Become a member of this UA-cam channel in order to watch videos ad-free, and get exclusive access to bonus video episodes, available only to members of The Rest Is History Club and members of the UA-cam channel: ua-cam.com/channels/UYK0BJZF3yNb2fw1EdAXUQ.htmljoin
I'm certain that you must hear this all the time but I was recently bedridden by a kidney stone that left me unable to do much more than tap weakly on my ipad as a diversion from the pain. Then the gods led me to your remarkable podcast. After bingeing heavily for a few days I was able to make a full recovery, hastened I am sure, by the even handed and insightful perspectives of two very knowledgeable and engaging hosts. And so, with gratitude I have "liked" and "subscribed." Thank you for helping me through a difficult time.
I Love your show and I'm so happy the French Revoluation is back! I'm especially up on Charlotte Corday, the lady who "did in" Jean-Paul Marat because my teenaged son had to select a figure from the French Revolution for a school report. He wanted to be edgy and cool so he selected Charlotte Corday. After turning in the report, the second half of the assignment was revealed: the students had to dress up as their selected person to present the report to the class. Being a former costumer, we did the research and I dragged my son around to thrift shops for a dress I could alter with a neckerchief and some frills. I made him a mob cap and then had to shop around for a long wig with auburn ringlets. I set down some real money for a Brazilian 1/2 synthetic 1/2 human hair wig that would do justice to both my son and Charlotte Corday. Nothing but the best for those two. I still have the wig years later. Lots of love from Virginia. ❤
Wonderful! I can imagine your son's initial consternation when he learned of the second part of the assignment, but the enthusiasm with which you both pursued it is admirable. AA+
@@FireflyOnTheMoon I don't know but the wig was pristine when it went to school and a real rat's nest when it came back. I had to use 1/2 warm water and 1/2 liquid fabric softener mix to spray on it and gently detangle and coax the long curls back into place. I feel like that poor thing got passed around and tried on by many after the presentation. ❤🩹
I think part of it is getting two experts discussing and putting each other in perspective, as opposed to a single lecturer. With any sort of history, even those with well documented sources, so much of it becomes interpretation of those sources, and even people who broadly agree will still disagree on minor details. I think thats why these guys are so refreshing, they keep each other grounded and you can see how different interpretations of the same events or sources can be equally valid.
@@KiLLaKiWi003 Oh, don't get me wrong, I'm not saying The Rest is History isn't great for a history-doc podcast... I just feel like if you are taking a university level history course it should be a bit more in depth/holistic than even a several hour long documentary podcast... Putting the actual lectures aside, in which you should be taking notes, you should be spending time doing assigned readings(which usually includes a textbook as well as primary source readings) while taking notes, doing research & writing papers, interfacing with your professor on subjects/ideas that interest you, writing exams to ensure you've got a good understanding etc. etc. etc.... I don't think this should be a really contentious opinion, but here we are in 2024.
@@BygoneUser1 A History module (French Revolution) in a Humanities course with some related studies in Philosophy (Rousseau) and History of Art (David) modules covering the same period. By the end of the module on Rousseau, I was losing my religion due the relentless, narrow, propagandist ideological trajectory of the course. I had taken the course to broaden my mind. The approved course material took me into the narrows of academia.
@@Chief-Solarize I don't think they are consciously making fun of bloodshed/violence etc. They may not have experience of it but we are not supposed to be used to it. Luckily they haven't experienced it. You are lucky if you live through your lifespan without the horror of war/civil war etc.
@@Chief-Solarize Dude, people who've been around violence are even more glib about it. Maybe it's familiarity, maybe dark humor is a way to cope, I dunno.
Thanks. This is the topic that I first listened to when I first discovered your channel. Happy to hear you come back to wrap up the revolution, s2 ep1!
I really hope you cover the Haitian revolution at some point. The rapid fire policy and regime changes in revolutionary France make the Haitian revolution one of the most fascinating things I've ever read about. They're always months behind events in Paris and it feels like the moment everything is starting to settle down in Haiti, a new political faction has already sent replacement commissioners that have no idea what they're jumping into. It's constant whiplash the whole way through and every piece of news from Paris seems to send the whole colony spiraling deeper into chaos. It's a brutal one though, it makes the reign of terror look downright civilized
At 48:00 in this episode, you describe denouncing as a tendency of the radical left, and not as a story as old as time related to power structures in general. The only reason you are associating this with "the left" is because this is one of the first times they have gained some semblance of power. Europe is filled with denunciation mania associated with both the left and right throughout history.
Y'all the best story tellers! You and Monty Python have taught me all I know about history. To me you encompass all the beauty that Great Britain possesses...just got Dominion audiobook...Toms voice is dreamy!
Tom well done with the defense of Lafayette. Dominic well done with the recap from season 1 lol. Love this podcast. Love you both. So much fun. Thanks again lads
There is NO "official dictionary of the French Revolution". It's "A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution" edited by Furey and Ouzef, and had one of your students mis-cited it as such, he'd gotten a rocket. And it's another collection of essays by various authors, all of whom belong to the international collegium of university savants who enjoy delivering judgements like "empty-headed political dwarf" upon men who actually acted in the political and military arena--unlike men like themselves, who can barely keep a seminar room in order and who can't make their mistresses behave. Present company excepted, of course.
Loving season 2! It would be so amazing if you did a multi-part series on the history of Haiti and how the revolts and subsequent independence lead to terrible state of the country today.
So happy there’s more episodes on the French Revolution!! Me and my bf listened to the first episodes together on long journeys across Japan - good memories, greater content!
Great work I love the pace you are telling the story of french Revolution, avoiding the shortcuts and cliches. A strong and true historian work. Would you still be interested in french history, i could recommand the period of the early years of restauration, with Louis XVIII, after Napoleon 1er. This is not a well known part of history, but full of political drama. How the royalists returned to power but faced a society who has learnt from the Revolution...
Thoroughly fascinating history telling. Great research, details as the earlier episodes of the French Revolution. Paints a compelling and gripping narrative of the characters, socio-political climate of the dramatic, horrifying and tragic story of this period. ❤ this!
Funny you’re coming up with Depardieu as Danton. He did play the historical character in Andrzej Wajda’s film, one I would make mandatory in high school as a complement to Orwell’s Animal Farm. This movie depicts perfectly the descent into bloody anarchy, warrying factions, politicization of the courts, the sociopaths in charge.
58:10 Gentlemen, I don't know you, but you are great men, you're the representatives of humanity in the Republic. (There ya go. From the audience of "The Rest Is History".)
I don't think anyone understands how quickly I click to listen to your podcasts! I love all the subjects, but I studied the French Revolution in college eons ago and LIVE for your podcasts on that. Love, love, love you guys.
Gorgeous chat, lads. Perfectly poised. One question I've always had about the French revolution - is it significant that so many of the revolutionaries are lawyers and jouernalists? Is the astonishing violence that gets unleashed at least partly the result of a leadership used to brandishing words as their weapons, with liitle awareness of where all the rhetoric takes them until it's too late?
Quand vous dites que la Gauche a pour habitude d'appeler à la dénonciation des traites, vous pouvez m'expliquer que ceux qui dénonçaient les résistant après la débâcle de 1940 étaient gauchistes? Ou que le Maccarthisme était de gauche ?
The Girondins as Boris Yeltsin. I love that analogy. For all that Yeltsin is considered by many as little more than an alcoholic puppet of the oligarchs and Americas, the fellow might have been the last thing standing against something very ugly that might have taken over in 1993: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1993_Russian_constitutional_crisis
My partner’s mother’s great, great, great grandfather was an ‘avocat’, one of three, condemned to death for defending Louis XVI during his trial. But he did a lot of pro bono work for the poor. He was recognised in his cell and smuggled to freedom. They remain to this day a wonderful, humane family.
Excellent stuff. Having a degree n European history, l always find the French Revolution fascinating. It gives birth to so many tropes that have dominated modern politics down to the present day. As Chou En Lai once said, when asked what he thought was the significance of the revolution: "it's too early to say!"
Coming back to this after reading “A Place of Greater Safety” by Hilary Mantel who also wrote the Wolf Hall Trilogy. Learned much more about the women in their lives. Not just Danton and Robespierre but also Desmoulin.
If you are interested in the Revolutionary/Napoleonic period, there are several podcasts: Napoleonic Quarterly (chronologically going through the period), Generals & Napoleon (personalities and some battles), Napoleonic Wars Podcast (mostly British with some French), Age of Napoleon (also chronologically, but focused on Napoleon's career). That will give you something for the cold winter evenings. Epic History is also looking at Napoleonic battles at the moment. Good to see another podcast bringing attention to this period.
Do you want children to be interested in history? This is how you teach them. With interesting, intelligent, humorous storytelling. And if your teachers both happen to be Oxford educated, it’s a bonus.
It's so bloody hard to feel sympathy for the royal couple at this point. It's astonishing they are still alive. The revolutionaries are bending over backwards to try and accomodate a monarchy and the king just isn't bending. So bloody Charles I. Is it the sense of their "divine right of kings" that they think they could never die? Even with crowds howling around them? Charles I of England was long dead by the time Louis is dithering - Louis seen a king beheaded. He'd seen james II of England turfed out of his country by the commons. Surely it takes a supremely dull mind and an astonishing lack of imagination to want to refuse negotiation. The masses clearly want a monarch (as with Charles I). It all beggars belief.
" There were two “Reigns of Terror,” if we would but remember it and consider it; the one wrought murder in hot passion, the other in heartless cold blood; the one lasted mere months, the other had lasted a thousand years; the one inflicted death upon ten thousand persons, the other upon a hundred millions; but our shudders are all for the “horrors” of the minor Terror, the momentary Terror, so to speak; whereas, what is the horror of swift death by the axe, compared with lifelong death from hunger, cold, insult, cruelty, and heart-break? What is swift death by lightning compared with death by slow fire at the stake? A city cemetery could contain the coffins filled by that brief Terror which we have all been so diligently taught to shiver at and mourn over; but all France could hardly contain the coffins filled by that older and real Terror-that unspeakably bitter and awful Terror which none of us has been taught to see in its vastness or pity as it deserves. " -Mark Twain
Wonderful earphones! Retro, I love it those monstrous 1980's versions you both proudly ware. Tom, however, has strayed by using Bluetooth while Dominic prefers wonderful dangling wires and a raised cage over his head.
Lafayette's men didn't have machine guns. I'm guessing 50 dead and hundreds wounded is much closer to the truth. People are going to scatter pretty energetically in that situation.
I'm in America, I've always been a history junkie. It feels like so much horrible history repeating itself. I'd forgotten how young the revolutionaries were. 😢
I've watched a few of your videos, but never realised one of you was Tom Holland - one of my favourite historians. Only found out today when an article in the Telegraph mentioned it.
They gave us Edmund Burke and that's the best this Colonial Briton can say about 1789 and All That. Less facetiously, it's a great yarn of fascinating people and ideas. Never gets old, must admit.
“Competence and the regular payment of taxes”, but are they fair taxes? Taxes levied without representation? Taxes on the people but not on the oligarchy?
I've been listening to this podcast for years at this point. And as you might expect I have built an image of Dominic and Tom in my head. And I have to say I got it exactly right. Except that the faces are opposite what I expected
Become a member of this UA-cam channel in order to watch videos ad-free, and get exclusive access to bonus video episodes, available only to members of The Rest Is History Club and members of the UA-cam channel:
ua-cam.com/channels/UYK0BJZF3yNb2fw1EdAXUQ.htmljoin
I'm addicted to this podcast
Agreed. They’ve got great chemistry and senses of humour.
Yup…likewise…
Genuinely, I've learnt more bout history from this than I have in years, never used to be a history buff.
I hope you're not addicted to the Jacobins, though. Radicals..
They’re amazing
I'm certain that you must hear this all the time but I was recently bedridden by a kidney stone that left me unable to do much more than tap weakly on my ipad as a diversion from the pain. Then the gods led me to your remarkable podcast. After bingeing heavily for a few days I was able to make a full recovery, hastened I am sure, by the even handed and insightful perspectives of two very knowledgeable and engaging hosts. And so, with gratitude I have "liked" and "subscribed." Thank you for helping me through a difficult time.
best of luck with your recovery.
Excellent prose my friend👍
You're right they do hear stories of bed ridden listeners with kidney stones all the time.
Very well said!!!
Be well.
"high minded vandalism" - what a great turn of phrase, and amazingly relevant to today, even
I Love your show and I'm so happy the French Revoluation is back! I'm especially up on Charlotte Corday, the lady who "did in" Jean-Paul Marat because my teenaged son had to select a figure from the French Revolution for a school report. He wanted to be edgy and cool so he selected Charlotte Corday. After turning in the report, the second half of the assignment was revealed: the students had to dress up as their selected person to present the report to the class. Being a former costumer, we did the research and I dragged my son around to thrift shops for a dress I could alter with a neckerchief and some frills. I made him a mob cap and then had to shop around for a long wig with auburn ringlets. I set down some real money for a Brazilian 1/2 synthetic 1/2 human hair wig that would do justice to both my son and Charlotte Corday. Nothing but the best for those two. I still have the wig years later. Lots of love from Virginia. ❤
Wonderful! I can imagine your son's initial consternation when he learned of the second part of the assignment, but the enthusiasm with which you both pursued it is admirable. AA+
A wonderful story. How did it go down at school?
@@FireflyOnTheMoon I don't know but the wig was pristine when it went to school and a real rat's nest when it came back. I had to use 1/2 warm water and 1/2 liquid fabric softener mix to spray on it and gently detangle and coax the long curls back into place. I feel like that poor thing got passed around and tried on by many after the presentation. ❤🩹
im not happy with that teacher
Best mom ever!!!
I studied this at University. I've learned far more listening to you guys. Far, far more.
Geek
Yikes, was it a full course on just this subject? If so, that must be a shite university.
I think part of it is getting two experts discussing and putting each other in perspective, as opposed to a single lecturer. With any sort of history, even those with well documented sources, so much of it becomes interpretation of those sources, and even people who broadly agree will still disagree on minor details. I think thats why these guys are so refreshing, they keep each other grounded and you can see how different interpretations of the same events or sources can be equally valid.
@@KiLLaKiWi003 Oh, don't get me wrong, I'm not saying The Rest is History isn't great for a history-doc podcast...
I just feel like if you are taking a university level history course it should be a bit more in depth/holistic than even a several hour long documentary podcast... Putting the actual lectures aside, in which you should be taking notes, you should be spending time doing assigned readings(which usually includes a textbook as well as primary source readings) while taking notes, doing research & writing papers, interfacing with your professor on subjects/ideas that interest you, writing exams to ensure you've got a good understanding etc. etc. etc....
I don't think this should be a really contentious opinion, but here we are in 2024.
@@BygoneUser1 A History module (French Revolution) in a Humanities course with some related studies in Philosophy (Rousseau) and History of Art (David) modules covering the same period.
By the end of the module on Rousseau, I was losing my religion due the relentless, narrow, propagandist ideological trajectory of the course. I had taken the course to broaden my mind. The approved course material took me into the narrows of academia.
This show is superb - riveting. I've been fascinated by the French Revolution for decades, but you have brought it to life.
I am fascinated by The French Wars of Religion.
“ The traitor that wears the mask of patriotism “
Can’t help but see the parallels that are currently going on in the states.
I love how you lads get so giddy when bloodshed is on the menu.
This is a trait of people who've never been around violence.
@@Chief-Solarize I don't think they are consciously making fun of bloodshed/violence etc. They may not have experience of it but we are not supposed to be used to it. Luckily they haven't experienced it. You are lucky if you live through your lifespan without the horror of war/civil war etc.
Projecting?
Not as giddy as me
@@Chief-Solarize Dude, people who've been around violence are even more glib about it. Maybe it's familiarity, maybe dark humor is a way to cope, I dunno.
Tom and Dominic …glad you didn’t abandon France!! 😊
Thanks. This is the topic that I first listened to when I first discovered your channel. Happy to hear you come back to wrap up the revolution, s2 ep1!
I really hope you cover the Haitian revolution at some point. The rapid fire policy and regime changes in revolutionary France make the Haitian revolution one of the most fascinating things I've ever read about. They're always months behind events in Paris and it feels like the moment everything is starting to settle down in Haiti, a new political faction has already sent replacement commissioners that have no idea what they're jumping into. It's constant whiplash the whole way through and every piece of news from Paris seems to send the whole colony spiraling deeper into chaos. It's a brutal one though, it makes the reign of terror look downright civilized
And tragically it's still current
At 48:00 in this episode, you describe denouncing as a tendency of the radical left, and not as a story as old as time related to power structures in general. The only reason you are associating this with "the left" is because this is one of the first times they have gained some semblance of power. Europe is filled with denunciation mania associated with both the left and right throughout history.
Yessss! I've been waiting for this for months!
"Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent" ...or maybe the first as well as the last.
"Will to power"
I've been looking forward the resumption of this story. A tangled tale entertainingly told.
Y'all the best story tellers! You and Monty Python have taught me all I know about history. To me you encompass all the beauty that Great Britain possesses...just got Dominion audiobook...Toms voice is dreamy!
Personne n'attend la Révolution Française!
Tom well done with the defense of Lafayette. Dominic well done with the recap from season 1 lol. Love this podcast. Love you both. So much fun. Thanks again lads
We love us some Marquis de Lafayette in the US. His life would be an incredible series on its own!
There is NO "official dictionary of the French Revolution". It's "A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution" edited by Furey and Ouzef, and had one of your students mis-cited it as such, he'd gotten a rocket.
And it's another collection of essays by various authors, all of whom belong to the international collegium of university savants who enjoy delivering judgements like "empty-headed political dwarf" upon men who actually acted in the political and military arena--unlike men like themselves, who can barely keep a seminar room in order and who can't make their mistresses behave.
Present company excepted, of course.
Loving season 2! It would be so amazing if you did a multi-part series on the history of Haiti and how the revolts and subsequent independence lead to terrible state of the country today.
too painful to listen to. Painful then and now
The best history podcast out there today. Brilliant stuff
this has made my Monday or should I say Lundi
I'm listening to this on the 27th of Vendémiaire 233.
I love this channel! Would love for you guys to do a series about the fall of the Romanovs.
TRIH hasn't done it but their sister podcast Empire has, episodes 90-93 from Oct 2023.
Please do a podcast on Burke's critique of the French Revolution, which is highly relevant to this period.
Great work as always lads, much love ❤️
So happy there’s more episodes on the French Revolution!! Me and my bf listened to the first episodes together on long journeys across Japan - good memories, greater content!
Yay! When your French Revolution series ended before this, I was sort of perplexed.
they probably needed a lie down after the first season. I know I did.
Dominic, I don't know you, but you're a great man. You're the representative of humanity on UA-cam.
The gentleness and mild humor of these fellas is very un-American . Refreshing
You guys are so interesting. Thanks for your continued efforts!❤
Great work
I love the pace you are telling the story of french Revolution, avoiding the shortcuts and cliches. A strong and true historian work.
Would you still be interested in french history, i could recommand the period of the early years of restauration, with Louis XVIII, after Napoleon 1er. This is not a well known part of history, but full of political drama. How the royalists returned to power but faced a society who has learnt from the Revolution...
Thoroughly fascinating history telling. Great research, details as the earlier episodes of the French Revolution. Paints a compelling and gripping narrative of the characters, socio-political climate of the dramatic, horrifying and tragic story of this period. ❤ this!
Funny you’re coming up with Depardieu as Danton. He did play the historical character in Andrzej Wajda’s film, one I would make mandatory in high school as a complement to Orwell’s Animal Farm. This movie depicts perfectly the descent into bloody anarchy, warrying factions, politicization of the courts, the sociopaths in charge.
My fave are the small group of Haitians dressed to the nines in French attire for the times representing Haiti.
Season two!👏👏👏
I literally just finished the last episode of the first set of shows a few hours ago. What a treat!
Love you guys. The information, the fantastic storytelling, the humour... all outstanding. Thank you for igniting my interest in history.
You two are a lot of fun! Thanks 🙏 good stuff
"Everyone is half tired and constantly drunk" argh you make it sound so easy
There will never be a better podcast❤
Winds, storm clouds, magnificent. Thank you guys.
58:10 Gentlemen, I don't know you, but you are great men, you're the representatives of humanity in the Republic. (There ya go. From the audience of "The Rest Is History".)
I don't think anyone understands how quickly I click to listen to your podcasts! I love all the subjects, but I studied the French Revolution in college eons ago and LIVE for your podcasts on that. Love, love, love you guys.
Oui … I understand. .
0:35 You need to get your smoke alarm tested.
This is really funny
That was sunlight?
I thought the duality of Toms nature was made physically manifest. Im a bit disappointed.
You two are brilliant, gripping story-tellers! You may have perfected the historical deep-dive genre!
Kudos to you!
Thanks Guys! It was great!😊
I've been waiting for this and you guys didn't disappoint! Bravo!
Wonderful retelling The excitement just keeps building
Top as always 🫡
Saved a few up so I could binge whilst I worked but I couldn't resist any longer!
Very nice discussion and very informative. Sharp broadcast on the floor. I mean that.
Gorgeous chat, lads. Perfectly poised. One question I've always had about the French revolution - is it significant that so many of the revolutionaries are lawyers and jouernalists? Is the astonishing violence that gets unleashed at least partly the result of a leadership used to brandishing words as their weapons, with liitle awareness of where all the rhetoric takes them until it's too late?
So glad to be back with the French revolution. Recently restarted watching the Columbus series with the recent news of his sephardic origins. 🌊🏯🏰
My new favourite youtube channel
Greatest podcast of all time❤❤❤❤
This is a wonderful Podcast
This is such good content. Both are great tellers.
Love it! thank you for your effort.
Quand vous dites que la Gauche a pour habitude d'appeler à la dénonciation des traites, vous pouvez m'expliquer que ceux qui dénonçaient les résistant après la débâcle de 1940 étaient gauchistes? Ou que le Maccarthisme était de gauche ?
The Girondins as Boris Yeltsin. I love that analogy. For all that Yeltsin is considered by many as little more than an alcoholic puppet of the oligarchs and Americas, the fellow might have been the last thing standing against something very ugly that might have taken over in 1993: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1993_Russian_constitutional_crisis
That “something ugly” is here now in U K.
My partner’s mother’s great, great, great grandfather was an ‘avocat’, one of three, condemned to death for defending Louis XVI during his trial. But he did a lot of pro bono work for the poor. He was recognised in his cell and smuggled to freedom. They remain to this day a wonderful, humane family.
The way you’ve brought it alive is excellent! I just want to perhaps correct a bit of the pronunciation 😅but that doesn’t matter much
Excellent as always - love you guys :)
Love the topic and love the dynamic between these two experts. 🎉
I would like to remind that first Constitution as we understand it today in Europe was approved in Polish-Lithuania in May 1791.
Great podcast
Good afternoon from the SF Bay Area. Wonderful! I've been on the edge of my chair for weeks now waiting to find out how this story ends! 🙃😄
I’ll be so mad if there’s spoilers! LOL
@@GoBlueGirl78 🤣
@@chappellroseholt5740 Heads will roll, amirite?
Has anyone seen Wajda’s ‘Danton’? Pretty great. Quite the atmosphere.
I’ve been waiting for this one!
Love this channel
You're back! Yes!
Great history….with no ads…..ha ha ha advertisers scorn history…..great stuff to fall asleep listening to.
Wonderful stuff!!!
Excellent stuff. Having a degree n European history, l always find the French Revolution fascinating. It gives birth to so many tropes that have dominated modern politics down to the present day. As Chou En Lai once said, when asked what he thought was the significance of the revolution: "it's too early to say!"
Sacre bleu!!! C'est trop fort!!!
Coming back to this after reading “A Place of Greater Safety” by Hilary Mantel who also wrote the Wolf Hall Trilogy. Learned much more about the women in their lives. Not just Danton and Robespierre but also Desmoulin.
If you are interested in the Revolutionary/Napoleonic period, there are several podcasts: Napoleonic Quarterly (chronologically going through the period), Generals & Napoleon (personalities and some battles), Napoleonic Wars Podcast (mostly British with some French), Age of Napoleon (also chronologically, but focused on Napoleon's career). That will give you something for the cold winter evenings. Epic History is also looking at Napoleonic battles at the moment. Good to see another podcast bringing attention to this period.
Do you want children to be interested in history? This is how you teach them. With interesting, intelligent, humorous storytelling. And if your teachers both happen to be Oxford educated, it’s a bonus.
It's so bloody hard to feel sympathy for the royal couple at this point. It's astonishing they are still alive. The revolutionaries are bending over backwards to try and accomodate a monarchy and the king just isn't bending. So bloody Charles I. Is it the sense of their "divine right of kings" that they think they could never die? Even with crowds howling around them?
Charles I of England was long dead by the time Louis is dithering - Louis seen a king beheaded. He'd seen james II of England turfed out of his country by the commons. Surely it takes a supremely dull mind and an astonishing lack of imagination to want to refuse negotiation. The masses clearly want a monarch (as with Charles I). It all beggars belief.
So excited for this series
Jefferson is rather typical for a continental congressman when he calls for bloodshed then does a runner when things get a bit too bloody
(sing) "Don't be fooled by the jewels as I rant-on, for I'm still Danton from the Canton".
How Tf did it take me so long to find this gem of a podcast??????
" There were two “Reigns of Terror,” if we would but remember it and consider it; the one wrought murder in hot passion, the other in heartless cold blood; the one lasted mere months, the other had lasted a thousand years; the one inflicted death upon ten thousand persons, the other upon a hundred millions; but our shudders are all for the “horrors” of the minor Terror, the momentary Terror, so to speak; whereas, what is the horror of swift death by the axe, compared with lifelong death from hunger, cold, insult, cruelty, and heart-break? What is swift death by lightning compared with death by slow fire at the stake?
A city cemetery could contain the coffins filled by that brief Terror which we have all been so diligently taught to shiver at and mourn over; but all France could hardly contain the coffins filled by that older and real Terror-that unspeakably bitter and awful Terror which none of us has been taught to see in its vastness or pity as it deserves. "
-Mark Twain
What a radical!🙂
Turns out sixteen Louis’ were one Louis too many.
No taxation without representation! 🇺🇸
Wonderful earphones! Retro, I love it those monstrous 1980's versions you both proudly ware. Tom, however, has strayed by using Bluetooth while Dominic prefers wonderful dangling wires and a raised cage over his head.
Thank you for this most excellent series. I went to public school in the USA so I never got a decent education in history.
"Google Maps" says it takes 4 1/2 hours to walk from Paris to Versailles. It's a lot of exercise to walk there, riot, and walk back in one day.
That's why they were starving, burning too many calories marching on the nobility.
Thank you!😮🇨🇵
Live this!!!
Lafayette's men didn't have machine guns. I'm guessing 50 dead and hundreds wounded is much closer to the truth. People are going to scatter pretty energetically in that situation.
Oh where oh where could Talleyrand be? In Louisiana surveying land and taking care of business! I wish you guys would cover him❤
I’d love a series just on him!
I'm in America, I've always been a history junkie. It feels like so much horrible history repeating itself. I'd forgotten how young the revolutionaries were. 😢
I've watched a few of your videos, but never realised one of you was Tom Holland - one of my favourite historians. Only found out today when an article in the Telegraph mentioned it.
So good! 🤓 📚
I need a tshirt that says, "I like competence and the regular payment of taxes".
They gave us Edmund Burke and that's the best this Colonial Briton can say about 1789 and All That. Less facetiously, it's a great yarn of fascinating people and ideas. Never gets old, must admit.
“Competence and the regular payment of taxes”, but are they fair taxes? Taxes levied without representation? Taxes on the people but not on the oligarchy?
"Trains that run on time"?
Can you guys do the Russian Revolution and the Romanovs etc? If you have and I have missed it my apologies. If not hurry up!
Love this history series.
Although distracted by the blurring of the biography of Hitler on the bookcase.
I've been listening to this podcast for years at this point. And as you might expect I have built an image of Dominic and Tom in my head. And I have to say I got it exactly right. Except that the faces are opposite what I expected