into the autumn of 1792. And I guess the previous episode that we did where we looked at the September massacres, I mean, it didn't really portray the revolution in a great light, did it? I mean, if we're absolutely honest. Not the best light, no. But I think this kind of reminds us that even while people are being dragged out of prisons and hacked to death, there is also a

an absolutely invigorating and inspiring sense of optimism and hope that is inspiring terrible deeds, yes, but also it's rallying people to the barricades and it's giving people dreams of a better future. A future in which all of the people of France will have a stake.

So you mentioned at the end of the last episode, you left us with this absolute cliffhanger that the Prussians are advancing on Paris. But you also talked about how there is this new political settlement. There's this national convention and elections are…

are being held to it. And you said, you know, if the Prussians break into Paris, then maybe the convention will never even meet. A spoiler alert, the Prussians don't end up meeting, advancing on Paris for reasons that we'll discuss in the next episode. And the national convention does meet. And

And it meets on the 20th of September. And the deputies who are going there, they're all going to the Tuileries, where the royal family had previously been based, until the massacre of their guards and their removal to what ultimately is their prison. So this is now at the centre of the convention, which is...

an expression of, in a way, popular sovereignty. What is striking about this, and it's not just in the French context, but in the context of the whole of global history, is that this is a near universal suffrage for men. There

There are no distinctions of class. There are no distinctions of property. People may remember back in the mists of time that we talked about. Originally, there was this idea of active and passive citizens, weren't there? That active citizens, you had to have certain property qualifications. You couldn't have certain professions. All that has gone. All males, basically over the age of 21, now have the vote. And I think this is a kind of noble and inspiring thing.

moment in history no matter what your views on the revolution might be Dominic would you disagree with that or not I mean maybe don't you think I would yeah I don't find it inspiring at all

Well, I don't think everybody should have the vote. So that's the difference between me and the French revolutionaries. So who do you think should not have the vote? I probably wouldn't give it to anybody, but I'd definitely raise the age thing. I think probably 30, 40. And also property. I think you need to be a property. You need to own property, don't you? Fine. Okay. The voice of John Bull. Otherwise you've got no stake in the system. I think you know that you are just teasing.

I'm sure you are a Democrat. Tom, that has thrown you so much. You don't know. I can't believe you. I don't really know. I don't think I've ever seen you. I don't really know how to reply to that.

Come on. This is universal suffrage. This is democracy in action. It's the closest to the modern ideal of democracy that we have. It's an ideal that Britain now cleaves to. So in that sense, you could say that Britain is inspired by this example as well. And Marianne kind of becomes the symbol of it. And the reason for that is the motion that is brought before the deputies the day after they meet on the 20th of September, on the 21st of September, when they essentially vote to abolish

monarchy. Royalty shall be abolished in France is the motion. And this is where the woman who comes to be called Marianne is introduced. Because again, to quote from the Elysee Palace, Marianne is the embodiment of the French Republic. And so how does it come about? How does this woman appear? How does she come to be called Marianne? It's actually not until the middle of the 19th century that she's kind of universally called Marianne. But the Elysee Palace thing that I read at the beginning is wrong.

I am. Am I not right in thinking that we know better than the Elysee Palace? Go on. So the Elysee Palace said, you know, who knows where the name comes from? We know precisely where the name comes from. The name comes from this poem that is written in, I think, October, is it? October 1792? To mark the founding of the Republic. And interestingly...

The poem is not in French. I mean, that's what makes it so fascinating. Yeah. So it's by a guy called Guillaume Lavabre, who is writing in Languedoc. And he writes this poem called La guérison de Marianne, The Healing of Marianne in French. And in that poem, Marianne is clearly an embodiment of the new republic that's been proclaimed. And this is the first equation of the republic with a woman called Marianne.

But unlike the Marseillaise, it doesn't really spread because it's not as accessible. And it takes a long, long time for that equation to kind of spread. As I said, it's not really until the 19th century. And so originally the figure of France as a woman, she's not called Marianne. She is very clearly liberty and specifically Republican liberty. And the emergence of an image of France as a,

a woman who embodies liberty. As we said, this is emerging at the same time as the Marseillaise is being enshrined as the national anthem. And so it's expressive of all the convulsions, all the excitements, all the kind of incredible process of change that these months in 1792 that we've been covering in the previous series and in this series are generating. And

She appears very precisely in the wake of the abolition of the monarchy when the royal seal, great golden seal of Louis XVI, is melted down and reconfigured. And on the new seal of the Republic, this is where liberty begins.

who will become Marianne, first appears. So the figure of liberty, this is, we've talked so much about the influence of the Romans in particular on the French revolutionaries. So this is a very obviously classical figure, basically a goddess holding the fasces with an ax.

and a Liberty cap. That's right, isn't it? So do you feel a bit of Athena about this figure maybe? Well, she's, I mean, she's Liberty. She's a classical abstraction given female form. And as with so much about the French revolution, it actually has its roots in the Ancien Regime. So the painters, um, illustrators had been showing Liberty as this kind of goddess in the years before the revolution breaks out. Um,

There's a particularly famous illustration in the book about Henry IV, who was the great hero of France before the revolution. He was seen as the people's king. This illustration shows him being carried up to heaven by liberty, by this goddess. This is allegorical illustrations and paintings that really have very little cut through, but it's kind of there on the margins.

And actually, I think you could say that the very value of liberty is that she is a kind of a bit of an empty cipher. She's a kind of an abstraction onto which you can project things. So Lynn Hunt, the great scholar of the kind of the culture of the French Revolution, particular interest in the role of women in the revolution.

She wrote about the figure of Liberty that she represented the virtue so desired by the new order, the transcendence of localism, superstition and particularity in the name of a more disciplined and universalistic worship. Liberty was an abstract quality based on reason. She belonged to no group, to no particular place. Which is another way of saying that the whole point of Liberty is that she's quite boring. She doesn't bring any baggage.

And it's important because, of course, the marketing of liberty is also a marketing of the Republic. And she's being stamped on the seal at the point where people don't really know what the Republic is about. What's it going to be? It doesn't have any of the attributes that a thousand-year-old monarchy has. It doesn't bring the inheritance of symbols that France, particularly Royal France, has been absolutely saturated in. And instead, she is...

She's kind of almost Robespierre. She's kind of chilly, poised, uptight, virtuous. And of course, there are the two obvious contrasts here. So even though she will come to be called Mary Anne, she's not Christian. She's not the virgin. She is a virgin who is not Christian. And I think that's, you know, as we will see in probably our next series.

what you do with Notre Dame, Our Lady, the Virgin, will be a pointed issue in due course for the revolution. So, Liberty Marianne is not the Virgin Mary. But of course, also, she's not an earthly queen. And more precisely, she is not Marie Antoinette. She is not an aristocratic woman. And generally, women who are paintings, images, they're from the aristocracy.

The whole point of Liberty is she is not. Right. She's classless, I suppose, isn't she? I mean, she's not defined by any... And because she's antique, she doesn't represent any particular group in contemporary France. She's universal. Exactly. Exactly.

And as you said, there are kind of obviously echoes of Athena, the Greek goddess of wisdom. So in due course, she comes to be shown wearing a helmet. She's shown kind of trampling down various monsters representing counter-revolution and monarchy or whatever. And

So pretty much within a year of her first appearance on the Great Seal of France, she's starting to become a bit more proactive. And of course, the classic expression of this isn't in this French Revolution, but in a later one in Delacroix's great painting of liberty leading the people. I'm sure people will have seen it later.

Liberty standing there in her Liberty cap, urging the revolutionaries on. And I think you get a kind of presentiment of that in the first revolution as well. But Dominic, I think there's a kind of interesting question about all this, that France, Liberty, the Republic, the revolution...

are all being imaged by this figure of a beautiful, slightly chilly woman. But what does it mean? I mean, does it have any resonance at all for the actual women who were living through the revolution? So we started the entire cycle of French Revolution series with a woman, with Marie Antoinette, and the extraordinary misogyny of the attacks on her. And then

Although virility, masculine friendship, martial virtue and all of that, these masculine ideas have mattered enormously to the ethos of the French Revolution. There have been moments, haven't there, when women have taken centre stage. So I think you did an episode about the women's march on Versailles, when the market women go and bring back the King and Marin Svernet. And the symbolism of it being the market women, I think is really important there, isn't it?

Yeah. And then, of course, you've got women who are prominent in the sans-culottes.

who are storming the Tuileries, who are shouting slogans in the streets. So it's not just a man's revolution by any means. Absolutely. So I think we talked before in the previous series about how the idea of the sans-culottes, the man who is wearing trousers rather than the breeches that is kind of the traditional markers of wealth and status, how important dress is. And there are...

There are female sans-culottes. You know, they're not wearing trousers, but they're wearing kind of coarse woolen skirts. And they're wearing the wooden clogs that are the markers of a sans-culotte. And they wear the carmagnole, this kind of jacket that has ultimately come from kind of revolutionaries in Italy. And...

Because of the role that they played in bringing the king and queen from Versailles to Paris back in 1789, and as you said, because of the role that they also play in helping the patriot heroes who stormed the Tuileries in the summer of 1792, they are enshrined as a group, as kind of mothers of the nation.

But I think there is a crucial difference between the way that women are portrayed in revolutionary propaganda and the way that men are. Because we've talked about revolutionary figures whose names continue to reverberate down. So everyone has heard of Robespierre or Marin or Desmoulins. These are individuals who kind of stand tall in the pages of history.

But women, by and large, don't. That is a trend that goes back to the revolution itself. We talked about Marat, who of course, in due course, will have a meeting with a woman who's not very keen on him in his bath. But before that, he was very proud of himself as a feminist. He marketed himself not just as the friend of the people, but specifically as the friend of women.

But when he writes about women, he never names individuals. It's always about the totality of women. They are a kind of a mass of humanity who are inspired by a kind of animating energy and animating emotional power. They're spontaneous. This is key to how the march on Versailles is portrayed.

They are not individuals. And in that way, they are kept safe. They're not intruding on the kind of masculine sphere. And this carries on even when they're not kind of marching on Versailles or attacking palaces or whatever, because women in Paris in particular, which is the cockpit of revolutionary activity,

they are very, very keen spectators. So the sense of particularly women from the markets, fishwives, as political junkies, is very, very strong. They're generally not allowed to contribute to the public debate itself, but they are given access to the galleries where spectators gather. They take up public seats at the convention when it meets. And

By and large, male revolutionaries are very appreciative of this. So there's one when it turns out that women are not being allowed in to watch a political session because too many people have gathered there. And one of the Jacobin deputies kind of posing like a Roman. It's exactly the kind of thing that you could imagine someone in the early pages of Livy or Plutarch saying.

He orders that more benches be brought in so that they can sit down. "These are mothers of families," he tells the other delegates, "they are worthy of ancient Rome." It may be because Robespierre in particular is so good at playing the Roman that he is a particular favourite of these women who come to cheer and support the various Jacobin deputies.

The fact that Robespierre, despite his kind of slight image of chilly asexuality, is an absolute heartthrob. I mean, you know, he has all these groupies. It's kind of noted by his enemies and causes them some degree of puzzlement, I think. But is it not because of that image, I would say, the chilliness and the... I think that is the draw, isn't it? The women think, I could be the one who melts everything.

The ice cold, incorruptible heart. But actually, we're just talking about women as spectators here watching men. But there are, well, we've had one woman in particular. So we talked about Marion Swinette, but on the side of the revolutionaries, we've had one woman in particular that we've mentioned a few times in the more recent episodes who actually is an actress.

An agent. She has genuine political influence. And that is Madame Roland. So tell me about Madame Roland.

So she is the wife of a Girondin minister, and she essentially is the archetype of the woman who runs a revolutionary salon. So the idea of a salon where movers and shakers meet up, discuss philosophy or current politics or whatever. Again, it's something that is inherited from the Ancien Régime. But Madame Royleau sets up the kind of the classic revolutionary salon, which

But she's not just a hostess. I mean, as you said, she is an actor. She, in a way, I mean, is much more forceful, much more dynamic, much more proactive than her husband. So she is the person who comes up with the idea of recruiting the federe from across France. These are the people who will come singing the Marseillaise from the south of France, for instance. So that's her idea. And

In the early months of 1792, as the royal constitution is starting to implode, she is writing letters left, right and centre. So she's writing letters to Brissot and his colleagues.

accusing them of being time wasters, of supporting the king when his regime is clearly on its uppers. She pushes her husband to support the suspension of the king. He'd been kind of hesitant about this. So she's very forceful. She has very strong opinions and she is able because of her position in the salon, because she has all these amazing connections to let her opinions be known. They have an impact.

But again, she does not herself think that women should play a role in kind of public politics.

So she doesn't invite other women to her salon. You know, it's hers and hers alone. That's very Margaret Thatcher, isn't it? It's how Margaret Thatcher ran her government. So Madame Roland, I don't think Mrs Thatcher would go this far, but she says women must inspire political endeavour yet without seeming to be contributing to it. And you mentioned Marie Antoinette. I think it's really striking. Madame Roland is very, very hostile to Marie Antoinette. And one of the reasons for this is that she condemns Marie Antoinette for...

being a malign influence on the king and therefore on politics generally. And so she condemns what she calls the faint rustling of silk behind the royal curtain. The idea that when Louis XVI is being attended by his ministers, Marie Antoinette is there kind of whispering from behind screens. And of course, the irony of that is that these are precisely the terms in which

many of her enemies, so Robespierre, Danton, the Montagnards, the people who opposed to the Girondins and Madame Rollins as Girondins, this is how they condemn her as someone who is kind of hiding behind a curtain, whispering. They literally say she is the new Madame de Pompadour. She is the new Madame du Barry. She is the overmighty female favourite who has corrupted and seduced the

this sort of slack-minded, gullible men who flock around her. I mean, she fits it basically into a standard demonology, doesn't she? She does. And it's to cast her husband as the new Louis XVI, kind of venal, pliable, emasculated. And over the course of that summer, as tensions between the Girondins and those who are kind of further to the left, you might put it like that,

She becomes a kind of hate figure for many of the sans-culottes. She's, I guess, what would she be? Kind of poly-toine-bee, perhaps. Right, that's the way that blue-collar Trump voters talked about Hillary Clinton, for example. Nagging. She's only got where she has because of her husband.

She's always telling us off and telling us what's good for us. All of that kind of thing. And I think that it actually, you know, her role and the things that are said about her and the misogyny that is directed at her, ironically kind of, you know, is drawing on the traditions of misogyny that had earlier condemned Marie Antoinette. It helps to polarise the political division between the Montagnards and the Girondins. And it's kind of striking that it is the Montagnards, those who are furthest left,

Those who are most committed to perhaps to the ideals of liberty, equality, and of course fraternity, brotherhood, not sisterhood, who are, I think, the readiest to see

female claims to a commanding role in the revolution as actually being counter-revolutionary and of course these you know on the furthest left the robespierre the marat so on these are the men who most identify with the model of antique virtue with spartans with kind of the romans of the early republic we know what the romans thought about women being involved in politics

They thought it was a terrible thing. Yes, because they saw the role, Spartans paradigmatically, saw the role of women to be wives and to be mothers. So in other words, women who are dedicated to the male citizen, their role is to serve them,

to enable them to do their patriotic duty and then to give them more sons who can continue to serve the Republic. This is very clearly drawing on Spartan and Roman ideals. It's an ideal that right from the beginning is there in all the festivals that are staged, in the rhetoric, all of that kind of thing. It leaves open the question, which I think we should maybe try and answer after a break. Are there actually

any women who are pushing for full political rights and if there are what is the response to them well the good news for people who like the rest is history is that there are such women because otherwise there would be no second half so return after the break and we will meet two of them see you then

Today's episode is brought to you by A Thousand Blows, the new original series premiering exclusively on Disney+. A Thousand Blows is inspired by the remarkable true life story of the infamous Mary Carpenter.

Carr, who led a notorious all-female London gang, the Forty Elephants. And as it's International Women's Day this week, we thought we'd talk about not necessarily the most notorious women in history, but some of the most remarkable ones, didn't we, Dominic?

We did indeed. So I don't know who yours is, Tom, but the person who we've talked about in the rest of history that I often think about is a young woman called Sophie Scholl, who grew up in Germany in the late 1930s, early 1940s. And she was a young woman of enormous sort of earnestness and kind of moral seriousness.

And she and her brother Hans joined and were key parts of an organization called the White Rose Group, which distributed pamphlets and leaflets across Germany attacking the crimes of the Third Reich. And as you'll remember, Tom, Sophie came to a very sad end.

that she and Hans were captured and they were interrogated and tried and executed by the Nazis. And the story of her in prison, in the Stadelheim prison, in the last hours before her death, and she's sort of praying and she's completely unapologetic about standing up against the horrors of Nazism, I think is one of the most inspirational stories in all history, not just in 20th century history. Yeah, such a remarkable young woman.

I've chosen a young woman who didn't die for liberty, but she was an extraordinary footballer or soccer player. If you're watching this in America, she's called Lily Parr. She was born in St. Helens in Lancashire in 1905. She was part of a huge family, lots of boys. And she, as a girl, loved playing rugby and particularly football.

And when the First World War hit Britain, men's football basically got cancelled. And so everyone started watching women's football instead. And Lily was an incredible, incredible player. So when she was 14, she got recruited to play for this munitions factory called Dick Kerr's. And she was only 14 and she scored, I think, something like 100 goals per

in her first season. And she played right the way through the First World War into the aftermath of the Second World War. She was famous for the brutality of her kicking. She said to have broken the leg of one man when she took a free kick. She broke another man's arm. And footballs then were really, really heavy. So for her to kick it, I mean, absolutely amazing.

What made her sporting ability even more remarkable is that she loved smoking and she was never seen without a woodbine between her teeth. And gradually her teeth all rotted and fell out. And in due course, the men who controlled football in England died.

got resentful of the fame of the female teams. And so they basically banned them from using the professional football grounds. Very sad. And so Lily retired and she became a nurse, but she was never forgotten. And she's now celebrated as one of England's not just greatest players,

sports women, but sports people of all time. And I think that she was the first woman to be inducted into English football's Hall of Fame. So, you know, I mean, she's not up there with Sophie Scholl, but she was a remarkable, remarkable woman.

It's brilliant, isn't it, Tom, that women's stories like these are being restored to their proper place in recent history. And that's one reason I'm looking forward to this new series so much. So this segment was brought to you by our friends at Disney+. So A Thousand Blows, that is a new original series, and it is streaming right now on Disney+, globally. And if you're watching this in the US, it is on Hulu.

This episode is brought to you by the Swedish clothing brand Asket. Asket was founded in 2015 to develop clothing that stands the test of time. And over the course of 10 years, they've built just one single permanent collection of 50 garments where every piece is under constant and relentless refinement. And while, Tom, they have just one permanent collection, they do offer three lengths for

for every regular size. So, for example, being normal, I'm a medium regular. But you, Tom, you're a large long, I believe. Like a Swedish berserker Viking king, actually, Dominic. Right. And I have to say, I really love their clothes. I have a black

hoodie that Sadie has essentially nicked off me. So that's my wife. And I think that when she nicks clothes, that's always a good sign. Well, I'm actually completely with you, Tom. I mean, my Asket cashmere sweater is a massive favourite of mine. And I love the fact, Tom, did you know this? That they work almost exclusively with natural materials and European craftsmanship. And the cherry on the cake...

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Welcome back to The Rest Is History. Before the break, Tom promised you, he said he'd got binders full of women who were pushing for full political rights. And actually, one of them is an old friend of the show. So a tremendous character who was very prominent in the Women's March on Versailles cut a very flamboyant figure, and that is Terroir de Merricourt. So she had kind of pistols in her belt. She looked a bit like a

She had a kind of... I don't know what. Adamant. Like Adamant, yeah. She looked like a new romantic. Exactly. She had a kind of liberty cap. She had a fancy hat. She's on a horse. Yeah.

cut scrape figure. But actually she then gets into a bit of a mess, doesn't she? Terrible scrape. Yeah. A scrape. Is that what it is? It's a scrape. So she's captured by Austrian agents. Tell us about that. Well, cause she's actually Belgian. So she's from Liege, which is under kind of Austrian ruled low countries. And May, 1790, she goes there very ill advisedly, you know, to catch up with all her old friends and she gets arrested by Austro-Hungarians.

Austrian agents put into prison. And the Austrians see this as a great coup because she's notorious as a kind of revolutionary Amazon. And so this is a great prize and they transport her all the way to Austria where she is, um,

kept in prison for months and months and she's finally released at the end of 1791 because rather sweetly her jailer has grown very fond of her she seems to have been a very charismatic person and the jailer had obviously developed a bit of a shine for her and so she then gets released and goes back to Paris and

And of course, her role in the Women's March has now been supplemented by the fact that she's been imprisoned by Austrian despots. I mean, you couldn't have a kind of better calling card, really. And so this gives her a stature among revolutionary men as a hero of the revolution that I think no other woman can rival, because she's been there. She's done the hard yards. She's got the notches in

in her escutcheon to show that she's really served the revolution. So even before her imprisonment, she had spoken at the Cordelier Club, which is the most radical of all the clubs. And after it, she's allowed to come and give an account of what she'd been getting up to in prison and everything at the Jacquemin Club itself. So, you know, these are very, very distinctive, almost kind of unprecedented markers of her status.

But I think the very taste of what it would be to be a kind of political player, to be not just a spectator at these clubs, but a participant, makes it all the more frustrating for her that women are essentially kept out of that, that they're not allowed to do it. And so she pursues a policy of trying to counter that. So she attempts to found women's only clubs, mixed clubs, but it doesn't work.

um and it largely doesn't work because women don't really seem to have wanted to participate in them and then in 1792 she gives up on the whole sit you know sitting around and talking because of course she's very much a woman for a pistol in a belt yeah and so with paris being threatened she agitates for a woman's battalion to be set up to help in the defense of paris and again this is turned down when the attack on the tuileries happens the the attack that that um

that results in the massacre of the Swiss guards. She's there. She's all over it. It's very much her scene kind of brandishing pistols again. And for this, she receives public honor, but I think that she remains an anomaly because she's taught between the traditional dimensions of the masculine and the feminine, the kind of the active and the domestic, the political and the person who stays at home fostering and looking after the,

the people who were engaged in politics, namely men. And in due course, as we will see, because we'll continue her story in subsequent episodes, this tension, it ends up destroying her. So just before you move on to the other person you want to talk about, there are other people who agree with her, other women who agree with her and say, especially when war is declared, they want to join the war effort. So there are two sisters called the Furnig sisters who,

took up arms in the defence of Valenciennes in the east of France. The general was so impressed by them he promised to put them in the line of fire at the first opportunity. And then there's a petition put up by an activist called Pauline Leon which was read out to the Legislative Assembly. So this is summer 1792. And

Our fathers, husbands and sons may perhaps be the victims of Erin and Miss Fury. Could we be forbidden the sweetness of avenging them or dying at their sides? You cannot refuse us. Society cannot deny us this right which is given us by nature unless it's claimed that the Declaration of Rights does not apply to women.

And the legislative assemblies, you know what it does? It just ignores them because people are embarrassed. And actually, in April 1793, the convention bans women, officially bans them from going into battle. But that issue of the Declaration of Rights brings us to the other great character that you're going to talk about today, who is a great favourite of mine. And her name is Olympe de Gouges. So tell us about her. I mean, I think you're absolutely right that there are women who,

who, listening to the revolutionary rhetoric, the talk about the rights of men, draw the logical conclusion and say, well, if men have rights, why don't women? And as you said, war seems to have been a particular focus for this. The idea that men should defend the country. If men can defend it, why not women?

And there are those who want to do that. But equally, the revolutionary authorities regard it as an embarrassment. They don't really want to give any encouragement to it. And that's why nothing really comes of it. There is no revolutionary battalion of Amazons defending the patrie on the barricades.

And it's left to one woman in particular to hammer home what I think clearly from our perspective seems a monstrous unfairness. And as you said, this is Olympe de Gouges, a woman who is becoming, I think, better known pretty much by the year, would you say? Yeah, better known now than she's ever been, I would say. And that is because more than anybody else in the revolution, she...

is exposing this key hypocrisy. If there are rights of men, then why not rights of women? And she is, I think, a very attractive figure. I mean, literally attractive. She's very charming, described in 1770 as one of Paris's prettiest women. But she's just also, her personality is very appealing. She's kind of witty. I mean, she seems fun. I think that's probably the best way to describe it. And

She's born in the Languedoc, but she comes to Paris in 1768 when she is 20 years old. And she does so initially as the mistress of a wealthy industrialist from Lyon.

There is all kinds of gossip in Paris that she is a courtesan. So there is a paper called La Correspondance who writes in 1770, so two years after her appearance in Paris, that she's born with a pretty face as her only heritage. She is known in Paris for sometimes solely through the favours with which she gratifies her compatriots. And one of these compatriots, it was rumoured, was Dominique, your old friend, the Duke of Orléans, Philippe VIII.

truly terrible man with whom she was supposed to have had an affair whether she had an affair with him or not she was definitely part of his circle and she goes to the Palais Real which people may remember is this kind of great complex of buildings in the centre of Paris owned by the Duke of Orléans which in the pre-revolutionary world was a kind of

place of free thinking. Anything could be published there. Anything could be said. And this is the world into which Olympe de Gouges moves, and she becomes a kind of leading contributor to it. She's fascinated by it. She is obsessed by all the ideas and the currents of conversation, the politics there. And what's amazing about this is that her background is actually unbelievably poor.

Um, she'd arrived in Paris, barely able to read or write. I mean, much debate among scholars as to whether she could read or write at all. And on top of that, French wasn't even her first language. She spoke Occitan. So she would have liked Marianne. Yeah, she would. Yeah, exactly. Her background is absolutely full of kind of the melodrama that you get in novels of this period. So the identity of her father is very mysterious. On the birth certificate says that she's the daughter of a butcher, but there's much

controversy about this. She liked to hint that she was the daughter of a Marquis. At times, she might even hint that she was the daughter of the King. So great kind of excitement and swirl of melodrama there. And she had then been forced into marriage at a very young age to a man she absolutely hated and who, again, in a very melodramatic way, drowned in a flood. And this is what enabled her then to reject any prospect of future marriage. She hated the

the institution of marriage condemned it as a form of slavery and to come to Paris. I mean, clearly as a kept woman, but maybe a courtesan as well. But she is very, very smart. And this woman who, when she arrived in Paris, could barely read or write, she very quickly becomes not just a kind of a participant in intellectual debate, but she becomes first of all, a novelist.

and then a playwright. So she writes her first novel in 1784, then gets very into the theatre. She becomes a friend of Sébastien Mercier, who we talked about in the previous episode, that playwright who came up with all the horrific details about the death of the Princess de Lamballe.

And her most famous play is called L'Esclavage des Noirs, The Slavery of the Blacks. It's a very ripe melodrama about a young girl being reunited with her long-lost father. So Olympe de Gouges is clearly working issues out there. But it is also very, very vehemently abolitionist. So she is hugely opposed to the slave trade. And...

The impact of this play is such that the slave trade lobby pay hecklers to go to the theatre and to shout it down.

And such is the kind of the uproar that this generates, that the play can only be staged for three nights and it has to be withdrawn, which is obviously on one level very bad for Olymp de Gouges. She wants the message to get out there. She's going to miss out on the money that she would otherwise have earned. But it does make her famous. It makes her a figure of fame.

prestige and status in the intellectual world of pre-revolutionary Paris. And by and large, I think it's fair to say that anyone who is a committed abolitionist before the revolution, when the revolution comes, is pretty much bound to be in favour of it.

Yeah, of course. And Olymp de Gouges is, she's a big fan of the revolution. But with caveats, right? Yeah, quite a kind of idiosyncratic take on it. So she always has a very soft spot for Louis XVI. And again, it may be this thing, she identifies with Louis XVI as a man who's unfortunate in his parents. Yeah. A bit like she was with her father. Or maybe she's really his daughter after all. Well, I think she was meant to be the daughter of Louis XVI.

Louis XV. Oh, right. So she's his... What does that make her? His... Step-sister. Yeah, step-sister. Yeah. Half-sister. Half-sister. Oh, no, it's too complicated. I can't work it out. But anyway, so she feels that Louis XVI has been dealt a very bad hand by his predecessors, by Louis XV and the people who had gone before. And so she wrote about him, an unhappier king than his ancestors. Is he to be made responsible for their mistakes? So right the way through...

Everything that follows the fall of the Bastille, right the way up to the flight to Varennes when Louis XVI and the royal family try to escape Paris and France. She's very, very, you know, always sticking up for him. When he makes his flight to Varennes, she's very, very disappointed in him. Yeah, understandably. She feels that, you know, he's let her down.

He's let France down, but worst of all, he's let himself down. But she still feels sorry for him. And I think that's reflective of the fact that above all, she has a big heart, Dominic. She feels the sufferings of others deeply. So whether it's the slaves in the Caribbean, whether it's the poor, whether it's the king, whether it's animals, she's a great animal lover. You know, she...

She feels compassion for them all. That's lovely. We love somebody with a big heart. So I think that this explains why she comes to feel as she does about the revolution, just as the king has let her down. So she feels that the revolution is letting her down. So people may remember, I can't even remember which episode it was now. We've done so many episodes on the revolution, but back in 1791,

France gets its first written constitution. This is the one that Louis XVI had been trying not to sign, and eventually he feels bulldozed into doing it. It passes into law on the 3rd of September 1791. Louis XVI accepts it ten days later. This is now the constitution that is going to govern France. This is the one that offers a measure of suffrage to men,

but not to women. And Olympe de Gouges is appalled by this. And she says, well, what about women? Why shouldn't women have the vote? Why shouldn't women have rights as well? Yeah.

And so 12 days later on the 15th of September, she, you know, she's, she's written this riposte and she publishes it. And it's called very pointedly the declaration of the rights of woman and of the female citizen. So it's an obvious parody of the declaration of the rights of man and the citizen. And, um,

It's a marker of her, again, idiosyncratic take on politics that she dedicates this to Marie Antoinette. It's the last person that you choose, right? If you were worried about your standing in revolutionary Paris. And it's simultaneously a kind of parody of revolutionary idealism.

But also, I think it's ultimate expression. Because by echoing the original Declaration, she's aiming to remind the world what it's missing. So, "Woman is born free and is equal to man in her rights." She's deliberately parodying the phrases of the Declaration of the Rights of Man.

And she is demanding that women share in all these rights, which of course includes suffrage. And she articulates this in a very famous way and one that looks forward notoriously to what is to happen in 1793, when she writes, woman has the right to climb onto the scaffold. She must equally have the right to climb onto the tribunal. So in other words, if she can be executed,

then she should have the right to govern the laws, to vote. Grimly ironic words. Very grimly ironic. Now, what is the response to this declaration of the rights of women? There are certainly revolutionaries who accept, male revolutionaries who accept its force. The most prominent of these is the erstwhile Marquis de Condorcet, who we met again recently.

ages ago. He's a philosopher, kind of enlightenment philosoph, very, very anti-Christian. He's an economist. He's very agitated by polluted rivers. And like Olympe de Gouges, he's a very committed abolitionist. So all reasons why he would be sympathetic to what she's arguing. And he absolutely supports female suffrage.

And I think it's not just a limp to gouge who is kind of influencing him on this. It's also his own wife, who is a very, very impressive woman called,

Sophie de Grouchy, who is sister of a guy who will in due course become one of Napoleon's most celebrated marshals, Emmanuel de Grouchy. Now, we've had quite a lot of relationships in this series and indeed in the rest of history generally, where the man is quite a lot older than the woman. So the age gap between Condorcet and Sophie is 20-30.

So she marries him when he's 22 and he's 42. But it's a very happy match. They're both philosophers. So you can imagine, you know, they have a lovely time sitting around discussing Diderot or Rousseau or whatever. And she's also a very skilled linguist. And Dominic, the tremendous news is that her best second language is English. Good for her. She translated Adam Smith. Yeah. Tremendous. And Thomas Paine. And Thomas Paine.

And she actually runs a salon. Unlike Madame Roland, she allows other women to come to her salon. Including Olympe de Gouges. So that's where they would all have met. Right, yeah. And the condos say they're not kind of card-carrying Girondins, but they're definitely aligned with them. And I think it's true to say that the Girondins are much more in favour of female participation in public life than the Montagnards. So even though Madame Roland, she's a Girondin, she's not...

It is a kind of part of intellectual discussion among Girondins Salon, and particularly Condorcet Salon, that perhaps there should be female suffrage. And so it's not surprising that Olympe de Gouges, I mean, she thinks the Girondins are great. She calls them torches of liberty. Théorne de Méricourt, she also aligns herself with the Girondins.

But in general, it has to be said that the reaction to the Declaration of the Rights of Women, when people can be bothered so much as to respond to it, is either hilarity or just utter contempt. And isn't it interesting that the more hardcore Jacobin, the Montagnards they call, Rob Spierre and his circle, people like that,

They're often among the most contemptuous and the most scornful. And you would think in other respects, I mean, it's a really good example, I guess, of what some listeners may say is the kind of the patriarchal attitudes, the misogyny, that in other respects, they are so democratic.

But on this issue, they say, women, are you joking? I mean, ha ha ha, women voting. Wouldn't that be a great, wouldn't that be a thing? Yeah. And these are the people who, of course, you know, they're all in favour of Saint-Colote wearing the Liberty cap, the Bonnet Rouge, and indeed of the female representative of the Republic, Liberty, the future Marianne wearing the Liberty cap, but not actual women.

They try and legislate to stop women from wearing it. And their justification for this, it's not just the Spartans, it's not just the Romans. There are also more recent influences of whom the main ones are Romanians.

are the philosophes, so Diderot, but particularly Rousseau. I mean, Rousseau has an incredible vein of hostility to any notion of female emancipation, of female suffrage. He wrote in his novel, which was a massive bestseller, La Nouvelle Héloïse, a brilliant wife is a plague to her husband, her children, her friends, her valet, everyone.

And Rousseau is such a massive influence on the way that particularly young male revolutionaries think that he kind of provides them with a sanction for

kind of celebrating a very overtly masculine ideal of virtue. And of course, you know, as we've said earlier, these are all people who are saturated in Roman literature. So they know that the word virtue itself derives from the Latin for man, vir. Virtus is to have masculine qualities. And...

When these young revolutionaries are playing the Roman, we talked about this in an earlier episode, to play the Roman often requires a counterpointing of a kind of masculine virtue against a female inadequacy. So David, the great painter, in 1789, he does a painting of Brutus, the man who expelled the king, the kind of the founder of the Roman Republic.

And in this painting, the man is shown stern, unyielding, flinty in the cause of liberty. And meanwhile, in the background, you have women having the vapors. They're kind of in hysterics, kind of screaming and generally losing the plot. And it is the role of the man to put the patry first there.

then the family. It is the role of the woman to stay within the domestic household and to raise citizens who can then go out and play their part serving the patrie. I mean, you could translate patrie, right, as homeland or as fatherland, couldn't you? You absolutely could. Yeah. And so for men, radicals, even those on, maybe especially those on the furthest left,

It's this combination, this fusion of the ancient and the cutting edge that serves to justify them in their, well, yeah, I mean, their contempt for everything that Olympe de Gouges is arguing for. But I think the thing that's unsettling, perhaps, for us today, and certainly, you know, for many of the feminist scholars that I read on this, is that it's not just men who are thinking this. A majority of women seem to have thought so too. And contrasting

Condorcet, who's in favour of female suffrage, he's really puzzled by it. And he's one of the people who watches women idolising Robespierre, who's absolutely against female suffrage. And he's kind of really puzzled by it. And so he writes, one wonders sometimes why there are so many women following Robespierre at his home, at the podium of the Jacobin, at the Cordelier, at the convention. And he says, which is absolutely right, well, maybe one reason for this is that women are reading Rousseau too often.

And La Nouvelle Héloïse, his great novel, I mean, that's a massive with women. So maybe they're imbibing it. So Madame Roulin is a big fan of Rousseau. Rosalie Julien, who you were quoting in the previous episode. I mean, she was a big fan of Rousseau. So, I mean, maybe it's that, but I, I mean, I can't really believe that that's... It's not just that there is it. So if you think a hundred years hence, when there are going to be huge arguments about...

women voting. Often among the most vociferous opponents of it are other women, you know, opposing suffrage campaigns, not just in France, in Britain, in the United States, wherever. And don't historians think that effectively a lot of women had internalized suffrage?

the assumptions of the age, that they have come to believe, they come to believe what they're told, that they have their domestic sphere, which is their domain, and that there is the public sphere, which is the domain of men. I think it's this language of rights, perhaps, that underpins it, which Olympe de Gouges is drawing on. But it also applies to men. So one of the striking things about this election to the convention, which is it's the first really full male suffrage in any election. I think...

Our perspective today would be people denied a right to vote would embrace it. You know, they would feel that,

a great weight had been lifted off their shoulders, that a great injustice had been righted. But what's striking about that election is how few people participate in it. I think it's something like one in six. Yeah, maybe one in ten. That must reflect maybe a bewilderment, a puzzlement, simply an inability to understand what's being offered on the part of

who are being given this right. And presumably then the same would be true of women, that this is such a kind of novel way of understanding politics

politics and the role of individuals within a polity that people just can't get a handle on it. And maybe it's a bit like about slavery, you know, where similar debates are happening. And it's kind of striking that Olympia Gouge is an abolitionist as well as an enthusiast for female suffrage, that she is, she's arguing for things that today are

We take so for granted that we can't even understand how people could possibly have thought otherwise. And yet the fact that she is so scorned and despised and mocked.

does, I think, remind us of just how revolutionary principles that today we completely accept once were. And I think there's a case for saying that, you know, for all her soft spot for Louis XVI, for all the fact that she dedicates her Declaration of the Rights of Women to Marie Antoinette,

There is a case for saying that the Dlimpti Gouge is as radical, if not more radical, than any of the revolutionaries that we've talked about in this series. Tom, I could not agree with you more. I think actually, by far, she's the most radical. So all that the men are arguing for, the Robespierres, the Maras, whatever, it's within the bounds of the imagination. There have been republics, right? I mean, England executed its king.

There has been the Dutch Republic. There's the Roman Republic. It is perfectly plausible to imagine that. You might think it's a bad thing, which a lot of people in France obviously did. But you can imagine it. It's not making your head hurt to think about it. But I think with this, what's clearly the case when she presents that Declaration of the Rights of Women,

When she unveils it, the ridicule, the contempt, the disbelief that greets it is a sign that a lot of people just simply cannot imagine a world in which women exercise political power.

Including women. Yeah, including women themselves, exactly. That they are, as it were, I don't want to say prisoners of the same imagination because that casts people in the past as somehow lesser than us. We're more enlightened. And I don't generally like that kind of language. But I think it is fair to say that just as we are trapped by our own preconceptions in ways that we don't even recognise, they are absolutely trapped by theirs. But I think it also suggests that we are beneficiaries of...

you know, the events that we're describing in this series in ways that we may not appreciate, that we may mistake for truths so self-evident that they don't need to be argued for, that that's not what they are at all. That they are, in fact, kind of radical, intellectual, ideological innovations that ultimately succeed because we come to feel, yeah, they're absolutely right. But

when they are first proposed, just seem absolutely kind of mad. Well, Tom, there are a lot of people in the world right now, when we're recording this, who would listen to this episode and would say they are mad. I mean, there are people right now, you know, the people who are currently administering Afghanistan or indeed Iran, who would say,

you know, a lot of what Olymp de Gouges was arguing was bonkers. So maybe we shouldn't be entirely complacent about it, I guess. Yes. Well, it's, um, yes. Um, but it, it, it's nice to hear you, uh, finally say something good about the revolution. I'd be pleased about that. Well, I'm not saying something good about the revolution. I'm saying about Olymp de Gouges, because as we will discover in a future episode, revolution doesn't treat her well, does it? No, it does not treat her well, which is yet another black mark, I'm afraid. So, um,

Jolly good, Tom. That was absolutely fascinating. And kind of overdue, we should have done a lot about men in the revolution. We've done quite a lot about women as well. Well, we have. We did start with a woman, I guess. So next week, we will be getting back to the narrative, won't we? Because I think we left it last time with the Prussians. Cliffhanger. They were approaching Paris. They're 120 miles away, and they've just turned to finish off the last French army at Valmy.

And listeners will be excited to hear that there is going to be a thrilling twist to the story. We love a thrilling twist on the rest of history. Can't wait. So, Tom, what could people do if they wanted to hear that episode now, literally now?

they could sign up to the Rest Is History Club. And not only will they be able to hear both the two episodes yet to come, but they will get a slew, Dominic, a slew of additional benefits. And just to be very clear, we are a mixed club. And Tom, do we treat our male and female members equally? We're all about egalite. We treat them equally badly. And on that bombshell...

We will see you next time for the most exciting twist in European history. Goodbye. Bye-bye.

Now, Tom, as you know, I am not just a man of history. I'm also known for my involvement in the performing arts. Are you now? I must confess that early on in my acting career, my stage presence did come under a little scrutiny from Britain's finest newspapers. Oh, yes. This is the famous, notorious one-star review in the Scotsman, isn't it? Yeah, and I will remind the listeners that in Scotland, they order their reviews in a different way. So one is at the top.

And five stars is the worst review you could get. So we were very happy with that one star review. But like a lot of great masters of their craft, Tom, I learned from it. I grew. I evolved. I knew I would bide my time before returning to the boards. And guess what? You're not. No. Yes. Tom, I have to tell you, I have returned to the boards. I'm performing once again. And the brilliant news for our listeners is that you can go and you can be transfixed

by my performance right now because I am honoured and privileged to appear in the latest Sherlock & Co adventure, The Adventure of the Norwood Builder. Please tell me that you are playing the Norwood Builder. I'm playing a much better character. I'm playing Hector Macfarlane.

a solicitor from Blackheath accused of murder. Goodness, as Lestrade's officers bear down on me, Tom, I have nowhere else to turn but to 221B Baker Street. This is amazing, Dominic. And the fact that you were cast in this role, it has nothing to do with the fact that Sherlock & Co. is a goal-hanger production.

Like this one. Well, very much like this one with a better acting, I think it's fair to say. It's a stable mate of ours. They are a massive show. They get 10 million downloads. Outside, I believe, The Archers. This is the biggest audio drama in Britain. Well, I have no doubt, Dominic, that it is more interesting than The Archers.

It genuinely is brilliant.

Do you know who else thinks it's brilliant, Tom? The Guardian newspaper. One of those prized one-star reviews? No, a five-star. They said, and I quote, very funny, mildly sweary and hugely popular. Do you want to know what the Times said? It said, a breakneck series that Gen Z, or Gen Z as members of it say, that Gen Z is hooked on. Wow. And now that you're appearing on the show, I mean, that will confirm the hook, won't it? It absolutely will. And the Guardian listeners will be beside themselves with joy.

So, everybody, please listen to Sherlock & Co. The Adventure of the Norwood Builder. It's multi-part, it's brilliant. Part one is out now. Jump right in wherever you get your podcasts. And here is a clip from that very episode. He was murdered. Supposedly.

No body has been found yet, Watson. Yeah, but... Now listen, you said you would hear me out, didn't you? Do you want to just dial it down a bit, Hector? Would you? Would you dial it down when you're smeared over every paper? Look at this. Look at this. In the Times here, look. Solicitor suspected for contractor disappearance. The Telegraph.

Solicitor faces long arm of law. The Daily Mail. Bully of Blackheath. Elite London lawyer facing murder charge. I mean, this is just... This is... This is... The Guardian. Here, look at this. Old Acre Murder. How neoliberal materialism and Kirsty Allsop home renovations are the real killers at the working... Oh, well, that one goes on a bit. Yeah, we get the point. Do you? Do you? I'm not sure you do. The Daily Sport...

Big job love. Macfarlane's wife's steamy romp with missing builder. I mean, look, there's a thought bubble above my wife's head saying, knob the builder, can he fix it? Hector, the speech bubble as well. Here's your extension, love. I mean, this is just the sun. Cannibal Hector. Macfarlane confesses to eating Norwood tradesmen.

You confessed to what? Sorry. I didn't confess to a damn thing! I said I was hungry for justice! That's all! It is slander! It's disgraceful! It's bloody humiliating! Could we perhaps return to the chain of events as you, not the press, perceive them? MUSIC

Hi there. I'm Al Murray, co-host of We Have Ways of Making You Talk, the world's premier Second World War history podcast from Goldhanger. And I'm James Holland, best-selling World War II historian, and together we tell the best stories from the war.

This time, we're doing a deep dive into the last major attack by the Nazis on the West, the Battle of the Bulge. And what's so fascinating about this story is we've been able to show how quite a lot of the popular history about this battle is kind of the wrong way around, isn't it, Jim? The whole thing is a disaster from the start. Even Hitler's plans for the attack are insane and divorced from reality. Well, you're so right. But what we can do is celebrate this as an American success story for the

ages. From their generals at the top to the GIs on the front line, full of gumption and grit, the Bold should be remembered as a great victory for the USA. And if this sounds good to you, we've got a short taste for you here. Search We Have Ways wherever you get your podcasts. Thanks.

Yeah. Anyway, so who is Obersturmbannfuhrer Joachim Peiper? But I see his jaunty hat and I just think... And his SS skull and crossbones. Well, I see his reputation and I think, you know, you might be a handsome devil, but the emphasis is on the devil bit rather than the handsome. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Anyway...

Be that as may, he's 29 years old and he's got a very interesting career, really, because he comes from a pretty right-wing family, let's face it. He's joined the SS at a pretty early stage. He's very international socialism. He's also been Himmler's adjutant. He took a little bit of time off in the summer of 1940 to go and fight with the 1st Waffen-SS Panzer Division.

Yeah. Did pretty well. Went back to being Himmler's adjutant. Then went off and commanded troops in the Eastern Front. Rose up to be a pretty young regimental commander. I mean, there's not many people that age. Or an Obersturmbannfuhrer, which is a sort of colonel. Yes, I... You see, what must it have been like if you're in...

If Himmler's adjutant turns up and he's been posted to you as an officer, do you think, well, he only got that job because of his connections? For Piper, it must have been always, he's always having to prove himself, surely, because he has turned up. He's not worked his way through the ranks of the Waffen-SS. He's dolloped in, having come from head office, as it were.

It must be a peculiar position to be in, right? He's got lots to prove, right? That's what I'm saying. Yeah, and he's from a sort of middle-class background as well. Yeah. But he's got an older brother who's had mental illness and attempted suicide and never really recovers and actually has died of TB eventually in 1942. He's got a younger brother called Horne.

He's also joined the SS and Totenkopfverbande and died in a never really properly explained accident in Poland in 1941. Piper gains a sort of growing reputation on the Eastern Front for being kind of very inspiring, fearless, you know, obviously courageous. You know, all the guys love him, all that kind of stuff. But he's also ordered the destruction of the entire village of Krasnaya Polyana in a kind of revenge killing by Russian partisans.

Yeah. And his unit becomes known as the Blowtorch Battalion because of his penchant for touching Russian villages. So he's got all the gongs. He's got Iron Cross, Second Class, First Class, Cross of Gold, Knight's Cross. Did very well at Kursk. Briefly in Northern Italy, actually. Then in Ukraine. Then in Normandy, he suffers a nervous breakdown. Yeah.

Yeah. And he's relieved of his command on the 2nd of August. And he's hospitalized from September to October. So he's not in command during Operation Lutich. And then he rejoins 1st SS Panzer Regiment as its commander again in October 1944. It's really, really odd. I mean... But isn't that interesting, though? Because if you're a Lancer, if you're an ordinary soldier, you're not allowed to have a nervous breakdown. You don't get hospitalized. You don't get time off.

How you could interpret this is this is a sort of Nazi princeling, isn't he? He's demonstrated the necessary Nazi zeal on the Eastern Front and all this sort of stuff. It comes to Normandy where they're losing. Why else would he have a nervous breakdown? He's shown all the zeal and application in the Nazi manner up to this point, and they're losing, you know. And because he's a knob, you know, because he's well connected, he gets to be hospitalized if he has a nervous breakdown. He isn't told like an ordinary German soldier, there's no such thing as combat fatigue, mate.

go back to work. Yes, and it's a nervous breakdown, not combat fatigue. Well, yes, of course. But, you know, what's the difference? One SS soldier said of him, Piper was the most dynamic man I ever met. He just got things done. Yeah. You get this image I have of him of having this kind of sort of

slightly manic energy, kind of. He's virulently National Socialist. He's got this great reputation. He's damned if anyone's going to tarnish it. You know, he's a driver, you know, all those things. He's trying to make the will triumph, isn't he? He's working towards the Fuhrer. He's imbued with, he knows what's expected of him, extreme violence and cruelty and pushing his men on. I mean, he's sort of, he's the Fuhrer Princip writ large, isn't he, as an SS officer? Yeah, yeah.

which is why cruelty and extreme violence are bundled in to wherever he goes, basically.