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| |title = <div style="padding-right:3em; padding-left:6em;">''<font style="color:black; font-size:13.5px; font-family:tahoma;"> Assassin's Creed: Nebula</font>''</div> | | |title = <div style="padding-right:3em; padding-left:6em;">''<font style="color:black; font-size:13.5px; font-family:tahoma;"> Assassin's Creed: Scarlet</font>''</div> |
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| |list4 = [[Assassins]] {{c|TBA Brotherhood}} • [[Templars]] {{c|TBA Rite}} | | |list4 = [[Assassins]] {{c|TBA Brotherhood}} • [[Templars]] {{c|TBA Rite}} • [[Aztec Empire]] |
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| |list5 = Space? | | |list5 = [[Mediterranean Sea]] • [[Mexico]] • [[Spain]] |
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| ===''Assassins vs Templars''=== | | ===''Assassins vs Templars''=== |
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| '''''The Knights Templar'''''
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| *'''Woman's Voice:''' ''History Hit and ''Assassin's Creed'' presents Assassins vs. Templars. Real histories of the secret orders.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''Welcome to the inside of one of history's greatest stories. I'm Matt Lewis, and in this collaboration between Ubisoft and History Hit, we're taking you back to the very beginning. The story of ''Assassin's Creed'' is one of deadly rivalry between conflicting ideologies that asks whether peace is found through freedom or control. It began with assassins and Templars racing to gather the [[Pieces of Eden]] in the fiery heat of the Near East amidst brutal religious upheaval. Now we're all [[Desmond Miles]], and we've even found our [[Animus]]. A team of the greatest historians working in their field today will help us unlock the memories of the past, lead us through their secrets, and introduce us to some of the real people who inspired the game. It's time to break into the vaults of two of history's most infamous organizations as we pit the Assassin's Creed against the Templar Order. In this episode, I'm joined by Professor Helen Nicholson, who is a professor of medieval history and former head of history at Cardiff University. She's a world-leading expert on the military religious orders and the crusades, which makes her the perfect guide to lead us through the mysteries of the Knights Templar. Thank you very much for joining us, Helen. It's wonderful to have you here.''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''Thank you for having me.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' Assassin's Creed ''pits the Assassins against the Templar Order. When does the Order of the Knights Templar emerge and become a military order?''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''No one recorded exactly when they started, but it seems to be January 1120 at the Council of Nablus in the Holy Land, when the Patriarch of Jerusalem and the King of Jerusalem were both present. They approved this idea by Hudepin and his friends that they should form a military group for defending Christian pilgrims, also for defending Christian land.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''And there's a bit of a movement of military religious orders at this point. Where do the Templars sit in that? Are they the first?''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''Templars were the first military religious order as such, although we could argue they were continuing the idea of the First Crusade, and some writers linked them back to the First Crusade and said that they were knights who'd been on the First Crusade and had decided to stay in the Holy Land, and that they saw the land needed protectors. Now, these are people writing slightly later, so it's not clear this is entirely accurate, but it gives us an idea of where the ideas came from. At the same time, you could see the idea of the Templars, a brotherhood in arms, serving God, could also come from the confraternities, the brotherhoods that have formed during the Crusade. And it wasn't a new idea for Christians to fight in defence of Christendom, but it's the Templars who became the first permanent and professional military religious force.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''And what do we know about [[Hugues de Payens]], that man who is credited with starting the Templars? Why did he want to build this military order?''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' There's a certain amount of information about Hugues de Payens' life in Champagne. Before he went out to the East, he'd been married, his wife's name was Elizabeth, and she died, they had a number of children, and he'd gone out to the East with Hugh, Count of Champagne, on at least one expedition to the East. Exactly when he'd arrived in the East before he founded the Templars is not clear. And then there were a number of other people who were with him at the beginning of the order, [[Godfrey de Saint-Omer|Godfrey of St. Omer]], for example, and we don't know exactly when they got there. All we can say is that they all seemed to be together in about 1120.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''And in the game in ''Assassin's Creed'', we see the Templars working in the Third Crusade in the 1190s. Why are military orders springing up in the build-up to that period in the 12th century? What are they a reaction to?''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''There's two things going on which we ought to take into account. One is big upheaval in the Catholic Church, the Catholic Church in Europe, that is. Not just the noble people who could afford to become monks, but now people not from the noble classes were joining the Church and forming originally ad hoc groups of hermits living in caves in Italy or Spain. And these become acknowledged by the Church as a good idea and become formal orders. We can see the Templars as being an offshoot from this, lay people coming together and forming their own religious group. The Church had become more willing to acknowledge these individual small group ideas, a bit more bottom-up than top-down. The other aspect was the rise of ideas of knighthood, chivalry as it becomes known from the French chevalier, which just means knighthood. And the Templars fit into these ideas of knights can serve God simply by being knights. There is a standard of behavior that they should adhere to, protecting other people at the risk of their own lives, laying down their own lives in defense of others, particularly those that can't defend themselves. So women, the elderly, children, Church people, who are only supposed to fight in self-defense and are probably not trained to fight. So the Templars combine these ideas of new religious life and idealized knighthood. But they're not quite like most secular knights because they concentrate on the austerity which is characteristic of religious orders. And they're not operating as individuals. As anyone who's read the stories of King Arthur would know, they're very much focused on individual knights, but Templars operate as a group, they're a community. So they have this communal lifestyle, communal mindset.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''So it sounds like they were a reaction to quite a few things that were going on at the time. Is it fair to see them as a thoroughly modern movement at the time?''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''Oh yes, cutting edge were the Templars when they were founded. The very latest thing in religious ideology and secular movement, which was one reason they were so popular among ordinary people, anyone who could afford to give them something indeed, down to when I die, they can have my horse.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''And you mentioned that the primary purpose of the Templars was to protect Christian pilgrims on their way to the Holy Land. Were they successful in that?''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''Yes, on the whole, they were. And the [[Knights Hospitalier|Hospitallers]] who became militarized a bit after the Templars, they started off as a hospital and then they take up military activities for the same reason as the Templars, pilgrims need protection. They commissioned ships and then they have their own ships to carry people from the West to the Holy Land. And the great advantage of traveling with the Templars or the Hospitallers was you could be pretty sure you'd get there and you wouldn't get sold as a slave on the way. And then they would escort you along the pilgrim routes. It looks a little bit like a package tour.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''I was going to say, it sounds a lot like buying a package tour with a tour rep coming with you. But I wondered whether I was being a bit naughty saying that.''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''Some scholars have made this comparison with a perfectly straight face and others have said that it's being flippant. But I like it because although these people don't go around photographing everywhere, they go around kissing all the sites instead. So you arrive at your holy site, you go in, you pray, you kiss any relics, you kiss the holy site. And some people obviously make written records of this, which they take home with them or they write it down when they get home so other people can read about their journey and can imagine that they're making this journey too and they're visiting the various holy sites so they can stop and pray while they're reading the description of the pilgrimage. So just as people also have vicarious holidays where they're watching other people's photographs or watch something on the television, you can have your vicarious pilgrimage.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''And we associate the Templars today with a particular uniform with the white robes with the red cross on. They stand out in the ''Assassin's Creed'' game for wearing that. Where does that uniform originate from and how soon do they develop that?''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''Originally, they didn't have any special clothing, but at the Council of Troyes, very near where Hugues de Payens came from, in Champagne in January 1129, the ecclesiastics who gathered there, the knights at any rate, should wear a white mantle as a sign of purity. They'd given away their old life and they're now taking on this new life. The red cross came later. Archbishop William II of Tyre, writing his history of the Crusader states from the mid 1160s to the mid 1180s, said that it was Pope Eugenius III who gave them the red cross. He was Pope during the Second Crusade, so we can assume it was about that time they were given the red cross. And the red cross represents the blood of Christ and the fact that Templars are supposed to shed their blood for other Christians on the battlefield.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''It's a very visible marker of that duality of what they do, the white rose of the priest, but the red cross to represent blood and the martial elements of what they do too.''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''Absolutely. Visually, very striking. Non-knights didn't have the white mantle. They had to wear a dark colored mantle, so they wouldn't have been quite so obvious.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''And how did the Templars balance their religious duties with the military aspects of what they do? I mean, traditionally, the church frowned on people who spilled blood. How did they manage to balance those two things?''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''The church had always said, yes, that clergy shouldn't shed blood, but there are certain people in society who should be able to shed blood, even though they might have to do penance for it afterwards, because they're defending other Christians. And some of Jesus' earliest followers were actually soldiers. Some of the early Christians mentioned in the Book of Acts in the New Testament are soldiers. So clearly, you can be a soldier and serve Christ, but you're not supposed to go around murdering people. You're supposed to be serving Christ by protecting other Christians. So when the Templars take this up, it's not an entirely new idea, but the idea of ordinary knights being allowed by the church to do this, to wipe out their sins, was something that canonist church lawyers were still working on. It was part of the idea behind the First Crusade, but of course, the First Crusade was only temporary. On the other hand, taking on this monastic lifestyle suited this very well, because monks already claimed to be fighting God's battle, but in prayer. So the Templars are a militia of God, but now they're fighting physically. So that can be easily adapted to suit knights in the Order of the Temple. They have very strict discipline, as monks do. Monks are all supposed to obey their abbot, and this idea of command and control that you have in a monastic order works very well for a military order as well. Everybody should obey the master. And then he has this hierarchy of officials under him, each one knowing what their particular duties are, which again works very well for an army. And they have a very strong mission statement. Every army needs its mission statement. Whereas monks serve God in prayer and contemplation, knights serve Christ as Christ's army and lay down their lives for Christians and in protection of Christian territory. So it's not actually that difficult to reconcile the two. There are a few practical difficulties, like what you do if it's time for matins and you're all out in the field. Well then, rather than having a formal service, you might have to just recite a certain number of the Lord's Prayer, the Pater Nostris, from the horseback. So certain things had to be adapted in the regulations of the Templars as they developed over the years, as they had to adapt to deal with current conditions. There's a comment that they might have to have their sins forward forgiven before they set off on a voyage, for example, because the chance of drowning at sea when you're on your way to Europe or coming back from Europe are quite high. So you have to take precautions. But on the whole, they managed to balance their rule of life, like monks would have with their military activities as an army would need to have. And as I say, the discipline aspect is there in both monks and in warriors. So the Templars were a very disciplined force and very much admired for their discipline.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''And I guess that mental gymnastics and that development of the rules is worth it for the Church to have such a potent force at its disposal.''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''It really was necessary to have a permanent military force out of the Crusader states. It was clear that none of the secular nobles could provide something that was permanent and that could be relied on to turn up when needed. This was always a headache in the West. When the kings of Spain are organizing their campaigns against the Muslims in Spain, their nobles don't always turn up when summoned, but the Templars will always turn up.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''Always ready for a fight.''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''It's one disadvantage, though, of the military orders being religious and only answerable in theory to the Pope, and they don't always answer to the Pope either. Because they know they're Christ's army, they often think they know best. So the King of Jerusalem might have one idea, the leader of the Crusade might have another idea, and the Templars have their own idea, and the Hospitallers have their own idea. And this will have been reinforced by prayer and discussion and their experiences in the Holy Land. And it's very difficult to talk them out of what they think. They're not actually answerable to secular authority, so they don't have to pay attention to secular authority.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''And that must have caused problems. If everyone agrees on the aim, but nobody agrees on the way to get there.''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''Yes, it was definitely a problem during the Second Crusade. And subsequently, you needed somebody with a very strong leadership skills, charismatic character like Richard the Lionheart in the Third Crusade to keep the military orders on side.
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| *Matthew Lewis: How good were the Knights Templar? Do they deserve their incredible military reputation? I mean, in the game, they're seen as the natural foils to the Assassins. We know that Altaïr in the game is forced to fight Robert de Sable, the Grand Master of the Templar Order. Are they worthy rivals?''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''They were as good as their reputation. They were a team. They worked together, fought together. They knew each other's weaknesses and strengths, unlike other armies of the time. It was unusual in Europe at this time to have military forces that worked together long term, except perhaps some of the mercenary companies who would stay together for a long period. One of the reasons they get blamed for defeats is because they were seen as the elite military force in the battle. Therefore, if we lost, it must be their fault. Because we didn't expect much of the others, but the Templars we expected more of. The fact that people continue to give them donations and join the Templars right up to the end of 1307 is an indication of how successful they were seen and how highly they were regarded in the West.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' 'And the game in ''Assassin's Creed'', it pits the Templars against the Assassins as the two pinnacles of different ideologies. Do you think it's fair to see the Templars as this real pinnacle of the Christian military presence in the Holy Land?''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''Templars were certainly a pinnacle of one line of Christian ideology in the Holy Land. Of course, the various leaders of the Crusader states could never agree on what the best policy was. So, for example, the Templars and Hospitallers disagreed in the 13th century after the Third Crusade on whether they should be aligned with Egypt or Damascus. And either one could be argued, and scholars are still arguing over that one. And so, likewise, during the Third Crusade, in fact, the military orders did agree that they shouldn't go and capture Jerusalem because they didn't think they could hold it. They should go and capture Egypt first. And Richard the Lionheart decided he would do that because he respected their views. But others said, no, we should have gone to Jerusalem. And again, scholars are still arguing over that. So it's clearly not an easy decision to make.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''How did the influence of the Templars begin to spread beyond the Holy Land? Because they would reach all the way across Christian Europe over the decades and centuries that followed their establishment.''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''The Templars had property right across Latin Christian Europe, except in Scandinavia. And they started to acquire that very, very quickly. In 1120, Count Fulk V of Anjou went to Jerusalem on pilgrimage and he joined the Templars for a short period. And then you were allowed to join as a temporary member. And then he went back to the West and continued to give them donations. And according to Orderic Vitalis, a monk from England, in fact, from the English-Welsh border, who was in the Norman monastery, he also encouraged other people to make donations to the Templars. So that's right from the very beginning of the Templars' existence. They had Fulk of Anjou agitating for them and encouraging other people to join. And Hugues de Paynes' lord, Count Hugh of Champagne, joined around 1125. Then in the Iberian Peninsula, the King of Aragon, Alfonso I, had already been trying to found his own military religious order from the early 1120s. And he clearly found it was difficult to do this, just one kingdom without the resources you need to keep it going on a long-term basis. So he ended up in 1131 when he made his will, donating his kingdom to the canons of the Holy Sepulchre. So it's the priests that run the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, the Hospitallers and the Templars. So that's hardly more than a decade after the Templars had been founded. They were being given a third of a kingdom, which they did not, in fact, get. And the Queen of Portugal was giving them a valuable castle by 1128. So the idea caught on very, very quickly in the West. People clearly thought, I can't go on pilgrimage myself, but I would like to help people in the Holy Land. I want to help protect the Crusader States. I'll make a donation to the Templars and they will pray for me because they're a religious order. And when they're out there fighting, I'll be praying for them. And it's almost the same as if I was there myself. Well, obviously not quite.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''Yeah, I was going to say, is it a way of people who couldn't or wouldn't or didn't want to go on Crusade, feeling like they were participating, they could support the Templars, which was supporting the effort in the Holy Land. And the effect of that is that they begin to acquire land all over the place in Europe.''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''Absolutely. That's what people thought it would appear because when they gave their donations, they referred to Jerusalem and the Templars who protect the Holy Sepulchre there.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''I mean, in the game, the Templars essentially are fronted by a big multinational corporation based in Rome that is conducting all sorts of experiments to find these pieces of Eden. It sounds like that's a fairly reasonable way to view the Templars, even in the 12th century, that they were this big multinational corporation, kind of medieval Amazon. And did the Templars, as they grow and they change and they become more powerful, did they lose sight of what they were originally founded to do? They were there to help pilgrims get to Jerusalem, but as you mentioned, Jerusalem is eventually lost. The Templars don't cease to exist because of that. Did they change? Did they alter their approach?''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''They had the problem that as people gave them donations in the West, they expected something back. So whereas the Templars' regulations indicate that they're supposed to be giving a third of the income, or at least the profit, from each of the properties they have in the West to headquarters, be it in Jerusalem or later in Acre. In fact, they had their patrons saying, well, we've given you all this land, but we want, for example, grandmother wants someone to look after her in her old age. She wants to come and live as a hermit in your estate. And so then the Templars would have to support her. She brings somebody with her, but it's a bit like going into a care home. After a certain point, your money's gone. And some people seem to have bought these care packages for their families. So clearly that is going to be a drain on resources. But the order itself, the brothers continue to talk about, we are defenders of the Holy Church, we are defenders of the Christians. They were still running boats out to the Holy Land so they could take pilgrims as far as Acre into the Christian territories there. They just couldn't necessarily get you to Jerusalem anymore. And of course, they were also fighting in the Iberian Peninsula in the frontier against the Muslims in Spain and Portugal. So they still had got a front in the West, as well as continuing to attempt to recover territory in the East. The problem from their point of view would be, is it, can we recover Jerusalem and keep it? They did try and get it back. They did get it back briefly in the 1240s, then it was captured off them again. Is it better just to try and maintain a foothold here and negotiate with the Muslims and negotiate terms so that pilgrims can visit Jerusalem? Be realistic about this. Perhaps we can see we aren't going to be able to hold Jerusalem permanently. So where do we go from here? Are we just trying to hold our line, maintain a presence, knowing we can't actually recover land and hold onto it? And they get criticised for that in the West, people who think they ought to be able to recover Jerusalem. These, of course, are the armchair critics that every general has always had to compete with.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''It seems to be, if that was their driving force, I mean, Richard I goes to the Holy Land and almost gets to Jerusalem and he seems determined not to make an attempt on Jerusalem. Do you think he's being pushed by people like the Templars who desperately do want to recover Jerusalem because that's so core to what they exist for?''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''Yes, Richard the Lionheart had to balance the different advice he was getting. So the Templars and Hospitallers, in fact, advised him not to go and attack Jerusalem at this point because they wanted more support from the West before they made an attempt on Jerusalem. They were afraid that if Richard captured Jerusalem, everybody would then go home, as they had after the First Crusade, and they wouldn't have the manpower left to hold it. So they wanted to keep the Crusade going a bit longer while they made other key conquests around, such as Egypt and securing supply lines from Egypt, Beirut in the North, so they get that valuable port back, and then they make an attempt on Jerusalem because what they didn't know at that point was that they didn't actually have that much time because Richard was going to be recalled to the West. On the other hand, if they had hugged around a bit longer and Richard hadn't gone back, Saladin died in 1193 and they might then have been able to make an attempt on the city. So there was a lot of criticism for not making that attempt. There is one account which says, if only we'd known, in fact, we could have captured Jerusalem at that point because Saladin's troops were in confusion and Saladin wasn't able to hold on to his troops and they were all wanting to disperse their various homes and we could have captured Jerusalem and held it. But, you know, hindsight is a wonderful thing.''
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| *''Matthew Lewis:'' ''Yeah. And as the Crusader kind of grip on the Holy Land slips further and further away from Jerusalem, what does the Knight Templar order look like? I mean, imagine if they're acquiring all of this land and money in Europe, it becomes a big administrative machine to run that in Europe.''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''In Europe, they are not only running their estates, they've also got houses in many towns and cities which they're letting out. So they have now become landlords, evil landlords charging rent to innocent young people as we have so many problems with that now. They move money across Europe because they wanted to get money to the Holy Land, of course. So they effectively set up a banking system. They're not quite like modern banks, the French historian Alain Demurger has argued, because they don't lend money out to other places and collect interest on that as modern banks do. Except that there are occasionally indications that they might've been doing that. So they're quite like a modern bank and they would do money transfers for you. But then that's another level of administration. They have to keep money records not only for their own money, but for everybody else's. And then because they were very trusted as knights and monks, regarded as people of great integrity, they get dragged into administration for lords and kings and the Pope as well. All these things, and yet they want to recapture Jerusalem. So they were still insisting that that was their purpose, that they wanted to do that. And that was why people were joining the Order. Although there do seem to be a few people that joined because they thought it could be a very good career in the royal service. And the best way of getting into royal service was to join the Templars. And then you could get into royal service by the back door, as it were.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''And just how, at their height, just how powerful were the Templars?''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''Well, they had the Pope's ear, whether or not they listened to what the Pope told them. Because a Templar was the Pope's cubicularis. It's one of the officials of his bedchamber. And the Hospitallers has had one too. So they could always get the Pope's ear. Then they have roles for monarchs. So in England and in Aragon, they help to run the treasury. They have a backup deposit system where the king leaves some of his valuables. And in France, they actually ran the royal treasury for a long time. So yes, the king can't do without them. They also act as ambassadors, not just for kings, but also for lords because they're very trusted. And because they are also military people, they're regarded as being the sort of people that doesn't get attacked and thrown off their horses and have all their letters stolen from them. And because they're religious, they may be exempt from some of the problems that other secular ambassadors had. Their members are always traveling around Europe collecting money. So some people accuse them of carrying secret messages for monarchs. So in all these respects, they are extremely influential. They seem to be quite popular landlords, in fact, despite my comments of earlier, because they have so many exemptions, not only from the Pope, but also from bishops and kings and landlords. But they don't have to pay taxes on this and they don't have to do this due or that due because all the money is going to the Holy Land. If you're their tenant, you may also be able to claim these exemptions. Now, technically you shouldn't be able to, but the Templars sort of blurred this. Oh, they're our tenants, so they count as our brotherhood so they can have some of the benefits of the brotherhood. And likewise, the Templars were allowed to exonerate their own members from excommunication. And they again appear to have pushed this on a little bit further than it was supposed to go and started exonerating their servants and their tenants as well. So quite nice landlords.And their tenants used to put Templars crosses on their houses to show up. We're Templars. The bishop comes on his visitation and says, no you're not, and take that cross down. And they don't.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''But those are incredible powers to be acquiring. The ability to quash someone's excommunication was meant to rest kind of just really with the Pope.''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''Yes, but they are Christ's army and they will tell you that although they answer to the Pope, but sometimes the Pope doesn't know his own mind. We know Christ's mind because we pray every day and we shed our blood on the battlefield. And you warriors all know that warriors are much closer to God than monks are because monks just sit in their monasteries and all they do is pray. They don't know what it's like out there on the battlefield.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''The Templars are the best of both worlds. To what extent do you think the Templars became victims of their own success, both in the sense that we know they will fall eventually, but also they don't ever recover Jerusalem, which is their stated aim. Is that because they get distracted and sidetracked and they become victims of their own success to the point where they're too busy to do what they were originally founded to do?''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''They were victims of their own success and that people expect so much of them. They think they should just able to walk across the Mamluks, who are actually the greatest warriors on the planet at this point, and walk straight into Jerusalem. That is not going to happen. But it was not the Templars fault the Mamluks seized control in Egypt during the 1250s and finally by 1260. And this was a very well led professional military force, and the Templars, the Hospitallers, and the leaders of the Crusaders states don’t really have an answer to the Mamluks powerful military machine. So, in fact once the Mamluks had united most of what had been the Crusader states in the various desperate Muslims states in the Middle East under their banner it was not going to be easy for anyone to dislodge them. The Mongols tried, the Mongol Ilkhanates invaded the area and they did make conquests, but they don’t stay. So, at the time of the Crusader states, reduced to just Cyprus in 1291, they–the Christians in Cyrpus can make bridgeheads. The Templars held Arwad Island, it wasn’t just Ruad Island, off Tortosa, for a few years but they can’t hold it permanently. The Mamluks come up with their navy from Egypt, because the Mamluks haven’t been an effective navy since Saladin a century earlier, and they just wipe the Templars off Ruad and that’s that. In that respect, no matter how powerful the Templars had been, they couldn’t stand against the Mamluks. The whole of Christian Europe wasn’t in a position to be able to hold onto territory in the Holy Land, apart from the fact that the rulers of Christian Europe all had other things on their minds. So, although the people still wanted Jerusalem, etcetera, kings had other battles to fight.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''Can we think of the Templars then as being too inflexible? Did they just not find a way to adapt to the new challenges that the Crusades were bringing?''
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''We could argue they were too inflexible. They would tell us actually they were still trying to do what they could, that they were supporting the Pope’s attempts to ban trade with the Muslims for example, stop people selling the latest in great weaponry to the Muslims. They could trade in that in the Eastern Mediterranean. So, there was an expedition. The commander of the Auvergne, Humbert Blanc, had organized an expedition around the Eastern Mediterranean in the Summer of 1306 to try and stop these traders. And it would appear that he going to organize another one, which didn’t happen, all for reasons of the trial. They were still trying to organize a Crusade, but there weas different opinions over what the Crusade should be because they were up against the Mamluks as well as the people of the second House of Leon said the early 1270s. It’s like a little dog kept barking at a big one, we’re never going to get anywhere against the Mamluks and the Mongols. So the Templars were attempting to organize a big expedition but it wasn’t getting anywhere. What could they have done? They could have done like the Hospitallers and just paced themselves with one island, roads, and used that as a bridgehead. Not that the Hospitallers ever got back to the mainland. They could have gone fought somewhere else entirely, the Teutonic Order had gone to Northeastern Europe, the Baltics, and they were fighting the Lithuanians who were still pagans. So that perhaps they should have done that in the Iberian Peninsula. And there's a hint in a writer in Austria in about 1316 who suggests that they might have been going to do that. This is 30 years after they lost Acre, so he might be making it up either. What else could they have done? They could have done that. I think to myself that more likely is they would continue to try and regain territory in the Eastern Mediterranean, find that they weren't getting anywhere, and they might have ended up like some of the other orders and eventually just being amalgamated into government service and becoming a military branch of the King of England's government, King of France's government, the King of Aragon, Portugal, and Castile's government, rather than being an independent force.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''It's fascinating. I mean, it sounds to me a lot like the makers of Assassin's Creed picked a really good foil for the Assassins, an incredibly powerful movement. We can see talk of them being involved in secrets and secret activity, which is exactly what the game plays on. It sounds like the Templars were the perfect pick for'' Assassin's Creed.
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| *'''Helen Nicholson:''' ''And one of the advantages of using the Templars is that they were abolished. Therefore, you're not treading on anybody's toes.''
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''Or at least, supposedly. Next time on Assassins vs Templars, it's the grandmaster of the evil Templars, Robert de Sable, as Dan Snow is joined by the expert on the man himself, Peter Edbury. Make sure you're following the Echoes of History podcast on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts from so you don't miss a single episode and you can listen to the rest of the series there too. This series is a special collaboration between Ubisoft and History Hit with post-production undertaken by Paradiso Media.''
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| |-|4=
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| '''''Robert de Sable'''''
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| *Woman's Voice: History Hit and Assassin's Creed presents Assassins vs. Templars. Real histories of the secret orders.
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| *Dan Snow: Welcome to Episode 4 of Assassins vs Templars, I'm Dan Snow and this is a special collaboration between History Hit and Ubisoft with the masterminds behind the Assassin's Creed games. This series explores the real history behind the secret societies that inspired the Assassin's Creed franchise. The Assassins themselves and the Templars. So in every episode we're diving deep into the Crusades. We're talking about everything from the myths of the Grail to discovering the real people who inspired the key characters of the game. In this episode it's Robert de Sablé, one of the main antagonists from the original Assassin's Creed game. Who was he? What did he accomplish? Was he that athletic? And why do we remember him today? The man who's going to answer all those questions for us is Peter Edbury, he's an emeritus professor in the School of History at Cardiff University. Enjoy Peter, thank you very much for coming on the podcast.
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| *Peter Edbury: Thank you, thank you for having me.
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| *Dan Snow: Listen, every great game needs a great evil genius. An antagonist. Assassin's Creed has got that, we've got Robert de Sablé. Tell us about this man.
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| *Peter Edbury: Robert de Sablé was from Western France—Sablé itself is sort of more or less halfway between Le Mans and Angers, and it was an important lordship—And he was the hereditary lord of Sablé. Came to inherit the place around about 1160. Now the point is that it had been a very, very important place because it was right on the border. It was the Marcher lordship between Angers and Maine, and so his ancestors were border lords. And that meant they had to be pretty tough. By the time Robert came along, it wasn't a border lordship any longer because a whole lot had got subsumed into the so-called Angevin Empire—The lands in France ruled by the King of England, Henry II —So he wasn't a border lord, but he was one of the awkward squad. He was one of the people who made life difficult for Henry. His own son rebelled, Robert joined in.
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| *Dan Snow: That's the problem with the Plantagenet family. The sons all went a bit rogue, didn't they?
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| *Peter Edbury: Yes, it was a pretty volatile situation. What happened in Robert's case was that when Henry's elder son, the young Henry, died in 1183 left Robert a bit high and dry.
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| *Dan Snow: He picked the wrong side.
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| *Peter Edbury: Yeah, and he managed to re-ingratiate himself. Which means that by the time the Third Crusade was called he was back in the King's good books. The other thing that Robert has to do before he can set off on Crusade is to make his peace with various abbots and so on whose property the abbots claimed he'd been infringing. There's quite a lot of sorting out of lawsuits and so on going on, because Robert wants to be squeaky clean if we're going on Crusade.
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| *Dan Snow: And is going on Crusade quite a good way of rehabilitating your reputation?
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| *Peter Edbury: In his case, he obviously was already rehabilitated, because of the responsibilities he was given. Basically what happens is that the Crusade is called in 1187. Robert as lord, Henry II, is a bit sort of sound-offish about this. But then he dies and Henry's son, Richard the Lionheart, Richard I, takes the lead. And Richard entrusts Robert with a group of others as his naval commanders. His job is to bring the ships round from England, through the Straits of Gibraltar en route for the Holy Land, basically.
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| *Dan Snow: And so Robert has the warlike instincts of his forebears. He's a warrior.
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| *Peter Edbury: Yes, he's a warrior, and he joined the king in Sicily. He's known to have been personally involved in negotiations for the king of Sicily. They sailed on to Cyprus, which Richard conquered. We know Robert was with him at the time because he turns up in a document, and then they reach the Holy Land.
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| *Dan Snow: So Robert de Sablé is the main antagonist in Assassin's Creed. Before he even goes on Crusade, is there any sense he's more or less villainous than anyone else in this period?
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| *Peter Edbury: No, no, he's also quite a sort of typical type of these people.
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| *Dan Snow: And is he involved with the Templars, the religious order?
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| *Peter Edbury: Not specifically, but, and this is the interesting thing. His great-uncle had been the master of the Temple. There's a man called Robert of Craon, whose dates are something like 1136-49. Robert Craon, incidentally, is not very far from Sablé, on that sort of border between Anjou and Maine. And Robert had been the master of the Temple at a time when the Templars got an enormous amount of their endowments. Templars are very wealthy.
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| *Dan Snow: So Robert de Sablé does have a lineage that involves the Templars. He's at King Richard's side, so he's a senior Crusader. So as far as the game's concerned, they have picked out a kind of a senior Crusader. But having landed in the Holy Land, what's he gone and doing? When does he fire up his association with the Templars?
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| *Peter Edbury: Well, when they reach the Holy Land, there are two things going on. The chief thing is that they're actually setting about besieging the town of Acre, which is the modern-day Israeli Akko in northern Israel. It's far and away the best harbour and it's also already identified as the sort of chief commercial centre. The Christians are trying to win it back from the Muslims, they'd lost it in 1187. By 1191, when they arrive, the siege has been going on for almost two years. Richard and the King of France, who arrived a few months earlier, bring it to a very speedy conclusion. The other thing that's happened is that the previous master of the Temple was a man called Gerard of Ridefort, and he'd actually died in a skirmish during the siege of Acre back in 1189. So in other words, there has been no master of the Temple for about 18 months by the time these people get there. And what seems to have happened was that Robert joins the Order and he's immediately elected master. Now you say, that's a bit funny. Surely you would expect the master to be somebody coming up through the ranks, rather than somebody who's been parachuted in from above. But that's effectively what's happened, obviously Richard has engineered this, I don't think there's any doubt about that. So he's Richard's protégé, he's the master of the Temple. Interestingly, the other great military order, the Hospitallers, another of Richard's cronies is the master at the same time, So Richard's got a full house, basically.
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| *Dan Snow: So Assassins Creed are right to say that Robert de Sablé was one of the most senior crusaders. He's obviously very close to Richard and he's now running this military order in the Holy Land.
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| *Peter Edbury: Yes, he's in charge. Now what's happened is that the Templars have suffered very, very serious losses. All the Templars captured at Battle of Hattin back in 1187 have been slaughtered. Other losses are quite considerable. The probability is that there are not so many Templars around and more to the point, there are not very many experienced Templars. People who are experienced with the local warfare, experienced with the local conditions.
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| *Dan Snow: But Robert isn't either, he's fought alone in France.
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| *Peter Edbury: Exactly, yes, Robert's another one. Now presumably what happens is that those Templars who are survivors are very much sort of looking to give sort of day-to-day advice as to what you can do. I mean after all, what are you going to do if you're running an army? Well you've got to find food, you've got to arrange transport, you've got to have horses. I mean one of the big problems you see with going on crusade is that horses don't like going on boats, especially little boats. If you bring your horse with you from the west on crusade, I think it takes quite a number of days before it's in a fit state to bear the weight of your body on its back after it's been cooped up in the hold of some ship. So I mean there's all sorts of problems, and these are the sort of practical problems that you have to get. I noticed from Assassin's Creed that he was obviously an extraordinarily athletic man who sort of did all sorts of running across roofs of houses and so on. There's no portrait of Robert, we assume he was active as a warrior. But whether he was a man of great physical prowess or not, we've no idea.
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| *Dan Snow: In the Assassin's Creed game he is portrayed as someone very very important. Can you see his impact on the course of the crusade?
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| *Peter Edbury: Well he is important simply because he's the commander of this particular military unit. It has to be said though that as Master of Templars he doesn't leave very many traces. He's not Master for very long, say he's elected in the summer of 1191. Dies probably in September 1193, although we can't rule out the possibility he may actually have died in September 1192. So he's not around for very long, and there are very very little documentation. What we do know is that the Templars were very much involved in Richard's campaign. After they captured Acre, Richard set off into what is now moved south into southern Palestine. What he's obviously trying to do initially is advance on Jerusalem. And the way to do that is to secure the coastal centres of Jaffa (present day Tel Aviv), Ashkelon, which had been a major fortress. And that's Richard's priority. Now to get there the army obviously has to march down the coastal road, and on the way the army comes under very heavy harassment from Muslim mounted archers. And how do you organise an army that's being attacked in this way? You want to move forward, you're being harassed and you have to get a strict, vigorous, well disciplined formation and you need people who know what they're doing to guard the rest of the troops and it's the military orders who take the lead. And the Hospitallers and Templars between them act as the vanguard and the rearguard of the army. And their job is to try and keep the Muslim mounted archers at bay, keep them out of range if possible.
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| *Dan Snow: It's a constant combat.
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| *Peter Edbury: It is a constant combat. And obviously Robert is going to be a key person in this. So the army sets off down the coast from Akko–from Acre–towards Tel Aviv–towards Jaffa. And when they get to a place called Arsuf, which is not very far north of Jaffa, they actually engage the Muslims in battle. And this is really the one occasion when Richard is involved in what's anything resembling a pitched battle with the Muslims, and the Christians come off pretty well. There are losses, but on the whole they've carried the day. The problem is that the Muslim mounted archers are back harassing them only a few days later. so in that sense it wasn't the sort of big knockout blow that they may have hoped for. When they get there, there's quite a lot of work needing to be done to get the fortress back in a sort of viable position and so on. And then there's the question of advancing on Jerusalem. And the military orders, again, presumably those members of the military orders who have local knowledge or experience say, now look, it's not going to work. Jerusalem itself is not actually particularly strongly defended by the Muslims. But you take Jerusalem, you're going to have very, very long supply lines and it will be very easy for the Muslims to bring up a much larger force and kick you out and destroy you. So basically cut your losses and don't bother. That, of course, didn't go down terribly well with the rank and file. But Richard could see the point. Now, say the Templars, Hospitallers, they're the people who are giving this advice. It's the local knowledge.
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| *Dan Snow: So you think Robert de Sablé, even though he was also from out of town, he was probably channeling that advice.
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| *Peter Edbury: He'll be endorsing what his guys tell him, basically. He'll be happy with that. So that's the first thing that happens, so they help with this march, they give the advice and that's more or less it. Now, there are two other things that they do. One is, when at the end of the Crusade, in September 1192, Richard decides to go home. He decides he wants to take the shortcut.
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| *Dan Snow: He would regret that.
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| *Peter Edbury: Well, exactly. He decides he'll go through the territory of his great enemy, the Duke of Austria, through Germany, heading for Normandy. And the way he decides to do it is he'll go in the company of some Templars, himself disguised as a Templar and they get found out that he's betrayed or recognised. We're not quite sure, the sources will tell you different stories, different details.
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| *Dan Snow: And he ends up in prison.
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| *Peter Edbury: And he ends up in prison and he is held to ransom and everything is sort of delayed. And it's terribly scandalous that they should do this to a Crusader, or at least that's the view the English took.
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| *Dan Snow: And Robert de Sablé was with him or he goes back a different way?
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| *Peter Edbury: No, almost certainly not. I think Robert must have stayed in the East. But the other thing that Robert's involved with concerns Cyprus. Richard conquered Cyprus en route for the Holy Land. Cyprus was not held by the Muslims, it was held by the Christian Greeks, in the person of a man called Isaac Doukas Komnenos who was basically a member of the Byzantine imperial family who'd gone rogue and effectively usurped power in Cyprus. Styled himself Emperor, but I don't know whether you can really call yourself Emperor of Cyprus because it's not a very big place really. Richard conquered it. This is in the summer of 1192, just before he reaches the Holy Land. And Richard of course realises right from the start, if the Crusade is going to work he must have plenty of ready cash up front to pay his troops and to hire additional mercenaries. That's what he wants to do. And Cyprus, yes, there'll be money floating around. They grab as much loose cash as they can from Cyprus and then, after a short interval, we don't know quite how long, Richard says, look, I will sell it to the Templars and they can produce some more cash up front. So he sells the island of Cyprus for an absolute bargain price of 100,000 bezants. Now the bezants is the Arabic dinar. So they're gold coins. And the Templars, of course, under the exigencies of the Third Crusade and all the problems, can't actually put 100,000 pounds worth of gold into Richard's sticky fingers on the nail. So they say, look, you can have 40,000 and we'll get the rest from the luckless Cypriots who we will now ruthlessly exploit. So what they do is they send a fairly small force of Templars to take charge of the island. Now consider the implications, had this worked Cyprus would have become a Templar island. It would have been rather like a later history of Hospitalers in Rhodes And then much later on in Malta. It would have been their own sovereign state. It's what the Teutonic Knights had in Prussia, the Templars would have had in Cyprus. And it is actually quite, the might of being, is really quite stupendous really. Well now, you say, what happens? Well, what happens is fairly predictable. The Cypriots don't like the Templars very much, but they also realise there aren't very many of them and so they stage an attack. And the Templars get holed up in a fortress in Nicosia. Now the sources say it's not very well defended. Now that can mean one of two things. It may mean that physically the fortress wasn't up to march. in other words, the walls weren't very strong. Or it could mean that the fortress was actually quite strong, but there weren't enough food and drink in it to keep the garrison there for more than a few days. But either way, the Templars are shut up in there, they try and negotiate their way out but the local Cypriots aren't having none of it. And so the Templars decide that the only thing to do is literally to cut their way out and so they sally forth, killing anyone who gets in the way. And the slaughter sounds to have been pretty appalling.
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| *Dan Snow: Do we think Robert was with them then?
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| *Peter Edbury: No, in fact he wasn't. It was quite clear he wasn’t. It was a man called Armand Bouchart, and Armand Bouchart, those of you who are Assassin Creed aficionados is another character who turns up in that story. The sources, again, are a little bit ambivalent. There are various versions of the account. One version says they did awfully well. Another one sort of rather laments the fact that the slaughter was so extensive and so largely unnecessary. So they escape from their fortress and Robert has to go back to Richard and say, look, sorry, chum, it's not working we're going to just have to give you the island back. We don't have the resources to do this. We can't cope. So in other words, Robert has failed.
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| *Dan Snow: Robert has failed. Richard has also failed to a certain extent. They've failed to capture Jerusalem and there's a peace treaty, isn't there? Well, there's an agreement between Saladin, the Muslim commander, and King Richard. In Assassin's Creed it's got Robert kind of negotiating this treaty himself, but that's not true, is it?
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| *Peter Edbury: Not as far as I know. There's no doubt at all that he would have been in on Richard's counsels when he was doing it. But whether he was actually physically involved (18:18) With talking to the Muslims, I don't know.
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| *Dan Snow: And as you point out, he dies in the Holy Land as well. So we don't think he dies in a dramatic duel, like he does in Assassin's Creed.
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| *Peter Edbury: No, as far as we know, he died in his bed.
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| *Dan Snow: But we should point out that lots of people…
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| *Peter Edbury: Died of disease.
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| *Dan Snow: It was hard campaigning as well.
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| *Peter Edbury: Yeah, he's a man of mature years. By this time he's probably in his 50s. Not very many of these people live beyond 60.
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| *Dan Snow: Just finishing up, I guess what Assassin's Creed portrays the Grand Master of the Templars as a sort of a hugely significant figure, as powerful as kings. Do you think that was realistic? Or does it depend on the health of the Templars at the time? Whoever was in the office?
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| *Peter Edbury: Well, they were powerful. But what happens is that after the Third Crusade is over they get much more powerful. Basically what happens is that a lot of the territory that the Christians lose they never get back, or they never get back securely. On the other hand, the Templars have still got all their estates in the West and their recruiting grounds in the West. So they've still got their wealth, and essentially what happens is the Templars and the sister order the Hospitallers are more important in the years that follow the Third Crusade than they had been previously. Before 1187, you have this rather odd situation developed. The king relies on the military orders because he needs their manpower, he needs their wealth. But on the other hand he doesn't control them, he doesn't rule them. Military orders are only answerable to the Pope, and that means that although the military orders, both Templars and Hospitallers, are an enormous asset their troops are not under direct royal control. And the other thing that needs to be said is that in the 12th century, at least three of the Masters are men rather like Robert, Who'd been jobbed in, not by the king of England as a Crusader, but by the kings of Jerusalem. Men who had been royal officials, who'd been high in the king's service and then suddenly appear As the Master of the orders. So again it looks as if the sort of manoeuvre that Richard had tried, had previously been played successfully by the various kings of Jerusalem.
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| *Dan Snow: Peter, thank you very much for coming on this podcast.
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| *Peter Edbury: Well thank you very much.
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| *Dan Snow: Thank you for listening. Next time on Assassins vs Templars, Matt Lewis is talking to Nicholas Morton About Richard I and Edward I. How one of them may have hired the Assassins, and how the other got on the wrong side of them. Make sure you're following the Echoes of History podcast on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts so you don't miss it and you can listen to the rest of the series. You've been listening to a special collaboration Between History Hit and Ubisoft with post production done by Paradiso Media.
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| '''''The Assassins & The Crusaders'''''
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| *Woman’s Voice: History Hit and Assassin's Creed presents Assassins vs Templars Real Histories of the secret orders.
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| *Matthew Lewis: Welcome to the inside of one of history's greatest stories. In this collaboration between Ubisoft and History Hit, we're taking you back to the very beginning. The story of Assassin's Creed is one of deadly rivalry between conflicting ideologies that asks whether peace is found through freedom or control. It begins with Assassins and Templars racing to gather the Pieces of Eden in the fiery heat of the Near East amidst brutal religious upheavals. We're all Desmond Miles now, and we've found our Animus. We've found a team of the best historians working in their fields who will unlock the memories of the past for us. They'll lead us through the vaults of their secrets and introduce us to some of the people who inspired the game. It's time to break into the vaults of two of history's most infamous organizations as we pit the Assassin's Creed against the Templar Order. In this episode, I'm joined by Dr. Nicholas Morton, an Associate Professor at Nottingham Trent University and a specialist in the medieval Near East. Nick's written several books, most recently The Mongol Storm, which considers the arrival of the Mongol Empire amidst the Crusades. And he's joining me today to talk about the Assassins and their relationship with Richard I, Lord Edward, and the various Crusader states. Thank you very much for joining us, Nick.
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| *Nicholas Morton: Great to be on the show.
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| *Matthew Lewis: The Crusader states and the Assassin sect sort of overlap each other in history. They run parallel to each other, pretty much. What was the relationship like between them? Did they view themselves as enemies? Were they divided on Christian versus Muslim lines?
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| *Nicholas Morton: One of the most interesting dimensions to the history of the relationship between the Crusader states and the Assassins and it goes back a little bit before the Crusaders arrived, because about 20, 30 years before the Crusaders, the entire Near East region is invaded by a group of people called the Seljuk Turks, and their invasions start in the year 1000, and they reach the northern Syrian region where the Crusaders themselves conduct their invasions about 20 or so years before the Crusaders. And the point is that the Seljuk Turks conquer the entire area, but that, of course, includes many different groups, Christian, Muslim, and Jewish, and it can't be guaranteed when the Crusaders arrive that these people will feel a sense of shared purpose and common feeling with the Seljuk Turks, who are themselves invaders. So you've got many groups, such as the Bedouin, and yes, the Assassins, who exist in a sort of amidst space. They don't necessarily feel aligned to the Seljuk Turks, but neither do they feel aligned to the Crusaders either, and that's what makes the relationship really so interesting in that they're trying to plot a route to their own survival amidst these two invaders coming in from different directions.
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| *Matthew Lewis: So the Assassins don't necessarily feel any loyalty to fellow Muslims, they're looking for a way for the Assassins to survive.
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| *Nicholas Morton: Well, in some cases they do, but the Seljuk Turks themselves are Sunni Muslims, or they become Sunni Muslims at least during the course of the 12th century. The Assassins, or Nizaris, they are Shia Muslims, and they're intensively persecuted by the Seljuk Turks, and so often they feel a greater sense of threat from the Seljuk Turks than they do from the Crusaders themselves.
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| *Matthew Lewis: What was the geopolitical setup of the Holy Land throughout these Crusades? It changes, I guess, but essentially we know we have Crusader states and we know we have Muslims, but it seems like the Assassins are a third power at play there.
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| *Nicholas Morton: Sure. Okay, so let's set the scene a little bit. Only a couple of decades before the arrival of the First Crusade, much of the Near East has been conquered by the Seljuk Turks, and they are a new influence in the region. They're not a long-standing or historic community in the area, and they have now come to rule a very broad population consisting of many Christian and Muslim groups, and many different ethnicities as well, whether that's Arabs or Kurds or other peoples across the entire area. And then, about 20 or so years after the Seljuk Turks reached the Near East, you have the advent of the First Crusade. As the First Crusaders set out from Western Christendom with the earliest waves in 1096, they became a major presence in Northern Syria in 1097 onwards, so only 20 or so years after the Seljuk Turks, and they conquered Antioch in Northern Syria. They were invited to defend the city of Edessa, and they then took power in Edessa soon afterwards, and then their armies advanced south, conducting a very brutal siege and overthrow of Jerusalem. Now, the conquests of these three cities, Edessa, Antioch, and Jerusalem, laid the foundation for what would become the Crusader States, essentially European countries in the Near East, in modern money, if you like. But this raises all sorts of questions for everyone else. The Seljuk Turks vigorously resisted the arrival of the First Crusaders, because, naturally, they threatened their control over the entire region. But at this point, at least, the Crusaders defeated field army after field army, sent against them from the various Seljuk Turkish governors from the area, cities like Aleppo, Damascus, and Mosul. And so, for a time, at least, it looks as if Seljuk authority is hovering in the balance. And that raises lots of questions for the various local communities who make up the bulk of the population. And the questions here would include things like, who's going to win? Irrespective of who you want to win, who is going to win? And then, of course, who do you prefer? Because it can't be taken for granted that the Crusaders would be viewed in a more hostile way than the Seljuk Turks. They're both invaders, and neither of them have been particularly gentle in taking control. And so some pick the era after the First Crusaders, their moment to rebel against the Seljuk Turks. Others align themselves more with the Seljuk Turks. But the Nizaris, or the Assassins, which is the nickname that people gave to many years later, they were one of these groups. Who should they support? Because they're intensively persecuted by the Seljuk Turks. In fact, when the Seljuk, a new sultan, came into power in 1105, he identified the Nizaris, or Assassins, as his number one opponent. Didn't even mention the Crusaders. In fact, it's something of a sort of Eurocentric conceit that the Crusaders are the biggest show in town. They're not. There's a lot of things going on in the Near East. At this point, at least, the Seljuks see the Nizaris, the Assassins, as being a very, very serious threat. So that raises a question for them, as it does for many, many other groups across the Near East. Who's going to win? Who should they support? Whose side are they on? And crucially, how do they survive against these two millstones of these two powers who are rivaling one another for control over many areas of the Near East?
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| *Matthew Lewis: And I guess if the Seljuks are persecuting the Assassins in particular, there might be a degree to which the enemy of my enemy is my friend, and perhaps the Assassins start to view the Crusaders as potential allies.
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| *Nicholas Morton: That's seen in many cases in the Near East. When we talk to people about the Crusades, they'll not nearly always sort of caption it as, oh, it's a Christian versus Muslim war. And there is an element of that. But there's lots of situations where you have Christians and Muslims on both sides. There's more reasons than just religion for conflict in the Near East. There's trade. There's population movements. There's the rivalries between families and ethnicities. It's a very complex map, which makes the whole thing incredibly intricate, but also very fascinating at the same time.
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| *Matthew Lewis: The balance of power swings backwards and forwards throughout the Crusades. And we join in the game in the Third Crusade, when the First Crusade's successful for the Christians, the Second Crusade a failure for the Christians, success for the Muslims. The Third Crusade is underway. Do we see the relationship between the Crusader states and the Assassins changing as that balance shifts?
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| *Nicholas Morton: Yes, absolutely. So the main thing is that perhaps the biggest presence of the assassins is in Aleppo, certainly in an urban area in northern Syria. Aleppo and northern Syria, where they have a large community. And the various Turkic rulers of Aleppo have to work out how they're going to orientate themselves vis-à-vis the Assassins. There's a strong pressure from other Seljuk Turkish rulers in the region to persecute them, but they've got to manage the fact there's a large population there too. And so eventually they're expelled. And so many Nizaris or assassins go down to Damascus, and there too, they are placed under a great deal of pressure. And so they begin to open talks with the Crusader states in the 1120s. The idea being that they will hand over the lands that they own in return for lands within the Crusader states. And then in the midst of a big crusade in 1129, because of fears that the Nizaris are collaborating or cooperating with the Crusaders, the authorities in Damascus conduct a massacre of Nizaris or Assassins in Damascus. And that then very much brings the assassins into the Crusader states, looking for sanctuary. And they eventually create a sort of small territory for themselves in northern Syria. And occasionally the Crusader states fight on the same side as the Assassins. Occasionally they fight against one another. It's not a particularly amicable relationship. Often the neighbouring landowners, who are often the Templars and Hospitallers, want tribute from the Assassins. But nonetheless, there are times where they work together. There are times when they fight together. But one of the most interesting details is that along the boundaries of Assassin territory, they've got boundary stones. And on the Crusader or Templar side of the border, those boundary stones are marked by a cross. And on the assassin's side, they're marked by a dagger, just to make the point that this is where the territory changes.
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| *Matthew Lewis: And we can really see iconography there that we would associate with those groups today, probably.
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| *Nicholas Morton: Sure. But like I said, it is a very uneven relationship. The Templars frequently want tribute from the Assassins. And one particularly well-known episode is where the assassins want to form a formal alliance with the largest of the Crusader states, called the Kingdom of Jerusalem. And the King of Jerusalem is very keen to have that alliance because he's looking for additional allies he can work with in the region. But the Templars don't want that alliance because they want to maintain their tribute payments from the Assassins. And so when the Assassins come down to the Kingdom of Jerusalem, they send their envoys down to finalise that treaty. It's actually the Templars who ambush the Assassins' deputation and assassinate them, if you like. So they then ruin that treaty. King Amalric of Jerusalem is furious. It ruins the relations at that moment. But relations go up and down for many decades, all the way through that period. Yes.
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| *Matthew Lewis: That's an interesting moment though, because the central conceit of Assassin's Creed is the Assassins who represent the desire to find peace through free will versus the Templars who want peace through order. And it places them ideologically at odds. And it sounds like the Templars had a different relationship to the Assassins than the rest of the Crusader states perhaps did.
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| *Nicholas Morton: Yeah, it's fairly simple. They want tribute from them. The Assassins, it's very difficult to gauge the assassins' motives and what they're after because we have so little written by them. Although judging by their actions, what they really want is to be left alone. They're aware that they're very small in number. And so they compensate for that by conducting these very high-profile assassinations, which means that people are often terrified of them. I mean, Saladin famously spent his nights on many campaigns sleeping in a wheeled wooden tower, which could be locked from the inside because he was so concerned that he might be assassinated. And the Assassins seem to have tried possibly around twice to assassinate Saladin, but they never got to him. But they could create huge amounts of fear. And that's how they protected their community because rulers didn't want to cause trouble with them because of that very danger.
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| *Matthew Lewis: Did that give them a power that went beyond their size and their territorial sort of reach? Did that fear of them and their ability to get to people make them more powerful than they might have otherwise been?
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| *Nicholas Morton: In most cases, yes. But so we're told by one Crusader called John de Joinville, not with the Templars. And the reason for that is the Templars, yeah, the Templars had a Templar Master, but the Templar Master ruled alongside a ruling council called the Central Chapter. And the assassins knew that if they were to kill a member of the Central Chapter or to kill the Templar Master, the remainder of the chapter would just continue to rule. So wherever you killed a sultan or a queen or a king, that would cause a crisis of state for most territories. It wouldn't actually affect the Templars because they're ruled by a group of 13. So unless you can kill all of them simultaneously, it's not going to work.
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| *Matthew Lewis: The original Assassin's Creed game picks up in the 1190s during the Third Crusade when Richard I, Richard the Lionheart, is in the Holy Land and he's a character in the game. But Richard I eventually gets into trouble because of alleged connections to the Assassins. Do we know whether he was on good terms with the Assassins? I mean, he's accused of hiring them to kill somebody. Is that likely? Do we know how true that is?
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| *Nicholas Morton: Oh, well, this is one of the great whodunits of the medieval period. The person who was killed was called Conrad of Montferrat. And Conrad was significant because he felt that he should be king of the remnants of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. And he wasn't the person Richard backed. Richard wanted another person to be king of Jerusalem. He wanted the existing king of Jerusalem, a man called Guy of Lusignan, to be king of Jerusalem. And so there had been an ongoing controversy over which of these people, Guy or Conrad, would become king. Now, that matter had just been settled before Conrad was assassinated with the decision going to Conrad. And so you could say, well, maybe it was Richard. Maybe he was angry at the fact that Conrad had become king of Jerusalem. But on the other hand, that's also not likely because Richard had been receiving reports of trouble in England while he's away. He knows he's got to get back. And whilst Conrad wouldn't have been his choice, Conrad's choice would have raised the prospect of stabilising things so that he could leave. So did Richard do it? It's difficult to say. Did he have a relationship with the Assassins? We don't have evidence of that, but it's not impossible either. It's very hard to say. The other possible culprits are Saladin or another member of the crusading elite who's out there, or perhaps the Assassins themselves. Famously, the Duke of Austria sent envoys to the Assassins basically to ask, why did you kill Conrad? And they came back saying, we killed Conrad for our own reasons. But actually, it's thought that that letter which reports that reply may have been forged. So again, another layer of complexity to the question of who did it.
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| *Matthew Lewis: And interestingly, Conrad's father, William, is a character in the game as well. He's one of the targets of Altaïr for assassination. So we see a direct parallel there between the game and real life. In the game, you're trying to assassinate William. In real life, it's his son who is actually killed by the Assassins. How does this end up getting Richard I into trouble?
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| *Nicholas Morton: It gets him into trouble because Richard has plenty of enemies, particularly within the crusader camp. The crusading army is a combination of factions from across Western Christendom who share very little except the fact that they are broadly seeking to try and conquer Jerusalem. Aside from that, they have longstanding political differences and disagreements, and many of them are not well disposed towards Richard. So when the prospect of blaming Richard for that assassination comes up, naturally, many will seize onto it, even if it's still not clear whether he did or he didn't or exactly what happened there.
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| *Matthew Lewis: Most of the crusades feel a lot like everyone taking their personal problems from Europe on holiday to the Near East in the sun and fighting it out amongst themselves as much as fighting Muslims there.
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| *Nicholas Morton: That's very true. And there's plenty of quarrels and arguments. And Richard, on his way home, was imprisoned by Leopold of Austria. And it seems very likely the reason for that was the on-crusade. When the city of Acre was conquered by the crusading forces, Leopold put his banner above the city walls, which is often taken as the symbol of the victor. And Richard said, well, no, you have all the victor by what about the fall of the city. He pulled down Leopold's banner and up goes his own. And Leopold was furious. So yes, there's that ongoing tension and controversy between crusading leaders could play out both in the crusader states and indeed in Western Christendom.
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| *Matthew Lewis: But am I right that the assassination of Conrad of Montferrat was kind of the official reason that Richard was held on his way home?
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| *Nicholas Morton: It's difficult to say what Leopold's actual motives were, that he probably had several things running through his mind. But certainly that accusation would have been a powerful one.
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| *Matthew Lewis: And your most recent book deals with the arrival of the Mongols in the Near East in the midst of all of this crusade. How does their arrival on the scene change the dynamic? Does it have an effect on the Templars and the Assassins in particular?
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| *Nicholas Morton: Yeah, so the Assassins had a very troubled relationship with the Mongols. Initially, when the Mongols started their invasions into the Near East, they began in the 1220s, that's when the Mongols had reached the region south of the Caspian. And at this point, it's not clear whether the Assassins saw the Mongols as a threat or even a potential ally. The Assassins tend to get persecuted quite a lot in this period. And so they may have seen the Mongols as a possible way of avoiding that. And there's even one report that says that they actually wrote to the Mongols inviting them in. Having said that, when the Mongols did finally arrive in force, in the Assassins' own territories in the 1250s, they besieged the Assassins' many strongholds. These are their strongholds in Persia. The Assassins have got two main clusters of territory, one in Syria, one in Persia. They besieged these citadels in Persia, or modern-day Iran, and then were very brutal in their overthrow of those strongholds. So the Mongols very much set themselves up as opponents to the Assassins. Again, this seems to have been a reaction, at least in part, to fears the Assassins would try and kill the great Khan or some leading members of the Mongol imperial family. So the Mongols overthrew the Assassins in the 1250s very brutally, although some of the sieges of the Assassins' castles lasted for well over a decade. And then the Mongols advanced across the Tigris, across the Euphrates, into northern Syria, into the region where you've got the Crusader States, as well as various other Muslim territories as well. And the main Mongol army besieged Aleppo in the north, which is only, I don't know, maybe 40 or 50 miles from the Assassins' own territory. And at this point, that raises the question of, well, what are the Mongols going to do next? Are they going to try and overrun the Assassins' territories in Syria, just as they had their territories in Persia? And certainly, when a flying column was sent out from the siege of Aleppo down towards Damascus by the Mongol leader, a man called Hulegu, he instructed his lieutenant leading that army, a man called Kitbuqa, to destroy the Assassins' lands on his journey south, or at least as part of that campaign. But he didn't do it. He went to Damascus, he secured Damascus' overthrow, and perhaps he was planning on doing it later. We'll never know, because at that point, the Mongol army was defeated by an Egyptian army led by the Mamluk dynasty, who was in charge of Egypt at this time. And so we don't know whether Kitbuqa would have sought to overthrow the Assassins immediately after that or not. What we can say with confidence is that the Assassins were acutely aware of the threat the Mongols posed from that point, if not before. And so they were very much looking for ways of supporting those who could resist the Mongols in later years.
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| *Matthew Lewis: So the scenery is changing all of the time and I think we have this view of the Assassins being quite, I guess, mercenary is the word. They're up for hire for anybody. But it sounds like they also had their own political agenda and their own considerations of who their friends or enemies were at any given time as well.
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| *Nicholas Morton: I haven't come across examples of the Assassins sort of murdering on order. If you pay a certain amount of money, you get a certain number of assassinations. But they do seem to have been open to political influence. So if there was a sort of a regional overlord who they felt that they ought to keep in favour with, then yes, they could well conduct assassinations on behalf of that regional overlord. And that does become clear in the 13th century, particularly after the Mongols become such an imminent threat. Because the only power in the region that shows any real ability to defeat the Mongols is the Mamluk Empire of Egypt and Syria. And so we have examples soon after the Mongols arrive in northern Syria in the early 1260s of the Assassins actually looking for Mamluk favour. Because they realise the Mamluks are their best chance of surviving. And so they begin to look to work with the Mamluks. And certainly in later years, a lot of the Mamluks' enemies, particularly Mongol opponents, do either suffer attempted assassinations or very real assassinations. There are a smaller number also of attempted assassinations against leaders in the Crusader States as well, which are sort of very, very thin territories by this stage, clinging onto the coast of the Levantine region.
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| *Matthew Lewis: And a lot of the gameplay in Assassin's Creed revolves around being sneaky, assassinating people from the shadows, surprise attacks, all of that kind of thing. What do we actually know about Assassin tactics? Is that the way they operated?
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| *Nicholas Morton: There's one tactic which seems to work particularly well and which we do tend to have fairly well recorded. And that tactic, in essence, is that the Assassins would disguise themselves as someone who might be of service to the leader they want to assassinate. And then to offer themselves for service, to get into that ruler's employ, and then just to wait until the order comes to strike. The idea being that that ruler will learn to trust them, will eventually lower their guard, and then they've got them where they want them. One very famous episode of this is where the Assassins sent an envoy to see Saladin. And the envoy said, look, I want to speak to you, Saladin, just you by yourself. And Saladin said, look, I'm not going to get rid of my entire entourage. I'll keep two bodyguards with me, but then we can talk in at least relative privacy. And so the Assassin's envoy said, okay, that's fine, we can do that. So they had their meeting. And the Assassin's envoy then went to that meeting and then addressed Saladin's two bodyguards and said, if I asked either of you to kill Saladin, would you do it? They both said yes, because they were both, if you like, sleeper agents for the Assassins. And this really worried Saladin. And the Assassins could do the same thing with leaders in the Crusader States. And so in, I think it's 1270, the Lord of Montfort, Lord of Tyre, a city on the coastline in the north of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, he employed two warriors as light cavalry in his army of his lordship. And he learned to trust them. And consequently, they became quite close. And it was at that moment that they then chose to strike. So this is quite common. Get close to the ruler you're after, wait for them to drop their guard, and then you've got them.
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| *Matthew Lewis: And did the Assassins tend to work in public or in private? Did they want people to know that they had killed someone? Or were they more keen that that person died in secret?
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| *Nicholas Morton: I'm not aware of the Assassins seeking to perform what could be described as sort of show killings, killing someone as a public spectacle. There are a few times that people were murdered in public places. The ruler of Mosul was killed in Damascus in a very sort of public act. But I suspect that in many cases, the Assassins want at least some chance of getting away. And the chances of doing that in public are much less than if you can do it in private and get out before the alarm is raised. So often it's in private or semi-private. It's often in those sorts of… I suppose the modern equivalent would be not if you were going to drive to a public event. You wouldn't be killed at home. You wouldn't be killed in the car. Perhaps when you're getting out of the car and going into the venue. It's those sorts of crossover moments. That's when you're vulnerable. And often that's when the Assassins struck. But essentially they wanted to do it when their target guard was down.
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| *Matthew Lewis: And I guess part of that bit about having sleeper agents there is that they can then pick those moments. They can find the moments to strike when the target is most vulnerable.
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| *Nicholas Morton: Sure. The non-lethal alternative, which is just, as with the Saladin example I gave you, of just making it very clear just how vulnerable you are if they want to get you, which of course gives political leverage without even having to kill anyone.
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| *Matthew Lewis: Yeah, which is in itself a very different form of power, I guess.
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| *Nicholas Morton: Sure. But much of this, this is the basic power relationship here, is it's a small community which is often intensively persecuted trying to find ways of exerting political influence, defending itself whilst recognising its limitations in terms of total population numbers, I suppose.
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| *Matthew Lewis: And there's another interesting incident that we can talk about. So in 1190s, Richard I gets kind of wrapped up with the idea that he may have engaged the Assassins to kill Conrad of Montferrat. And that causes trouble for him because of his proximity to the Assassins. 80 years later, we have Lord Edward, who would soon become King Edward I of England, also in the Holy Land on Crusade. And he becomes the target of an assassination attempt by the Assassins. What do we know about how that attempt played out?
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| *Nicholas Morton: So very similar to many of the others, really. It seems as if this person, the Assassin, offered himself for service with Edward and his entourage. He grew close to Edward. And on this occasion, I think it was in Edward's bedchamber, he waited till he'd got Edward alone. And then tried to stab him when he was unawares. But he's Edward I, and I don't know, whatever you think of Edward I, no one disputes that he was an excellent warrior. And so not an easy person to catch as unaware. So it seems as if the Assassin did draw blood. But Edward got to him before he could strike a mortal wound. And of course, as soon as Edward had held this person, the alarm was raised. And then the room was flooded with soldiers and the Assassin was killed. So the assassination attempt was a failure. But it's a very similar approach to many of the others the Assassins tried. And there's various stories about this. It seems as if Edward's brother was pretty quickly on the scene. There is one story from a much, much later period that his wife, Eleanor of Castile, sucked poison from the wound. Because the idea being the blade may have been poisoned. In fact, that doesn't seem to have been the case. But it's one of the stories told about the incident.
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| *Matthew Lewis: It's a great medieval romantic tale to add on to it. And so how do we know that the attack on Lord Edward was by the Assassins? Do they claim credit for it?
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| *Nicholas Morton: That's a complicated question. We know that an assassination attempt occurred. But there is a temptation when studying Near Eastern history to assign every assassination to the Assassins because they're well known for that. People could murder one another for all sorts of reasons and different factions could do that. So we can never be quite sure. And certainly there are other groups who may have conducted the assassination. And it may not have been as simple as it's being the Mamluk Sultan commissioning it. May have been one of the regional governors instead. It's difficult to be sure. All we can say is that because the assassination attempt itself had many of the hallmarks of the typical approaches the Assassins used previously to assassinate. Disguising himself as one of Edward's followers, waiting for a moment of when Edward's guard was dropped and then conducting the act. That would be fairly standard for the Assassins. But that's no guarantee. And so it's always one of these sorts of grey area questions which of course would have strengthened the Assassins' hand at the time. People can never be quite sure who it was they were up against.
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| *Matthew Lewis: And I guess to some extent if they develop a known tactic it becomes repeatable by someone else who could make it look like an attempt by the Assassins.
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| *Nicholas Morton: Yep, absolutely. And so once again there are question marks over these sorts of things. But of course the Assassins, their whole purpose is to live in the shadows and to play with those grey areas. So that whole grey area would work in their favour.
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| *Matthew Lewis: And does Edward make much of the assassination attempt himself? I guess surviving an assassination attempt would have been a mark of prestige for him. It shows how brave and how strong he was.
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| *Nicholas Morton: Quite possibly. Certainly the incident became very well known in Western Christendom soon afterwards. And you have various sort of songs and elaborations and reinterpretations told of the story in later years. Yes, absolutely.
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| *Matthew Lewis: And do we know why the Assassins may have gone after Edward I? Or does that remain a mystery?
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| *Nicholas Morton: That's not clear. I mean Edward's crusade has occasionally been billed as this sort of epic contest, as it were. The crusaders coming in, the Muslim powers trying to defeat this crusade. In fact, it wasn't. Edward's army was not large. The papacy had hoped to raise a big army and hadn't. Edward arrived with a fairly small crusading force. He conducted a couple of very, very limited campaigns. And they were so limited that actually the Mamluk Sultan mocked them simply because they weren't making any difference to the status quo whatsoever. And so in a sense, I'm rather surprised that Edward was targeted, not because he was an enemy to the Mamluk Sultan, who could then, of course, leverage support from the Assassins, but because geopolitically, he was fairly insignificant by this stage. One suggestion that has been made is that the Mamluk Sultan wanted a treaty with the Kingdom of Jerusalem, which Edward opposed. So this may have been a way of making sure that treaty happened. But the thing that surprises me most about the assassination is that it happened at all, because quite honestly, by this stage, the Kingdom of Jerusalem is such a minor player in the affairs of the Near East. The big players are the Mongols and the Mamluks, and they're facing off along the line of the River Euphrates. Kingdom of Jerusalem's hardly got any military leverage at all by this stage.
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| *Matthew Lewis: Could it have been an effort just to finish off the crusader kingdoms? (34:38) I mean, they don't last too much longer after this anyway.
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| *Nicholas Morton: They don't, and that would make sense. Although to be honest, Edward wasn't billed to be going home fairly soon after this anyway. It may have been a show of strength, though, you're right.
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| *Matthew Lewis: We know that in that moment, Edward's assassin was captured and was killed at the scene. But what would generally happen to an Assassin if their attempt failed?
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| *Nicholas Morton: Well, if an assassination attempt failed, the Assassin would either get away or more likely they wouldn't, in which case the Assassin specifically would be killed. But it's actually quite rare to hear of repercussions against the Assassin's territorial holdings. Once they had the protection of the Mamluk Sultanate, essentially that gave them a fair degree of protection anyway. There was a case in 1213 when the assassins killed the son of one of the rulers of the Crusader states. And following that, there was a campaign directly against the Assassin's strongholds as a repercussion of that. But often because the Assassins conduct their assassinations for their patron, as it were, the person who has a fair degree of control over them, normally it's the patron who gets blamed rather than them themselves.
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| *Matthew Lewis: It seems like the core message here is if you go to the Holy Lands on Crusade and someone offers to be of service and seems like a really useful, helpful chap, probably don't take him into your service.
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| *Nicholas Morton: Well, unless you're very confident in your relationship with the Assassins, certainly.
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| *Matthew Lewis: Thank you very much for joining us today, Nick, to run through all of that. And a big reminder to people to look out Nick's book, The Mongol Storm, which is available in all good bookstores everywhere. Thank you very much, Nick.
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| *Nicholas Morton: Thank you so much.
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| *Matthew Lewis: Join us again next time on Assassins vs Templars when I'm joined by Dr. Juliet Wood to talk about the Templars, the Grail and the mythology that surrounds them. Make sure you're following the Echoes of History podcast on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts so you don't miss an episode in this fascinating series. This series is a special collaboration between Ubisoft and History Hit with post-production undertaken by Paradiso Media.
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| '''''The Templars & The Holy Grail''''' | | '''''The Templars & The Holy Grail''''' |
| Line 507: |
Line 339: |
| '''''Hammam''''' | | '''''Hammam''''' |
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| *Deana Hassanein: Baghdad Sound Walks Hello fellow travelers, I'm Deana– | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Baghdad Sound Walks Hello fellow travelers, I'm Deana– |
| *Ali Olomi: –and I'm Ali. Where should we travel to today, Deana? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' –and I'm Ali. Where should we travel to today, Deana? |
| *Deana Hassanein: To be honest Ali, I'm feeling like taking it easy, maybe something more relaxing after the marketplace and the mosque. I just want to chill. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' To be honest Ali, I'm feeling like taking it easy, maybe something more relaxing after the marketplace and the mosque. I just want to chill. |
| *Ali Olomi: I've got just the thing for you. Let's make our way to the hammam. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I've got just the thing for you. Let's make our way to the hammam. |
| *Deana Hassanein: When you say hammam, you mean the bathhouse, a public house, right? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' When you say hammam, you mean the bathhouse, a public house, right? |
| *Ali Olomi: Right. But Deana, the hammam is so much, much more than that. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Right. But Deana, the hammam is so much, much more than that. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I know that they were very popular back in the day and still are in lots of places around the world. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I know that they were very popular back in the day and still are in lots of places around the world. |
| *Ali Olomi: They're called the Thermae, if I can remember my Latin. It's been a little bit, but they were really popular and they were a hangout spot for the Romans, particularly wealthy ones. In fact, some of the oldest hammams in the world are found in old Roman territories, like Syria and then eventually Baghdad and the rest of the Islamic world. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' They're called the Thermae, if I can remember my Latin. It's been a little bit, but they were really popular and they were a hangout spot for the Romans, particularly wealthy ones. In fact, some of the oldest hammams in the world are found in old Roman territories, like Syria and then eventually Baghdad and the rest of the Islamic world. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Please tell me, what would I see? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Please tell me, what would I see? |
| *Ali Olomi: Well, first the hammam would be located relatively close to the mosque or sometimes near the marketplace. You want it nearby because everyday activity would be around it. So it's easily accessible. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Well, first the hammam would be located relatively close to the mosque or sometimes near the marketplace. You want it nearby because everyday activity would be around it. So it's easily accessible. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Yeah. Especially for Muslims, you know, throughout the day they have to maintain a certain level of hygiene. It's very important Islamically and even before they pray, they have to perform wudu. So I get that. That makes sense. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Yeah. Especially for Muslims, you know, throughout the day they have to maintain a certain level of hygiene. It's very important Islamically and even before they pray, they have to perform wudu. So I get that. That makes sense. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah. So hammam served in some ways, a religious function, like you're pointing out, but they also had access to baths and cleanliness more broadly. And they were also incredibly social. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah. So hammam served in some ways, a religious function, like you're pointing out, but they also had access to baths and cleanliness more broadly. And they were also incredibly social. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Surprise, surprise. Everything is social in Baghdad. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Surprise, surprise. Everything is social in Baghdad. |
| *Ali Olomi: Extroverts through and through. They like to hang out and relax at the same time. Honestly, it may actually be better to see them as a sort of spa rather than like a bathhouse. So if we were making our way to the hammam, we would see a structure with some type of a dome and a courtyard on the outside leading to the doors. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Extroverts through and through. They like to hang out and relax at the same time. Honestly, it may actually be better to see them as a sort of spa rather than like a bathhouse. So if we were making our way to the hammam, we would see a structure with some type of a dome and a courtyard on the outside leading to the doors. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Okay. Tell me more. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Okay. Tell me more. |
| *Ali Olomi: But this is where we're going to have to part ways, Deana. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' But this is where we're going to have to part ways, Deana. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Okay. That makes sense. We can't enter together. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Okay. That makes sense. We can't enter together. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah. Like the harem, hammam was a pretty gendered space. In the marketplace and in public, you've got men and women that did intermingle with one another, but not the hammam, not the bath space. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah. Like the harem, hammam was a pretty gendered space. In the marketplace and in public, you've got men and women that did intermingle with one another, but not the hammam, not the bath space. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That's still quite similar to spa places nowadays as well. You have different spaces for different people. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That's still quite similar to spa places nowadays as well. You have different spaces for different people. |
| *Ali Olomi: Right, yeah. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Right, yeah. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So did they have different spaces like spas do today? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So did they have different spaces like spas do today? |
| *Ali Olomi: Sometimes I think, but mostly in Abbasid Baghdad, what we're seeing is different times of the day for men and different times for women. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Sometimes I think, but mostly in Abbasid Baghdad, what we're seeing is different times of the day for men and different times for women. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Okay. So we'd walk in at separate times, but we'd both have access to the same hammam. Shall we take a peek? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Okay. So we'd walk in at separate times, but we'd both have access to the same hammam. Shall we take a peek? |
| *Ali Olomi: All right. So up first, we're going to see the outer chamber. This is where we take off our clothes and wrap ourselves in small cloths. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' All right. So up first, we're going to see the outer chamber. This is where we take off our clothes and wrap ourselves in small cloths. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That's why there are different times for men and women. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That's why there are different times for men and women. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah. And in addition, there's going to be a sort of successive layout that's a Roman inspiration. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah. And in addition, there's going to be a sort of successive layout that's a Roman inspiration. |
| *Deana Hassanein: What would that be like? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' What would that be like? |
| *Ali Olomi: There would be rooms right after one another. So one room back to back. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' There would be rooms right after one another. So one room back to back. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Okay. Let's keep exploring the space. I'm excited. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Okay. Let's keep exploring the space. I'm excited. |
| *Ali Olomi: All right. Once we've started to undress ourselves or we've gone through the undressing room, the first room up is called the cold room, cleverly titled because this is the room that has no heat in it. It has the attendance with the fans to keep you cool in that Baghdad heat. It’s got benches and cushions so that you can sit and chill and relax. And of course, people congregate and chat and play. There were board games, sometimes music, food, and even... | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' All right. Once we've started to undress ourselves or we've gone through the undressing room, the first room up is called the cold room, cleverly titled because this is the room that has no heat in it. It has the attendance with the fans to keep you cool in that Baghdad heat. It’s got benches and cushions so that you can sit and chill and relax. And of course, people congregate and chat and play. There were board games, sometimes music, food, and even... |
| *Deana Hassanein: Oh, I know what you're going to say. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Oh, I know what you're going to say. |
| *Ali Olomi: Shisha | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Shisha |
| *Deana Hassanein: Shisha. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Shisha. |
| *Ali Olomi: You know me too well, Deana. You know me too well. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' You know me too well, Deana. You know me too well. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Just before you carry on, Ali, what do you mean there was food? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Just before you carry on, Ali, what do you mean there was food? |
| *Ali Olomi: They would eat in these places. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' They would eat in these places. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Like food, food, not snacks? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Like food, food, not snacks? |
| *Ali Olomi: Mostly fruit. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Mostly fruit. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Okay. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Okay. |
| *Ali Olomi: So you'd have some grapes, you'd have some oranges, citruses, and chilled drinks called sherbets. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' So you'd have some grapes, you'd have some oranges, citruses, and chilled drinks called sherbets. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Okay. What comes next? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Okay. What comes next? |
| *Ali Olomi: After the cold room comes the warm room. So you can see there's a logic here. Things get even more comfortable. Here you've got fragrant incenses and steam that keeps the room warm as you lounge and just let the worries of the day melt away. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' After the cold room comes the warm room. So you can see there's a logic here. Things get even more comfortable. Here you've got fragrant incenses and steam that keeps the room warm as you lounge and just let the worries of the day melt away. |
| *Deana Hassanein: My eyes are closed. I'm visualizing it. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' My eyes are closed. I'm visualizing it. |
| *Ali Olomi: Oh, there's more. There's more. This is the massage parlor. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Oh, there's more. There's more. This is the massage parlor. |
| *Deana Hassanein: A massage parlor? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' A massage parlor? |
| *Ali Olomi: Yep. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yep. |
| *Deana Hassanein: For free? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' For free? |
| *Ali Olomi: For free. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' For free. |
| *Deana Hassanein: No. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' No. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yes. This was a public service. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yes. This was a public service. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Oh my God. Okay. Everything's changed. I'm now a hundred times more excited. I thought this would be somewhere that people go to buy these services. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Oh my God. Okay. Everything's changed. I'm now a hundred times more excited. I thought this would be somewhere that people go to buy these services. |
| *Ali Olomi: Nope. This is a public service because hygiene is a public service. You want a healthy population. So let them get into those baths. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Nope. This is a public service because hygiene is a public service. You want a healthy population. So let them get into those baths. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Okay. We're not calling it a bathhouse anymore. This is officially a spa. And you said that there are different rooms with different experiences. One's social and one's relaxing. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Okay. We're not calling it a bathhouse anymore. This is officially a spa. And you said that there are different rooms with different experiences. One's social and one's relaxing. |
| *Ali Olomi: And the more you move through the hammam, the more relaxing it gets, the more intimate it gets. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And the more you move through the hammam, the more relaxing it gets, the more intimate it gets. |
| *Deana Hassanein: What do you mean intimate? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' What do you mean intimate? |
| *Ali Olomi: Well, if you're going from eating and chatting to massage, that's pretty intimate. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Well, if you're going from eating and chatting to massage, that's pretty intimate. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I could really do with a massage. I haven't had one since like 2017. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I could really do with a massage. I haven't had one since like 2017. |
| *Ali Olomi: Just keep in mind though, massages and hammams tend to be really vigorous with like lots of joint pulling and hard rubbing. The idea was to kind of get the blood flowing as much as it was to relax you. I mean, I've experienced a hammam in Istanbul. First of all, one of the most awkward experiences in my life. And two, he pulled my limbs in directions that my limbs don't go in. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Just keep in mind though, massages and hammams tend to be really vigorous with like lots of joint pulling and hard rubbing. The idea was to kind of get the blood flowing as much as it was to relax you. I mean, I've experienced a hammam in Istanbul. First of all, one of the most awkward experiences in my life. And two, he pulled my limbs in directions that my limbs don't go in. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Sad story aside of your experience in Istanbul, I feel like what you're describing is, as you mentioned, a health center, because I'm not going there for a nice relaxing Thai massage. I'm going to fix my body. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Sad story aside of your experience in Istanbul, I feel like what you're describing is, as you mentioned, a health center, because I'm not going there for a nice relaxing Thai massage. I'm going to fix my body. |
| *Ali Olomi: That's actually a really great way to think about it, because in addition to the massage, you have three other big services. First, you go in there, you're going to get a nice trim. You're going to get your beard lined up, your hair done. This is where the barbers were hanging out and they made sure you look pretty. Then you had your physicians. So while the massage person is moving your limbs in directions that they don't go, the physician is telling you, all right, you need to watch your diet and eat this particular medicine and make sure you get lots of exercise. And then they have one of the coolest, cupping. Cupping is really, really popular. Have you ever heard of cupping before? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That's actually a really great way to think about it, because in addition to the massage, you have three other big services. First, you go in there, you're going to get a nice trim. You're going to get your beard lined up, your hair done. This is where the barbers were hanging out and they made sure you look pretty. Then you had your physicians. So while the massage person is moving your limbs in directions that they don't go, the physician is telling you, all right, you need to watch your diet and eat this particular medicine and make sure you get lots of exercise. And then they have one of the coolest, cupping. Cupping is really, really popular. Have you ever heard of cupping before? |
| *Deana Hassanein: I have. You'll probably be able to explain it better than me. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I have. You'll probably be able to explain it better than me. |
| *Ali Olomi: They're still in Cairo, right? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' They're still in Cairo, right? |
| *Deana Hassanein: Definitely. And there's a lot of people that do it in the UK as well. It has become quite popular, but it's this sucking method that kind of brings the blood to the surface, right? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Definitely. And there's a lot of people that do it in the UK as well. It has become quite popular, but it's this sucking method that kind of brings the blood to the surface, right? |
| *Ali Olomi: I've seen it. I've never had it done. I don't think it looks too relaxing, but people swear by it. They say it's really good for your health. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I've seen it. I've never had it done. I don't think it looks too relaxing, but people swear by it. They say it's really good for your health. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I'm just still not over the fact that I could go into a spa, get a massage, get some fruit, get my hair cut all for free. They really had it all. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I'm just still not over the fact that I could go into a spa, get a massage, get some fruit, get my hair cut all for free. They really had it all. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, totally. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, totally. |
| *Deana Hassanein: You can see how the hammam wasn't just for religious cleansing, because this was actually more of a social function. And you even mentioned about the physician. So this is actually connected to health. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' You can see how the hammam wasn't just for religious cleansing, because this was actually more of a social function. And you even mentioned about the physician. So this is actually connected to health. |
| *Ali Olomi: I love that you actually called it a health center. It's changed my whole world right now. I'm going to call it a health center going forward because it really was what it was. It was tied to health. We even have examples from medieval doctors that say and prescribe, you need to go and visit the hammam. It was the most common flu remedy. If you get feeling a little congested, go and hang out in the steam rooms. And it was also recommended after childbirth as a deep cleansing for the woman, but also to really restore her muscles and her joints after childbirth. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I love that you actually called it a health center. It's changed my whole world right now. I'm going to call it a health center going forward because it really was what it was. It was tied to health. We even have examples from medieval doctors that say and prescribe, you need to go and visit the hammam. It was the most common flu remedy. If you get feeling a little congested, go and hang out in the steam rooms. And it was also recommended after childbirth as a deep cleansing for the woman, but also to really restore her muscles and her joints after childbirth. |
| *Deana Hassanein: You know, it's kind of sad to hear this because I don't feel like we take care of ourselves anymore hearing this. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' You know, it's kind of sad to hear this because I don't feel like we take care of ourselves anymore hearing this. |
| *Ali Olomi: They really had it good with this hammam. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' They really had it good with this hammam. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Oh my God. So after our massage, cupping and haircut, what comes next? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Oh my God. So after our massage, cupping and haircut, what comes next? |
| *Ali Olomi: Logically after the warm room, the hot room. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Logically after the warm room, the hot room. |
| *Deana Hassanein: The shock. This is where we get to the bath portion. I'm already a little bit iffy on. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' The shock. This is where we get to the bath portion. I'm already a little bit iffy on. |
| *Ali Olomi: I'm iffy about this too. But after the scrubbing and the rubbing, there comes the washing down with hot water and steam. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I'm iffy about this too. But after the scrubbing and the rubbing, there comes the washing down with hot water and steam. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And is that communal, Ali, or are you still in separate rooms for this? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And is that communal, Ali, or are you still in separate rooms for this? |
| *Ali Olomi: It's communal. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It's communal. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Okay. The technology and architecture here is actually very interesting. To get different temperatures in each room to move around steam, to keep the water hot for the hot room, you'd really need a lot of precise designs. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Okay. The technology and architecture here is actually very interesting. To get different temperatures in each room to move around steam, to keep the water hot for the hot room, you'd really need a lot of precise designs. |
| *Ali Olomi: This is the magic of engineering. It's something that even I try to wrap my head around sometimes, just how advanced it was. I mean, the use of furnaces and vents, it was really ingenious how they were able to create the different temperatures. I read that they even had special shafts in the dome of the hot room so that it would get natural light and allow some of the steamed escape so it wasn't too hot, but hot enough. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' This is the magic of engineering. It's something that even I try to wrap my head around sometimes, just how advanced it was. I mean, the use of furnaces and vents, it was really ingenious how they were able to create the different temperatures. I read that they even had special shafts in the dome of the hot room so that it would get natural light and allow some of the steamed escape so it wasn't too hot, but hot enough. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I love that they think of everything. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I love that they think of everything. |
| *Ali Olomi: Right? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Right? |
| *Deana Hassanein: So it's a health center, a community center, a bathhouse. Who was paying for all of this? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So it's a health center, a community center, a bathhouse. Who was paying for all of this? |
| *Ali Olomi: Mostly the caliph. The Abbasid Empire saw it as a public good, and so it was accessible regardless of wealth or class, though obviously the wealthy had better services. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Mostly the caliph. The Abbasid Empire saw it as a public good, and so it was accessible regardless of wealth or class, though obviously the wealthy had better services. |
| *Deana Hassanein: What more could you have? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' What more could you have? |
| *Ali Olomi: Probably better quality oils and incenses and better masseurs. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Probably better quality oils and incenses and better masseurs. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Okay, that makes total sense. And now that we've dived into what the bathhouse is, or as you want to call it now, a health center, it does make a lot of sense because hygiene is always connected to both religion and health. So I'm guessing the caliph frequently visited the hammam. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Okay, that makes total sense. And now that we've dived into what the bathhouse is, or as you want to call it now, a health center, it does make a lot of sense because hygiene is always connected to both religion and health. So I'm guessing the caliph frequently visited the hammam. |
| *Ali Olomi: We do see some change here. Originally, the caliphs did. Later on, we're going to see some private hammams for the caliph, but originally, the caliph and his family would use the exact same hammam as everyone else, just at different times of the day. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' We do see some change here. Originally, the caliphs did. Later on, we're going to see some private hammams for the caliph, but originally, the caliph and his family would use the exact same hammam as everyone else, just at different times of the day. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I still find that so weird. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I still find that so weird. |
| *Ali Olomi: It's a little weird. In fact, I got a story for you. The hammam, because it was public, was one of the few places that the caliph could probably be attacked. And in fact, one of the caliphs were. Al-Ma'mun, supposedly there was a plot in order to kill him when he went to the hammam. But he was warned of the plot in advance by his advisors and the court astrologers. So he sent someone else in his place, his advisor, al-Fadl. And what happens to poor al-Fadl? They mistake him for the caliph and he ends up getting killed. Horrible, messed up story, huh? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It's a little weird. In fact, I got a story for you. The hammam, because it was public, was one of the few places that the caliph could probably be attacked. And in fact, one of the caliphs were. Al-Ma'mun, supposedly there was a plot in order to kill him when he went to the hammam. But he was warned of the plot in advance by his advisors and the court astrologers. So he sent someone else in his place, his advisor, al-Fadl. And what happens to poor al-Fadl? They mistake him for the caliph and he ends up getting killed. Horrible, messed up story, huh? |
| *Deana Hassanein: Yeah. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Yeah. |
| *Ali Olomi: But it shows that these spaces were still very political spaces. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' But it shows that these spaces were still very political spaces. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I can always rely on you, Ali, to give me a random exciting story. I had fun in the hammam. We got a chance to relax, socialize, get a massage, wash away all our problems. And thankfully, I'm not on anyone's assassinations list. Next time, let's go somewhere even more exciting. I'm Deana. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I can always rely on you, Ali, to give me a random exciting story. I had fun in the hammam. We got a chance to relax, socialize, get a massage, wash away all our problems. And thankfully, I'm not on anyone's assassinations list. Next time, let's go somewhere even more exciting. I'm Deana. |
| *Ali Olomi: And I'm Ali. This is a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Be sure to subscribe to the Echoes of History podcast so you don't miss the next episode of Baghdad Soundwalks. See you next time, fellow travelers. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And I'm Ali. This is a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Be sure to subscribe to the Echoes of History podcast so you don't miss the next episode of Baghdad Soundwalks. See you next time, fellow travelers. |
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| |-|7= | | |-|7= |
| '''''The Caravanserai''''' | | '''''The Caravanserai''''' |
| *Deana Hassanein: Baghdad Sound Walks Hello fellow travellers, I'm Deana– | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Baghdad Sound Walks Hello fellow travellers, I'm Deana– |
| *Ali Olomi: And I'm Ali. How are you feeling today, Deana? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And I'm Ali. How are you feeling today, Deana? |
| *Deana Hassanein: I'm feeling very well, thank you, Ali. How are you feeling? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I'm feeling very well, thank you, Ali. How are you feeling? |
| *Ali Olomi: Pretty good, I'm happy to be here. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Pretty good, I'm happy to be here. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Where are we off to today? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Where are we off to today? |
| *Ali Olomi: So, how about we take a jaunt to an ancient structure that was what made Baghdad what it was today. The Caravanserai or the funduq. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' So, how about we take a jaunt to an ancient structure that was what made Baghdad what it was today. The Caravanserai or the funduq. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Ancient? So you're saying this existed before Baghdad and the Islamic empires? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Ancient? So you're saying this existed before Baghdad and the Islamic empires? |
| *Ali Olomi: That's right. What do you know about the Silk Roads? Because this is something we're going to be talking about a little bit. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That's right. What do you know about the Silk Roads? Because this is something we're going to be talking about a little bit. |
| *Deana Hassanein: This is my favourite thing to say whenever this comes up. Spoiler alert, it isn't an actual road. It's not one single road. It refers to a network of trading routes that links the Middle East, Asia and the Western world. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' This is my favourite thing to say whenever this comes up. Spoiler alert, it isn't an actual road. It's not one single road. It refers to a network of trading routes that links the Middle East, Asia and the Western world. |
| *Ali Olomi: Oh, I love that. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Oh, I love that. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Thank you. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Thank you. |
| *Ali Olomi: My historian heart got so happy. Yeah, the Silk Roads aren't really a road, it's a network. The trade is mostly local and it's really about the movement of various goods. How about another question for you? Because this is all about trade. Do you know that there are different types of camels? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' My historian heart got so happy. Yeah, the Silk Roads aren't really a road, it's a network. The trade is mostly local and it's really about the movement of various goods. How about another question for you? Because this is all about trade. Do you know that there are different types of camels? |
| *Deana Hassanein: There's actually only two true types of camels, right? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' There's actually only two true types of camels, right? |
| *Ali Olomi: That's right. Arabian camels or dromedaries, which have one hump and Sogdian camels from Persia, which have two. I'm very hesitant here because that's the extent of my camel knowledge. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That's right. Arabian camels or dromedaries, which have one hump and Sogdian camels from Persia, which have two. I'm very hesitant here because that's the extent of my camel knowledge. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Today is your lucky day, Ali, because I'm going to add some facts for you so you can add it to your list. Camels are born without humps. They store water in their blood. They have three sets of eyelids and two rows of eyelashes to keep sand out of their eye. They can shut their nostrils completely and they can survive up to 15 days without water, which makes them the perfect animal to transport goods on the Silk Roads. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Today is your lucky day, Ali, because I'm going to add some facts for you so you can add it to your list. Camels are born without humps. They store water in their blood. They have three sets of eyelids and two rows of eyelashes to keep sand out of their eye. They can shut their nostrils completely and they can survive up to 15 days without water, which makes them the perfect animal to transport goods on the Silk Roads. |
| *Ali Olomi: You're blowing my mind a little bit here. Do you know the camel experts? I love it. And you're right, they're absolutely excellent for carrying heavy burdens and they could go long distances without food. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' You're blowing my mind a little bit here. Do you know the camel experts? I love it. And you're right, they're absolutely excellent for carrying heavy burdens and they could go long distances without food. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Exactly, but back to the Silk Roads, they existed well before the Islamic empires and I remember studying how the ancient Persians, Romans and Chinese were all part of it, right? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Exactly, but back to the Silk Roads, they existed well before the Islamic empires and I remember studying how the ancient Persians, Romans and Chinese were all part of it, right? |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, there were a series of roads that existed, but they were really expanded under the Achaemenids, which were an ancient Persian empire and it was part of their royal road project. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, there were a series of roads that existed, but they were really expanded under the Achaemenids, which were an ancient Persian empire and it was part of their royal road project. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Exactly, and since Baghdad is the inheritor of those old Persian empires, it makes sense why it was smack bang in the middle of those roads. Shall we do a bit of sightseeing? What would we see? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Exactly, and since Baghdad is the inheritor of those old Persian empires, it makes sense why it was smack bang in the middle of those roads. Shall we do a bit of sightseeing? What would we see? |
| *Ali Olomi: You would see merchants and caravans of camel which would move goods from all over the region. We know, for example, that they brought paper and porcelain from China. In fact, we even have evidence in China itself of the Silk Roads connecting Baghdad. There's this famous burial of a Sogdian, which is a Persian person in China and the inscription says this person is from the Persian world. They were very good at bartering and trade and negotiating. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' You would see merchants and caravans of camel which would move goods from all over the region. We know, for example, that they brought paper and porcelain from China. In fact, we even have evidence in China itself of the Silk Roads connecting Baghdad. There's this famous burial of a Sogdian, which is a Persian person in China and the inscription says this person is from the Persian world. They were very good at bartering and trade and negotiating. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Wow, what a nice little comment to leave about someone. What's so striking about history is how we have these like little traces of life stories carved on stones, paper, images of people traveling, doing business. They leave things behind, you know, vases, coins, jewelry. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Wow, what a nice little comment to leave about someone. What's so striking about history is how we have these like little traces of life stories carved on stones, paper, images of people traveling, doing business. They leave things behind, you know, vases, coins, jewelry. |
| *Ali Olomi: It really makes you wonder what traces we'll leave behind. In a hundred years from now, what evidence of our life will there be? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It really makes you wonder what traces we'll leave behind. In a hundred years from now, what evidence of our life will there be? |
| *Deana Hassanein: It doesn't sound exciting because obviously we live in this era, but I'm guessing cars, coffee receipts, sprawls, electronic devices. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' It doesn't sound exciting because obviously we live in this era, but I'm guessing cars, coffee receipts, sprawls, electronic devices. |
| *Ali Olomi: Snapchat, Instagram selfies. Gotta think about those things as a historian. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Snapchat, Instagram selfies. Gotta think about those things as a historian. |
| *Deana Hassanein: You're right. There's going to be a lot of online content for them to delve through and maybe future historians will hear these podcasts as well. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' You're right. There's going to be a lot of online content for them to delve through and maybe future historians will hear these podcasts as well. |
| *Ali Olomi: That is a comforting thought. Hello, future historians. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That is a comforting thought. Hello, future historians. |
| *Deana Hassanein: You know, the more I think about it, the more I'm really stunned by the long distances these caravans covered. And just to be clear, I know obviously caravans now are vehicles, but back then it was a term used to basically describe groups of people traveling. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' You know, the more I think about it, the more I'm really stunned by the long distances these caravans covered. And just to be clear, I know obviously caravans now are vehicles, but back then it was a term used to basically describe groups of people traveling. |
| *Ali Olomi: And this is actually where the funduq comes into play. They were probably originally built by those Persians, the Achaemenids, as roadside taverns or inns. They were dwellings that connected all these roads together. In fact, that's where the idea of hostels come from. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And this is actually where the funduq comes into play. They were probably originally built by those Persians, the Achaemenids, as roadside taverns or inns. They were dwellings that connected all these roads together. In fact, that's where the idea of hostels come from. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Did they invent them? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Did they invent them? |
| *Ali Olomi: Not really. They pre-existed. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Not really. They pre-existed. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I would love to know what it looked like. Can you describe it to me? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I would love to know what it looked like. Can you describe it to me? |
| *Ali Olomi: They're pretty simple structures. They're kind of a rectangle with walls that has a space for your horses and camels, a place where you can eat and a place where you can sleep. Not really how we would imagine a nice hotel today. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' They're pretty simple structures. They're kind of a rectangle with walls that has a space for your horses and camels, a place where you can eat and a place where you can sleep. Not really how we would imagine a nice hotel today. |
| *Deana Hassanein: What was it built from? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' What was it built from? |
| *Ali Olomi: Generally wood, sometimes clay, sometimes mud. They're very simple. When you look at them, they're minimalist design. Just a square wall that you can hide away from thieves, brigands, and the weather. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Generally wood, sometimes clay, sometimes mud. They're very simple. When you look at them, they're minimalist design. Just a square wall that you can hide away from thieves, brigands, and the weather. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Yeah. It's not giving Four Seasons. It's giving a hut. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Yeah. It's not giving Four Seasons. It's giving a hut. |
| *Ali Olomi: No pool, no gym, no continental breakfast. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' No pool, no gym, no continental breakfast. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Well, I mean, it makes sense. Travelers do need a place to stay. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Well, I mean, it makes sense. Travelers do need a place to stay. |
| *Ali Olomi: There's the first rule of history. You need to eat. And then the second rule of history, you got to build places to eat and sleep. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' There's the first rule of history. You need to eat. And then the second rule of history, you got to build places to eat and sleep. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Pretty straightforward. And these rules also apply to me. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Pretty straightforward. And these rules also apply to me. |
| *Ali Olomi: Me too. And that's where these funduqs came into play. They were organizing these roads, but it was also about providing food and shelter. It's what made trade along distances possible. If you're traveling along miles and miles of roads, you need to stop somewhere to eat and somewhere to sleep. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Me too. And that's where these funduqs came into play. They were organizing these roads, but it was also about providing food and shelter. It's what made trade along distances possible. If you're traveling along miles and miles of roads, you need to stop somewhere to eat and somewhere to sleep. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So when the Abbasids built Baghdad, they incorporated these caravanserais. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So when the Abbasids built Baghdad, they incorporated these caravanserais. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, the early Islamic dynasties made use of them even before the Abbasids. In fact, given how important trade was to the beginning of Islam, I mean, Muhammad was a merchant after all, before he became a prophet. All of these funduq were instrumental to actually the rise of Islam. Before Muslim armies and empires ever showed up onto the scene, Muslim merchants were there first. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, the early Islamic dynasties made use of them even before the Abbasids. In fact, given how important trade was to the beginning of Islam, I mean, Muhammad was a merchant after all, before he became a prophet. All of these funduq were instrumental to actually the rise of Islam. Before Muslim armies and empires ever showed up onto the scene, Muslim merchants were there first. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And then with Baghdad, it would be right in the center of those roads and the different roadside inns. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And then with Baghdad, it would be right in the center of those roads and the different roadside inns. |
| *Ali Olomi: That's a good point. By the time of the Abbasids, they had incorporated these funduq into their trade system. But also they built many of their own, generally around Baghdad. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That's a good point. By the time of the Abbasids, they had incorporated these funduq into their trade system. But also they built many of their own, generally around Baghdad. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Why around the city? Was it because of the way the trade flows? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Why around the city? Was it because of the way the trade flows? |
| *Ali Olomi: Definitely. It helped with the overflow. Over time, the city grew beyond the initial bounds of Mansur's design in 762. You have this sprawling city with millions of people connected to the flow of roads, people, and goods. In fact, the medieval traveler Ibn Battuta gives us a fascinating description. He says, after sunset or nightfall, the director comes to the funduq with his secretary and writes down the names of all the travelers who will pass the night there. He seals it and locks the door of the funduq. In the morning, he and the secretary come and call everybody's name and write down a record. He sends someone with the travelers to conduct them to the next post station, and he brings back a certificate from the director of funduq, confirming that they have all arrived. So it's a system that connects all the funduqs together, one to the next to the next. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Definitely. It helped with the overflow. Over time, the city grew beyond the initial bounds of Mansur's design in 762. You have this sprawling city with millions of people connected to the flow of roads, people, and goods. In fact, the medieval traveler Ibn Battuta gives us a fascinating description. He says, after sunset or nightfall, the director comes to the funduq with his secretary and writes down the names of all the travelers who will pass the night there. He seals it and locks the door of the funduq. In the morning, he and the secretary come and call everybody's name and write down a record. He sends someone with the travelers to conduct them to the next post station, and he brings back a certificate from the director of funduq, confirming that they have all arrived. So it's a system that connects all the funduqs together, one to the next to the next. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Oh my god, this isn't just super efficient, but this is literally a postal system with bodyguards. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Oh my god, this isn't just super efficient, but this is literally a postal system with bodyguards. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, that's exactly what they were. This is what allowed their communication to happen in the empire, a relay system that allowed you to send a message quickly, because rather than one person running the entire distance, they would run to a funduq, someone would take over the message, then they would run to the next funduq, someone else would take the message. So you always had fresh horses, fresh messengers, and you were able to travel long distances very quickly. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, that's exactly what they were. This is what allowed their communication to happen in the empire, a relay system that allowed you to send a message quickly, because rather than one person running the entire distance, they would run to a funduq, someone would take over the message, then they would run to the next funduq, someone else would take the message. So you always had fresh horses, fresh messengers, and you were able to travel long distances very quickly. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And were the guards really that necessary? Was it that dangerous? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And were the guards really that necessary? Was it that dangerous? |
| *Ali Olomi: Yes, very dangerous. I mean, you're out in the deserts, you're out in the mountains, you're out in the plains, you're looking at a variety of different topographies and geographies, and that's where all the thieves were hanging out. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yes, very dangerous. I mean, you're out in the deserts, you're out in the mountains, you're out in the plains, you're looking at a variety of different topographies and geographies, and that's where all the thieves were hanging out. |
| *Deana Hassanein: This is literally a postal system with bodyguards. And I get it, because I imagine these merchants were targets for brigands and thieves on the road. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' This is literally a postal system with bodyguards. And I get it, because I imagine these merchants were targets for brigands and thieves on the road. |
| *Ali Olomi: Absolutely. The funduqs were the safest way to travel and the fastest way to travel. Without them, you want to avoid the roads, because that's where the thieves would be hanging out. That's why we call them highwaymen, right? They're on the highway. But now with the funduqs, you can travel that road and be safe. So it was a quick way to travel and a fast way to send your messages from funduq to funduq to funduq. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Absolutely. The funduqs were the safest way to travel and the fastest way to travel. Without them, you want to avoid the roads, because that's where the thieves would be hanging out. That's why we call them highwaymen, right? They're on the highway. But now with the funduqs, you can travel that road and be safe. So it was a quick way to travel and a fast way to send your messages from funduq to funduq to funduq. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Here's me thinking a funduq is just a hotel, but it's actually so much more. It creates a good deal of safety. You record everyone that's staying. You then guide them to the next funduq and check that everyone's off your roster. What an efficient system. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Here's me thinking a funduq is just a hotel, but it's actually so much more. It creates a good deal of safety. You record everyone that's staying. You then guide them to the next funduq and check that everyone's off your roster. What an efficient system. |
| *Ali Olomi: Very efficient. But I've got to say, they could also be quite rowdy, the funduqs, that is. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Very efficient. But I've got to say, they could also be quite rowdy, the funduqs, that is. |
| *Deana Hassanein: What do you mean they could be rowdy? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' What do you mean they could be rowdy? |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, I mean, we see a lot of stories of things going wrong in funduqs. If you've got a lot of people gathering together after a long day of travel in the heat and in the desert, and you've just come together to eat and drink, maybe sometimes with strangers, things are going to go wrong. Tempers are going to flare. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, I mean, we see a lot of stories of things going wrong in funduqs. If you've got a lot of people gathering together after a long day of travel in the heat and in the desert, and you've just come together to eat and drink, maybe sometimes with strangers, things are going to go wrong. Tempers are going to flare. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Give me a story. You can't just tease them, not tell me a story. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Give me a story. You can't just tease them, not tell me a story. |
| *Ali Olomi: I have a great story about one of these trips to the funduqs. So there is this famous astrologer known as Abu Ma'shar. He is an icon and a legend and we'll be talking about him in the future. But he's traveling to one of these funduqs with a bunch of different merchants. They spend the night and the next morning, Abu Ma'shar wakes up and he casts his horoscope and he goes, the stars do not look good today. We should not leave the funduq. And the merchants are like, oh, we don't need to listen to you. That's silly. We're going to leave. They leave. Abu Ma'shar says, no, I'm going to follow the advice of the stars. And he hangs out in the funduq only for the merchants to come back a couple hours later. Some of them are bleeding. Their goods are missing. They had been attacked by thieves and brigands. But in their mind, Abu Ma'shar was part of the thieves and brigands. Somehow he had caused it. So they took their anger out on him. They took out their sticks and attacked him. The guards had to intervene. Abu Ma'shar fled for his life and famously wrote in his diary, never again shall I share wisdom with fools who will not listen. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I have a great story about one of these trips to the funduqs. So there is this famous astrologer known as Abu Ma'shar. He is an icon and a legend and we'll be talking about him in the future. But he's traveling to one of these funduqs with a bunch of different merchants. They spend the night and the next morning, Abu Ma'shar wakes up and he casts his horoscope and he goes, the stars do not look good today. We should not leave the funduq. And the merchants are like, oh, we don't need to listen to you. That's silly. We're going to leave. They leave. Abu Ma'shar says, no, I'm going to follow the advice of the stars. And he hangs out in the funduq only for the merchants to come back a couple hours later. Some of them are bleeding. Their goods are missing. They had been attacked by thieves and brigands. But in their mind, Abu Ma'shar was part of the thieves and brigands. Somehow he had caused it. So they took their anger out on him. They took out their sticks and attacked him. The guards had to intervene. Abu Ma'shar fled for his life and famously wrote in his diary, never again shall I share wisdom with fools who will not listen. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Oh, my God. Plot twist. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Oh, my God. Plot twist. |
| *Ali Olomi: Plot twist. The astrologer gets blamed for the funduk's troubles. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Plot twist. The astrologer gets blamed for the funduk's troubles. |
| *Deana Hassanein: To be fair, as someone who's not hugely obsessed with horoscopes, it kind of does sound like he was involved. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' To be fair, as someone who's not hugely obsessed with horoscopes, it kind of does sound like he was involved. |
| *Ali Olomi: It does sound shady. And Abu Ma'shar was slightly shady. Let's be real. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It does sound shady. And Abu Ma'shar was slightly shady. Let's be real. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Oh, travel and trade. That is good advice for all of us, though. Avoid the troublemakers. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Oh, travel and trade. That is good advice for all of us, though. Avoid the troublemakers. |
| *Ali Olomi: That's right. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That's right. |
| *Deana Hassanein: It was so nice that we got a chance to travel outside of Baghdad today. It's the first time in the season. And I'm in awe of these super efficient systems, this postal service slash bodyguard system that allowed trade to flow so well. Yes, they did exist before Baghdad and became a huge part of the city, the role in its trade. It's all tied into these repeated themes that we keep seeing. How Baghdad was built on history of the region, but also expanded in it. Next time, let's travel to its political heart, the Palace of the Golden Gate. I'm Deana. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' It was so nice that we got a chance to travel outside of Baghdad today. It's the first time in the season. And I'm in awe of these super efficient systems, this postal service slash bodyguard system that allowed trade to flow so well. Yes, they did exist before Baghdad and became a huge part of the city, the role in its trade. It's all tied into these repeated themes that we keep seeing. How Baghdad was built on history of the region, but also expanded in it. Next time, let's travel to its political heart, the Palace of the Golden Gate. I'm Deana. |
| *Ali Olomi: And I'm Ali. This is a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Be sure to subscribe to the Echoes of History podcast so you don't miss out the next episode of Baghdad Soundwalks. See you next time, fellow travelers. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And I'm Ali. This is a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Be sure to subscribe to the Echoes of History podcast so you don't miss out the next episode of Baghdad Soundwalks. See you next time, fellow travelers. |
| |-|8= | | |-|8= |
| '''''The Palace of the Golden Gate''''' | | '''''The Palace of the Golden Gate''''' |
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| *Deana Hassanein: Baghdad Sound Walks. Hello fellow travelers, I'm Deana. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Baghdad Sound Walks. Hello fellow travelers, I'm Deana. |
| *Ali Olomi: And I'm Ali, ready to continue our tour of medieval Baghdad. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And I'm Ali, ready to continue our tour of medieval Baghdad. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I'm always ready, Ali. Little by little we are seeing this city come to life. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I'm always ready, Ali. Little by little we are seeing this city come to life. |
| *Ali Olomi: We've been to its walls, its market, its bathhouses, the inns, and the great mosque. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' We've been to its walls, its market, its bathhouses, the inns, and the great mosque. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And it's finally time to head to the palace. As you can hear in my voice, I'm very, very excited about this. A theme we keep seeing throughout the different locations is how much politics was woven into each part of the city. From handling trade to the sermons said on behalf of the Caliph. And now it's time to get right to the center of it all. The Palace of the Golden Gate was in the center of Baghdad, near the mosque. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And it's finally time to head to the palace. As you can hear in my voice, I'm very, very excited about this. A theme we keep seeing throughout the different locations is how much politics was woven into each part of the city. From handling trade to the sermons said on behalf of the Caliph. And now it's time to get right to the center of it all. The Palace of the Golden Gate was in the center of Baghdad, near the mosque. |
| *Ali Olomi: That's right, a stunning structure really meant to impress. Imagine with me, you're a new visitor to the city, or you're a traveler coming in from one of the funduq. You've traveled for miles, perhaps stopping at the various caravans sarai along the way, slowly making your way into the Round City. There's a bustle as the crowds of visitors like you wind their way from the many roads to the gates of Baghdad. As you pass the entry, you see it right in your line of sight. The palace in the center of the city, rising above all the other buildings with its gleaming green dome that stands out against the backdrop. Atop that dome is a figure of a horseman with a lance. The traveler next to you whispers into your ear, legend has it the figure is enchanted. When enemy armies march on Baghdad, the Caliph turns the figure to face the oncoming horde. It's eye-catching, inspiring, and it lets you know who's in charge. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That's right, a stunning structure really meant to impress. Imagine with me, you're a new visitor to the city, or you're a traveler coming in from one of the funduq. You've traveled for miles, perhaps stopping at the various caravans sarai along the way, slowly making your way into the Round City. There's a bustle as the crowds of visitors like you wind their way from the many roads to the gates of Baghdad. As you pass the entry, you see it right in your line of sight. The palace in the center of the city, rising above all the other buildings with its gleaming green dome that stands out against the backdrop. Atop that dome is a figure of a horseman with a lance. The traveler next to you whispers into your ear, legend has it the figure is enchanted. When enemy armies march on Baghdad, the Caliph turns the figure to face the oncoming horde. It's eye-catching, inspiring, and it lets you know who's in charge. |
| *Deana Hassanein: The Caliph, it makes it very, very clear. The idea of a Round City is making more and more sense. In a way, all the roads lead to the Caliph. You can see the city from afar, and you know the most important person is right in the middle. It would also make the palace the center of city life. It's basically giving main character energy. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' The Caliph, it makes it very, very clear. The idea of a Round City is making more and more sense. In a way, all the roads lead to the Caliph. You can see the city from afar, and you know the most important person is right in the middle. It would also make the palace the center of city life. It's basically giving main character energy. |
| *Ali Olomi: I love that, that's really important to know. The palace is not just this private residence of the Caliph. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I love that, that's really important to know. The palace is not just this private residence of the Caliph. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Right, because that's technically the harem where the household including the wives and all the children live. The harem is the private quarters of the Caliph. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Right, because that's technically the harem where the household including the wives and all the children live. The harem is the private quarters of the Caliph. |
| *Ali Olomi: And the palace was the official seat of power. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And the palace was the official seat of power. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And as we've talked about this before, the palace was built alongside the Great Mosque, so it was technically accessible to the public. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And as we've talked about this before, the palace was built alongside the Great Mosque, so it was technically accessible to the public. |
| *Ali Olomi: You know, the palace and the mosque were probably the first two structures built by al-Mansur, allowing him to move in quickly. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' You know, the palace and the mosque were probably the first two structures built by al-Mansur, allowing him to move in quickly. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Set right in the center of the Round City. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Set right in the center of the Round City. |
| *Ali Olomi: Like Ba Sing Se. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Like Ba Sing Se. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Gosh, you really love your Avatar: The Last Airbender, right? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Gosh, you really love your Avatar: The Last Airbender, right? |
| *Ali Olomi: It's a good analogy. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It's a good analogy. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I can definitely see the symbolism though. Building a circular city and putting your palace right in the middle lets the world know who is in charge. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I can definitely see the symbolism though. Building a circular city and putting your palace right in the middle lets the world know who is in charge. |
| *Ali Olomi: Definitely, Deana. It puts you in the center of the world symbolically. But it was also about drawing the people right into that center. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Definitely, Deana. It puts you in the center of the world symbolically. But it was also about drawing the people right into that center. |
| *Deana Hassanein: This is why the mosque was adjacent to it. Putting the palace and the mosque together, or at least next to each other, sends a clear message. It's the center of religious life and political life. It was probably a powerful sight seeing the Caliph walk next door to join in the prayers as well. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' This is why the mosque was adjacent to it. Putting the palace and the mosque together, or at least next to each other, sends a clear message. It's the center of religious life and political life. It was probably a powerful sight seeing the Caliph walk next door to join in the prayers as well. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, the palace was the Caliphal residence, but it was also the public administration. It had this sort of wide open courtyard, or a maidan, with surrounding gardens, a structure, a house, the hujariyah, or the horse guard. That is the private guard of the Khalif, these people who would protect him. And then there were smaller residences for administrators, the captain of the shurta, or the city guard, bureaucrats, and even palaces for the princes, all next door to that mosque. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, the palace was the Caliphal residence, but it was also the public administration. It had this sort of wide open courtyard, or a maidan, with surrounding gardens, a structure, a house, the hujariyah, or the horse guard. That is the private guard of the Khalif, these people who would protect him. And then there were smaller residences for administrators, the captain of the shurta, or the city guard, bureaucrats, and even palaces for the princes, all next door to that mosque. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Do you know what really stands out to me, Ali? The city design tries to balance prestige and access. So the closer you get to the center, the closer you are to the center of power. I can just never imagine popping to the center of London and casually running into the king. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Do you know what really stands out to me, Ali? The city design tries to balance prestige and access. So the closer you get to the center, the closer you are to the center of power. I can just never imagine popping to the center of London and casually running into the king. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, the structure of the city, this round city, it tries to balance it all. It tries to create prestige for the Caliph, while technically also being accessible, because the mosque is also in that center. So it would draw everyone to stand before God in prayer equally. But it's a non-subtle way of reinforcing who's in charge, because the Caliph is right next door. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, the structure of the city, this round city, it tries to balance it all. It tries to create prestige for the Caliph, while technically also being accessible, because the mosque is also in that center. So it would draw everyone to stand before God in prayer equally. But it's a non-subtle way of reinforcing who's in charge, because the Caliph is right next door. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Exactly, the people with all the real power. Think about it. The Khalif only has to walk next door to the mosque, but anyone else would have to walk much further if they wanted to visit it. The design of the city really highlights access, who has it and who has to work for it. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Exactly, the people with all the real power. Think about it. The Khalif only has to walk next door to the mosque, but anyone else would have to walk much further if they wanted to visit it. The design of the city really highlights access, who has it and who has to work for it. |
| *Ali Olomi: Over time though, we should point out that Caliphs really built other palaces. So there was this central palace that was a symbol of their power, but they weren't always at home in that central palace. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Over time though, we should point out that Caliphs really built other palaces. So there was this central palace that was a symbol of their power, but they weren't always at home in that central palace. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Were these palaces within Baghdad itself or elsewhere? Because I'd imagine there is a difference between having other palaces within the city walls versus having to travel outside the city. This actually reminds me of why the rivers were probably so important, easy access up and down the Tigris. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Were these palaces within Baghdad itself or elsewhere? Because I'd imagine there is a difference between having other palaces within the city walls versus having to travel outside the city. This actually reminds me of why the rivers were probably so important, easy access up and down the Tigris. |
| *Ali Olomi: That's a really good point. You could take a leisurely barge up to your palace. And some of these Caliphs did have winter palaces and other locales they'd like to visit, like Anbar. But they also built palaces inside Baghdad, like Qasr al-Khuld or the Palace of Eternity, which was built right on the river. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That's a really good point. You could take a leisurely barge up to your palace. And some of these Caliphs did have winter palaces and other locales they'd like to visit, like Anbar. But they also built palaces inside Baghdad, like Qasr al-Khuld or the Palace of Eternity, which was built right on the river. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That is prime time waterfront property. It reminds me a little bit of the Thames in London and how it was used to travel the length of England and how kings sailed on barges. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That is prime time waterfront property. It reminds me a little bit of the Thames in London and how it was used to travel the length of England and how kings sailed on barges. |
| *Ali Olomi: Royals do seem to love taking trips on barges for some reason. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Royals do seem to love taking trips on barges for some reason. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I love being on the water, so I get it. If you were a Khalif, you could enjoy a leisurely trip on the river while hanging out in your waterfront palace. Doesn't get better than that. Why don't we go inside the palace? Maybe we can paint a bit of a picture and see how the other half lives. What can we see? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I love being on the water, so I get it. If you were a Khalif, you could enjoy a leisurely trip on the river while hanging out in your waterfront palace. Doesn't get better than that. Why don't we go inside the palace? Maybe we can paint a bit of a picture and see how the other half lives. What can we see? |
| *Ali Olomi: Well, the first thing you would see are the guards. The Khalif, despite claiming this title, like the shadow of God on earth, had to manage a lot of different power blocks. He had to navigate big, powerful alliances. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Well, the first thing you would see are the guards. The Khalif, despite claiming this title, like the shadow of God on earth, had to manage a lot of different power blocks. He had to navigate big, powerful alliances. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Yeah, and the guards were one of those. This is an empire after all. So you had scholars and administrators and advisors, but you also had to deal with the people who kept security in the city itself. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Yeah, and the guards were one of those. This is an empire after all. So you had scholars and administrators and advisors, but you also had to deal with the people who kept security in the city itself. |
| *Ali Olomi: Exactly. The Abbasids overthrew the Umayyads in 750 CE and they established their own dynasty, but they were only able to do that with the help of other factions. In fact, they initially didn't even have a centralized army, but relied on different units. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Exactly. The Abbasids overthrew the Umayyads in 750 CE and they established their own dynasty, but they were only able to do that with the help of other factions. In fact, they initially didn't even have a centralized army, but relied on different units. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And each of these had their own political interests as well. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And each of these had their own political interests as well. |
| *Ali Olomi: Very much so. You had three big units, the Anba, which were the old guard. These were the Arabian Muslims that had come out of Arabia and settled in the region. There's the Maghreba, who are mostly East and North African soldiers, and the Khorasaniya, which were local Persians, each with their own political intentions and their political goals. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Very much so. You had three big units, the Anba, which were the old guard. These were the Arabian Muslims that had come out of Arabia and settled in the region. There's the Maghreba, who are mostly East and North African soldiers, and the Khorasaniya, which were local Persians, each with their own political intentions and their political goals. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I remember a story that you mentioned before about how the troops once revolted and it took the queen intervening to settle them down. I believe it was Queen Khayzuran. She intervened to ensure her chosen successor. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I remember a story that you mentioned before about how the troops once revolted and it took the queen intervening to settle them down. I believe it was Queen Khayzuran. She intervened to ensure her chosen successor. |
| *Ali Olomi: And that's because they were paid troops. And so they did rebel from time to time. Each faction had its own politics and interests that the Caliph would have to navigate. The Anba, for example, as I mentioned, were the oldest and most powerful faction. They were made up of the Arabs who had settled into this region. And they intermarried with local elites, so the Caliph would have to make sure that he kept them on his side. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And that's because they were paid troops. And so they did rebel from time to time. Each faction had its own politics and interests that the Caliph would have to navigate. The Anba, for example, as I mentioned, were the oldest and most powerful faction. They were made up of the Arabs who had settled into this region. And they intermarried with local elites, so the Caliph would have to make sure that he kept them on his side. |
| *Deana Hassanein: These are houses that are run by hereditary lords or ladies. They hold titles and land and have a great deal of power and influence within the family. Think Bridgerton, but less entertaining. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' These are houses that are run by hereditary lords or ladies. They hold titles and land and have a great deal of power and influence within the family. Think Bridgerton, but less entertaining. |
| *Ali Olomi: All right, confession. I've never actually seen that show. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' All right, confession. I've never actually seen that show. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Oh my God, Ali. But you've watched Avatar and the Airbender like 70 billion times. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Oh my God, Ali. But you've watched Avatar and the Airbender like 70 billion times. |
| *Ali Olomi: That should tell you all about my personality. Look, lineage here really matters. And there were certainly noble families, but it really wasn't exactly an aristocracy like we would imagine in, say, Europe. Instead, what we have were powerful families that were originally local rulers, kings and commanders and generals that eventually sided with the Abbasids, one being the Tahirids. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That should tell you all about my personality. Look, lineage here really matters. And there were certainly noble families, but it really wasn't exactly an aristocracy like we would imagine in, say, Europe. Instead, what we have were powerful families that were originally local rulers, kings and commanders and generals that eventually sided with the Abbasids, one being the Tahirids. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So the first thing we'd see was a show of power by these groups. This was their way of showing they were in the center of political life. They weren't just servants of the Khalif or his aides, but powerful in themselves. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So the first thing we'd see was a show of power by these groups. This was their way of showing they were in the center of political life. They weren't just servants of the Khalif or his aides, but powerful in themselves. |
| *Ali Olomi: Exactly. As you walked up to the palace, you would then be greeted by the hujariyah who patrolled the grounds and they had their building nearby. Then you'd actually see the anba and they always wore black, which was the Khalifu colors, and they represent the old guard. Then you would enter the palace itself and you would come across the chamberlain who's known as the Keeper of the Doors. I love all these titles. He would manage the number of visitors who could see the Khalif. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Exactly. As you walked up to the palace, you would then be greeted by the hujariyah who patrolled the grounds and they had their building nearby. Then you'd actually see the anba and they always wore black, which was the Khalifu colors, and they represent the old guard. Then you would enter the palace itself and you would come across the chamberlain who's known as the Keeper of the Doors. I love all these titles. He would manage the number of visitors who could see the Khalif. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Did the Caliph sit on a throne and wear a crown like how I imagine kings and queens? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Did the Caliph sit on a throne and wear a crown like how I imagine kings and queens? |
| *Ali Olomi: Not exactly. What's funny? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Not exactly. What's funny? |
| *Deana Hassanein: It's a valid question. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' It's a valid question. |
| *Ali Olomi: Because I could envision the Caliph sitting on a throne, but it isn't exactly like that. He had a cushion that he would be on, but more likely he had a formal seal, a special ring with an insignia. He had some type of staff of office they would care and he wore a mantle of power that they claimed actually came from Prophet Muhammad. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Because I could envision the Caliph sitting on a throne, but it isn't exactly like that. He had a cushion that he would be on, but more likely he had a formal seal, a special ring with an insignia. He had some type of staff of office they would care and he wore a mantle of power that they claimed actually came from Prophet Muhammad. |
| *Deana Hassanein: What is a mantle of power? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' What is a mantle of power? |
| *Ali Olomi: It's like a cape, if you will, that you wear over your shoulders, but it goes down the front as well. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It's like a cape, if you will, that you wear over your shoulders, but it goes down the front as well. |
| *Deana Hassanein: You made it sound so cool. Then I was like, wow! And then it's a cape. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' You made it sound so cool. Then I was like, wow! And then it's a cape. |
| *Ali Olomi: They have fancy names for everything. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' They have fancy names for everything. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I love that. It sounds very grand and I can see the Khalif sitting in the palace decked in his royal garb. Confessionally, when I was younger, I was convinced that I was a princess and that my family had kidnapped me and my real family were out there looking for me and that one day they'd find me and I'd be decked out in gold from head to toe, still waiting. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I love that. It sounds very grand and I can see the Khalif sitting in the palace decked in his royal garb. Confessionally, when I was younger, I was convinced that I was a princess and that my family had kidnapped me and my real family were out there looking for me and that one day they'd find me and I'd be decked out in gold from head to toe, still waiting. |
| *Ali Olomi: If you didn't imagine some type of escape or fancy life, did you really have a childhood? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' If you didn't imagine some type of escape or fancy life, did you really have a childhood? |
| *Deana Hassanein: Exactly. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Exactly. |
| *Ali Olomi: All right. Imagine the space that is underneath the green dome of the palace. You've got elaborate silks, wooden panels carved with geometric designs that cleverly let in air and light, elaborate embroidery and fine clothing. And within all that finery, there is the Caliph, recognizable with his staff and mantle. You knew who he was by sight. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' All right. Imagine the space that is underneath the green dome of the palace. You've got elaborate silks, wooden panels carved with geometric designs that cleverly let in air and light, elaborate embroidery and fine clothing. And within all that finery, there is the Caliph, recognizable with his staff and mantle. You knew who he was by sight. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Who would be with the Caliph? The palace has a lot of buzz to it, people coming and going, but there wasn't in a court, people who advised the Khalif or ran his empire for him, the government, if you like. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Who would be with the Caliph? The palace has a lot of buzz to it, people coming and going, but there wasn't in a court, people who advised the Khalif or ran his empire for him, the government, if you like. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, there were scholars and philosophers and viziers. Remember, the Abbasids were warrior nerds. They loved to surround themselves with philosophers and host debates even. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, there were scholars and philosophers and viziers. Remember, the Abbasids were warrior nerds. They loved to surround themselves with philosophers and host debates even. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Kind of like the debate with Timothy. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Kind of like the debate with Timothy. |
| *Ali Olomi: Exactly. The court played chess, they debated philosophy, they listened to recited poetry, they even smoked... | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Exactly. The court played chess, they debated philosophy, they listened to recited poetry, they even smoked... |
| *Deana Hassanein: I know what you're going to say. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I know what you're going to say. |
| *Ali Olomi: Shisha. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Shisha. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Yeah, I knew that was coming. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Yeah, I knew that was coming. |
| *Ali Olomi: And of course, they argued policy and strategy all while hearing petitions. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And of course, they argued policy and strategy all while hearing petitions. |
| *Deana Hassanein: It sounds very lively, Ali. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' It sounds very lively, Ali. |
| *Ali Olomi: Lively, but also dangerous. Powerful families often vied for power in the court. One of them that started really early on with the Abbasids was the Barmakids. Let me ask you, have you ever seen Aladdin? Do you remember the vizier Jafar? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Lively, but also dangerous. Powerful families often vied for power in the court. One of them that started really early on with the Abbasids was the Barmakids. Let me ask you, have you ever seen Aladdin? Do you remember the vizier Jafar? |
| *Deana Hassanein: It's only one of my favorite Disney movies. Of course, I remember Jafar with his black snake staff and Iago, his parrot. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' It's only one of my favorite Disney movies. Of course, I remember Jafar with his black snake staff and Iago, his parrot. |
| *Ali Olomi: Well, Jafar is based on an actual historical character. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Well, Jafar is based on an actual historical character. |
| *Deana Hassanein: No. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' No. |
| *Ali Olomi: Known as Jafar of the Barmakids. He was an advisor to the various caliphs and he was a patron of the arts. He supported different poets. And at one time, Harun al-Rashid, wanting to keep him close, marries him off to his sister just so that they have some type of political alliance. But it was not meant to be a love marriage. There was just meant to be a marriage of convenience so that the families were tied together. But Harun al-Rashid has no control over the matters of the heart and Jafar falls in love. And eventually, the caliph's sister ends up pregnant. And when Harun al-Rashid discovers it, he has Jafar executed. And this brings the Barmakids to an end. One great family destroyed by marriage. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Known as Jafar of the Barmakids. He was an advisor to the various caliphs and he was a patron of the arts. He supported different poets. And at one time, Harun al-Rashid, wanting to keep him close, marries him off to his sister just so that they have some type of political alliance. But it was not meant to be a love marriage. There was just meant to be a marriage of convenience so that the families were tied together. But Harun al-Rashid has no control over the matters of the heart and Jafar falls in love. And eventually, the caliph's sister ends up pregnant. And when Harun al-Rashid discovers it, he has Jafar executed. And this brings the Barmakids to an end. One great family destroyed by marriage. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I'm sorry, we're gonna have to back up here. So he was expecting them to be married but not actually ever procreate. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I'm sorry, we're gonna have to back up here. So he was expecting them to be married but not actually ever procreate. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yes, he was very clear about that. It was a political marriage. No, no, no, you can get married, but don't you dare touch my sister. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yes, he was very clear about that. It was a political marriage. No, no, no, you can get married, but don't you dare touch my sister. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Oh my God, so that's the inspiration for Jafar. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Oh my God, so that's the inspiration for Jafar. |
| *Ali Olomi: It is. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It is. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I feel like we've just scratched the surface of the messy politics of the Abbasids. There is so much depth to this palace. The location, the architecture, and the symbolism. The way it was more than just a private residence. The tricky navigating of power at the heart of it. The families like the Barmakids who were in the heart of power, all inside a palace at the center of a round city. In future episodes, we are going to dive even further into those politics. I'm Deana. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I feel like we've just scratched the surface of the messy politics of the Abbasids. There is so much depth to this palace. The location, the architecture, and the symbolism. The way it was more than just a private residence. The tricky navigating of power at the heart of it. The families like the Barmakids who were in the heart of power, all inside a palace at the center of a round city. In future episodes, we are going to dive even further into those politics. I'm Deana. |
| *Ali Olomi: And I'm Ali. This is a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Be sure to subscribe to Echoes of History podcast so you don't miss the next episode of Baghdad Sound Walks. See you next time, fellow travelers. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And I'm Ali. This is a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Be sure to subscribe to Echoes of History podcast so you don't miss the next episode of Baghdad Sound Walks. See you next time, fellow travelers. |
| |-|9= | | |-|9= |
| '''''War between the Brothers''''' | | '''''War between the Brothers''''' |
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| *Deana Hassanein: Hello fellow travellers, welcome to Baghdad Sound Walks, I'm Deana– | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Hello fellow travellers, welcome to Baghdad Sound Walks, I'm Deana– |
| *Ali Olomi: –and I'm Ali. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' –and I'm Ali. |
| *Deana Hassanein: You know Ali, we've travelled all around Baghdad and almost everything we've talked about is touched by politics, from the marketplace, to the mosques, to the harem, even the hammam. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' You know Ali, we've travelled all around Baghdad and almost everything we've talked about is touched by politics, from the marketplace, to the mosques, to the harem, even the hammam. |
| *Ali Olomi: Politics was everything, Deana. Muslims spilled a lot of ink pondering what good government should look like, what a wise ruler should be like, and why it all mattered for society. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Politics was everything, Deana. Muslims spilled a lot of ink pondering what good government should look like, what a wise ruler should be like, and why it all mattered for society. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And we got a little glimpse of this when we visited the palace, the caliph, the viziers, and all the different powerful groups who are right in the centre of the political intrigue. We know throughout history how messy succession can be. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And we got a little glimpse of this when we visited the palace, the caliph, the viziers, and all the different powerful groups who are right in the centre of the political intrigue. We know throughout history how messy succession can be. |
| *Ali Olomi: I mean the issue with the caliph is that technically he's not a king. Muslims in fact were initially very averse to monarchies, that's why they invented the concept of the caliph, because he was supposed to be a custodian of sorts, if you will, the social and political leader who guided the Muslim community and guarded their realms. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I mean the issue with the caliph is that technically he's not a king. Muslims in fact were initially very averse to monarchies, that's why they invented the concept of the caliph, because he was supposed to be a custodian of sorts, if you will, the social and political leader who guided the Muslim community and guarded their realms. |
| *Deana Hassanein: A very good way to get around the label, even in Arabic, caliph doesn't mean king, but vice-sergeant if I remember right. But honestly, it sounds exactly like a kingship. Power wrestled with them and they were part of the dynasty that passed the rule down and they lived in a palace. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' A very good way to get around the label, even in Arabic, caliph doesn't mean king, but vice-sergeant if I remember right. But honestly, it sounds exactly like a kingship. Power wrestled with them and they were part of the dynasty that passed the rule down and they lived in a palace. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, a king in all but name. Names can be deceiving, for example, Baghdad was called the City of Peace, but really there were some skeletons in the closet. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, a king in all but name. Names can be deceiving, for example, Baghdad was called the City of Peace, but really there were some skeletons in the closet. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I'm glad you finally said it. Ali, I can tell you're gearing up for a story. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I'm glad you finally said it. Ali, I can tell you're gearing up for a story. |
| *Ali Olomi: Do you remember the founder of Baghdad? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Do you remember the founder of Baghdad? |
| *Deana Hassanein: Al-Mansur and his dream of a round city, yes. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Al-Mansur and his dream of a round city, yes. |
| *Ali Olomi: Well, this story goes right back to him. Apparently, once he had built the city, he gives the key to the vault to Raita, a future queen, and he says to her, do not open these vaults until I have passed. And Raita being a faithful woman said, all right, I won't. And once they heard news that Al-Mansur had died, she goes to her husband and says, listen, Al-Mansur gave me this key and he told me not to open up the vaults, but now he's dead. Let's go see what's inside the vaults. So they go down, put the key in, the door creaks open, and they discover wall after wall of bodies. The bodies of the Talibit, a powerful dynasty that were the rival of Al-Mansur. He had kept all the skeletons in the vault with tags on them so that you could identify whose body was whose. Eventually they buried them and gave them a formal funeral. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Well, this story goes right back to him. Apparently, once he had built the city, he gives the key to the vault to Raita, a future queen, and he says to her, do not open these vaults until I have passed. And Raita being a faithful woman said, all right, I won't. And once they heard news that Al-Mansur had died, she goes to her husband and says, listen, Al-Mansur gave me this key and he told me not to open up the vaults, but now he's dead. Let's go see what's inside the vaults. So they go down, put the key in, the door creaks open, and they discover wall after wall of bodies. The bodies of the Talibit, a powerful dynasty that were the rival of Al-Mansur. He had kept all the skeletons in the vault with tags on them so that you could identify whose body was whose. Eventually they buried them and gave them a formal funeral. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Oh, my God. So literal skeletons in the closet. That's so disgusting. Can you imagine what that smelled like? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Oh, my God. So literal skeletons in the closet. That's so disgusting. Can you imagine what that smelled like? |
| *Ali Olomi: And with that heat, ooh. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And with that heat, ooh. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Oh, my God. The politics of this time period was no joke. Putting the bodies of your enemies in a big vault with a label. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Oh, my God. The politics of this time period was no joke. Putting the bodies of your enemies in a big vault with a label. |
| *Ali Olomi: It's a tale as old as time from the ancient Achaemenids to the Romans to the Huns. One of the universal constants of history is that human competitions for power are always lethal. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It's a tale as old as time from the ancient Achaemenids to the Romans to the Huns. One of the universal constants of history is that human competitions for power are always lethal. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And it's this type of political intrigue that will make Baghdad, the city of peace, into a place of civil war. I know that Baghdad is technically destroyed several times throughout history. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And it's this type of political intrigue that will make Baghdad, the city of peace, into a place of civil war. I know that Baghdad is technically destroyed several times throughout history. |
| *Ali Olomi: Destroyed and rebuilt. The War of the Two Brothers is one of those instances. But to know that, we actually have to go to the Night of the Three Caliphs first. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Destroyed and rebuilt. The War of the Two Brothers is one of those instances. But to know that, we actually have to go to the Night of the Three Caliphs first. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I love how dramatic all the names are from this time period. The Palace of the Golden Gate, the House of Wisdom, the Night of the Three Caliphs. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I love how dramatic all the names are from this time period. The Palace of the Golden Gate, the House of Wisdom, the Night of the Three Caliphs. |
| *Ali Olomi: They really, really don't name things like they used to. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' They really, really don't name things like they used to. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Literally. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Literally. |
| *Ali Olomi: This night sets the stage for everything. So al-Hadi, the caliph, rules for one year. The reason for only one year is that he tries to sideline his powerful mother Khayzuran, who we visited before. He doesn't like women being in charge. Like all dunderheads, he thinks that women shouldn't be involved in politics. So what does she do? She has him killed. It's unclear how. Some say she hired his favorite wife to smother him with a pillow. Others say poison. But on that night, his brother Harun al-Rashid will hear that he has been named caliph in 786. He gets this news. The old caliph is dead. You are the new caliph. And at the exact same moment, he also hears about the birth of his son al-Ma'mun, who will be caliph later. So you have one dead caliph, the ascension of another, and the birth of a third. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' This night sets the stage for everything. So al-Hadi, the caliph, rules for one year. The reason for only one year is that he tries to sideline his powerful mother Khayzuran, who we visited before. He doesn't like women being in charge. Like all dunderheads, he thinks that women shouldn't be involved in politics. So what does she do? She has him killed. It's unclear how. Some say she hired his favorite wife to smother him with a pillow. Others say poison. But on that night, his brother Harun al-Rashid will hear that he has been named caliph in 786. He gets this news. The old caliph is dead. You are the new caliph. And at the exact same moment, he also hears about the birth of his son al-Ma'mun, who will be caliph later. So you have one dead caliph, the ascension of another, and the birth of a third. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That is one busy night. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That is one busy night. |
| *Ali Olomi: It really is. Imagine hearing all that. By the way, the old king is dead. You're the new king. And the future king has been born. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It really is. Imagine hearing all that. By the way, the old king is dead. You're the new king. And the future king has been born. |
| *Deana Hassanein: What stands out to me in that story as well is Khayzuran, who we've spoken about a few times. Like Zubaydah, she stands out as one of the powerful women of this time. She quelled the rebellion of the guards in the marketplace by paying them off. She changed the whole succession of the caliphate from one son to another. And Zubaydah managed the marriage of al-Amin and built the roads around Baghdad for the pilgrimage and the caravanserai. Talk about exceptional women. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' What stands out to me in that story as well is Khayzuran, who we've spoken about a few times. Like Zubaydah, she stands out as one of the powerful women of this time. She quelled the rebellion of the guards in the marketplace by paying them off. She changed the whole succession of the caliphate from one son to another. And Zubaydah managed the marriage of al-Amin and built the roads around Baghdad for the pilgrimage and the caravanserai. Talk about exceptional women. |
| *Ali Olomi: Truly. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Truly. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So I'm guessing this is where the war begins. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So I'm guessing this is where the war begins. |
| *Ali Olomi: I mean, it's certainly when the seeds are planted, but actually Harun al-Rashid will rule over a pretty peaceful period. In fact, some call it the golden period of al-Rashid. It's his golden rule because of how prosperous it was, how stable it was. He moves out of the palace of eternity and moves back into the palace of the golden gate, which we talked about. And he's the one who really builds the house of wisdom and is responsible for the cultural renaissance that is taking place. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I mean, it's certainly when the seeds are planted, but actually Harun al-Rashid will rule over a pretty peaceful period. In fact, some call it the golden period of al-Rashid. It's his golden rule because of how prosperous it was, how stable it was. He moves out of the palace of eternity and moves back into the palace of the golden gate, which we talked about. And he's the one who really builds the house of wisdom and is responsible for the cultural renaissance that is taking place. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I can't wait till we cover the house of wisdom. But for now, back to the brothers. They were the sons of Harun al-Rashid. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I can't wait till we cover the house of wisdom. But for now, back to the brothers. They were the sons of Harun al-Rashid. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yes, al-Amin and al-Ma'mun, night and day. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yes, al-Amin and al-Ma'mun, night and day. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Isn't that always the case of siblings? Do you have any brothers or sisters? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Isn't that always the case of siblings? Do you have any brothers or sisters? |
| *Ali Olomi: I have two sisters and I can tell you night and day. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I have two sisters and I can tell you night and day. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I'm the exact same. My brother and I, we are so different. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I'm the exact same. My brother and I, we are so different. |
| *Ali Olomi: I mean, we already know that families can be pretty messy. But then you add in the politics and you can just imagine. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I mean, we already know that families can be pretty messy. But then you add in the politics and you can just imagine. |
| *Deana Hassanein: This all came down to a sibling rivalry between two brothers over their father's throne, both competing to see who should rule. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' This all came down to a sibling rivalry between two brothers over their father's throne, both competing to see who should rule. |
| *Ali Olomi: Exactly. And this is what Harun al-Rashid feared. He actually woke up one night from a nightmare where he saw his empire in flames and he called for his dream interpreters who warned him of a coming civil war. To stave it off, he named al-Amin his successor with the promise that after al-Amin's death, al-Ma'mun would rule. So he's trying to balance the brothers out. The problem was al-Amin was the younger brother. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Exactly. And this is what Harun al-Rashid feared. He actually woke up one night from a nightmare where he saw his empire in flames and he called for his dream interpreters who warned him of a coming civil war. To stave it off, he named al-Amin his successor with the promise that after al-Amin's death, al-Ma'mun would rule. So he's trying to balance the brothers out. The problem was al-Amin was the younger brother. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I can imagine this was a really big deal because back then dreams and astrology were so important. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I can imagine this was a really big deal because back then dreams and astrology were so important. |
| *Ali Olomi: They were omens. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' They were omens. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Yeah, exactly. And I find it quite weird that Ma'mun, al-Ma'mun was older. Why wasn't he first in line? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Yeah, exactly. And I find it quite weird that Ma'mun, al-Ma'mun was older. Why wasn't he first in line? |
| *Ali Olomi: Al-Ma'mun was the son of a Persian concubine. So even though he was older, he's technically a half-brother. And so that's the reason. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Al-Ma'mun was the son of a Persian concubine. So even though he was older, he's technically a half-brother. And so that's the reason. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That makes sense. So it was a lineage issue. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That makes sense. So it was a lineage issue. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, this succession would really come to haunt Baghdad, honestly. I mean, Harun al-Rashid made the whole court swear to this particular succession when they went on pilgrimage to Mecca. In the meantime, al-Ma'mun would be given governorship of Khorasan. This is a region in the eastern parts of Persia, but it's a really important region for the Abbasids since that's where their power originally comes from. That's how they overthrew the Umayyads from Khorasan. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, this succession would really come to haunt Baghdad, honestly. I mean, Harun al-Rashid made the whole court swear to this particular succession when they went on pilgrimage to Mecca. In the meantime, al-Ma'mun would be given governorship of Khorasan. This is a region in the eastern parts of Persia, but it's a really important region for the Abbasids since that's where their power originally comes from. That's how they overthrew the Umayyads from Khorasan. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Well, that would make al-Ma'mun very powerful. That's a very large piece of land. Eastern parts of Iran, Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan. He'd be a king in his own region, basically. So he'd have his own army base. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Well, that would make al-Ma'mun very powerful. That's a very large piece of land. Eastern parts of Iran, Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan. He'd be a king in his own region, basically. So he'd have his own army base. |
| *Ali Olomi: You bring up a good point because added to the tensions around this succession is those different military factions that we talked about when we discussed the palace. You had the Anba, the oldest army block based in Baghdad, who would become al-Amin supporters. But al-Ma'mun would have the backing of the Khorasaniyah, the Persian troops. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' You bring up a good point because added to the tensions around this succession is those different military factions that we talked about when we discussed the palace. You had the Anba, the oldest army block based in Baghdad, who would become al-Amin supporters. But al-Ma'mun would have the backing of the Khorasaniyah, the Persian troops. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Oh my God, this is getting real messy real quick. Despite these rulers basically being kings, the Khalif has to manage the different power blocks and navigate tricky courtly politics. That has to take some strong political instincts. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Oh my God, this is getting real messy real quick. Despite these rulers basically being kings, the Khalif has to manage the different power blocks and navigate tricky courtly politics. That has to take some strong political instincts. |
| *Ali Olomi: And that honestly is what al-Amin lacks. Originally, his reign is sort of peaceful for about two years. He wasn't a bad caliph. He just had some really bad political instincts and really bad advisers. Namely, the powerful and conniving al-Rabbi. Think of him as the Wormtongue from Lord of the Rings. He begins to sort of provoke brother against brother. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And that honestly is what al-Amin lacks. Originally, his reign is sort of peaceful for about two years. He wasn't a bad caliph. He just had some really bad political instincts and really bad advisers. Namely, the powerful and conniving al-Rabbi. Think of him as the Wormtongue from Lord of the Rings. He begins to sort of provoke brother against brother. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Uh-uh, bad move. He sounds like my brother always picking fights with me that he can't win. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Uh-uh, bad move. He sounds like my brother always picking fights with me that he can't win. |
| *Ali Olomi: I could see that. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I could see that. |
| *Deana Hassanein: It's probably also a really bad idea to piss off the guy who's basically got his own kingdom at this point with armies and territories that are loyal to him. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' It's probably also a really bad idea to piss off the guy who's basically got his own kingdom at this point with armies and territories that are loyal to him. |
| *Ali Olomi: It was a big mistake, Deana. Al-Ma'mun removes the Khalif's name from the Friday sermon prayers. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It was a big mistake, Deana. Al-Ma'mun removes the Khalif's name from the Friday sermon prayers. |
| *Deana Hassanein: No. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' No. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yep. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yep. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That is a big move. We already saw how important that was. It literally gives legitimacy to the caliph. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That is a big move. We already saw how important that was. It literally gives legitimacy to the caliph. |
| *Ali Olomi: Exactly. And al-Amin responds. So you got a bit of a tit for tat. He responds by removing al-Ma'mun from succession, naming his own son and therefore breaking their oath to their father. That's when al-Ma'mun declares himself imam or the prayer lady. And this, of course, increases the tension. Al-Amin ups the ante, declaring a new governor of Khorasanah, Ali ibn Isa, who is under orders to arrest al-Amin's brother. It becomes a tit for tat, which eventually spirals into a civil war in 811 CE. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Exactly. And al-Amin responds. So you got a bit of a tit for tat. He responds by removing al-Ma'mun from succession, naming his own son and therefore breaking their oath to their father. That's when al-Ma'mun declares himself imam or the prayer lady. And this, of course, increases the tension. Al-Amin ups the ante, declaring a new governor of Khorasanah, Ali ibn Isa, who is under orders to arrest al-Amin's brother. It becomes a tit for tat, which eventually spirals into a civil war in 811 CE. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So on one side, we have al-Amin and his Anba troops and the powerful families of Baghdad. And on the other side, we have al-Ma'mun and the Persian troops and the powerful families of Khorasan. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So on one side, we have al-Amin and his Anba troops and the powerful families of Baghdad. And on the other side, we have al-Ma'mun and the Persian troops and the powerful families of Khorasan. |
| *Ali Olomi: And al-Ma'mun had much better advisors. He had this guy named Fadl ibn Sal, and a very powerful general known as Tahir. Fadl was way more clever than the advisor al-Rabi, who was actually counseling al-Amin. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And al-Ma'mun had much better advisors. He had this guy named Fadl ibn Sal, and a very powerful general known as Tahir. Fadl was way more clever than the advisor al-Rabi, who was actually counseling al-Amin. |
| *Deana Hassanein: When we looked at the Palace of the Golden Gate, I remember you saying how powerful viziers and advisors were. They made up the core of the court. Did they have their own Jaffars, and were they evil like him? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' When we looked at the Palace of the Golden Gate, I remember you saying how powerful viziers and advisors were. They made up the core of the court. Did they have their own Jaffars, and were they evil like him? |
| *Ali Olomi: They were a little bit. Al-Rabi definitely falls into that mold. I mean, a good advisor could make all the difference in the world. Al-Fadl was a good advisor. He in fact, counseled not to push the battle, but to wait and to take up a defensive stance, letting al-Amin's forces come to al-Ma'mun. Al-Rabi, on the other hand, who is like this Jaffar-like character you mentioned, pushes for the war. He told al-Amin, dispatch your army and quickly depose your brother. And so what does al-Ma'mun do? He listens to advisor. He waits. He has Tahir wait with the army from Baghdad coming to them, and then they fight them on familiar ground. And despite the fact that al-Ma'mun's forces are much smaller from the troops in Baghdad, al-Ma'mun wins the day. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' They were a little bit. Al-Rabi definitely falls into that mold. I mean, a good advisor could make all the difference in the world. Al-Fadl was a good advisor. He in fact, counseled not to push the battle, but to wait and to take up a defensive stance, letting al-Amin's forces come to al-Ma'mun. Al-Rabi, on the other hand, who is like this Jaffar-like character you mentioned, pushes for the war. He told al-Amin, dispatch your army and quickly depose your brother. And so what does al-Ma'mun do? He listens to advisor. He waits. He has Tahir wait with the army from Baghdad coming to them, and then they fight them on familiar ground. And despite the fact that al-Ma'mun's forces are much smaller from the troops in Baghdad, al-Ma'mun wins the day. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That has to change the game on the ground. Losing the first battle of war would literally sap your soldier's motivation and weaken your support, no? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That has to change the game on the ground. Losing the first battle of war would literally sap your soldier's motivation and weaken your support, no? |
| *Ali Olomi: The momentum was al-Ma'mun's. Tahir won that battle and then battle after battle after that. Until at one point, even al-Amin's own troops begin to rebel in a mini coup of sorts. Now al-Ma'mun tries to hold on for a little bit, but the damage was done. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' The momentum was al-Ma'mun's. Tahir won that battle and then battle after battle after that. Until at one point, even al-Amin's own troops begin to rebel in a mini coup of sorts. Now al-Ma'mun tries to hold on for a little bit, but the damage was done. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Yeah, there's really no coming back from something like that, is there? No. If your own troops and supporters abandon you, then that's the final nail in the coffin. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Yeah, there's really no coming back from something like that, is there? No. If your own troops and supporters abandon you, then that's the final nail in the coffin. |
| *Ali Olomi: It was a disaster for al-Amin. Tahir is given this fancy title, the one with the two headships, along with his commander Hathama, and they press their advantage. And slowly, bit by bit, different territories fall under their control. Arabia joins al-Ma'mun, as does Egypt, your hometown. That's a big deal. Now you have North Africa. You have Arabia, the place of Mecca, siding with you. Then falls Mosul and Basra and Khufa. And eventually, that evil Jafar-like advisor al-Rabbi, he resigns. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It was a disaster for al-Amin. Tahir is given this fancy title, the one with the two headships, along with his commander Hathama, and they press their advantage. And slowly, bit by bit, different territories fall under their control. Arabia joins al-Ma'mun, as does Egypt, your hometown. That's a big deal. Now you have North Africa. You have Arabia, the place of Mecca, siding with you. Then falls Mosul and Basra and Khufa. And eventually, that evil Jafar-like advisor al-Rabbi, he resigns. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Like a rat on a sinking ship. He also flees after he was the one who pushed for the war in the first place. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Like a rat on a sinking ship. He also flees after he was the one who pushed for the war in the first place. |
| *Ali Olomi: Right. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Right. |
| *Deana Hassanein: The one who set the whole thing in motion. Usually, I say, if you can't handle the heat, don't step in the kitchen. But he literally thought he could handle the heat. Overconfidence. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' The one who set the whole thing in motion. Usually, I say, if you can't handle the heat, don't step in the kitchen. But he literally thought he could handle the heat. Overconfidence. |
| *Ali Olomi: That was his big failure. He saw the writing on the walls, though. Hathama swept in from the east and Tahir came in from the west of Baghdad. And the city was caught right in the middle of it. Al-Amin tried to call upon the ordinary people to kind of rise up. But this time it was over for him. It was too late. Tahir took Harbiya. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That was his big failure. He saw the writing on the walls, though. Hathama swept in from the east and Tahir came in from the west of Baghdad. And the city was caught right in the middle of it. Al-Amin tried to call upon the ordinary people to kind of rise up. But this time it was over for him. It was too late. Tahir took Harbiya. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And Harbiya is the suburb where a lot of the Persian and non-Arab population lived. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And Harbiya is the suburb where a lot of the Persian and non-Arab population lived. |
| *Ali Olomi: Right. So the base of power for al-Ma'mun. And because of this, by taking Harbiya, we're going to actually see a suburb versus suburb war. The civil war will become a year-long city fight between these different factions. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Right. So the base of power for al-Ma'mun. And because of this, by taking Harbiya, we're going to actually see a suburb versus suburb war. The civil war will become a year-long city fight between these different factions. |
| *Deana Hassanein: It's like the war focused on the city. The fight outside of Baghdad was brought into Baghdad, which must have been devastating. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' It's like the war focused on the city. The fight outside of Baghdad was brought into Baghdad, which must have been devastating. |
| *Ali Olomi: Ah, it was brutal. In 811, Tahir managed to cut off the bridges to the river and cut Baghdad's support. Al-Amin tries to flee, but he's caught and he's executed. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Ah, it was brutal. In 811, Tahir managed to cut off the bridges to the river and cut Baghdad's support. Al-Amin tries to flee, but he's caught and he's executed. |
| *Deana Hassanein: By his own brother. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' By his own brother. |
| *Ali Olomi: By his own brother's troops. So his brother's hands are technically clean. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' By his own brother's troops. So his brother's hands are technically clean. |
| *Deana Hassanein: We've heard of caliphs who were killed or poisoned, but execution must have been a completely different experience, especially if it's your brother. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' We've heard of caliphs who were killed or poisoned, but execution must have been a completely different experience, especially if it's your brother. |
| *Ali Olomi: It was. It fractured the caliphate pretty severely. It would take al-Ma'mun nearly eight more years before he got the caliphate back under control. But really, it would never be quite the same. In 819, he finally, after bringing it all under control, marches into Baghdad with his whole retinue wearing green. But his reign would be fraught. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It was. It fractured the caliphate pretty severely. It would take al-Ma'mun nearly eight more years before he got the caliphate back under control. But really, it would never be quite the same. In 819, he finally, after bringing it all under control, marches into Baghdad with his whole retinue wearing green. But his reign would be fraught. |
| *Deana Hassanein: We all know that putting together the pieces after a civil war is very hard. Not everyone manages it. Countries break up from civil wars. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' We all know that putting together the pieces after a civil war is very hard. Not everyone manages it. Countries break up from civil wars. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, it would be a completely different caliphate from then on. Still powerful and wealthy, but new factions would arrive, new powers and families. You'd have more power in the Turkic mercenaries and slave soldiers, while a lot of the regions would actually begin to have dynasties of their own, loyal to the caliph, but with their own power base. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, it would be a completely different caliphate from then on. Still powerful and wealthy, but new factions would arrive, new powers and families. You'd have more power in the Turkic mercenaries and slave soldiers, while a lot of the regions would actually begin to have dynasties of their own, loyal to the caliph, but with their own power base. |
| *Deana Hassanein: The civil war is the turning point. There is no going back. You can almost see old Baghdad, the city of peace, fade away for this new one to emerge. Ali, does Baghdad survive it? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' The civil war is the turning point. There is no going back. You can almost see old Baghdad, the city of peace, fade away for this new one to emerge. Ali, does Baghdad survive it? |
| *Ali Olomi: It does. It's rebuilt, but it will continue to be full of strife. Within a generation, it will be caught between the anarchy in Samarra, where a troop rebellion will remake the entire politics of the Abbasids, and then the Zanj rebellion, a great slave rebellion, which will shake the caliphate to the core. What ends up happening is that the Abbasids, originally the most powerful family, would simply become one among many powerful families. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It does. It's rebuilt, but it will continue to be full of strife. Within a generation, it will be caught between the anarchy in Samarra, where a troop rebellion will remake the entire politics of the Abbasids, and then the Zanj rebellion, a great slave rebellion, which will shake the caliphate to the core. What ends up happening is that the Abbasids, originally the most powerful family, would simply become one among many powerful families. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So even though it continues on for centuries more and as a huge cultural hub, the city of peace has now changed. It's more tense than ever before. Baghdrama. Did you like that? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So even though it continues on for centuries more and as a huge cultural hub, the city of peace has now changed. It's more tense than ever before. Baghdrama. Did you like that? |
| *Ali Olomi: I love it. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I love it. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I love a good pun. The intrigue and drama is intense. This should be a miniseries or TV show. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I love a good pun. The intrigue and drama is intense. This should be a miniseries or TV show. |
| *Ali Olomi: I would absolutely watch that. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I would absolutely watch that. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Of course you would, warrior nerd. From the night of the three caliphs to the war between two brothers, it was all so intense. I'm looking forward to something a bit more peaceful next time. Thank you for joining us. I'm Deana. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Of course you would, warrior nerd. From the night of the three caliphs to the war between two brothers, it was all so intense. I'm looking forward to something a bit more peaceful next time. Thank you for joining us. I'm Deana. |
| *Ali Olomi: And I'm Ali. This is a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Be sure to subscribe to the Echoes of History Podcast so you don't miss the next episode of Baghdad Soundwalks. See you next time, fellow travelers. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And I'm Ali. This is a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Be sure to subscribe to the Echoes of History Podcast so you don't miss the next episode of Baghdad Soundwalks. See you next time, fellow travelers. |
| |-|10= | | |-|10= |
| '''''Education & The House of Wisdom''''' | | '''''Education & The House of Wisdom''''' |
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| *Deana Hassanein: Hello fellow travellers, welcome to Baghdad Soundwalks. I'm Deana–. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Hello fellow travellers, welcome to Baghdad Soundwalks. I'm Deana–. |
| *Ali Olomi: –and I'm Ali. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' –and I'm Ali. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And we've made it, we are at the end of our journey. Where are we headed for our final stop in Baghdad? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And we've made it, we are at the end of our journey. Where are we headed for our final stop in Baghdad? |
| *Ali Olomi: Deana, I have saved the best for last, the House of Wisdom. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Deana, I have saved the best for last, the House of Wisdom. |
| *Deana Hassanein: AKA the Great Library, where we finally get to dive into the cultural and intellectual achievements of medieval Baghdad. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' AKA the Great Library, where we finally get to dive into the cultural and intellectual achievements of medieval Baghdad. |
| *Ali Olomi: I mean, for nerds like me, the House of Wisdom is the dream. This is my Library of Alexandria. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I mean, for nerds like me, the House of Wisdom is the dream. This is my Library of Alexandria. |
| *Deana Hassanein: The Library of Alexandria was built by Cleopatra, by the way. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' The Library of Alexandria was built by Cleopatra, by the way. |
| *Ali Olomi: Oh yeah, and interestingly enough, we have something similar here. Arun al-Rashid, the famed caliph who ruled over that golden period of Abbasid Baghdad, he's often credited with building the House of Wisdom. But in actuality, it was his wife Zubaydah who founded it. She was a major patron of the arts and sciences. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Oh yeah, and interestingly enough, we have something similar here. Arun al-Rashid, the famed caliph who ruled over that golden period of Abbasid Baghdad, he's often credited with building the House of Wisdom. But in actuality, it was his wife Zubaydah who founded it. She was a major patron of the arts and sciences. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Do people know that it was Zubaydah or is it? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Do people know that it was Zubaydah or is it? |
| *Ali Olomi: Historians know, but the average person probably not. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Historians know, but the average person probably not. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Wow, Zubaydah is one of those queens whose name keeps popping up across our journey. She was also the one funding the pilgrimage roads and the caravanserai roads too. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Wow, Zubaydah is one of those queens whose name keeps popping up across our journey. She was also the one funding the pilgrimage roads and the caravanserai roads too. |
| *Ali Olomi: We all aspire to have her impact, Deana. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' We all aspire to have her impact, Deana. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Seriously, so the House of Wisdom was a library? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Seriously, so the House of Wisdom was a library? |
| *Ali Olomi: It was the private library of the caliph that housed his books originally, but it was also an institution that funded scholars, learning, and most importantly, translation. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It was the private library of the caliph that housed his books originally, but it was also an institution that funded scholars, learning, and most importantly, translation. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I remember you mentioning that translation is such an important process. Is the only way we know what we know? I mean, even the information in this episode is only possible because someone somewhere translated important texts like the writings of Euclid, Aristotle, and Plato. What we know about science and mathematics are all part of the process of translation. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I remember you mentioning that translation is such an important process. Is the only way we know what we know? I mean, even the information in this episode is only possible because someone somewhere translated important texts like the writings of Euclid, Aristotle, and Plato. What we know about science and mathematics are all part of the process of translation. |
| *Ali Olomi: That's a pretty important point. I mean, it makes you really think knowledge throughout history is really a product of a collective process of people working together across cultures and centuries. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That's a pretty important point. I mean, it makes you really think knowledge throughout history is really a product of a collective process of people working together across cultures and centuries. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That makes total sense for Baghdad, Ali. We talked about how medieval Baghdad was made up of Muslims, Jews, Christians, Arabs, Persians, Greeks, Africans, and Syriac people, and even location reflects that blending. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That makes total sense for Baghdad, Ali. We talked about how medieval Baghdad was made up of Muslims, Jews, Christians, Arabs, Persians, Greeks, Africans, and Syriac people, and even location reflects that blending. |
| *Ali Olomi: You know, that cultural sharing that you're talking about, Deana, becomes so important for the Abbasids. Even their predecessors, the Umayyads, were interested in knowledge of other cultures and societies, but it's really the Abbasids that would take it to the next level. They'll translate the great works of Greek and Persian thinkers, stuff that had been sidelined to some degree in Europe, but now they would be brought back into the public debate and learning in medieval Baghdad. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' You know, that cultural sharing that you're talking about, Deana, becomes so important for the Abbasids. Even their predecessors, the Umayyads, were interested in knowledge of other cultures and societies, but it's really the Abbasids that would take it to the next level. They'll translate the great works of Greek and Persian thinkers, stuff that had been sidelined to some degree in Europe, but now they would be brought back into the public debate and learning in medieval Baghdad. |
| *Deana Hassanein: This reminds me that the city design was partly based on Euclid. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' This reminds me that the city design was partly based on Euclid. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, we see all these old classics, Plato and Aristotle, Galens and Ptolemy, Hipparchus. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, we see all these old classics, Plato and Aristotle, Galens and Ptolemy, Hipparchus. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So, the House of Wisdom was home to both the translation movement, bringing Greek and Persian knowledge into Arabic, and it was home for the texts themselves. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So, the House of Wisdom was home to both the translation movement, bringing Greek and Persian knowledge into Arabic, and it was home for the texts themselves. |
| *Ali Olomi: Now that I'm thinking about it, it's probably more of a learning center plus a library, or maybe a public academic center. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Now that I'm thinking about it, it's probably more of a learning center plus a library, or maybe a public academic center. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Did it start that way, or did it gradually evolve into that? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Did it start that way, or did it gradually evolve into that? |
| *Ali Olomi: I mean, under al-Mansur, who was the founder of Baghdad, it starts off really as a private library for the caliph, but under Harun al-Rashid, it becomes this public learning center, thanks to the patronage of his wife, Zubaydah. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I mean, under al-Mansur, who was the founder of Baghdad, it starts off really as a private library for the caliph, but under Harun al-Rashid, it becomes this public learning center, thanks to the patronage of his wife, Zubaydah. |
| *Deana Hassanein: She's the money behind the whole operation. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' She's the money behind the whole operation. |
| *Ali Olomi: Absolutely, this was a cushy time to be a scholar, especially under either Zubaydah and later under al-Ma'mun. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Absolutely, this was a cushy time to be a scholar, especially under either Zubaydah and later under al-Ma'mun. |
| *Deana Hassanein: The man who ends up winning the war of the two brothers. So, after he's established himself as caliph and restored his empire, he turns his attention to the House of Wisdom. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' The man who ends up winning the war of the two brothers. So, after he's established himself as caliph and restored his empire, he turns his attention to the House of Wisdom. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, al-Ma'mun really fancies himself as a sort of philosopher king, so he expands those translation efforts greatly, and he even used to hold regular scholarly debates himself. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, al-Ma'mun really fancies himself as a sort of philosopher king, so he expands those translation efforts greatly, and he even used to hold regular scholarly debates himself. |
| *Deana Hassanein: You weren't kidding when you said the Abbasid caliphs fancied themselves as warrior nerds. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' You weren't kidding when you said the Abbasid caliphs fancied themselves as warrior nerds. |
| *Ali Olomi: I mean, the whole society was like this. Knowledge was deeply, deeply valued. The result of this was that knowledge spread throughout society. You saw philosophers engage in public debates, translated works, wouldn't just be hidden away, but even copied, so that they were made for reading. We had high literacy rates, and scholars held positions of power. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I mean, the whole society was like this. Knowledge was deeply, deeply valued. The result of this was that knowledge spread throughout society. You saw philosophers engage in public debates, translated works, wouldn't just be hidden away, but even copied, so that they were made for reading. We had high literacy rates, and scholars held positions of power. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Just like the mutanabi, or the street of booksellers, I can still envision the books piled high as people sought through them. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Just like the mutanabi, or the street of booksellers, I can still envision the books piled high as people sought through them. |
| *Ali Olomi: Oh, a dream. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Oh, a dream. |
| *Deana Hassanein: All right, Ali, why don't we step into the House of Wisdom? Who would we meet there? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' All right, Ali, why don't we step into the House of Wisdom? Who would we meet there? |
| *Ali Olomi: So, scholars from all over would be drawn to Baghdad. The House of Wisdom was a magnet. If you could land a job there, the chance of learning the mysteries of the universe and engaging with your fellow scholars, that's ace. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' So, scholars from all over would be drawn to Baghdad. The House of Wisdom was a magnet. If you could land a job there, the chance of learning the mysteries of the universe and engaging with your fellow scholars, that's ace. |
| *Deana Hassanein: In the same way, young people applied to certain colleges today, like Oxford, or Cambridge, or Sorbonne, or Harvard. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' In the same way, young people applied to certain colleges today, like Oxford, or Cambridge, or Sorbonne, or Harvard. |
| *Ali Olomi: Like those kids, education was a way to get ahead in life, to go up the social ladder, so to speak. But it was also a way to participate in something deeply valued, learning. So you'd have people from all walks of life. You had Fabet ibn Qurra, who was a haren, a special religion that worshipped the stars. He would translate Euclid and Ptolemy. You had Ibn Ishaq, who was an historian Christian, a physician, and he would translate Galens and Hippocrates. You have original, brand new types of mathematics from al-Khwarizmi, and you'd have fusion Islamic and Aristotelian philosophy under al-Kindi. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Like those kids, education was a way to get ahead in life, to go up the social ladder, so to speak. But it was also a way to participate in something deeply valued, learning. So you'd have people from all walks of life. You had Fabet ibn Qurra, who was a haren, a special religion that worshipped the stars. He would translate Euclid and Ptolemy. You had Ibn Ishaq, who was an historian Christian, a physician, and he would translate Galens and Hippocrates. You have original, brand new types of mathematics from al-Khwarizmi, and you'd have fusion Islamic and Aristotelian philosophy under al-Kindi. |
| *Deana Hassanein: The combination of translation and original work must have had major consequences, though, Ali. We talked about how there was such a big advancement in science and technology in this time. I'm still imagining those beautiful water clocks and mechanical clocks. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' The combination of translation and original work must have had major consequences, though, Ali. We talked about how there was such a big advancement in science and technology in this time. I'm still imagining those beautiful water clocks and mechanical clocks. |
| *Ali Olomi: Right, the one that I want in my garden and you want an elephant. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Right, the one that I want in my garden and you want an elephant. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Good memory. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Good memory. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah. I mean, in a lot of ways, Deana, this is the birth of modern science and mathematics as we know it. Ibn Sina's Qanun of Medicine is the standard of medicine for the next thousand years. I said that right. A thousand years. His model will be used. The idea of quarantining, the idea of germ theory all comes from Ibn Sina. Al-Khwarizmi will give us the algebra and algorithm, modern mathematics as we know it, the ones and the zeros. And Ibn al-Haytham gives us the scientific method. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah. I mean, in a lot of ways, Deana, this is the birth of modern science and mathematics as we know it. Ibn Sina's Qanun of Medicine is the standard of medicine for the next thousand years. I said that right. A thousand years. His model will be used. The idea of quarantining, the idea of germ theory all comes from Ibn Sina. Al-Khwarizmi will give us the algebra and algorithm, modern mathematics as we know it, the ones and the zeros. And Ibn al-Haytham gives us the scientific method. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Ah, so I have al-Khwarizmi to thank for my math classes in school. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Ah, so I have al-Khwarizmi to thank for my math classes in school. |
| *Ali Olomi: Al-Khwarizmi had to be a nerd, and now we are all suffering for it. But as much as he's a pain, he's the man who introduces the zero from India. Sefer. It's part of the Arabic mathematics of this time period. That alone is what makes technology like computers, cell phones, and any technology really that relies on ones and zeros possible. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Al-Khwarizmi had to be a nerd, and now we are all suffering for it. But as much as he's a pain, he's the man who introduces the zero from India. Sefer. It's part of the Arabic mathematics of this time period. That alone is what makes technology like computers, cell phones, and any technology really that relies on ones and zeros possible. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So much of what we study in school is really only possible because of the advancement in this moment. I mean, without the house of wisdom, there goes a lot of science and medicine, maths, and chemistry. School would be really different without them. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So much of what we study in school is really only possible because of the advancement in this moment. I mean, without the house of wisdom, there goes a lot of science and medicine, maths, and chemistry. School would be really different without them. |
| *Ali Olomi: And we've got to throw in astronomy too. I mean, we see such a massive advancement in astronomy. One of Al-Mansur's closest friends is a guy named Yahya ibn Abi Mansur. And he creates the most advanced solar eclipse calculations the world has seen to this date. And of course, advancements in astrology. The only reason we know what our star signs are is because people of Yahya ibn Abi Mansur and Abu Ma'shar who write them down. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And we've got to throw in astronomy too. I mean, we see such a massive advancement in astronomy. One of Al-Mansur's closest friends is a guy named Yahya ibn Abi Mansur. And he creates the most advanced solar eclipse calculations the world has seen to this date. And of course, advancements in astrology. The only reason we know what our star signs are is because people of Yahya ibn Abi Mansur and Abu Ma'shar who write them down. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Ah, astrology. We've seen the importance of that in the founding of Baghdad itself. Ali, do you want to try and guess my star sign? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Ah, astrology. We've seen the importance of that in the founding of Baghdad itself. Ali, do you want to try and guess my star sign? |
| *Ali Olomi: All right, all right. Based off of your positive energy, I'm going to guess a Gemini. But based off of your ability to keep me and this podcast in line, I'm going to guess Virgo. So it's one of those two. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' All right, all right. Based off of your positive energy, I'm going to guess a Gemini. But based off of your ability to keep me and this podcast in line, I'm going to guess Virgo. So it's one of those two. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I don't know where to start with the compliments you're giving me or the fact that you actually did guess my star sign. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I don't know where to start with the compliments you're giving me or the fact that you actually did guess my star sign. |
| *Ali Olomi: Oh, did I? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Oh, did I? |
| *Deana Hassanein: You did. I am a Virgo, but I don't trust you. I reckon you found my date of birth somehow. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' You did. I am a Virgo, but I don't trust you. I reckon you found my date of birth somehow. |
| *Ali Olomi: I'm not that technologically literate. So that's a-it's totally a guess. Here, let's actually read what the most famous Abbasid astrologer says about your sign. This is a man named Abu Ma'shar who in the ninth century writes the most important text of astrology. He says, those born under Virgo or Al-Adra are said to be pleasant, but anxious about the future, playful, but restrained. They grow to be wise, are just, generous, judgmental, and cultured. They enjoy music and have good manners. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I'm not that technologically literate. So that's a-it's totally a guess. Here, let's actually read what the most famous Abbasid astrologer says about your sign. This is a man named Abu Ma'shar who in the ninth century writes the most important text of astrology. He says, those born under Virgo or Al-Adra are said to be pleasant, but anxious about the future, playful, but restrained. They grow to be wise, are just, generous, judgmental, and cultured. They enjoy music and have good manners. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I'm currently speechless because I need to ask you, are you making this up? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I'm currently speechless because I need to ask you, are you making this up? |
| *Ali Olomi: No, no, I swear. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' No, no, I swear. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That's a little too true. It's quite scary how accurate that was. I don't really know how to feel about that. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That's a little too true. It's quite scary how accurate that was. I don't really know how to feel about that. |
| *Ali Olomi: I mean, there's a reason astrology was the queen of the sciences for them. In fact, they actually build some of the world's first and most amazing observatories so that they can watch the stars. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I mean, there's a reason astrology was the queen of the sciences for them. In fact, they actually build some of the world's first and most amazing observatories so that they can watch the stars. |
| *Deana Hassanein: You know, my homework tonight is going to be hunting your star sign down. I'm going to use any evidence that is out there to get it because I'm actually in awe of what just happened. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' You know, my homework tonight is going to be hunting your star sign down. I'm going to use any evidence that is out there to get it because I'm actually in awe of what just happened. |
| *Ali Olomi: It's classified. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It's classified. |
| *Deana Hassanein: What I really want to know, Ali, is did they share this knowledge? Because they built a society that genuinely valued knowledge. All of medieval Baghdad is caught up in it, but what about the rest of the world? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' What I really want to know, Ali, is did they share this knowledge? Because they built a society that genuinely valued knowledge. All of medieval Baghdad is caught up in it, but what about the rest of the world? |
| *Ali Olomi: You know, remember when we talked about Abbasid diplomacy and how they relied on trade routes which allowed them to send lavish gifts? Well, some of those gifts that they were sending were engineering marvels and whole treasure troves of books. One of those mechanical clocks makes its way to Europe, in fact. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' You know, remember when we talked about Abbasid diplomacy and how they relied on trade routes which allowed them to send lavish gifts? Well, some of those gifts that they were sending were engineering marvels and whole treasure troves of books. One of those mechanical clocks makes its way to Europe, in fact. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I still want the gift of an elephant. I remember how access to paper from China made books cheaper so they could produce more and more books. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I still want the gift of an elephant. I remember how access to paper from China made books cheaper so they could produce more and more books. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, that was the effect on the outlying regions as well, from Cairo to Cordoba, Samarkand, Balkh, Damascus. All of these are going to become major centers of knowledge. This is an Islamic impulse that is shared amongst all of them. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, that was the effect on the outlying regions as well, from Cairo to Cordoba, Samarkand, Balkh, Damascus. All of these are going to become major centers of knowledge. This is an Islamic impulse that is shared amongst all of them. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Who are some of the other scholars we would see in the House of Wisdom? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Who are some of the other scholars we would see in the House of Wisdom? |
| *Ali Olomi: So, in addition to the cultural mix, we talked of Muslims, we talked of Christians, we also saw that knowledge was open to women at this time. You had Zainab al-Shada, who was the first jurist. In fact, some argue that she might have been a sort of the equivalent of a Supreme Court Justice at this time period, the High Court. You have Fakhr al-Nisa, who was a Hadith scholar. And as you know, the Hadiths are the sayings of Muhammad. So, she was incredibly important for religion. And of course, you had Zumarud Khatun, who creates her own mosque and becomes a patron of it. So, you have women justices, women scholars, even religious leaders in this time period. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' So, in addition to the cultural mix, we talked of Muslims, we talked of Christians, we also saw that knowledge was open to women at this time. You had Zainab al-Shada, who was the first jurist. In fact, some argue that she might have been a sort of the equivalent of a Supreme Court Justice at this time period, the High Court. You have Fakhr al-Nisa, who was a Hadith scholar. And as you know, the Hadiths are the sayings of Muhammad. So, she was incredibly important for religion. And of course, you had Zumarud Khatun, who creates her own mosque and becomes a patron of it. So, you have women justices, women scholars, even religious leaders in this time period. |
| *Deana Hassanein: It's so exciting to see women participate in intellectual culture like this, because we don't have many cases of women theologians and scholars in medieval Europe at this time period, at least not for another several centuries. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' It's so exciting to see women participate in intellectual culture like this, because we don't have many cases of women theologians and scholars in medieval Europe at this time period, at least not for another several centuries. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, I mean, women were legally entitled to an education under Islamic law. And given that the Abbasids had this great love of learning, it makes perfect sense for them. That's why you end up with female theologians and female scientists like Sutayata, who's working on And, you know, these are only the women that we know about. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, I mean, women were legally entitled to an education under Islamic law. And given that the Abbasids had this great love of learning, it makes perfect sense for them. That's why you end up with female theologians and female scientists like Sutayata, who's working on And, you know, these are only the women that we know about. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I imagine there were even more whose names we don't know or who lived quite scholarly lives. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I imagine there were even more whose names we don't know or who lived quite scholarly lives. |
| *Ali Olomi: I mean, we know that there were many women translators, for example. We don't know all their names, but the very texts that we read today were made possible by them. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I mean, we know that there were many women translators, for example. We don't know all their names, but the very texts that we read today were made possible by them. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Now, that is what I call leaving an impact. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Now, that is what I call leaving an impact. |
| *Ali Olomi: You know, the House of Wisdom's influence cannot be overstated. It was culturally, intellectually one of the greatest turning points in history. Without it, our civilizations today would look vastly different. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' You know, the House of Wisdom's influence cannot be overstated. It was culturally, intellectually one of the greatest turning points in history. Without it, our civilizations today would look vastly different. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Ali, you really did save the best till last. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Ali, you really did save the best till last. |
| *Ali Olomi: I love it. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I love it. |
| *Deana Hassanein: The House of Wisdom was everything I imagined it to be. When you have a name as fancy as that, it's hard to live up to it, but it really did. And what's even more exciting is that we'll be diving further into some of these intellectual figures in our next season as we continue our journey. For now, we've studied the layout and design of the city, like fellow travelers walking through from Baghdad's winding streets to its palaces. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' The House of Wisdom was everything I imagined it to be. When you have a name as fancy as that, it's hard to live up to it, but it really did. And what's even more exciting is that we'll be diving further into some of these intellectual figures in our next season as we continue our journey. For now, we've studied the layout and design of the city, like fellow travelers walking through from Baghdad's winding streets to its palaces. |
| *Ali Olomi: From its mosque to its House of Wisdom. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' From its mosque to its House of Wisdom. |
| *Deana Hassanein: We've seen a lot, but there is still so much more. Thanks for joining us. I'm Deana. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' We've seen a lot, but there is still so much more. Thanks for joining us. I'm Deana. |
| *Ali Olomi: And I'm Ali. This is Ubisoft Podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Follow Echoes of History wherever you get your podcasts. See you next time, fellow travelers. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And I'm Ali. This is Ubisoft Podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Follow Echoes of History wherever you get your podcasts. See you next time, fellow travelers. |
| </tabber> | | </tabber> |
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| '''''Who were the Banū Mūsā brothers?''''' | | '''''Who were the Banū Mūsā brothers?''''' |
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| *Ali Olomi: A jewel in the desert. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' A jewel in the desert. |
| *Deana Hassanein: A round city full of merchants, rulers and scholars. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' A round city full of merchants, rulers and scholars. |
| *Ali Olomi: The great minds of the Abbasid Empire. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' The great minds of the Abbasid Empire. |
| *Deana Hassanein: This is Figures of Baghdad. Hello fellow travellers. Surprise! We're back with a whole new season dedicated to the different figures of Baghdad as found in the game Assassin's Creed Mirage. In this season, we'll be exploring the rich world of the Abbasids and their capital city. Ali, I'm glad to be back and excited to get to know some of these cool people. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' This is Figures of Baghdad. Hello fellow travellers. Surprise! We're back with a whole new season dedicated to the different figures of Baghdad as found in the game Assassin's Creed Mirage. In this season, we'll be exploring the rich world of the Abbasids and their capital city. Ali, I'm glad to be back and excited to get to know some of these cool people. |
| *Ali Olomi: Oh, I'm so excited to be back too. We have some fascinating people to visit with rich stories full of drama, intrigue and mystery. As you say, Deana, in every episode of this season we'll be covering characters that feature in Assassin's Creed Mirage. And today we're kicking it off with the three brothers of dubious origin who are actually adopted by the caliph. Raised in the court, they become famous scientists and scholars and eventually political figures amidst the chaos of warring factions. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Oh, I'm so excited to be back too. We have some fascinating people to visit with rich stories full of drama, intrigue and mystery. As you say, Deana, in every episode of this season we'll be covering characters that feature in Assassin's Creed Mirage. And today we're kicking it off with the three brothers of dubious origin who are actually adopted by the caliph. Raised in the court, they become famous scientists and scholars and eventually political figures amidst the chaos of warring factions. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Okay, I'm ready. Yalla, let's do this. In the last season, we left off at the House of Wisdom. So now let's meet some of the scholars who studied in this incredible institution. Let's meet these three brothers. Disclaimer though, they have no links to the Night of the Three Caliphs from last season's episode, The War Between Two Brothers. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Okay, I'm ready. Yalla, let's do this. In the last season, we left off at the House of Wisdom. So now let's meet some of the scholars who studied in this incredible institution. Let's meet these three brothers. Disclaimer though, they have no links to the Night of the Three Caliphs from last season's episode, The War Between Two Brothers. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, no relation whatsoever. But for whatever reason, they do love the symmetry or the harmony of three for all of their descriptions. You're gonna frequently see three this, three that. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, no relation whatsoever. But for whatever reason, they do love the symmetry or the harmony of three for all of their descriptions. You're gonna frequently see three this, three that. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So it's good to get out of the way. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So it's good to get out of the way. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, true. The three brothers of the Banu Musa were actually a family of brilliant engineers and scientists with a really interesting history. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, true. The three brothers of the Banu Musa were actually a family of brilliant engineers and scientists with a really interesting history. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I'll be honest, Ali, that sounds super predictable. I'm not even surprised that you said that because growing up Egyptian, all I ever heard is that this person's graduated in engineering. Oh, your cousin's become an engineer. So I know that feeling all too well. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I'll be honest, Ali, that sounds super predictable. I'm not even surprised that you said that because growing up Egyptian, all I ever heard is that this person's graduated in engineering. Oh, your cousin's become an engineer. So I know that feeling all too well. |
| *Ali Olomi: It's honestly the same. My mom wanted me to become a doctor, a lawyer or an engineer. I became a professor. Sorry, mom. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It's honestly the same. My mom wanted me to become a doctor, a lawyer or an engineer. I became a professor. Sorry, mom. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I don't see how that's not amazing. I'm sure she's oozing with pride. My mom and dad... | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I don't see how that's not amazing. I'm sure she's oozing with pride. My mom and dad... |
| *Ali Olomi: I hope. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I hope. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Yeah, I'm sure she does. I mean, my mom and dad still don't really fully get what I do. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Yeah, I'm sure she does. I mean, my mom and dad still don't really fully get what I do. |
| *Ali Olomi: I had to explain what being a professor was actually like to my mom. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I had to explain what being a professor was actually like to my mom. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Really? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Really? |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, she's like, so you're a teacher. And I'm like, sort of. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, she's like, so you're a teacher. And I'm like, sort of. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Oh, she wasn't happy with the professor title. She's like, so you're just a teacher, basically. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Oh, she wasn't happy with the professor title. She's like, so you're just a teacher, basically. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Okay, Ali, so did the Banu Musa's mom want them to become engineers too? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Okay, Ali, so did the Banu Musa's mom want them to become engineers too? |
| *Ali Olomi: You know, we don't actually know a lot about their mom, but I will tell you, their dad was a con man. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' You know, we don't actually know a lot about their mom, but I will tell you, their dad was a con man. |
| *Deana Hassanein: A con man? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' A con man? |
| *Ali Olomi: Yep. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yep. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I did not see that coming. Now I know this story is going to be very good. How'd you go from being a con man to a dad with three engineer sons? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I did not see that coming. Now I know this story is going to be very good. How'd you go from being a con man to a dad with three engineer sons? |
| *Ali Olomi: Well, the funny story is their father is a man named Musa ibn Shakir, and he was originally a highwayman. And he used to steal from people. There's actually a really interesting story. Is during Friday prayers, while everyone was congregating during those times, he would sneak out of the mosque and then steal from their possessions, from the houses. And he would come back before the prayers were finished. For whatever reason, at some point, he comes across caliph al-Ma'mun and he impresses him. And so al-Ma'mun hires him to be his personal astrologer. So from thief to astrologer. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Well, the funny story is their father is a man named Musa ibn Shakir, and he was originally a highwayman. And he used to steal from people. There's actually a really interesting story. Is during Friday prayers, while everyone was congregating during those times, he would sneak out of the mosque and then steal from their possessions, from the houses. And he would come back before the prayers were finished. For whatever reason, at some point, he comes across caliph al-Ma'mun and he impresses him. And so al-Ma'mun hires him to be his personal astrologer. So from thief to astrologer. |
| *Deana Hassanein: When you say impresses him, what do you mean as in his ability to steal while people are praying? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' When you say impresses him, what do you mean as in his ability to steal while people are praying? |
| *Ali Olomi: He ends up being very smart. For whatever reason, like they have this conversation and Musa is like an intelligent person, not just a thief, but really well-read. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' He ends up being very smart. For whatever reason, like they have this conversation and Musa is like an intelligent person, not just a thief, but really well-read. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I can't get over the contradiction, by the way, of people praying and then him stealing while they're doing a religious act. Okay, Ali, I've come across a lot of job titles in my time, but that one is definitely out there. Talk about strange evolution. How can you go from being a thief to a personal astrologer to the caliph? Not only is that an upgrade, but I'm sure that came with a lot of perks. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I can't get over the contradiction, by the way, of people praying and then him stealing while they're doing a religious act. Okay, Ali, I've come across a lot of job titles in my time, but that one is definitely out there. Talk about strange evolution. How can you go from being a thief to a personal astrologer to the caliph? Not only is that an upgrade, but I'm sure that came with a lot of perks. |
| *Ali Olomi: Oh yeah, it's kind of goals. I mean, why can't a rich patron of the arts give us a cushy court position? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Oh yeah, it's kind of goals. I mean, why can't a rich patron of the arts give us a cushy court position? |
| *Deana Hassanein: Maybe they will after this podcast, but... | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Maybe they will after this podcast, but... |
| *Ali Olomi: Maybe. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Maybe. |
| *Deana Hassanein: What would you want to be, Ali? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' What would you want to be, Ali? |
| *Ali Olomi: Definitely court astrologer, but I'd probably get in trouble for rousing the rabble against the caliph. How about you? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Definitely court astrologer, but I'd probably get in trouble for rousing the rabble against the caliph. How about you? |
| *Deana Hassanein: I'd be chilling in the palace as a queen, duh. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I'd be chilling in the palace as a queen, duh. |
| *Ali Olomi: Of course. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Of course. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So the Banu Musa grew up very close to the court. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So the Banu Musa grew up very close to the court. |
| *Ali Olomi: They did. When their dad died, the caliph takes over their education, so they were practically raised in the house of wisdom, which we've talked about. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' They did. When their dad died, the caliph takes over their education, so they were practically raised in the house of wisdom, which we've talked about. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That means they would have got a really high quality education. We know from the last season that the house of wisdom not only has the best translations in the world, but access to the latest theories in mathematics, science, philosophy, and they're working with the brightest minds at such a young age. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That means they would have got a really high quality education. We know from the last season that the house of wisdom not only has the best translations in the world, but access to the latest theories in mathematics, science, philosophy, and they're working with the brightest minds at such a young age. |
| *Ali Olomi: They got one heck of an education, Deana. They were taught by the head of the house of wisdom, Ibn Ishaq, who was an historian Christian. And so each brother actually goes on to develop their own unique expertise. Jafar Muhammad becomes an expert in mathematics, astronomy, and astrology. Ahmed becomes an expert in engineering and mechanics. And Al-Hassan is an expert in geometry and algebra. It's really cool. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' They got one heck of an education, Deana. They were taught by the head of the house of wisdom, Ibn Ishaq, who was an historian Christian. And so each brother actually goes on to develop their own unique expertise. Jafar Muhammad becomes an expert in mathematics, astronomy, and astrology. Ahmed becomes an expert in engineering and mechanics. And Al-Hassan is an expert in geometry and algebra. It's really cool. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Wow, their parents must have been really proud of them. And they covered a range of subjects. From what I remember from the house of wisdom episode is that these are predominantly Greek sciences. So you can really see their interest coming through. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Wow, their parents must have been really proud of them. And they covered a range of subjects. From what I remember from the house of wisdom episode is that these are predominantly Greek sciences. So you can really see their interest coming through. |
| *Ali Olomi: Their love of the Greek sciences was very, very real. I mean, you can see in what they mastered. They even traveled actually on behalf of caliph al-Ma'mun, collecting various points. And at one instance, even goes to the Byzantine Empire to collect some books and return them to Baghdad. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Their love of the Greek sciences was very, very real. I mean, you can see in what they mastered. They even traveled actually on behalf of caliph al-Ma'mun, collecting various points. And at one instance, even goes to the Byzantine Empire to collect some books and return them to Baghdad. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And collecting books was a big deal for the Abbasids. They are, as you always say, warrior nerds. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And collecting books was a big deal for the Abbasids. They are, as you always say, warrior nerds. |
| *Ali Olomi: Like me. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Like me. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Exactly. And this isn't just a trip for books for them. There's so much more to it. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Exactly. And this isn't just a trip for books for them. There's so much more to it. |
| *Ali Olomi: Totally. Knowledge is political. In the same way that empires build great monuments and statues as their legacies, for the Abbasids, it would be their knowledge. And so they would hire people like al-Hajjaj who will translate Euclid. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Totally. Knowledge is political. In the same way that empires build great monuments and statues as their legacies, for the Abbasids, it would be their knowledge. And so they would hire people like al-Hajjaj who will translate Euclid. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And his theories were important for Baghdad itself because the round city was a homage to his mathematics. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And his theories were important for Baghdad itself because the round city was a homage to his mathematics. |
| *Ali Olomi: Euclid inspired them. So the Banu Musa traveled west to the Byzantine Empire, to your hometown, in fact, Egypt, and even to East Africa because they were inspired. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Euclid inspired them. So the Banu Musa traveled west to the Byzantine Empire, to your hometown, in fact, Egypt, and even to East Africa because they were inspired. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Yeah, they acted like agents of the caliph. You don't always think of scholars in that way. But for the Abbasid scholars, learning and education was really important. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Yeah, they acted like agents of the caliph. You don't always think of scholars in that way. But for the Abbasid scholars, learning and education was really important. |
| *Ali Olomi: It was part of their imperial project, in fact, to create an empire of learning. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It was part of their imperial project, in fact, to create an empire of learning. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Now I can see why you really like these warrior nerds, Ali. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Now I can see why you really like these warrior nerds, Ali. |
| *Ali Olomi: Mm-hmm. What can I say? They are people after my own heart. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Mm-hmm. What can I say? They are people after my own heart. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So in their travels, what did they do? You know, who did they meet and what books did they translate? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So in their travels, what did they do? You know, who did they meet and what books did they translate? |
| *Ali Olomi: They actually gathered quite a bit, Deana. They focused mostly on the Greek translations that you mentioned, but they also had original works of their own. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' They actually gathered quite a bit, Deana. They focused mostly on the Greek translations that you mentioned, but they also had original works of their own. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And that's a good point to make because it wasn't just about translating and preserving knowledge. The scholars of Medieval Baghdad were advancing it. They were coming up with their own theories and own inventions. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And that's a good point to make because it wasn't just about translating and preserving knowledge. The scholars of Medieval Baghdad were advancing it. They were coming up with their own theories and own inventions. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah. For the Banu Musa, they wrote important treatises around the degrees of the Zodiac constellation. They even calculated the astronomical years so they got the exact timing of how long it takes the sun to revolve around. We even have some brilliant mechanical feats that are inspired by Phylo of Byzantium. One of which is a mechanical tree made of gold and silver with birds that sing. And all of it was mechanical. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah. For the Banu Musa, they wrote important treatises around the degrees of the Zodiac constellation. They even calculated the astronomical years so they got the exact timing of how long it takes the sun to revolve around. We even have some brilliant mechanical feats that are inspired by Phylo of Byzantium. One of which is a mechanical tree made of gold and silver with birds that sing. And all of it was mechanical. |
| *Deana Hassanein: What was the purpose of that? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' What was the purpose of that? |
| *Ali Olomi: It was just to demonstrate they can do it. Some of it was for timekeeping measures, but others was to demonstrate the mathematical accuracy of this moment. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It was just to demonstrate they can do it. Some of it was for timekeeping measures, but others was to demonstrate the mathematical accuracy of this moment. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Like the water clocks and mechanical clocks that we talked about last season. I remember those because I have to get you a sundial. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Like the water clocks and mechanical clocks that we talked about last season. I remember those because I have to get you a sundial. |
| *Ali Olomi: And I got to get you an elephant. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And I got to get you an elephant. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Yeah, you're taking your time though, aren't you? Okay, Ali, math keeps coming up. Can we talk a bit more about just how much investigation and study was dedicated to math? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Yeah, you're taking your time though, aren't you? Okay, Ali, math keeps coming up. Can we talk a bit more about just how much investigation and study was dedicated to math? |
| *Ali Olomi: Allah, I mean, the medieval scholars were totally obsessed with math. They saw it as the harmony of the universe. Just don't ask me to explain the math because I'm a history major and it flies completely over my head. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Allah, I mean, the medieval scholars were totally obsessed with math. They saw it as the harmony of the universe. Just don't ask me to explain the math because I'm a history major and it flies completely over my head. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Both of us know though, those calculations were super important for medieval scholars. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Both of us know though, those calculations were super important for medieval scholars. |
| *Ali Olomi: Very much. So for example, the biographer Ibn Khalqan talks about how the Banu Musa go out to the Sinjar desert and they use the pole star and measuring stakes and ropes. And with it, they're able to calculate the circumference of the earth, which is 24,000 miles. And that's incredibly accurate. So when I say investigate, that's what I mean. They're carrying out these intense experiments. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Very much. So for example, the biographer Ibn Khalqan talks about how the Banu Musa go out to the Sinjar desert and they use the pole star and measuring stakes and ropes. And with it, they're able to calculate the circumference of the earth, which is 24,000 miles. And that's incredibly accurate. So when I say investigate, that's what I mean. They're carrying out these intense experiments. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So many of the theories, calculations, and measurements from this period still stand up. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So many of the theories, calculations, and measurements from this period still stand up. |
| *Ali Olomi: Totally. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Totally. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Something I've been thinking about actually is what the politics of the House of Wisdom was like, because we've talked about their achievements, but if you've got that many different personalities trying to win the favor of the caliph, it must get spicy. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Something I've been thinking about actually is what the politics of the House of Wisdom was like, because we've talked about their achievements, but if you've got that many different personalities trying to win the favor of the caliph, it must get spicy. |
| *Ali Olomi: Honestly, it's not too different from the cutthroat life of universities today. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Honestly, it's not too different from the cutthroat life of universities today. |
| *Deana Hassanein: University life then seems way more interesting though. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' University life then seems way more interesting though. |
| *Ali Olomi: It's a story for another time, but it really, it was the same with the House of Wisdom. So when I read about this time, Deana, I recognize it because the politics could be incredibly fierce. Now, while the patronage was great under al-Ma'mun, his, and of course, his immediate successor, by the time of al-Mutawakkil, things got a bit tense. Mutawakkil was a much harsher ruler. He curtailed some of the rights of non-Muslims, for example, and he was way more demanding of the scholars. So it really depended on the caliph. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It's a story for another time, but it really, it was the same with the House of Wisdom. So when I read about this time, Deana, I recognize it because the politics could be incredibly fierce. Now, while the patronage was great under al-Ma'mun, his, and of course, his immediate successor, by the time of al-Mutawakkil, things got a bit tense. Mutawakkil was a much harsher ruler. He curtailed some of the rights of non-Muslims, for example, and he was way more demanding of the scholars. So it really depended on the caliph. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And that's really important to know, Ali, because the Abbasids were generally known for their tolerance. It's what makes medieval Baghdad so unique. But those rights all depended on whether the caliph was a tyrant or not. And that wouldn't just affect the targeted group. It also affects everyone. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And that's really important to know, Ali, because the Abbasids were generally known for their tolerance. It's what makes medieval Baghdad so unique. But those rights all depended on whether the caliph was a tyrant or not. And that wouldn't just affect the targeted group. It also affects everyone. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, and the Banu Musa used this to their advantage. They were very close friends with the court astrologer, Abu Ma'shar. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, and the Banu Musa used this to their advantage. They were very close friends with the court astrologer, Abu Ma'shar. |
| *Deana Hassanein: His translation of my Zodiac we read last season. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' His translation of my Zodiac we read last season. |
| *Ali Olomi: A bit of a legend, that Abu Ma'shar. But he and the Banu Musa had a little bit of a rivalry with al-Kindi, who's the father of Arabic Aristotelian philosophy. We'll mention him a little bit later. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' A bit of a legend, that Abu Ma'shar. But he and the Banu Musa had a little bit of a rivalry with al-Kindi, who's the father of Arabic Aristotelian philosophy. We'll mention him a little bit later. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So each of these people are incredibly important in their own ways. Abu Ma'shar is the court astrologer, al-Kindi is a famous philosopher, and the Banu Musa are scholars and agents of the caliph. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So each of these people are incredibly important in their own ways. Abu Ma'shar is the court astrologer, al-Kindi is a famous philosopher, and the Banu Musa are scholars and agents of the caliph. |
| *Ali Olomi: Exactly. And the Banu Musa in particular ended up hating al-Kindi. He criticized one of their calculations at one point, and that pissed him off. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Exactly. And the Banu Musa in particular ended up hating al-Kindi. He criticized one of their calculations at one point, and that pissed him off. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Never hurt a man's ego. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Never hurt a man's ego. |
| *Ali Olomi: That's what the Banu Musa said. So they actually had Mutawakkil confiscate all of al-Kindi's books and his library. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That's what the Banu Musa said. So they actually had Mutawakkil confiscate all of al-Kindi's books and his library. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That's got to hurt. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That's got to hurt. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Books were so important in this time and cherished by all. So the labor that went into that book, the knowledge, and having it taken away is a huge deal. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Books were so important in this time and cherished by all. So the labor that went into that book, the knowledge, and having it taken away is a huge deal. |
| *Ali Olomi: Oh, they get a little bit of their own kebab, or just a tad. Because shortly afterwards, the Banu Musa end up getting in trouble with the very same caliph. They're put in charge of a canal in Jafariyya, and they're supposed to calculate how to build this canal so that it keeps the water. But they end up miscalculating it. And so the caliph tells them, if this canal doesn't work and the water doesn't stay there, we are going to have you executed. So an even worse punishment than al-Kindi. But the Banu Musa get lucky. The court astrologer predicts that the caliph is going to die soon. So they just wait him out. He dies and they survive. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Oh, they get a little bit of their own kebab, or just a tad. Because shortly afterwards, the Banu Musa end up getting in trouble with the very same caliph. They're put in charge of a canal in Jafariyya, and they're supposed to calculate how to build this canal so that it keeps the water. But they end up miscalculating it. And so the caliph tells them, if this canal doesn't work and the water doesn't stay there, we are going to have you executed. So an even worse punishment than al-Kindi. But the Banu Musa get lucky. The court astrologer predicts that the caliph is going to die soon. So they just wait him out. He dies and they survive. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Saved by astrology again. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Saved by astrology again. |
| *Ali Olomi: In the end, for all their exploits, the Banu Musa would become really, really wealthy and powerful. And they're going to play a role in future politics. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' In the end, for all their exploits, the Banu Musa would become really, really wealthy and powerful. And they're going to play a role in future politics. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Oh, I love how scandalous the scholars were. We dived into the rich history of the Banu Musa, their work, their schemes. And there is so much more to come as we learn more about the people who lived and plotted in medieval Baghdad. What's great about this season is we're going to be talking about other people with surprising origin stories and how they go on to achieve great things or leave a mark on history. Thanks for joining us. I'm Deana. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Oh, I love how scandalous the scholars were. We dived into the rich history of the Banu Musa, their work, their schemes. And there is so much more to come as we learn more about the people who lived and plotted in medieval Baghdad. What's great about this season is we're going to be talking about other people with surprising origin stories and how they go on to achieve great things or leave a mark on history. Thanks for joining us. I'm Deana. |
| *Ali Olomi: And I'm Ali. This is a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Be sure to subscribe to the Echoes of History podcast so you don't miss the next episode of Figures of Baghdad. See you next time, fellow travelers. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And I'm Ali. This is a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Be sure to subscribe to the Echoes of History podcast so you don't miss the next episode of Figures of Baghdad. See you next time, fellow travelers. |
| |-|2= | | |-|2= |
| '''''Who was Al-Mahani?''''' | | '''''Who was Al-Mahani?''''' |
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| *Ali Olomi: A jewel in the desert. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' A jewel in the desert. |
| *Deana Hassanein: A round city full of merchants, rulers and scholars. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' A round city full of merchants, rulers and scholars. |
| *Ali Olomi: The great minds of the Abbasid Empire. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' The great minds of the Abbasid Empire. |
| *Deana Hassanein: This is Figures of Baghdad. Hello fellow travelers, welcome to Figures of Baghdad. I’m Deana– | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' This is Figures of Baghdad. Hello fellow travelers, welcome to Figures of Baghdad. I’m Deana– |
| *Ali Olomi: –and I'm Ali. Who shall we visit today? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' –and I'm Ali. Who shall we visit today? |
| *Deana Hassanein: I really liked how messy the Banu Musa were, so I'd like more of the same please. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I really liked how messy the Banu Musa were, so I'd like more of the same please. |
| *Ali Olomi: I've got just the guy. A mysterious figure at the heart of Baghdad's intellectual culture, Al Mahani. We really know very little about his life except for the amazing body of work that he leaves behind. You'll meet him in your travels in Mirage. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I've got just the guy. A mysterious figure at the heart of Baghdad's intellectual culture, Al Mahani. We really know very little about his life except for the amazing body of work that he leaves behind. You'll meet him in your travels in Mirage. |
| *Deana Hassanein: But first, I want to know more about how Greek philosophers and thinkers were brought into medieval Baghdad because we've mentioned Euclid a few times in previous episodes. From the round city of Baghdad to the translations of Banu Musa, so who was Euclid? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' But first, I want to know more about how Greek philosophers and thinkers were brought into medieval Baghdad because we've mentioned Euclid a few times in previous episodes. From the round city of Baghdad to the translations of Banu Musa, so who was Euclid? |
| *Ali Olomi: Good question. Let's take a look at some of these Greek thinkers who inspired Abbasid scholars. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Good question. Let's take a look at some of these Greek thinkers who inspired Abbasid scholars. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Give us the big ones, the ones who were translated the most, whose ideas really shaped Baghdad. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Give us the big ones, the ones who were translated the most, whose ideas really shaped Baghdad. |
| *Ali Olomi: Alright, the top four would have to be Galens, Ptolemy, Euclid and Aristotle. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Alright, the top four would have to be Galens, Ptolemy, Euclid and Aristotle. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I definitely remember Aristotle from school. Each of these represent different strains of thought and different fields of knowledge. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I definitely remember Aristotle from school. Each of these represent different strains of thought and different fields of knowledge. |
| *Ali Olomi: That is precisely why they were so influential. They were each representative of different fields of knowledge which the medieval scholars were interested in. You had medicine, which was Galens. You had astronomy, which was Ptolemy. You had mathematics, which was Euclid. And you had rational philosophy, which was Aristotle. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That is precisely why they were so influential. They were each representative of different fields of knowledge which the medieval scholars were interested in. You had medicine, which was Galens. You had astronomy, which was Ptolemy. You had mathematics, which was Euclid. And you had rational philosophy, which was Aristotle. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So how did Euclid's mathematics become part of medieval Baghdad? Because if you think about it, Euclid lived centuries and centuries before Baghdad was even built. How his ideas show up in this period is interesting. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So how did Euclid's mathematics become part of medieval Baghdad? Because if you think about it, Euclid lived centuries and centuries before Baghdad was even built. How his ideas show up in this period is interesting. |
| *Ali Olomi: Totally, Deana. We talked about this a little bit last season, but translation of knowledge is so incredibly important in this time period. It was their way of bringing what they saw as the ancient past into their present. And so the first translations are people like al-Hajjaj who brings Euclid into the Arabic. And then al-Mahani in 860 or so will write further translations and commentaries on Euclid. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Totally, Deana. We talked about this a little bit last season, but translation of knowledge is so incredibly important in this time period. It was their way of bringing what they saw as the ancient past into their present. And so the first translations are people like al-Hajjaj who brings Euclid into the Arabic. And then al-Mahani in 860 or so will write further translations and commentaries on Euclid. |
| *Deana Hassanein: But we're not just talking about word-for-word translations. This wasn't a copy and paste job. They were expanding and adding their own thoughts and ideas. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' But we're not just talking about word-for-word translations. This wasn't a copy and paste job. They were expanding and adding their own thoughts and ideas. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, in fact, al-Mahani writes an extensive commentary on Euclid. If we think about it, there's really two impulses that are happening at the same time. There's an encyclopedic impulse, which is about cataloguing everything, recording everything. And the second is an experimental impulse. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, in fact, al-Mahani writes an extensive commentary on Euclid. If we think about it, there's really two impulses that are happening at the same time. There's an encyclopedic impulse, which is about cataloguing everything, recording everything. And the second is an experimental impulse. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Wait, are you saying they were doing experiments like Dexter's laboratory type experiments? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Wait, are you saying they were doing experiments like Dexter's laboratory type experiments? |
| *Ali Olomi: Funny enough, that's exactly what they were doing. We talked a little bit about the Banu Musa's experiments out in the desert, but they also did mathematic experiments like al-Mahani's equation, which, surprisingly enough, he actually fails to solve. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Funny enough, that's exactly what they were doing. We talked a little bit about the Banu Musa's experiments out in the desert, but they also did mathematic experiments like al-Mahani's equation, which, surprisingly enough, he actually fails to solve. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Sometimes, Ali, that's just the way it is. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Sometimes, Ali, that's just the way it is. |
| *Ali Olomi: In fact, that's my motto. It is what it is. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' In fact, that's my motto. It is what it is. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Ah, solid motto. Mine is out of sight, out of mind. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Ah, solid motto. Mine is out of sight, out of mind. |
| *Ali Olomi: Like that one. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Like that one. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I've got to ask, though, why was there such a focus on maths? Because I'm an ex-maths teacher, but it was more of a surface-level thing. I wasn't in love with it. I didn't have a passion for it. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I've got to ask, though, why was there such a focus on maths? Because I'm an ex-maths teacher, but it was more of a surface-level thing. I wasn't in love with it. I didn't have a passion for it. |
| *Ali Olomi: You know, Deana, this is what I've wondered myself. And it wasn't until I read al-Mahani's work or the works of others like Juarezmi, because then you start to see that they saw God in the beauty of math. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' You know, Deana, this is what I've wondered myself. And it wasn't until I read al-Mahani's work or the works of others like Juarezmi, because then you start to see that they saw God in the beauty of math. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Sorry, what do you mean they saw God? In maths? That's a completely different way of looking at maths. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Sorry, what do you mean they saw God? In maths? That's a completely different way of looking at maths. |
| *Ali Olomi: I mean, for them, math shows the harmony of the universe, a perfectly created cosmos by the hands of the creator. So they really did see math as beautiful. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I mean, for them, math shows the harmony of the universe, a perfectly created cosmos by the hands of the creator. So they really did see math as beautiful. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That's such an interesting way to talk about it, because I just remember when I taught in a school, all I heard was, Miss, when am I ever actually going to use this? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That's such an interesting way to talk about it, because I just remember when I taught in a school, all I heard was, Miss, when am I ever actually going to use this? |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, I mean, it's a different way of looking at it. When I was in high school, my algebra teacher was talking about solving for x. I was thinking about lunchtime. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, I mean, it's a different way of looking at it. When I was in high school, my algebra teacher was talking about solving for x. I was thinking about lunchtime. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Wow. It's a good thing they did care about maths, though, because without them, we'd live a completely different life. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Wow. It's a good thing they did care about maths, though, because without them, we'd live a completely different life. |
| *Ali Olomi: Too true. I mean, what would the world look like? In 825, al-Juarezmi introduces the Indian and Arabic numerals with zero. And think about it. What happens if we don't have that zero? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Too true. I mean, what would the world look like? In 825, al-Juarezmi introduces the Indian and Arabic numerals with zero. And think about it. What happens if we don't have that zero? |
| *Deana Hassanein: Our maths would look entirely different. The hands on the clock, the numbers in your car's mileage, how you'd calculate your taxes, and of course, how you count your money. What would our dollar bills look like? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Our maths would look entirely different. The hands on the clock, the numbers in your car's mileage, how you'd calculate your taxes, and of course, how you count your money. What would our dollar bills look like? |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, totally. Even our technology would be different. Our digital technology uses binary code. So without the introduction of that zero, which literally comes from the Arabic word sifr, would we even have the technology that we have today? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, totally. Even our technology would be different. Our digital technology uses binary code. So without the introduction of that zero, which literally comes from the Arabic word sifr, would we even have the technology that we have today? |
| *Deana Hassanein: No phones, no tablets, no computers, no podcast. Boom. There goes our job. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' No phones, no tablets, no computers, no podcast. Boom. There goes our job. |
| *Ali Olomi: So thank God for these medieval thinkers then. But this is why this time period is so incredibly exciting. We are looking at a moment that changed the very course of history. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' So thank God for these medieval thinkers then. But this is why this time period is so incredibly exciting. We are looking at a moment that changed the very course of history. |
| *Deana Hassanein: What I love is this sort of a bridge between the ancient knowledge of the past, transformed in the medieval period, then connecting and shaping our world in the present. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' What I love is this sort of a bridge between the ancient knowledge of the past, transformed in the medieval period, then connecting and shaping our world in the present. |
| *Ali Olomi: That's a really cool way of looking at it, Deana. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That's a really cool way of looking at it, Deana. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And of course, al-Mahani wasn't alone. He was part of this wider intellectual culture. I remember the descriptions of the House of Wisdom and the back and forth between the scholars. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And of course, al-Mahani wasn't alone. He was part of this wider intellectual culture. I remember the descriptions of the House of Wisdom and the back and forth between the scholars. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, the dialogue and debate and the collaboration is what makes this such a unique moment. You have al-Mahani working on Euclid, while al-Khwarizmi is working on algebra. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, the dialogue and debate and the collaboration is what makes this such a unique moment. You have al-Mahani working on Euclid, while al-Khwarizmi is working on algebra. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Ah, that's who we have to blame. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Ah, that's who we have to blame. |
| *Ali Olomi: We can really blame him. He's the one that gives us our 8am math classes. But also, he developed some of the world's first algorithms and complex formulas that we've never seen in history before. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' We can really blame him. He's the one that gives us our 8am math classes. But also, he developed some of the world's first algorithms and complex formulas that we've never seen in history before. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Just like the concept of zero, we take that for granted, but it's so impactful on algebra and algorithms. It really, really does impact our lives. It changes everything. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Just like the concept of zero, we take that for granted, but it's so impactful on algebra and algorithms. It really, really does impact our lives. It changes everything. |
| *Ali Olomi: Right. I mean, like our entire digital system, our system of information, our militaries, our banking system, our whole way of modern life relies on algorithms. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Right. I mean, like our entire digital system, our system of information, our militaries, our banking system, our whole way of modern life relies on algorithms. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I wonder if they ever considered things like AI, artificial intelligence. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I wonder if they ever considered things like AI, artificial intelligence. |
| *Ali Olomi: Oh yeah, it's a hot topic, but for sure they did. We have this fascinating set of writings from this time period that discusses automatons. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Oh yeah, it's a hot topic, but for sure they did. We have this fascinating set of writings from this time period that discusses automatons. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Automaton sounds like a warrior robot, by the way. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Automaton sounds like a warrior robot, by the way. |
| *Ali Olomi: It is a little bit. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It is a little bit. |
| *Deana Hassanein: A little bit, but it's just like the ones built by the Banu Musa, the mechanical tree with the birds. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' A little bit, but it's just like the ones built by the Banu Musa, the mechanical tree with the birds. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, there was this fascinating way in which all knowledge was practical. Their mathematics was a practical. There was, of course, a theoretical component. They believed knowledge was beautiful for its own sake. And of course, any learning was worthwhile on its own, but they were really, really interested in practical applications. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, there was this fascinating way in which all knowledge was practical. Their mathematics was a practical. There was, of course, a theoretical component. They believed knowledge was beautiful for its own sake. And of course, any learning was worthwhile on its own, but they were really, really interested in practical applications. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So this could be maths you would use for different purposes, just like with the Banu Musas, that meant engineering and the building of the canal. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So this could be maths you would use for different purposes, just like with the Banu Musas, that meant engineering and the building of the canal. |
| *Ali Olomi: Exactly. And for al-Mahani, new calculations in math allowed him to improve the astronomy of the time period. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Exactly. And for al-Mahani, new calculations in math allowed him to improve the astronomy of the time period. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Baghdad itself was meant to reflect the order of the heavens, so astronomy was paramount. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Baghdad itself was meant to reflect the order of the heavens, so astronomy was paramount. |
| *Ali Olomi: Astronomy and astrology were the queen of the sciences, they say. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Astronomy and astrology were the queen of the sciences, they say. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So what was the practical application for al-Mahani? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So what was the practical application for al-Mahani? |
| *Ali Olomi: He was able to use his new advancements in calculations to get the exact time of the eclipse. He could get the timing down to just a few minutes. And like the circumference, it's impressive. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' He was able to use his new advancements in calculations to get the exact time of the eclipse. He could get the timing down to just a few minutes. And like the circumference, it's impressive. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Wow. This is a huge deal because if we think about it, they didn't have the type of technology we did. No computers, no telescopes. So getting that type of accuracy is very impressive. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Wow. This is a huge deal because if we think about it, they didn't have the type of technology we did. No computers, no telescopes. So getting that type of accuracy is very impressive. |
| *Ali Olomi: I mean, what gaps they had with technology, they made up with mathematics. Using algorithms, Euclidean geometry, algebraic equations, all of that helped them improve precision, whether it was engineering with the Banu Musa or astronomy with al-Mahani. I think for me, what makes al-Mahani so interesting is that he represents the lineage of knowledge that is forming in this time period. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I mean, what gaps they had with technology, they made up with mathematics. Using algorithms, Euclidean geometry, algebraic equations, all of that helped them improve precision, whether it was engineering with the Banu Musa or astronomy with al-Mahani. I think for me, what makes al-Mahani so interesting is that he represents the lineage of knowledge that is forming in this time period. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Right. Like we said, he's bringing knowledge of the ancients into his present world. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Right. Like we said, he's bringing knowledge of the ancients into his present world. |
| *Ali Olomi: And the connection is paramount for understanding the learning and scholarship of this time period. They created bridges between that Greek past and their Muslim present. For al-Mahani, this was through Euclid and his translation and commentaries of those works. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And the connection is paramount for understanding the learning and scholarship of this time period. They created bridges between that Greek past and their Muslim present. For al-Mahani, this was through Euclid and his translation and commentaries of those works. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Which then would be picked up by someone after him, the future scholars. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Which then would be picked up by someone after him, the future scholars. |
| *Ali Olomi: That's the lineage of learning we are talking about. Al-Mahani is important in his own right, of course, but he's also important because of the influence that he has on later scholars. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That's the lineage of learning we are talking about. Al-Mahani is important in his own right, of course, but he's also important because of the influence that he has on later scholars. |
| *Deana Hassanein: They probably relied on the work of al-Mahani for their own calculations, right? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' They probably relied on the work of al-Mahani for their own calculations, right? |
| *Ali Olomi: That's too true. Al-Mahani and his near contemporary al-Khwarazmi were instrumental in developing the math of this time period. A century later, al-Khazn would actually use al-Mahani's math to solve Archimedes' problem. Then, a century later, al-Biruni would take it even further. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That's too true. Al-Mahani and his near contemporary al-Khwarazmi were instrumental in developing the math of this time period. A century later, al-Khazn would actually use al-Mahani's math to solve Archimedes' problem. Then, a century later, al-Biruni would take it even further. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Oh, I can tell we're gearing up for a good science story, Ali. Let's hear it. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Oh, I can tell we're gearing up for a good science story, Ali. Let's hear it. |
| *Ali Olomi: All right, so al-Biruni was a Persian scientist, just like al-Mahani, and he would rely on the mathematic groundwork laid by al-Mahani and al-Khwarazmi for a stunning calculation. In fact, he would use an astrolabe, a tool that we've actually mentioned before. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' All right, so al-Biruni was a Persian scientist, just like al-Mahani, and he would rely on the mathematic groundwork laid by al-Mahani and al-Khwarazmi for a stunning calculation. In fact, he would use an astrolabe, a tool that we've actually mentioned before. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I remember it, the medieval iPhone. It was used for calculations, for navigation, architecture, astronomy, timekeeping, and of course, a lot more. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I remember it, the medieval iPhone. It was used for calculations, for navigation, architecture, astronomy, timekeeping, and of course, a lot more. |
| *Ali Olomi: The very one. It was incredibly important. You know, sometimes I wonder if people in medieval Baghdad would have waited in long lines to get the latest astrolabe in the same way that we wait for the latest iPhone. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' The very one. It was incredibly important. You know, sometimes I wonder if people in medieval Baghdad would have waited in long lines to get the latest astrolabe in the same way that we wait for the latest iPhone. |
| *Deana Hassanein: The astrolabe 14 or 15, worth the wait. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' The astrolabe 14 or 15, worth the wait. |
| *Ali Olomi: Kind of a perfect ad. All right, I'm sold. Okay, so al-Biruni would take this astrolabe, maybe version 14 or 15, and with it, measure the degree of a mountain using angles. He then used the formula from algebra and trigonometry with the calculated angles to get the exact height of a mountain. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Kind of a perfect ad. All right, I'm sold. Okay, so al-Biruni would take this astrolabe, maybe version 14 or 15, and with it, measure the degree of a mountain using angles. He then used the formula from algebra and trigonometry with the calculated angles to get the exact height of a mountain. |
| *Deana Hassanein: You've already lost me. This is incredibly complicated. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' You've already lost me. This is incredibly complicated. |
| *Ali Olomi: Look, I'm not a math person and I'm already lost. But there's more. He used these measurements to imagine a triangle with its point being the top of the mountain, then the other point being the horizon, and the final point being the center of the earth. So I just sort of imagine a giant triangle going from the mountain to the horizon, and then the horizon to the center of the earth. With algebra, he was then able to calculate the circumference of the earth, roughly around 25,000 miles. And guess what? He was right. He got the calculation down to barely a percent of an error, even more accurate than the Banu Musa calculations. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Look, I'm not a math person and I'm already lost. But there's more. He used these measurements to imagine a triangle with its point being the top of the mountain, then the other point being the horizon, and the final point being the center of the earth. So I just sort of imagine a giant triangle going from the mountain to the horizon, and then the horizon to the center of the earth. With algebra, he was then able to calculate the circumference of the earth, roughly around 25,000 miles. And guess what? He was right. He got the calculation down to barely a percent of an error, even more accurate than the Banu Musa calculations. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Wow, wow, wow. What I love is how we see each generation of scientists improving on one another, leaving knowledge for the next person to come along and further their research. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Wow, wow, wow. What I love is how we see each generation of scientists improving on one another, leaving knowledge for the next person to come along and further their research. |
| *Ali Olomi: Oh, wait, Deana, there's more. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Oh, wait, Deana, there's more. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Really? You sound like a cheesy game show host, by the way. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Really? You sound like a cheesy game show host, by the way. |
| *Ali Olomi: With his calculations, Al Biruni was able to theorize that there was actually another continent besides Africa, Asia, and Europe, that another continent lay beyond them. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' With his calculations, Al Biruni was able to theorize that there was actually another continent besides Africa, Asia, and Europe, that another continent lay beyond them. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Ali, stop, hold up. Are you saying he figured out the Americas? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Ali, stop, hold up. Are you saying he figured out the Americas? |
| *Ali Olomi: That's right. Hundreds of years before Christopher Columbus or anything in Europe, Al Biruni was able to use the mathematics to figure out the continent of America. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That's right. Hundreds of years before Christopher Columbus or anything in Europe, Al Biruni was able to use the mathematics to figure out the continent of America. |
| *Deana Hassanein: My mind is blown right now. So school lied to me, to us. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' My mind is blown right now. So school lied to me, to us. |
| *Ali Olomi: That's why these lineages of learning matter. The way Al Bahani brings Euclid into his present world and then how his work is passed on to later generation of scholars like Al Biruni. It's like they're collaborating across time and the mathematics that they are doing has practical applications, like determining the radius of the Earth or the existence of other continents. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That's why these lineages of learning matter. The way Al Bahani brings Euclid into his present world and then how his work is passed on to later generation of scholars like Al Biruni. It's like they're collaborating across time and the mathematics that they are doing has practical applications, like determining the radius of the Earth or the existence of other continents. |
| *Deana Hassanein: We're slowly bringing you around, looking at the people who lived in medieval Baghdad. We see a wide range of scientists who, like Al Mahani, are engaging and reconnecting with the knowledge of the past, but in new and exciting ways. And the impact is huge. It really was a turning point in history. All our contemporary math and science can be traced back to this. Thank you for coming along. I'm Deana. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' We're slowly bringing you around, looking at the people who lived in medieval Baghdad. We see a wide range of scientists who, like Al Mahani, are engaging and reconnecting with the knowledge of the past, but in new and exciting ways. And the impact is huge. It really was a turning point in history. All our contemporary math and science can be traced back to this. Thank you for coming along. I'm Deana. |
| *Ali Olomi: And I'm Ali. This is a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Be sure to subscribe to the Echoes of History podcast so you don't miss the next episode of Figures of Baghdad. See you next time, fellow travellers. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And I'm Ali. This is a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Be sure to subscribe to the Echoes of History podcast so you don't miss the next episode of Figures of Baghdad. See you next time, fellow travellers. |
| |-|3= | | |-|3= |
| '''''Who was Hunayn ibn Hishaq?''''' | | '''''Who was Hunayn ibn Hishaq?''''' |
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| *Ali Olomi: A jewel in the desert. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' A jewel in the desert. |
| *Deana Hassanein: A round city full of merchants, rulers and scholars. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' A round city full of merchants, rulers and scholars. |
| *Ali Olomi: The great minds of the Abbasid Empire. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' The great minds of the Abbasid Empire. |
| *Deana Hassanein: This is Figures of Baghdad. Hello fellow travelers, welcome to Figures of Baghdad. I'm Deana– | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' This is Figures of Baghdad. Hello fellow travelers, welcome to Figures of Baghdad. I'm Deana– |
| *Ali Olomi: –and I'm Ali. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' –and I'm Ali. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So Ali, who shall we visit today? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So Ali, who shall we visit today? |
| *Ali Olomi: Who do you want to hang out with? We visited the engineering nerds and the math dorks. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Who do you want to hang out with? We visited the engineering nerds and the math dorks. |
| *Deana Hassanein: You know, it's time for the doctors. When we chatted last, we talked about the major sciences of this time period. So I want to hear about them. Astronomy, mathematics, philosophy and medicine. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' You know, it's time for the doctors. When we chatted last, we talked about the major sciences of this time period. So I want to hear about them. Astronomy, mathematics, philosophy and medicine. |
| *Ali Olomi: And with all these sciences, they were related to each other in some way. We can see that in the form of Hunyan ibn Ishaq. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And with all these sciences, they were related to each other in some way. We can see that in the form of Hunyan ibn Ishaq. |
| *Deana Hassanein: We met him briefly last season where he was in charge of the House of Wisdom and one of the lead translators. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' We met him briefly last season where he was in charge of the House of Wisdom and one of the lead translators. |
| *Ali Olomi: That's our guy. He was an historian Christian who lived from 808 to 873. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That's our guy. He was an historian Christian who lived from 808 to 873. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Which again really stresses that we are looking at cultures sharing with one another. Jewish and Christian scientists working alongside Muslim ones. Now, what does the job of the head of the House of Wisdom involve, Ali? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Which again really stresses that we are looking at cultures sharing with one another. Jewish and Christian scientists working alongside Muslim ones. Now, what does the job of the head of the House of Wisdom involve, Ali? |
| *Ali Olomi: Ibn Ishaq basically had about four responsibilities. He needed to collect new texts. He would then translate texts. He also directed the research and translation projects of the entire House of Wisdom. And then either he or his agents would educate the students. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Ibn Ishaq basically had about four responsibilities. He needed to collect new texts. He would then translate texts. He also directed the research and translation projects of the entire House of Wisdom. And then either he or his agents would educate the students. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And I really have to say this again. The House of Wisdom really is so much more than a library. It's a learning center. It doesn't just house the world's knowledge, but they're also expanding it in different ways. We talked about how al-Mahani was commenting on Euclid. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And I really have to say this again. The House of Wisdom really is so much more than a library. It's a learning center. It doesn't just house the world's knowledge, but they're also expanding it in different ways. We talked about how al-Mahani was commenting on Euclid. |
| *Ali Olomi: This is true of Ibn Ishaq too. He was commenting and expanding the knowledge he was encountering. His origins though are actually quite humble. He's originally a Syriac and an Arabic native speaker. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' This is true of Ibn Ishaq too. He was commenting and expanding the knowledge he was encountering. His origins though are actually quite humble. He's originally a Syriac and an Arabic native speaker. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That probably helped with the translations. Most of these scholars were multilingual, but it was in languages they were native speakers in. What were some of the common languages scholars at this time spoke, Ali? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That probably helped with the translations. Most of these scholars were multilingual, but it was in languages they were native speakers in. What were some of the common languages scholars at this time spoke, Ali? |
| *Ali Olomi: You know, Deana, we believe that most of them were at minimum trilingual. I mean, that kind of blows your mind considering that some of the struggle being bilingual or even monolingual. But the most common languages here were Arabic, Greek, Syriac, and Persian. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' You know, Deana, we believe that most of them were at minimum trilingual. I mean, that kind of blows your mind considering that some of the struggle being bilingual or even monolingual. But the most common languages here were Arabic, Greek, Syriac, and Persian. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And they were each specialists in their own languages. Did Ibn Ishaq work mostly in Syriac and Arabic? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And they were each specialists in their own languages. Did Ibn Ishaq work mostly in Syriac and Arabic? |
| *Ali Olomi: Greek too, actually. His origins are really interesting here. His father was a pharmacist, so that probably indicates why he had such a deep interest in medicine. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Greek too, actually. His origins are really interesting here. His father was a pharmacist, so that probably indicates why he had such a deep interest in medicine. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Ah, so that is the start of his medical journey. I've noticed that frequently there is a family connection for the scholars. They either learn from their fathers or they develop an interest early. Nowadays, we don't really pick a major until university. Or as you'd say, Ali, college. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Ah, so that is the start of his medical journey. I've noticed that frequently there is a family connection for the scholars. They either learn from their fathers or they develop an interest early. Nowadays, we don't really pick a major until university. Or as you'd say, Ali, college. |
| *Ali Olomi: What was your major? I know we talked about engineering, but what did you want to be? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' What was your major? I know we talked about engineering, but what did you want to be? |
| *Deana Hassanein: I majored in economics. I actually wanted to be the first female president of Egypt. Obviously, not going well. What about you? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I majored in economics. I actually wanted to be the first female president of Egypt. Obviously, not going well. What about you? |
| *Ali Olomi: I was really interested in politics, but I was always a history major all through college. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I was really interested in politics, but I was always a history major all through college. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Oh, I found politics quite frustrating as a subject. That's exactly why I majored in economics. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Oh, I found politics quite frustrating as a subject. That's exactly why I majored in economics. |
| *Ali Olomi: Makes sense. But if you think about it, our system is very different from what we see in medieval Baghdad. While the House of Wisdom is a learning institution, and there were certainly classes, we're really looking at more of an apprentice-style structure. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Makes sense. But if you think about it, our system is very different from what we see in medieval Baghdad. While the House of Wisdom is a learning institution, and there were certainly classes, we're really looking at more of an apprentice-style structure. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So it's more like a one-to-one tuition, learning from an expert or master who then passes their knowledge on to you. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So it's more like a one-to-one tuition, learning from an expert or master who then passes their knowledge on to you. |
| *Ali Olomi: And it wasn't always one-on-one, we should be clear. I mean, it could be a class or group setting, but it was always focused on the individual teacher rather than the subject. In fact, if you think about it, a lot of our graduate school education today is based off of this structure. You pick an advisor and then they guide you through until you get your master's or your doctorate. For Ibn Ishaq, this was Ibn Masawi. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And it wasn't always one-on-one, we should be clear. I mean, it could be a class or group setting, but it was always focused on the individual teacher rather than the subject. In fact, if you think about it, a lot of our graduate school education today is based off of this structure. You pick an advisor and then they guide you through until you get your master's or your doctorate. For Ibn Ishaq, this was Ibn Masawi. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And through one-to-one instruction, you get a really high quality education. Having the attention of a teacher and their focus on not just the education, but your learning style is incredible. You can see a passing down of knowledge from teacher to student in so many of the people we have discussed before. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And through one-to-one instruction, you get a really high quality education. Having the attention of a teacher and their focus on not just the education, but your learning style is incredible. You can see a passing down of knowledge from teacher to student in so many of the people we have discussed before. |
| *Ali Olomi: True enough, but that didn't quite work as well with Ibn Masawi. Ibn Ishaq was a bit of an annoying student. Apparently, he kept asking question after question after question until his teacher, Ibn Masawi, kicked him out of class. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' True enough, but that didn't quite work as well with Ibn Masawi. Ibn Ishaq was a bit of an annoying student. Apparently, he kept asking question after question after question until his teacher, Ibn Masawi, kicked him out of class. |
| *Deana Hassanein: He was that student. But thinking about that as a lecturer, as a professor, would you not love it when students ask you questions? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' He was that student. But thinking about that as a lecturer, as a professor, would you not love it when students ask you questions? |
| *Ali Olomi: I love students like that. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I love students like that. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Do you think it was maybe an ego thing? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Do you think it was maybe an ego thing? |
| *Ali Olomi: Maybe. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Maybe. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I can kind of see you asking a lot of questions, Ali, as a student. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I can kind of see you asking a lot of questions, Ali, as a student. |
| *Ali Olomi: Nah, I was too rebellious. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Nah, I was too rebellious. |
| *Deana Hassanein: You? Okay, warrior nerd. But obviously, Ibn Ishaq was brilliant regardless of how things went down with Ibn Masawi. He goes from humble but annoying student to the head of the house of wisdom. And that's quite a climb. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' You? Okay, warrior nerd. But obviously, Ibn Ishaq was brilliant regardless of how things went down with Ibn Masawi. He goes from humble but annoying student to the head of the house of wisdom. And that's quite a climb. |
| *Ali Olomi: In fact, they actually reconcile at some point. Ibn Ishaq goes away to master more languages, specifically Greek, so that he can get a strong grasp over medicine. And he comes back to Baghdad where he meets his old teacher and he shows off by reciting the complete works of Homer in Greek. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' In fact, they actually reconcile at some point. Ibn Ishaq goes away to master more languages, specifically Greek, so that he can get a strong grasp over medicine. And he comes back to Baghdad where he meets his old teacher and he shows off by reciting the complete works of Homer in Greek. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That must have felt so good to be able to come back and show up your teacher. It's definitely something I would have loved to do. I can see why he goes on to become the head of the entire house of wisdom project. He worked so hard to get to where he did. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That must have felt so good to be able to come back and show up your teacher. It's definitely something I would have loved to do. I can see why he goes on to become the head of the entire house of wisdom project. He worked so hard to get to where he did. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, and under him, the house of wisdom really flourishes. His translations were numerous. He translated more texts than absolutely anyone, adding new contributions to the field. He actually had a very interesting approach to translation. He was the expert in Greek and Syriac, so he would translate from Greek into the Syriac. And then he would have his son and his nephew translate from the Syriac into the Arabic. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, and under him, the house of wisdom really flourishes. His translations were numerous. He translated more texts than absolutely anyone, adding new contributions to the field. He actually had a very interesting approach to translation. He was the expert in Greek and Syriac, so he would translate from Greek into the Syriac. And then he would have his son and his nephew translate from the Syriac into the Arabic. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That's probably why he was so prolific. He had a conveyor belt like technique. I love that he collaborated in that way. You know, each book is a product of not just one person, but many people working on it together. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That's probably why he was so prolific. He had a conveyor belt like technique. I love that he collaborated in that way. You know, each book is a product of not just one person, but many people working on it together. |
| *Ali Olomi: A true community of scholars all working in partnership. But of course, his greatest works were in the field of medicine. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' A true community of scholars all working in partnership. But of course, his greatest works were in the field of medicine. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That is what he's known for after all. In addition to being the head of the house of wisdom, he was the personal physician to many caliphs. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That is what he's known for after all. In addition to being the head of the house of wisdom, he was the personal physician to many caliphs. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, he advised al-Ma'mun, but from al-Mutawakkil on, he would be the court physician, the chief physician, in addition to being the head of the house of wisdom. Though I don't know what it says about him that he outlived so many of his patients. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, he advised al-Ma'mun, but from al-Mutawakkil on, he would be the court physician, the chief physician, in addition to being the head of the house of wisdom. Though I don't know what it says about him that he outlived so many of his patients. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Or maybe he actually took his own advice. Maybe those patients didn't listen. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Or maybe he actually took his own advice. Maybe those patients didn't listen. |
| *Ali Olomi: I mean, he did have a pretty long life. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I mean, he did have a pretty long life. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And he accomplished a lot in his time. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And he accomplished a lot in his time. |
| *Ali Olomi: He definitely did. But it was also a very, very cushy job. I mean, you had to keep the favor of the caliph, but if you managed to do so, it was a good way to live. The Banu Musa, who were students, eventually become very wealthy, and they added on top of what the caliph did, which is why he's so interesting, because it tells us the ordinary life of a scholar. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' He definitely did. But it was also a very, very cushy job. I mean, you had to keep the favor of the caliph, but if you managed to do so, it was a good way to live. The Banu Musa, who were students, eventually become very wealthy, and they added on top of what the caliph did, which is why he's so interesting, because it tells us the ordinary life of a scholar. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So what was a normal day like for him? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So what was a normal day like for him? |
| *Ali Olomi: We have a biographer who talks a little bit about Ibn Ishaq's day. So I'm going to quote, after writing, he would have water poured on him. He would lie down until he stopped perspiring. Sometimes he would fall asleep. Then he would get up and burn perfumes to fumigate his body and have dinner brought in. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' We have a biographer who talks a little bit about Ibn Ishaq's day. So I'm going to quote, after writing, he would have water poured on him. He would lie down until he stopped perspiring. Sometimes he would fall asleep. Then he would get up and burn perfumes to fumigate his body and have dinner brought in. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That sounds like a nice life. Go for a nice ride, bathe, nap, eat. But despite all of that, he's still got a lot done, which is something I couldn't even imagine trying to do. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That sounds like a nice life. Go for a nice ride, bathe, nap, eat. But despite all of that, he's still got a lot done, which is something I couldn't even imagine trying to do. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, he really did. Just his theories of medicine alone were incredibly important. He translated the most definitive work of Galen's, which laid the foundation of medicine. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, he really did. Just his theories of medicine alone were incredibly important. He translated the most definitive work of Galen's, which laid the foundation of medicine. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So he's the founder of a new school of medicine. Well, an Islamic science of medicine. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So he's the founder of a new school of medicine. Well, an Islamic science of medicine. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, it's called Tebunoni. It's a fusion of Greek, Arabic, Indic, and Syriac medical techniques, drawing upon Galen's and Hippocrates. It actually theorizes that everyone is made up of four different humors. And maybe we can take a look and see which humor you are, Deana, and which humor I am. So the four are hot and dry, cold and wet, hot and wet, and cold and dry. So hot and dry is someone who is inflexible, but passionate, and they are sort of aggressive, impulsive. Cold and wet is a person who is adaptable, but reserved. Hot and wet is a person who is adaptable, but social. And cold and dry is a person who is inflexible, but reserved. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, it's called Tebunoni. It's a fusion of Greek, Arabic, Indic, and Syriac medical techniques, drawing upon Galen's and Hippocrates. It actually theorizes that everyone is made up of four different humors. And maybe we can take a look and see which humor you are, Deana, and which humor I am. So the four are hot and dry, cold and wet, hot and wet, and cold and dry. So hot and dry is someone who is inflexible, but passionate, and they are sort of aggressive, impulsive. Cold and wet is a person who is adaptable, but reserved. Hot and wet is a person who is adaptable, but social. And cold and dry is a person who is inflexible, but reserved. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Which one are you, Ali? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Which one are you, Ali? |
| *Ali Olomi: I think I'm cold and dry. I'm very reserved, but I'm very set in my ways. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I think I'm cold and dry. I'm very reserved, but I'm very set in my ways. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I'm hot and wet, definitely. I'm very adaptable, I'm very social. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I'm hot and wet, definitely. I'm very adaptable, I'm very social. |
| *Ali Olomi: So you've got that social component. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' So you've got that social component. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Yeah, I have a lot of hot and dry friends, though. I don't know if you can relate. A lot. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Yeah, I have a lot of hot and dry friends, though. I don't know if you can relate. A lot. |
| *Ali Olomi: I can definitely relate. And this entire scheme was the key to health because it was the balance of the humors, the harmony between mind, body, and spirit. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I can definitely relate. And this entire scheme was the key to health because it was the balance of the humors, the harmony between mind, body, and spirit. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So tell me a bit about the techniques they use for maintaining that balance in their health. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So tell me a bit about the techniques they use for maintaining that balance in their health. |
| *Ali Olomi: So they had a few different techniques. First was dietary and nutrition, changing the way you ate and what you ate. They had medicinal compounds that they would take. They even had cupping and body manipulation. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' So they had a few different techniques. First was dietary and nutrition, changing the way you ate and what you ate. They had medicinal compounds that they would take. They even had cupping and body manipulation. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Ah, like in the Hamem? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Ah, like in the Hamem? |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, and then they also had surgery and bloodletting. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, and then they also had surgery and bloodletting. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Surgery sounds very dangerous. Even today there's always a risk of infection and recovery can be a real challenge. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Surgery sounds very dangerous. Even today there's always a risk of infection and recovery can be a real challenge. |
| *Ali Olomi: They do mention that surgery was the most dangerous approach and so they were very sparing when they were doing it and very careful in applying it. But they also developed some really new antiseptic techniques which they could use in some of those surgeries. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' They do mention that surgery was the most dangerous approach and so they were very sparing when they were doing it and very careful in applying it. But they also developed some really new antiseptic techniques which they could use in some of those surgeries. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Having said that, Ali, we do hear a lot of horror stories about amputations. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Having said that, Ali, we do hear a lot of horror stories about amputations. |
| *Ali Olomi: I mean, mostly they did things like C-sections and eye surgery for cataracts, but there's actually a funny story about an amputation that I gotta tell you. So there's this guy named Usama ibn Munqith who's living during the Crusades and he's in Jerusalem and he comes across a man who has an abscess on his leg and he and a Crusader doctor try to treat this man. Usama ibn Munqith, being an expert in Islamic medicine, he applies a poultice, an herbal mixture wrapped up in a bandage and places it on the abscess and says, we will cleanse it, purify it and it will go away. The Crusader doctor on the other hand goes, nope, you've got to lose the leg. You have a choice, die with two legs or live with one leg. So he calls for an axe and there goes the man's leg. Usama ibn Munqith is so shocked by this that he says, never again will I treat these barbarians. But if I'm being honest with you, I think Usama ibn Munqith was exaggerating a tad. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I mean, mostly they did things like C-sections and eye surgery for cataracts, but there's actually a funny story about an amputation that I gotta tell you. So there's this guy named Usama ibn Munqith who's living during the Crusades and he's in Jerusalem and he comes across a man who has an abscess on his leg and he and a Crusader doctor try to treat this man. Usama ibn Munqith, being an expert in Islamic medicine, he applies a poultice, an herbal mixture wrapped up in a bandage and places it on the abscess and says, we will cleanse it, purify it and it will go away. The Crusader doctor on the other hand goes, nope, you've got to lose the leg. You have a choice, die with two legs or live with one leg. So he calls for an axe and there goes the man's leg. Usama ibn Munqith is so shocked by this that he says, never again will I treat these barbarians. But if I'm being honest with you, I think Usama ibn Munqith was exaggerating a tad. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Oh, so he likes to brag. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Oh, so he likes to brag. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, a little bit. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, a little bit. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Okay, let's get back to the eye surgery because that really stood out and blows my mind. Surgery on the eye back then? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Okay, let's get back to the eye surgery because that really stood out and blows my mind. Surgery on the eye back then? |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, this is ibn Ishaq's specialty. His contributions to eye medicine were incredible. His diagrams, in fact, were so advanced that they became the standard for the next 900 years. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, this is ibn Ishaq's specialty. His contributions to eye medicine were incredible. His diagrams, in fact, were so advanced that they became the standard for the next 900 years. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I really wanna know more about some of the other treatments. Can you give me some recipes from Islamic medicine? For example, if I have a headache, what should I do? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I really wanna know more about some of the other treatments. Can you give me some recipes from Islamic medicine? For example, if I have a headache, what should I do? |
| *Ali Olomi: All right, so I'm gonna read some of his formulas. If you have a headache, particularly a headache from heat, what you're supposed to do is get a towel with cool water. You're supposed to put camphor oil on it or fumigate it with camphor and place it upon your head as a compress until the headache goes away. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' All right, so I'm gonna read some of his formulas. If you have a headache, particularly a headache from heat, what you're supposed to do is get a towel with cool water. You're supposed to put camphor oil on it or fumigate it with camphor and place it upon your head as a compress until the headache goes away. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Okay, what if I had tummy problems or like a common cold? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Okay, what if I had tummy problems or like a common cold? |
| *Ali Olomi: All right, here he says, take one teaspoon or one part violet flowers and boil them in three cups of water for several minutes, then strain them and take it on an empty stomach. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' All right, here he says, take one teaspoon or one part violet flowers and boil them in three cups of water for several minutes, then strain them and take it on an empty stomach. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So not a cold and flu tablet then? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So not a cold and flu tablet then? |
| *Ali Olomi: No, but we're getting complex and simple medicine techniques here. Very interesting. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' No, but we're getting complex and simple medicine techniques here. Very interesting. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Totally, really intriguing stuff. And we're really seeing a turning point in knowledge and science in this time period and Ibn Ishaq's influence is all over it. This humble Christian man who learned Greek and became a translator and physician would transform the world of medicine and learning. And we still have so many more cool people to visit. Thank you for coming along. I'm Deana. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Totally, really intriguing stuff. And we're really seeing a turning point in knowledge and science in this time period and Ibn Ishaq's influence is all over it. This humble Christian man who learned Greek and became a translator and physician would transform the world of medicine and learning. And we still have so many more cool people to visit. Thank you for coming along. I'm Deana. |
| *Ali Olomi: And I'm Ali. This is a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Be sure to subscribe to the Echoes of History podcast so you don't miss the next episode of Figures of Baghdad. See you next time, fellow travelers. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And I'm Ali. This is a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Be sure to subscribe to the Echoes of History podcast so you don't miss the next episode of Figures of Baghdad. See you next time, fellow travelers. |
| |-|4= | | |-|4= |
| '''''Who was Arib al'Mamuniyya?''''' | | '''''Who was Arib al'Mamuniyya?''''' |
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| *Ali Olomi: A jewel in the desert. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' A jewel in the desert. |
| *Deana Hassanein: A round city full of merchants, rulers and scholars. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' A round city full of merchants, rulers and scholars. |
| *Ali Olomi: The great mines of the Abbasid Empire. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' The great minds of the Abbasid Empire. |
| *Deana Hassanein: This is Figures of Baghdad. Hello fellow travelers, welcome to Figures of Baghdad. I'm Deana– | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' This is Figures of Baghdad. Hello fellow travelers, welcome to Figures of Baghdad. I'm Deana– |
| *Ali Olomi: –and I'm Ali. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' –and I'm Ali. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Ali, we've visited some interesting scientists and scholars the past few episodes. I'm ready to change it up. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Ali, we've visited some interesting scientists and scholars the past few episodes. I'm ready to change it up. |
| *Ali Olomi: I feel you. Let's hang out with one of the most interesting people of this time period and probably one of my favorite, Arib al-Mu'miniyya. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I feel you. Let's hang out with one of the most interesting people of this time period and probably one of my favorite, Arib al-Mu'miniyya. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Finally, let's talk about the women. We've already got a glimpse of some of the interesting women of this era in the last season. We talked about brilliant queens like Khayzuran and Zubaydah, politically savvy with rich lives. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Finally, let's talk about the women. We've already got a glimpse of some of the interesting women of this era in the last season. We talked about brilliant queens like Khayzuran and Zubaydah, politically savvy with rich lives. |
| *Ali Olomi: And Arib lives up to that as well. Hers is an interesting tale and one that is linked to a story we've already looked at, the fall of the Barmakids. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And Arib lives up to that as well. Hers is an interesting tale and one that is linked to a story we've already looked at, the fall of the Barmakids. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I remember them. The Barmakids were a powerful family of viziers who were in charge of the politics of the court. The Abbasids relied on their expertise until there was a falling out with Harun al-Rashid and they were stripped of their power. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I remember them. The Barmakids were a powerful family of viziers who were in charge of the politics of the court. The Abbasids relied on their expertise until there was a falling out with Harun al-Rashid and they were stripped of their power. |
| *Ali Olomi: Right, and with the war of the two brothers, the power of the Barmakids came to an end. But while their power was gone, it was not the end of their story. Supposedly, Arib was the daughter of one of the Barmakids who had been stolen away in the dead of the night from the family and so survived the fall of her house. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Right, and with the war of the two brothers, the power of the Barmakids came to an end. But while their power was gone, it was not the end of their story. Supposedly, Arib was the daughter of one of the Barmakids who had been stolen away in the dead of the night from the family and so survived the fall of her house. |
| *Deana Hassanein: The last survivor of a great house. What happened to her, Ali? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' The last survivor of a great house. What happened to her, Ali? |
| *Ali Olomi: Supposedly, she was sold into slavery and lived the early portion of her life as an enslaved woman. For all the achievements of the Abbasids, this was still a slave society, very much like the empires that came before them, like the Persians and the Romans. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Supposedly, she was sold into slavery and lived the early portion of her life as an enslaved woman. For all the achievements of the Abbasids, this was still a slave society, very much like the empires that came before them, like the Persians and the Romans. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Okay, let's talk a little bit about this so we can understand Arib's life a bit better. How was the life of a slave like in this time period? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Okay, let's talk a little bit about this so we can understand Arib's life a bit better. How was the life of a slave like in this time period? |
| *Ali Olomi: The life of a slave was hard. They had little to no freedom and were sold to the wealthy. They often occupied the lowest rung of society, though not always, as some could become advisors and members of the royal court. Most slaves were taken into captivity during war or conquest and some were enslaved on a contractual basis, kind of like an indentured servitude. In either case, they were stripped of their freedom and put into mostly domestic labour. It was a hard life and an unjust one. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' The life of a slave was hard. They had little to no freedom and were sold to the wealthy. They often occupied the lowest rung of society, though not always, as some could become advisors and members of the royal court. Most slaves were taken into captivity during war or conquest and some were enslaved on a contractual basis, kind of like an indentured servitude. In either case, they were stripped of their freedom and put into mostly domestic labour. It was a hard life and an unjust one. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Tell me a bit more about the jobs that slaves did, because you just said that some of them could be found in the royal court. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Tell me a bit more about the jobs that slaves did, because you just said that some of them could be found in the royal court. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, I mean, some were soldiers who occupied a position similar to mercenaries. They received booty and a stipend in turn for fighting. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, I mean, some were soldiers who occupied a position similar to mercenaries. They received booty and a stipend in turn for fighting. |
| *Deana Hassanein: When you say booty, you mean treasure? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' When you say booty, you mean treasure? |
| *Ali Olomi: We mean treasure, yes, that booty. Most were domestic servants in the household. They too were kind of paid a small amount and others were in the royal court as advisors, counselors and even some entertainers. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' We mean treasure, yes, that booty. Most were domestic servants in the household. They too were kind of paid a small amount and others were in the royal court as advisors, counselors and even some entertainers. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So they could be advisors, not just doing domestic work in the palace? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So they could be advisors, not just doing domestic work in the palace? |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, because they were enslaved, they were part of society, not just outside of it. It was a social class that meant that they could move up in the social ranks. Certain enslaved people, while still not free, held a lot of power. Eventually, some of them, like the Mamluks, would found their own dynasty and rule over places like Egypt for centuries. But those were exceptions on the whole because slaves had little to no freedom. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, because they were enslaved, they were part of society, not just outside of it. It was a social class that meant that they could move up in the social ranks. Certain enslaved people, while still not free, held a lot of power. Eventually, some of them, like the Mamluks, would found their own dynasty and rule over places like Egypt for centuries. But those were exceptions on the whole because slaves had little to no freedom. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Okay, I'm trying to understand this a little more. How could a slave have power if they weren't free? You have a system in place to enslave people, but some of those same people can become rulers. I don't get it. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Okay, I'm trying to understand this a little more. How could a slave have power if they weren't free? You have a system in place to enslave people, but some of those same people can become rulers. I don't get it. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, I think it's partly because the enslaved were sometimes treated as the most trusted members of society. Unlike political figures, a ruler could rely on those that were directly under his command and under his pay. So there was a trade-off. You lost your freedom, but you gained access to the caliph or ruler. But it's not like you had much choice either. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, I think it's partly because the enslaved were sometimes treated as the most trusted members of society. Unlike political figures, a ruler could rely on those that were directly under his command and under his pay. So there was a trade-off. You lost your freedom, but you gained access to the caliph or ruler. But it's not like you had much choice either. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So that's important to understand Uribe, I'm guessing, because she starts off as a daughter of a noble household and then is sold into slavery. So it's a big change in her situation, the loss of her freedom and the challenges of a life as a slave. You usually hear the reverse. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So that's important to understand Uribe, I'm guessing, because she starts off as a daughter of a noble household and then is sold into slavery. So it's a big change in her situation, the loss of her freedom and the challenges of a life as a slave. You usually hear the reverse. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, her origins are a bit murky at best and we don't actually know if she was sold into slavery or born into it. But either way, large parts of her life were enslaved. She was part of those entertainers who were enslaved. She lived from 798 to 890, so a pretty long life. And at some point, she catches the eye of Al-Amin, the caliph who was particularly interested in poetry. And Uribe was well trained in poetry. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, her origins are a bit murky at best and we don't actually know if she was sold into slavery or born into it. But either way, large parts of her life were enslaved. She was part of those entertainers who were enslaved. She lived from 798 to 890, so a pretty long life. And at some point, she catches the eye of Al-Amin, the caliph who was particularly interested in poetry. And Uribe was well trained in poetry. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Al-Amin was one of the caliphs who fought in the war of the two brothers, the loser of the two. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Al-Amin was one of the caliphs who fought in the war of the two brothers, the loser of the two. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, I mean, that's fair. He did lose the war pretty spectacularly. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, I mean, that's fair. He did lose the war pretty spectacularly. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So she was caught up in the civil war. What happened to her afterwards? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So she was caught up in the civil war. What happened to her afterwards? |
| *Ali Olomi: Once Al-Ma'mun wins, he ends up buying her and it's possible she becomes his concubine or his lover. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Once Al-Ma'mun wins, he ends up buying her and it's possible she becomes his concubine or his lover. |
| *Deana Hassanein: We know how important poetry was to the Abbasids and in Islamic culture. So being a poet was very important. I'm thinking this is why she became a favourite of the caliphs. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' We know how important poetry was to the Abbasids and in Islamic culture. So being a poet was very important. I'm thinking this is why she became a favourite of the caliphs. |
| *Ali Olomi: I think so too. If the Barmageddon connection is true, then she may have been trained by Mukharik, who was already the most famous poet and musician of the time. Uribe would go on in her own right to become the most famous, especially with the oud. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I think so too. If the Barmageddon connection is true, then she may have been trained by Mukharik, who was already the most famous poet and musician of the time. Uribe would go on in her own right to become the most famous, especially with the oud. |
| *Deana Hassanein: We have ouds in Egypt. They're this stringed instrument with a small neck and a roundish body. They have a beautiful sound. I could honestly just sit there for hours and listen to someone play the oud. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' We have ouds in Egypt. They're this stringed instrument with a small neck and a roundish body. They have a beautiful sound. I could honestly just sit there for hours and listen to someone play the oud. |
| *Ali Olomi: Oh yeah. And along with the lute, the oud is really the predecessor to the guitar, which surprisingly enough, comes from the Arabic qitara. So that's your fun fact of the day. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Oh yeah. And along with the lute, the oud is really the predecessor to the guitar, which surprisingly enough, comes from the Arabic qitara. So that's your fun fact of the day. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I love a fun fact. I also like the idea that the oud, which we know today, would have been played in the streets and courts of medieval Baghdad. That's a really nice thing to think about because they make such beautiful music. I would have loved to sit there and listen to some of the music from this moment in history because Arab and North African music is a huge passion of mine. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I love a fun fact. I also like the idea that the oud, which we know today, would have been played in the streets and courts of medieval Baghdad. That's a really nice thing to think about because they make such beautiful music. I would have loved to sit there and listen to some of the music from this moment in history because Arab and North African music is a huge passion of mine. |
| *Ali Olomi: Oh, me too. And Arib was said to be the best of them. She once held a competition between her and her students versus a rival, a young group poet and musician, Sharia. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Oh, me too. And Arib was said to be the best of them. She once held a competition between her and her students versus a rival, a young group poet and musician, Sharia. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Oh, like a music competition, kind of like The Voice, medieval Baghdad style. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Oh, like a music competition, kind of like The Voice, medieval Baghdad style. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yes. Can you imagine? All the drama too. This competition actually took place in Samarra. The city was divided into two teams, hashtag team Arib and hashtag team Sharia, and each side used applause to show their support. They took turns with like cutting verses and clever lyrics, each side rising in thunderous applause, almost like a rap battle. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yes. Can you imagine? All the drama too. This competition actually took place in Samarra. The city was divided into two teams, hashtag team Arib and hashtag team Sharia, and each side used applause to show their support. They took turns with like cutting verses and clever lyrics, each side rising in thunderous applause, almost like a rap battle. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Who won? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Who won? |
| *Ali Olomi: The legend herself, Arib. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' The legend herself, Arib. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Okay. I liked her before, but now I'm loving her even more. What's not to like about a woman who can kick ass with music and poetry? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Okay. I liked her before, but now I'm loving her even more. What's not to like about a woman who can kick ass with music and poetry? |
| *Ali Olomi: I mean, she impresses caliph after caliph, from Al-Amin to Al-Ma'mun. Al-Ma'mun's successor and younger brother, in fact, Al-Mutasim, will grant her manumission, letting her go free. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I mean, she impresses caliph after caliph, from Al-Amin to Al-Ma'mun. Al-Ma'mun's successor and younger brother, in fact, Al-Mutasim, will grant her manumission, letting her go free. |
| *Deana Hassanein: From an enslaved woman to a free woman, she used her wits to work her way up Abbasid society until she's free. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' From an enslaved woman to a free woman, she used her wits to work her way up Abbasid society until she's free. |
| *Ali Olomi: And she makes the absolute most of it. She goes on to earn a reputation not only as the favorite singer and poet of the Caliphs, but as a savvy businesswoman. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And she makes the absolute most of it. She goes on to earn a reputation not only as the favorite singer and poet of the Caliphs, but as a savvy businesswoman. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And we know from our previous episodes and previous discussions that women could participate in trade and own their own wealth in this time period. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And we know from our previous episodes and previous discussions that women could participate in trade and own their own wealth in this time period. |
| *Ali Olomi: She becomes an incredibly wealthy woman, actually. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' She becomes an incredibly wealthy woman, actually. |
| *Deana Hassanein: The arc of her life is fascinating, though, because I'm trying to think of a more compelling life to go from enslaved, where your freedom is stripped, to becoming a powerful and wealthy free woman. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' The arc of her life is fascinating, though, because I'm trying to think of a more compelling life to go from enslaved, where your freedom is stripped, to becoming a powerful and wealthy free woman. |
| *Ali Olomi: I mean, it speaks to the tenacity and willpower, but also the complexities of Abbasid society. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I mean, it speaks to the tenacity and willpower, but also the complexities of Abbasid society. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I just really want her to have a happy ending at this point in time. She has been through too much, and I'm rooting for her. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I just really want her to have a happy ending at this point in time. She has been through too much, and I'm rooting for her. |
| *Ali Olomi: Your wish comes true. She ends up taking on many, many lovers over time, and several powerful people, including the Caliphs, are among her patrons, and some are even her lovers. She goes on to live to the ripe old age, roughly around over 90 years. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Your wish comes true. She ends up taking on many, many lovers over time, and several powerful people, including the Caliphs, are among her patrons, and some are even her lovers. She goes on to live to the ripe old age, roughly around over 90 years. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Wow, what a full and rich life. She really lived by her wits, and her ability in poetry and music helped her ascend to new heights. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Wow, what a full and rich life. She really lived by her wits, and her ability in poetry and music helped her ascend to new heights. |
| *Ali Olomi: Exactly. In a time where literacy was prized and learning was valued, she was intelligent, educated, literate, a lyrical genius, skilled in chess, calligraphy, and poetry. It's no wonder she became a medieval rock star. And like a rock star, she was also pretty controversial. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Exactly. In a time where literacy was prized and learning was valued, she was intelligent, educated, literate, a lyrical genius, skilled in chess, calligraphy, and poetry. It's no wonder she became a medieval rock star. And like a rock star, she was also pretty controversial. |
| *Deana Hassanein: A little bit of controversy makes life worth living, though, Ali, right? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' A little bit of controversy makes life worth living, though, Ali, right? |
| *Ali Olomi: So according to Matthew Gordon, once, during the time that she was enslaved, she ran away from her master to be with her lover, Ibn Hamid. So her master takes the matter to the Caliph, where Ibn Hamid, who's brought before them, refuses to reveal where Arib is. So the Caliph plans to have him flogged. But right before that punishment, Arib shows up in dramatic fashion and shouts, I am Arib. If I am a slave, then he should sell me. But if I am free, then he has no claim on me. This he being her master, of course. She, in fact, forces the matter to court. On top of all that, her poetry and music was really, really raunchy, and she even bragged about sleeping with something like seven to eight Caliphs during her lifetime and spurning many others. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' So according to Matthew Gordon, once, during the time that she was enslaved, she ran away from her master to be with her lover, Ibn Hamid. So her master takes the matter to the Caliph, where Ibn Hamid, who's brought before them, refuses to reveal where Arib is. So the Caliph plans to have him flogged. But right before that punishment, Arib shows up in dramatic fashion and shouts, I am Arib. If I am a slave, then he should sell me. But if I am free, then he has no claim on me. This he being her master, of course. She, in fact, forces the matter to court. On top of all that, her poetry and music was really, really raunchy, and she even bragged about sleeping with something like seven to eight Caliphs during her lifetime and spurning many others. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That must not have gone down well. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That must not have gone down well. |
| *Ali Olomi: She's all over the place. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' She's all over the place. |
| *Deana Hassanein: She is. She's so chaotic. But at the same time, she's fighting for her freedom in court, and even the Caliphs were her groupies, and I think that's pretty cool. I can see why they were obsessed with her. It's hard not to be obsessed with a woman like this. Ali, we have to do proper justice, though. Can you read me some of her poetry, please? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' She is. She's so chaotic. But at the same time, she's fighting for her freedom in court, and even the Caliphs were her groupies, and I think that's pretty cool. I can see why they were obsessed with her. It's hard not to be obsessed with a woman like this. Ali, we have to do proper justice, though. Can you read me some of her poetry, please? |
| *Ali Olomi: All right. Why don't we take turns? I'll read one from Uthari's translation. To you, your treachery is a virtue. You have many faces and ten tongues. I am surprised my heart still clings to you in spite of what you put me through. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' All right. Why don't we take turns? I'll read one from Uthari's translation. To you, your treachery is a virtue. You have many faces and ten tongues. I am surprised my heart still clings to you in spite of what you put me through. |
| *Deana Hassanein: That's quite deep. I quite like this one translated by Matthew Caswell. As for the lover, he went away. In spite of and against my will, I erred in being separated from one for whom I have found no substitute because of his absence from my sights. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' That's quite deep. I quite like this one translated by Matthew Caswell. As for the lover, he went away. In spite of and against my will, I erred in being separated from one for whom I have found no substitute because of his absence from my sights. |
| *Ali Olomi: That's so good. So there's this one poem by Arib that's one of my favorites, because it goes right to what we're all experiencing, even in today's world. And it's about a cold and distant lover, and she talks about how she apologized, but he didn't accept the apology, and how her body aches for him in a bad way. Deana, why don't you read the Arabic for us? Oh, straight to my heart. I'm telling you, a rock star. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That's so good. So there's this one poem by Arib that's one of my favorites, because it goes right to what we're all experiencing, even in today's world. And it's about a cold and distant lover, and she talks about how she apologized, but he didn't accept the apology, and how her body aches for him in a bad way. Deana, why don't you read the Arabic for us? Oh, straight to my heart. I'm telling you, a rock star. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I know, Ali, and I think we can all relate to heartbreak, but they just don't do poetry quite like that anymore. You know what, Ali? Arib is definitely my favorite so far. Her life is so interesting and complex, from an enslaved woman to a wealthy and powerful woman. She freed herself, and with her wit and poetry, winning music battles and winning the hearts of the caliphs. I'm looking forward to meeting more historical figures, but good luck, Ali, finding someone who impresses me more than Arib. Thank you all for coming along. I'm Deana. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I know, Ali, and I think we can all relate to heartbreak, but they just don't do poetry quite like that anymore. You know what, Ali? Arib is definitely my favorite so far. Her life is so interesting and complex, from an enslaved woman to a wealthy and powerful woman. She freed herself, and with her wit and poetry, winning music battles and winning the hearts of the caliphs. I'm looking forward to meeting more historical figures, but good luck, Ali, finding someone who impresses me more than Arib. Thank you all for coming along. I'm Deana. |
| *Ali Olomi: And I'm Ali. This is a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Be sure to subscribe to the Echoes of History podcast so you don't miss the next episode of Figures of Baghdad. See you next time, fellow travelers. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And I'm Ali. This is a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media. Be sure to subscribe to the Echoes of History podcast so you don't miss the next episode of Figures of Baghdad. See you next time, fellow travelers. |
| |-|5= | | |-|5= |
| '''''Who was al-Jahiz?''''' | | '''''Who was al-Jahiz?''''' |
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| *Ali Olomi: A jewel in the desert. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' A jewel in the desert. |
| *Deana Hassanein: A round city full of merchants, rulers and scholars. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' A round city full of merchants, rulers and scholars. |
| *Ali Olomi: The great minds of the Abbasid Empire. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' The great minds of the Abbasid Empire. |
| *Deana Hassanein: This is Figures of Baghdad. Hello fellow travellers and welcome to Figures of Baghdad. I'm Deana. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' This is Figures of Baghdad. Hello fellow travellers and welcome to Figures of Baghdad. I'm Deana. |
| *Ali Olomi: And I'm Ali. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And I'm Ali. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Ali, the life story of Arib has really sparked my curiosity and I am ready for more. Can we visit another scholar maybe? Someone as interesting as Arib? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Ali, the life story of Arib has really sparked my curiosity and I am ready for more. Can we visit another scholar maybe? Someone as interesting as Arib? |
| *Ali Olomi: Let's do it. Let's take a walk to Al-Jahiz's house which is really nearby. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Let's do it. Let's take a walk to Al-Jahiz's house which is really nearby. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Hold on. Al-Jahiz? Doesn't that mean... | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Hold on. Al-Jahiz? Doesn't that mean... |
| *Ali Olomi: Bug-Eyed. It's a horrible nickname. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Bug-Eyed. It's a horrible nickname. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Ouch, poor guy. Honestly, a nickname can really affect you. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Ouch, poor guy. Honestly, a nickname can really affect you. |
| *Ali Olomi: It really can. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It really can. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Did you have one growing up, Ali? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Did you have one growing up, Ali? |
| *Ali Olomi: No, but that Prince Ali song was the bane of my existence. Kids could come up with the most creative lyrics, let me tell you. How about you, Deana? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' No, but that Prince Ali song was the bane of my existence. Kids could come up with the most creative lyrics, let me tell you. How about you, Deana? |
| *Deana Hassanein: Yeah, kids can be really mean. I had loans because I had a monoprow when I was in school. So I'll let you run wild with your imagination and what the kids could have called me. But, I mean, Bug-Eyed, that must have been a really tough childhood for Al-Jahiz. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Yeah, kids can be really mean. I had loans because I had a monoprow when I was in school. So I'll let you run wild with your imagination and what the kids could have called me. But, I mean, Bug-Eyed, that must have been a really tough childhood for Al-Jahiz. |
| *Ali Olomi: It was not an easy early life for him. I mean, he grew up very, very poor in the city of Basra. He used to fish in one of the canals in order to help support his family. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It was not an easy early life for him. I mean, he grew up very, very poor in the city of Basra. He used to fish in one of the canals in order to help support his family. |
| *Deana Hassanein: A very different life from the Banu Musa who grew up in the courts and enjoyed the power and wealth of their patrons, the Caliphs. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' A very different life from the Banu Musa who grew up in the courts and enjoyed the power and wealth of their patrons, the Caliphs. |
| *Ali Olomi: Al-Jahiz and the Banu Musa come from two completely different social worlds, but they really were united by their love of learning. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Al-Jahiz and the Banu Musa come from two completely different social worlds, but they really were united by their love of learning. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And I remember you mentioning that the House of Wisdom is open to everyone, even if you're poor. But I know that it would be a lot harder to have access to the type of knowledge and learning that the wealthy and powerful have. The Banu Musa had one-on-one tuition in the House of Wisdom. So what did Al-Jahiz have? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And I remember you mentioning that the House of Wisdom is open to everyone, even if you're poor. But I know that it would be a lot harder to have access to the type of knowledge and learning that the wealthy and powerful have. The Banu Musa had one-on-one tuition in the House of Wisdom. So what did Al-Jahiz have? |
| *Ali Olomi: I mean, access was so different based on class. But I mean, thanks to that Abbasid cultural renaissance and that availability of paper that we talked about, books became increasingly accessible. What the House of Wisdom would produce would eventually be sold in local bookshops, and that's how he would gain access. So sort of filtering down, if you will. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I mean, access was so different based on class. But I mean, thanks to that Abbasid cultural renaissance and that availability of paper that we talked about, books became increasingly accessible. What the House of Wisdom would produce would eventually be sold in local bookshops, and that's how he would gain access. So sort of filtering down, if you will. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And we know very well that Medieval Baghdad really valued, as a culture, learning and knowledge. They would want books to be widely spread. They would want people to learn. And thanks to the availability of books, there were more and more people who were literate. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And we know very well that Medieval Baghdad really valued, as a culture, learning and knowledge. They would want books to be widely spread. They would want people to learn. And thanks to the availability of books, there were more and more people who were literate. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, I mean, learning and education was one of the few ways that the Abbasids had real social mobility. If you became learned, it didn't matter what your background was, actually. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, I mean, learning and education was one of the few ways that the Abbasids had real social mobility. If you became learned, it didn't matter what your background was, actually. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So you could be a poor kid fishing in canals, but still become a scholar. A very meritocratic society. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So you could be a poor kid fishing in canals, but still become a scholar. A very meritocratic society. |
| *Ali Olomi: And that's Al-Jahiz. He actually used to hang out near the local mosque where he and his other young friends would listen in to the latest theories and the philosophies. Basra, the city that he was in, was reputed to be a major intellectual centre for language and grammar. So they would listen in, and then Al-Jahiz and his friends would have debates of their own right out in the streets. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And that's Al-Jahiz. He actually used to hang out near the local mosque where he and his other young friends would listen in to the latest theories and the philosophies. Basra, the city that he was in, was reputed to be a major intellectual centre for language and grammar. So they would listen in, and then Al-Jahiz and his friends would have debates of their own right out in the streets. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Like a medieval version of those dude podcasts, but less annoying. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Like a medieval version of those dude podcasts, but less annoying. |
| *Ali Olomi: Definitely more interesting. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Definitely more interesting. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So Al-Jahiz worked his way up. He earned his knowledge bit by bit. That can't have been easy. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So Al-Jahiz worked his way up. He earned his knowledge bit by bit. That can't have been easy. |
| *Ali Olomi: Quite literally. His learning was really hard. And he had to gain his knowledge little by little. But he was an incredibly prolific writer. In fact, at one point he supposedly wrote a treatise about the Caliphate and that captures the attention of Al-Ma'mun. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Quite literally. His learning was really hard. And he had to gain his knowledge little by little. But he was an incredibly prolific writer. In fact, at one point he supposedly wrote a treatise about the Caliphate and that captures the attention of Al-Ma'mun. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And we should all remember that Al-Ma'mun was the Caliph who really treasured scholarship, just like his father. So all the Caliphs loved knowledge, but Al-Ma'mun, as we know, hosted debates and even was a bit of a scholar himself. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And we should all remember that Al-Ma'mun was the Caliph who really treasured scholarship, just like his father. So all the Caliphs loved knowledge, but Al-Ma'mun, as we know, hosted debates and even was a bit of a scholar himself. |
| *Ali Olomi: He fancied himself a philosopher king of sorts. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' He fancied himself a philosopher king of sorts. |
| *Deana Hassanein: So catching the attention of Al-Ma'mun would have been huge for Al-Jahiz. It could literally change his life. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' So catching the attention of Al-Ma'mun would have been huge for Al-Jahiz. It could literally change his life. |
| *Ali Olomi: And it did. He was invited to Baghdad, where he would now be among the very scholars he was reading. He would no longer need to fish for a living and instead live off his knowledge and his books. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And it did. He was invited to Baghdad, where he would now be among the very scholars he was reading. He would no longer need to fish for a living and instead live off his knowledge and his books. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I really love the stories of people who work hard at what they're really passionate about and are rewarded for it. Al-Jahiz's humble origins are somewhat similar to Arib from the previous episode, who started off as a slave and became wealthy in her own right. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I really love the stories of people who work hard at what they're really passionate about and are rewarded for it. Al-Jahiz's humble origins are somewhat similar to Arib from the previous episode, who started off as a slave and became wealthy in her own right. |
| *Ali Olomi: And what's fascinating is that we're seeing these people change their social class, like you mentioned, Arib. From medieval city or a time and place that's bound by lineage and dynasties, there are these people who absolutely change their lot in life, whether through skill or knowledge. And that's partly because of the Abbasids themselves, because they cherished learning. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' And what's fascinating is that we're seeing these people change their social class, like you mentioned, Arib. From medieval city or a time and place that's bound by lineage and dynasties, there are these people who absolutely change their lot in life, whether through skill or knowledge. And that's partly because of the Abbasids themselves, because they cherished learning. |
| *Deana Hassanein: When I look back at history and society, I never really think about people climbing social ladders. Something that's beautiful from the discussions we've had is that there really is a chance for people to gain knowledge and change their life. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' When I look back at history and society, I never really think about people climbing social ladders. Something that's beautiful from the discussions we've had is that there really is a chance for people to gain knowledge and change their life. |
| *Ali Olomi: Right. For Al-Jahiz, it meant that he could now live the life he loved more than anything else, the life of a scholar. And he truly loved learning. He truly loved knowledge. And now he could make a living off of it. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Right. For Al-Jahiz, it meant that he could now live the life he loved more than anything else, the life of a scholar. And he truly loved learning. He truly loved knowledge. And now he could make a living off of it. |
| *Deana Hassanein: He's a scholar's scholar then. With some like the Banu Musa, they put their research and studies in service of the Caliph, but Al-Jahiz seems to do what he does for the sake of learning itself. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' He's a scholar's scholar then. With some like the Banu Musa, they put their research and studies in service of the Caliph, but Al-Jahiz seems to do what he does for the sake of learning itself. |
| *Ali Olomi: I love that. I'm going to borrow that from when I describe Al-Jahiz, Deana. So the biographer Ibn Nadim tells a story of how Al-Jahiz would stop at a bookstore, pick up a book and read the whole thing right then and there. Nothing could stop him from reading. He was truly a book nerd. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I love that. I'm going to borrow that from when I describe Al-Jahiz, Deana. So the biographer Ibn Nadim tells a story of how Al-Jahiz would stop at a bookstore, pick up a book and read the whole thing right then and there. Nothing could stop him from reading. He was truly a book nerd. |
| *Deana Hassanein: They didn't make him pay for the book he just read? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' They didn't make him pay for the book he just read? |
| *Ali Olomi: He would just pick up a book and read it right there. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' He would just pick up a book and read it right there. |
| *Deana Hassanein: He must have loved Baghdad then, because I remember last season, we talked about Al-Mutanabi, the book markets overflowing with books. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' He must have loved Baghdad then, because I remember last season, we talked about Al-Mutanabi, the book markets overflowing with books. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, he was in his element. And honestly, many of those books he wrote himself. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, he was in his element. And honestly, many of those books he wrote himself. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Did he write even more than Ibn Aisha, the head of the House of Wisdom? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Did he write even more than Ibn Aisha, the head of the House of Wisdom? |
| *Ali Olomi: Maybe. I mean, he's credited with writing over 200 books covering a range of topics from grammar to humour to religion, politics and science. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Maybe. I mean, he's credited with writing over 200 books covering a range of topics from grammar to humour to religion, politics and science. |
| *Deana Hassanein: 200 books in a single lifetime? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' 200 books in a single lifetime? |
| *Ali Olomi: Uh-huh. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Uh-huh. |
| *Deana Hassanein: Oh my God, I think that really drives home how different this time was. If the Khalif or someone wealthy patronised you, you then could spend your entire life writing. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Oh my God, I think that really drives home how different this time was. If the Khalif or someone wealthy patronised you, you then could spend your entire life writing. |
| *Ali Olomi: Yeah, I mean, it's a good life. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, I mean, it's a good life. |
| *Deana Hassanein: I mean, today, even if someone is prolific, Ali, 200 books is huge. I'm not over that. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I mean, today, even if someone is prolific, Ali, 200 books is huge. I'm not over that. |
| *Ali Olomi: It is a really wild number. It's kind of goals, to be honest, if you're an author. But that was, you know, the life he always wanted growing up. We mentioned that learning in the Islamic period had kind of two impulses, remember? | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' It is a really wild number. It's kind of goals, to be honest, if you're an author. But that was, you know, the life he always wanted growing up. We mentioned that learning in the Islamic period had kind of two impulses, remember? |
| *Deana Hassanein: Yes, I remember. It was encyclopedic knowledge and investigative knowledge. | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' Yes, I remember. It was encyclopedic knowledge and investigative knowledge. |
| *Ali Olomi: Right. So Al-Jahiz was drawn to that encyclopedic style of knowledge and writing. He saw himself as a witness recording the world around him. So that's why he was so prolific. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Right. So Al-Jahiz was drawn to that encyclopedic style of knowledge and writing. He saw himself as a witness recording the world around him. So that's why he was so prolific. |
| *Deana Hassanein: OK, so he wrote books on his observations, what he saw. Can I then say that's ancient medieval journaling? | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' OK, so he wrote books on his observations, what he saw. Can I then say that's ancient medieval journaling? |
| *Ali Olomi: I love that. That's a great description. These were medieval journals of sorts. | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I love that. That's a great description. These were medieval journals of sorts. |
| These were medieval versions of encyclopedias, cataloguing the knowledge of his day while also, of course, expanding it. | | These were medieval versions of encyclopedias, cataloguing the knowledge of his day while also, of course, expanding it. |
| *Deana Hassanein: And these aren't small texts. I'm talking encyclopedic-like books. He's writing in a large scale, large texts.
| | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And these aren't small texts. I'm talking encyclopedic-like books. He's writing in a large scale, large texts. |
| | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' With multiple volumes. |
| | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I can envision it now, a medieval version of the Encyclopedia Britannica spanning multiple volumes, thick with knowledge. |
| | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Oh, that's perfect. I always wanted those Encyclopedia Britannica in your house. That's how you knew you were a real book nerd is when you had those collections. And it's really that love of books that he had that made him one of these great book collectors. So not only an author, but an amazing book collector in his own right. It's said that his library, his personal library, was absolutely massive. |
| | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And I guess that makes total sense. He grew up very hungry for learning. |
| | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, he would have to earn these books the hard way, gather sort of snippets of knowledge here or there from passing scholars. |
| | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' And now when he's made it, he enjoys the wealth he spends on the things he wanted the most growing up, books. That's beautiful. Ali, let's talk a little bit about the books he wrote. We can't just skip past this 200. |
| | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Yeah, they cover a wide range of topics from grammar to religion to rhetoric and to science. One of his most favourite books and probably his most famous, in my humble opinion, is the Kitab al-Hayawan or the Book of Animals. |
| | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I love animals, as you know. What's your favourite animal, Ali? |
| | *'''Ali Olomi:''' I'd have to say cats and otters. Don't you have a very cute dog? |
| | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I do. I have a stubborn Shiba Inu called Leela. She's beautiful and she's cute and fluffy and white. |
| | *'''Ali Olomi:''' That's so cute. So the Book of Animals is this massive encyclopedia cataloguing all the different species of animals there are out there. It also has, and this is the most fascinating bit, some early hints of the theory of evolution. Maybe not the complete theory, but Jahiz really speculates on the role of the environment on different animals. Why some animals have fur, some have horns, that the environment shapes them that way. |
| | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' I really love how the thinkers of this time were always looking at changing the way they see the world or trying to take notes of what's different. Am I right in saying that his theory came before Darwin's theory of evolution then? |
| | *'''Ali Olomi:''' Oh, yeah. He's almost a thousand years before Darwin. That really puts into perspective how radical what he's doing is. It kind of blows your mind. Again, it's not like the full theory of evolution, but a thousand years before Darwin, he's already introducing this environmental component that wouldn't be picked up in the rest of the world a thousand years later. He even uses that same environmental theory to talk about his fellow humans. He talks about race. He's one of the earliest thinkers talking about race and why people are different. He rejects some of the racist theories about, for example, Africans being cursed by God |
| </tabber> | | </tabber> |
| | |
| | ===Syndicate=== |
| | <tabber> |
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| | '''''Queen Victoria: The Woman Behind An Era''''' |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Welcome to Echoes of History, the place to explore the rich stories from the past that bring the world of Assassin's Creed to life. I'm Matt Lewis. For the next four episodes, we'll be taking a dark turn into the murky underbelly of Victorian London, home to Assassin's Creed Syndicate. We'll be bringing you the real history behind a key character, a landmark, an event in the game, plus you'll also be hearing from both experts in history and gaming on how you bring Victorian London to life in a game like Syndicate. Today though, we're delving into the life of one of Britain's most defining figures, a woman who ruled for three-quarters of a century and who gave her name to an age. Queen Victoria. Born in 1819, she was the last in the line of the House of Hanover and became Queen upon the death of her uncle in 1837. Whilst often caricatured as being spiky and stubborn, Victoria reigned during some of the most significant turning points in British history and left a legacy unmatched by many other British monarchs. But what was Queen Victoria really like and how did she rule as Queen of a tiny island that possessed half the world? In Assassin's Creed Syndicate, we're offered a glimpse into her royal household as we meet the Queen at a Buckingham Palace garden party. Picture the scene. It's a warm summer's evening in the heart of the city of Westminster. Twilight is drawing in that space between light and dark where shadows grow long and the sun hovers just above the horizon. A perfect evening for a garden party. The dulcet tones of a string quartet fill the air. Red streamers hang from poles and crisscross above the heads of revelers busy gossiping about the haves and have-nots of Victorian high society. The women are dressed in richly colored and extravagantly patterned ball gowns that trail along the floor. The men meanwhile wear deep blue or black swallowtail coats to contrast with their ivory white shirts and gloves. All are dressed impeccably. For this is no ordinary garden party. It's the most exclusive garden party of them all. An evening with Queen Victoria herself in the gardens of Buckingham Palace. You arrive as part of the entourage of Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli rubbing shoulders with the most powerful man in the country. Indeed the Disraelis are great friends with the Queen. They're united in their ambitious vision of Britain as a world power. As you follow the Prime Minister into the throng of gathered guests you catch sight of Her Majesty. She wears the same black mourning dress she has worn since the death of her husband Prince Albert but over the top is draped a jade blue sash, the colour of the clearest of seas. Even in her mourning, the Queen can still embrace a small flavor of celebration. She's flanked by her Royal Guards conspicuous in their blood-red tunics and lofty bearskin hats. The gold buttons that line their chests glint in the light of the rising moon. You head vaguely in Her Majesty's direction but in a flash the crowds part and you find yourself standing in front of the Queen of Great Britain and Ireland. Before you can utter a word the Queen, curt as always, tells you to enjoy the ball and walks away to resume her efforts to speak to all her guests. Those who seek the Queen's grace and favor chase after her but you turn around and weave your way back into the gathered masses. Before long you're enveloped by it. Once again just an anonymous face in a Victorian crowd. So that's how we meet her in the game but what was she like in real life? To answer this and plenty more I'm joined by Alex Churchill to explore the real story of one of Britain's most famous Queens. We'll unpack the myths about her personality and discover how she ruled during one of the most seismic eras in British history. Join us as we cross the contours of time to hear the real echoes of history resonating from Assassin's Creed Syndicate. Welcome to Echoes of History Alex it's fantastic to have you here. |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' Well thank you for having me. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Can we start off with I guess when and where is Victoria born and what do we know about her parents and her family? |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' So the big thing with Victoria is she's basically part of a scramble to populate the throne I guess. There's lots of uncles but the upshot of it is there's a succession crisis in a way because of George IV not having an heir all the way down which means the throne is going sideways to his brothers. The two brothers we care about. We care a little bit about Victoria's father otherwise she wouldn't be around but we care about George and then William who takes the throne after him until 1837 and the point is when she's born she's only fifth in line to the throne but the important thing about it is that all of those are a generation above her so she's going to outlive all of them and the brothers are having a race effectively to produce an heir first and she is the winner. She's like the Derby winner basically in baby form but when she's born her name isn't even Victoria it's Dreena so short for Alexandrina. Victoria is her mother's name so it's kind of slung in as an afterthought. It's a middle name so I think they decided eventually that that didn't quite have the gravitas for a royal name which is why she went with Victoria but I feel bad for her upbringing because no royal upbringing is not fraught with just chaos basically because it's the weirdest kind of goldfish environment you could possibly try and raise a child in and I'm trying to describe it without swearing but it's nuts. It's basically nuts and hers is no different and there's always people that have got a vested interest in interfering with their upbringing because they might get something out of them later on and in her case her mother's quite vulnerable like Miranda Richardson played her in ''The Young Victoria'' film and I think she put just enough of Queenie in her to make it viable like I kind of just see her and I think that she played her as kind of a bit ditzy, not stupid but easily manipulated and that's what happens. There's a guy, there's always a guy with ulterior motives and in this case, it's Conroy and he tries eventually to kid on that he's related to the royal family but it's nonsense but what he does is infiltrate her household as her mother's lover and take control of everything and what he ultimately wants is to almost to rule through her. Obviously, we've had George III on the throne for an eternity and that and suddenly there's this idea of a young woman hitting the throne or a girl even depending on how long her predecessors live and now we'd be like Queen Elizabeth came to the throne at 25, she was awesome but then they're thinking oh my god like the monarchy is a nightmare at the time. It's not in good standing with the people. You've had George III and his nuttiness, bless him. You've had George IV and his overspending and he's just not nice and then William IV is he's alright but he's just a gruff sailor. That's what he is. He's not really born to be king and he does alright. He doesn't cause any more damage but he's not inspiring anybody and he's also only on the throne for seven years so by the time she comes to the throne people are not expecting much from her and they're gonna get a surprise which is nice to know but Conroy has positioned himself to come to power and what he tries to do is get papers signed that say that he'll effectively be a regent until she knows what she's doing or until she turns 18 and William IV, god love him, if he does one thing right it's survive until one month after her 18th birthday. He clings on by his fingernails and we're spared that. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Just a spiked Conroy and I think it's Sir John Conroy, is that Mark Strong in ''The Young Victoria'' film? |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' Yeah. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' I mean I think he plays him as the detestable charming person, plays him to perfection in my mind, Sir John Conroy is Mark Strong. |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' He does. I think if anyone's playing Conroy and you don't want to punch him in the face they're not doing it right because there's just that smarmy level where he's kind of worked his way in and he's higher than he ever thought he would be and he's aiming even higher. That's one thing that actually and it lasts with Victoria into her adulthood is that it prepares her. Mental well-being and physical well-being is in doubt in the last few years of living under a roof with that man and Queen Adelaide's noticed it. They're talking about a separate household for her. It's not good. It's violent in terms of like arguments and it's stressful and it's not good for her and what she does do is the second that she does come to the throne, instead of collapsing and letting him take control, she punts him out and he never gets another look in and it involves punting her mother out of any influence as well. It shapes her for the future because it makes her so fiercely protective of her birthright and her power which leads to many, many comedy incidents with Prince Albert later on but it does make her determined not to be stomped on ever again. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And I guess it's quite striking that Conroy decides to try and get himself into this position not by ingratiating himself with the future monarch but by going on the attack trying to control her and every aspect of her life in a way that he almost certainly wouldn't have done if that was a Prince who was going to come to the throne. So Victoria must have been acutely aware from a young age that her sex was going to be a factor she was going to have to deal with. |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' Yeah because I think he probably banks on her coming to the throne before 18 and then there being a job opportunity there for a bloke to step in but he very much tries to go down the road of making her utterly dependent on him and all he does is make her hate him because he just does it in a way that makes him the villain in everything and she despises him and like I said the flaming rows and the arguments. I mean for the pre-Victorians to be commenting on someone's mental well-being like it must have been pretty bad in that house if she was that far gone. He cut her off, he isolated her and her mother played into all of this. She's not innocent either but what he did was manipulate a situation where she had no one else to go to which means that that job opportunity is there because she goes and recruits Melbourne for it and she clings to him and without him, she'd have been doomed in the first few months of her reign. So he does create that space for a strong man to occupy to guide her through her early reign but he makes himself so hateful to her that he doesn't get the job which makes me LOL. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah I mean it's short-sighted but it's a horrendous way to be short-sighted and I think that must surely then have coloured both Victoria's view of her mother but also do you think it made her a stronger person? You say she does rely on Melbourne and we'll get to her early reign I guess later on but she must have had a problematic relationship with her mother who allowed all of this to happen around her but do you think it galvanized her in any way to think that a woman shouldn't allow herself to be treated like that? |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' It's going to sound like I'm contradicting myself because she was contradictory about it. This is someone who insists on leaving the honour and obey in her wedding vows but throws stuff at her husband if he gets too uppity and takes too much of her power away and she rages against physically what being a woman and a queen does and we'll get to it because it's the forced repetitive childbirth and what it does to a woman's body makes her so so angry but actually I think the making of Queen Victoria is when all of those men are removed and there are none of them left and that's when Albert dies and I actually think that she comes out of that a much stronger human being like we're fast forwarding here but when we get to the end like he wouldn't have recognised her in 1880, 1890 as the woman he was married to because she was formidable and quite something else and at times yes she did lean on men but those kind of relationships changed and we'll talk about some of them because I think some of them revolve around boinking and wanting to get laid because she's only in her early 40s when she gets made a widow and she's not dead inside and then some of those are friendship and support like with Disraeli and some of them like Melbourne are absolute necessity at the beginning so there's all different kinds of relationships with men and what was funny was I did that chapter for Ian Dale's book about her and I made it all about her being a woman I made it all about her body, her body issues, her femininity, how she saw herself in the world as a woman and a queen and the only review I saw of it the guy said she's written it through the eyes of the men in her life I'm like oh did you get that wrong? I signpost her development as a person but they do not define her she defines herself through her relationships with them and I think to take that away from her she would stomp her little tiny feet and scream at you if she saw you trying to do that. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' It sounds a little bit like you know Conroy does this damage and then her later life is the process of healing that and closing the gap that Conroy has opened up so that actually she doesn't need the men in there. |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' Yeah it's brilliant because like if you think about it so she goes from Conroy and it's not only Melbourne we talk about Melbourne because we're anglo-centric all the time in our history but you have to factor in her mother's family is important so her mother is a Coburg which is hugely important because the Coburgs are so influential Albert is a Coburg but the reason she marries a Coburg is because of uncle Leopold who's her mother's brother he's Leopold of the Belgians not that one not the absolute monster that's later on a different one and he sends someone called Baron Stockmar over at the very beginning as well and it's Stockmar and Melbourne that walk her through her early reign and that's very much walking a young girl not it's quite funny not only in terms of matters of state as well but one of my favorite anecdotes is like just basic adulting I mean this is someone who has had to hold her mother's hand going up and down the stairs at Kensington and isn't allowed to do anything for herself and she won't exercise and she starts her reign and she's tiny so any weight gain with Victoria is quite noticeable and she's at Windsor with Melbourne and for some reason they're in St George's Chapel and she gets all morbid looking at all the family tombs down in the crypt and says oh I'll be dead in here one day like proper 18 year old girl miserable statement and he says well you will be if you get too fat you need to do some exercise and she goes mental and her argument is she doesn't like going outside to walk because she gets stones in her shoes which is a particularly lame teenage girl argument but she does win that argument because he says well if you get too fat you'll die and she says well the Queen of Spain does loads of exercise and she's really fat so no and Melbourne's like well played |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' When precisely then does Victoria become queen and how quickly do we see a change in her attitude? Is she really quick to eject Conroy and her mother then? |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' Get out of my house she's moving out and she ain't taking him with her not a chance there is resentment towards her mother for letting Conroy do that to her yes there is there's a very definitive line Victoria draws the line and her mother is never allowed any influence on her reign but her mother is not shut out of her life she doesn't do that Conroy on the other hand get out don't want to see your face ever again be gone and I'm not sure how long he sort of sidles around her mother after that when he's not going to get anything out of her but he kind of drops off the story but he is punted forcefully the day that she is able to do it and her mother there's a very definitive line you are my mother I don't hate you you will always be my mother but stay away from my throne kind of thing and that happens in 1837 like I said for all involved this is a happy occurrence that poor William lost till one month past her 18th birthday so she is of age but she's cripplingly immature she's not unprepared in that she hasn't been taught about the constitution and stuff for that but in terms of life and dealing with people she's been so isolated it causes a big stink earlier in her reign because it's to do with the ladies of the bedchamber because she just throws a tantrum because she wants what she wants and she's queen and you can't tell her otherwise whereas actually she was wrong then it's to do with letting your sitting prime minister appoint the ladies of the bedchamber and when Melbourne went she said no so Melbourne stayed because the other government wouldn't take over so she has a lot to learn in terms of dealing with people but it's not like she's been uneducated about what being a queen involves that's been taken care of in spades if you had to give Conroy any credit at all it's education in terms of subjects and languages and diplomacy and things like that is better than the one she's going to give some of her children |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' medieval history is my thing Victorian history not so much but I've watched ''The Young Victoria'' and I have actually read Victoria's diaries when she was young for a project for work and it is striking how utterly immature and engaged with stuff like opera and things like that she seems to be before she becomes queen but then how that flips in the instant William IV dies it's like she just changes completely and she understands the mission she gets that she's now got freedom that she's been craving for years and she means to use it seems to be that real switch in her to me |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' first of all i'll blow your mind and tell you that the diaries are basically fake so her stupid youngest daughter beatrice god damn you beatrice so when Victoria died she copied them out omitting all the paragraphs she thought her mother wouldn't approve of people seeing and burnt the originals so they are a redacted edited version of what she actually wrote so there's some semblance of her in there but yeah she doesn't go nuts she doesn't do whatever the 1830s girl equivalent is of hookers and blows she's not out there like on a vegas weekend blowing all her money and shunning her responsibilities but definitely there's a joy in like i can go out into the world and enjoy things like going to the opera now and i'm not controlled my every waking moment by this swine that i could not get out of my household for love nor money so i she does enjoy that she's never gonna not like being in charge she definitely likes that aspect of her reign sometimes a little too much she is the last one that doesn't quite get the concept of constitutional monarchies take that rule where a monarch technically has the power to veto a law when it comes up from the commons and the lords that hasn't been done since 1707 at this point so it hasn't been done in a century but she still struggles sometime with the concept of the fact that you may be queen but you reign you don't rule after her there's no doubt Edward VII gets it George V definitely gets it and then it's a straight run all the way down to king charles the third they get it i think she's the last one that still has the occasional tantrum where she's just like but i'm queen and this is what i want and you can't tell me otherwise and people are like well we have a constitution that kind of says we can your majesty some of that might be immaturity as well and some of it i think just personality i love her i think she's great she's absolutely nuts people say all the boring Victorians and i'm like no no that was PR it was very good PR she was anything but boring |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' as she becomes queen what is the kind of social and political context when we think of the 19th century now we very much think of Queen Victoria and she dominates our thinking for that whole period I think but she's coming at the end of the Georgian era England has an Empire but has lost a lot of land in America and all of that kind of thing where are we politically and socially when she becomes queen you mentioned that we're in a constitutional monarchy but she's still willing to sort of buck against that a little bit |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' it's also in some ways yes we're on a downward slide the Americas have been lost 40 years before but then we're still 20 years after waterloo and wellington is still a towering figure in politics and everywhere so there's definitely this old god sitting around from then but then this era is what will shape the british Empire as we think of it like with the sun never setting on it and all of that stuff from our childhood when it was still okay to make memes like that and people didn't scream at you and now it's very frowned upon but the scramble for africa hasn't happened so we do have an Empire we are well established in india by this point but we're still 20 years before the mutiny so east india company has still got their claws into everything over there and that won't be the same in every way possible the world will not be the same by the time she dies it's such a span she's born in 1819 so she's born four years after waterloo and she dies a decade before the first world war so there's a massive amount of time to deal with i think in terms of her and the royal family like i said at this point they're a very low ebb with the public they are not popular i think there was a certain amount of sympathy with George iii then we've had George IV who frankly no one liked then you've had William IV who sort of like you say he's all right he's functional he's a good man in a storm but he's not a colorful monarch they've been overspending they've been over chagging they've been behaving badly her uncles on mass are referred to as queen Victoria's wicked uncles Albert does my head in sometimes he really does but you do have to give him credit for spotting that and this whole genesis of this whole where we see these middle class values with the royal family that they have today like when people go oh look kate's wearing a dress we saw her wear six months ago and everybody gets really excited all of that starts with Albert it really explodes and takes root and becomes the norm under George V but she's about to kind of become the savior in a way of the British monarchy without the huge fanfare of saying it just by actions and as i said this is a huge PR exercise to convince people that they are just like us and these people aren't monsters and they're not out having decadent orgies while you're all struggling to earn a living so she's on the brink of becoming part of a huge change in how people see the monarchy and how the monarchy operates as well like for a modern age. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' and Victoria will famously rule for a very very long time. Is there any way that we can give a kind of a broad sweep to her reign? Obviously Albert will arrive, children will arrive but is there a short version of Victoria's reign? |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' yeah so it comes in blocks block number one come to the throne lean on Melbourne learn the job get married been about 10 years punching out kids takes up the Albert dying Albert dying low point but even then you feel like she disappeared and no one saw her for 15 years no not true she disappeared from social life she did not stop doing her job she did it all the way through but i would take that second block all the way through to like 1870-ish which is where she stopped having children she's a middle-aged woman she's been a grieving widow she's been out of the public eye somewhat by her own volition because she just doesn't want to engage with people but she is still doing her job a constitutional role and then after that i'm going off on a tangent here but you saw this with Elizabeth II as well there was that point in the 90s when nobody liked her when Diana died and everybody was mean about her and people said horrible things about the queen and we do this to middle-aged women in society we love them when they're young and beautiful and mothers and spitting out kids and everything and she benefited from that that bit in the middle before they become the lovely old grandma that you all love as well there's a chunk in the middle where society is really horrible to women it's like it's almost like what are you here for like you're not young and attractive anymore and you're not my nan so i'm ambivalent towards you and she took a hit in that period in that block and it also it has wider connotations revolutionary activities going on elsewhere in Europe as well so it does tie in with all of that too that's a downward ebb and that covers John Brown as well who i don't think she married but i really hope that they did have a sexual relationship because like i said 41 when she died and if that's how she got her kicks and it didn't hurt anybody then why do we care so i hope she points him silly and had a great time but then he dies and then from the 1880s on she becomes very much this stately motherly figure someone said to me would you ever write a book about queen Victoria and i said if i did it would be about the last 10 years of her life because i found it immeasurably sad going through those diaries and letters when i was doing stuff for George V watching her lose her grip on her place in the world and she couldn't see properly so she couldn't read properly and in that you've got Abdul Kareem as well Abdul Kareem i feel is like when the current queen had that very good looking major Johnny something who's now assigned because he's tired of being referred to as the very good looking major with the lovely calves but if you're a woman in your 80s and 90s and you're a queen and you can't pay to have some eye candy hang around you then why are you even doing the job and i feel like that's what he was but he gave her something as well he gave her a huge measure of happiness because he gave her something new and shiny she wasn't just waiting to die he taught her how to speak hindi he taught her about indian culture he taught her how to make curries he made her excited about something again and you know what if you want to take that away from your mom and be a dick about it like Edward VII was and i'm gonna judge you not her because she was an old lady and there must be a point where she's sitting there and she's immobile and she's not well and she's losing her eyesight where she's thinking why am i still here and i would love to explore that better because there's a period in there as well where it looks like despite all of her hard work and despite bashing out nine children that actually her dynasty might not carry on because all the heirs almost die at once so that's what i would broadly term it at a young mother Victoria middle-aged Victoria who doesn't have a good time at all and part of that's on everybody else as well as her elderly Victoria and then the very tail end of Victoria where i think she can see a bit of the writing on the wall she's not dumb she knows her grandson she knows Willie and as soon as she dies Willie kind of positions himself as the preeminent European royal which is just dangerous for everybody because he's a fool but he was been on the throne since 1888 at that point and yeah he had been around longer than anyone else and he had a swagger about him that got everybody into trouble eventually so four main phases to queen Victoria |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' I like that fascination with the older Victoria. My late grandmother, God love her, one of the absolute treasures of my life. I'm 99% certain that she frequently paid for unnecessary building work by bad builders who were willing to work in her garden with their shirts off because she liked a bit of eye candy. |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' good for her, her money. I'd be like hell yeah he looks great with his top off I've gone doing the garden now we had the garden done last week and my money I'll do what I want she liked the guy he was a handsome man he was quite charming she liked having him around he made her feel like she wasn't done I can't imagine at the age we are roughly the same age you and I we can't imagine what it's like to sit there at double this age and think I'm irrelevant now I'm never going to do anything important again I might as well not be here and he made her feel good and so I think he's immeasurably important and it makes me dislike Edward VII even more that he was mean to him because if you can't let your mother just have that in her old age then you're not a decent person for me |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' I did just want to pick up a couple of things from what you've said so far so you mentioned Victoria despising elements of being a woman particularly the having lots of children how does that manifest '''i'''tself during that period of her life? |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' Manifest herself in a lot of complaining so the first pregnancy she would ultimately be annoyed that he knocked her up so quickly yes it's her duty and everything but she kind of just liked the boinking she wasn't really into the whole sort of the strain of having a child so the first time she's pregnant she refused to wear a corset was still expected that she would wear stays i think almost to the end and she went no i'm queen can't make me and also as well she was fabulously like indiscreet ask me if this makes sense right you're a male doctor the queen is your patient and she's pregnant you expect to get all the sordid detail right but what's brilliant is that her doctor's like she just won't shut up i don't need all this is this TMI this is too in my head and i can't handle this because she'd moan about every aspect of it because she was having a miserable time with it and she wanted him to suffer as well so he would get gynecological details and he'd be like i don't need to hear this and i'm like you're a doctor dude you kind of do he said and she looks like a barrel because she's so short and she's like fat and she won't wear her corset and i don't know what to do with her and they actually think that she will kill herself in labor like they're like i don't know how she's going to survive it and even Albert says she's going to be a nightmare and she's not she's a trooper she has the kid she has postnatal depression she does but like in terms of the actual physical acts of giving labor she does it and she has Vicky first and then very quickly after she has Bertie who really are the important two because Vicky will go on to marry a German Emperor and mother William II god love her and ruin his psyche for the rest of us and Bertie obviously will become Edward III so she's what like 20-21 she's got two kids till about 1859 i think there's only four years in the whole of that span where she's not pregnant at some point the statistic for how many months she is pregnant while Albert is alive is staggering and miserable and she told everyone about it and it's brilliant it manifests itself in the best way when the first two daughters get married and they go off to have children so you have Vicky goes to Germany and she gets pregnant with Wilhelm II “Willie”, the first grandchild and she's only about 18-19 at this point she's like mother it's delightful i've made a soul and she's like oh it's horrible they're gonna treat you like a cow it's agony pushing it out your body's going to be ruined you're going to be fat no one's going to want to look at you she utterly destroys any romantic notion she's got about motherhood and just says it sucks then alice who's the third child and she is the mother of alexandra of hess who will marry nicholas ii so she's important too but when alice gets pregnant for the first time there's a more serious letter and it's less funny but she basically says to her i hate that we have to do this i hate that our role in life requires us as very young women to ruin ourselves and be ruined by our husband in the name of a throne and producing heirs and it pains me to see the beautiful young wife reduced to that she hates that that's part of their job she knows it's part of her job and she does it she carries on having kids i mean like she was fond of sex and it shows so she gets the number six i think it is which off the top of my head is arthur but there are a lot of them excuse me if and this revolutionary possibility has risen its head and that is pain relief in childbirth and on this occasion she allows herself to be talked out of it by and this is brilliant i don't have any children but if a man said to me no no your majesty it is god's will that women suffer giving birth otherwise what's the point i'd have hit him with a brick but on this occasion she accepts it has it but then baby number seven comes along and she's like you can get out of my face i want all of the drugs now and she becomes the first royal to have chloroform when she's having baby number seven so she's revolutionary in that as well they do tell her the more children she has the more bad temper she gets during the pregnancy and the more she takes it out on Prince Albert which i love because it's like you you and your penis get away from me i hate you which is basically the theme every time she's pregnant they tell her after number seven with the pain killing one don't have any more because we worry for your mental health because you're so evil when you're pregnant and it stresses you out it stresses everybody else out you've got enough kids now you don't need to she gets pregnant an eighth time and then gets pregnant a ninth time the urban legend which i hope is true is that the ninth time Prince Albert was forbidden from being in her presence because she got more and more pregnant if she saw his face the angrier she would get and she would throw stuff at him and scream at him and they feared for the life of the mother and the child she used to get so enraged at the sight of him so he was banned from her presence and would have to communicate by passing notes but also as well for all the comedy of her being pregnant that often it factors into what we were talking about earlier which is how fiercely she defends her throne because every time she's in confinement and she's busy having a child and dealing with postnatal depression and all the other yucky stuff that comes with having another kid he gets more of her power he stands in and he does more work for her and she hates it she needs it it's not like she says take it away from him i don't want him to have it but watching him do her job while she can't because she's supposed to do two jobs at once and that is populate the throne and reign makes her angry as well so that i think is part of the rage is she's not just raging at his mad bits getting her pregnant again she's raging against watching him get to do her job because she can't because she has to do the other job so yeah many manifestations of Victoria and the body issues that come in with it as well i mean in the weight game she likes to eat she's quite greedy and proudly greedy she's like i like food not sorry but if you're four foot ten or whatever she was and it shows every time you gain weight and she did grow outwards as her reign went on i think you'd class her as morbidly obese based on that chart. She wasn't happy with their own body; she hated it. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' It sounds to me like there's a lot of really weird juxtaposition in there in that she hates lots about being a woman, particularly with the childbirth responsibilities that something's out of her control when she wants control over everything it forces her to give away control to a man which is not what she wants to do doesn't seem like she's particularly empowering of women particularly her own daughters yet there's lots of ways in which if she's adopting painkillers and refusing to wear corsets and things like that because she's in a position to make that happen it's almost like it makes that acceptable to other women as well which is empowering women even if she doesn't mean it. |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' yeah she absolutely is not a feminist she actually thinks feminists are yuck but she is a feminist and that's what i love about her she's so contradictory she just is who she is and you have to accept her for it and she is contradictory completely i mean she hates that the children interfere between the time she would be able to spend with Albert she just wants to be with her husband she likes her husband quite a lot and they're in the way but it doesn't mean she doesn't love the children she does love the children but then my god you're not showing it much we can talk about the pendulum of royal i can't say the word i usually use to describe it but a pendulum of royal shenanigans maybe that swings between not parenting your offspring at all and parenting them too much and either way they both end up psychologically distraught and unable to function as grown-ups but that's more on Albert than it is on Victoria there's things where she is conscious that she puts her foot down and screams and stamps so much about her power as a queen that she mitigates it by stepping back as a wife so when he does institute this horrific parenting regime of education that drives his into the ground she lets him like you're the husband you are the father you raise them as you see fit you educate them as you see fit like she will back off for him as well but then the next day she'll be screaming and throwing things at him again so yeah trying to label her you'll just tie yourself up in knots |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' is it too much of a cliche to say that the biggest kind of challenge in her life was losing Albert because he's such an important part of her life and her personality and I guess the way she views herself is it too much of a cliche to say that losing him is the big moment in her life and her reign? |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' Again a contradiction of course it is we know that she had his room laid out forever more as if he was still going to come back to it we know she was distraught she loved her husband like she was a monster to him on occasion but I don't think he was like completely great all the time either but he was her partner in everything and he was gone and she was only 41 years old but I actually think that in retrospect it's the making of her and like I said by 1880 he would not have recognized the Victoria that he saw she was not the woman he had married she was someone else and I don't think the space would have been there for her to become that person had he still been there. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah, and I guess one of the other challenges you know we're talking here loosely about ''Assassin's Creed'' is that she's forced to survive numerous assassination attempts which must have been pretty scary for someone who in the park a lot in public |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' Um, yeah I mean a little bit scary, but actually she's badge of honor she says they've tried to kill me eight times i must be awesome i must be so important for eight of them to try to come at me the first one she's actually three months pregnant with Vicky that's really early in the reign and that makes people think oh she may be 18 and very small but she appears to have some backbone because she's having a carriage ride in Hyde Park and they try to kill her or i think this one is the one where he pretends he's got a giant sort of network of anarchists or politically motivated supporters but he's just a crazy bloke who lives with his mom and he can't shoot straight and she literally ducks puts her head up they take him down she goes can we finish the carriage ride now please and everyone thinks wow that's quite cool but i was expecting wailing and crying and screaming and a lot more drama she surprises people with that one my my favorite one is one of the later ones there was a parade going on through so because obviously Windsor and Eton are basically the same place all the Eton college school boys had come out to watch and they took the would-be assassin down so this guy ended up pinned on the floor while school boys in top hats beating with umbrellas which i think is hilarious like he went from i'm going to kill the Empress to i got beaten up by some school kids outside winter castle so yeah he got what was coming to him but yeah she actually joked about it in the end obviously i think if you're staring down the barrel of it and someone is about to pull the trigger then yeah you'd be afraid but she very much mocked them and laughed it off as if they were insignificant which actually PR wise is about the best thing you can do |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' I think for most of us who aren't involved in the study in this period a lot so I mean me, for me. |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' Yeah, I mean weird castles and stuff like that. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah you know crazy stuff probably my enduring image of Victoria is the photo that we have I guess the older lady the larger lady looking particularly grumpy and we have this image of her being quite a spiky hard person to deal with do you think that's a fair reflection of her personality |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' no not at all really it depended on who you were if she didn't like you hell yeah like also as well you'll notice try and find pictures of her where she's staring right at the camera they're very very rare and they're because the cameraman caught her off guard because she doesn't believe that you should be allowed to stare upon majesty she splits two eras at the beginning of her reign you had to paint a portrait and you can airbrush a lot out with the portrait but then if you're waving a camera around in 1900 you can see all the fat you can see the age and i don't think she was particularly impressed with how life became with the photograph compared to those sort of doll-like portraits you see of her in the 1830s she didn't think people should be able to gaze directly on majesty as in like make eye contact so you won't see a lot of them like that and she could be a grumpy piece of work i mean i'd be a grumpy piece of work with Edward VII as well if he was my kid so he's boffed all these people he's end up getting dragged through court on gambling stuff he's almost died of typhoid he's not parenting his own kid properly so you've now got a grandson Prince eddie who's just as bad getting wrapped up in the cleveland streets so by the 1890s i'd have had some harsh words for some of my relatives as well also so Prince Albert had cultivated this domesticity this middle-class domesticity that we still associate with the royal family today and i think what his death does do is break that for a while George V brings it back and he nails it home during the first world war but there's a gap in between that might not have been there if Albert was around and that gap is all of her family running around making dicks of themselves and doing inappropriate things and threatening this image that they had cultivated all of those winter holter portraits of the family all gathered around the feet of Albert and Victoria they're PR they're crafted PR to make them look like a happy domestic unit which is in contravention of everything that had gone before she came to the throne like you'd have to go back into George III and his large family but all that mess in the middle it's moving them away from that it's moving them away from that royal family crowning it this is like the Saxe-Coburg-Gotha royal family this is not the georgians which is interesting because it's a very definitive sort of PR move and it kind of crumbles a bit in her later reign because she's got sons and grandsons just doing ridiculous things and i think maybe if Albert had still been alive then that might not have happened but i still don't think that's justification for wishing he hadn't died i guess like because i honestly i like the person she becomes and she is formidable and if she doesn't like you you know it so she really really hates some of her prime ministers and it's great so Disraeli knew how to play her and she adored him and she said when Disraeli died it was the worst she'd ever felt at losing someone that included Albert and it included John Brown and i think because she found common ground in him and it was because he didn't treat her like an organ of state he treated her like a human being he flirted with her she flirted back i don't think she was buffering Disraeli at all but i think that the banter and the human connection meant so much to her moving into that last block of her life that we're talking about so coming out of the sort of the republican bit and the bit where she's been shielded off and emerging back into the social life of the country he is so pivotal in that she was devastated when he died but she really really hates some of the others and she's just a complete dick to them and i love it because there's not a lot they can do about it they can be replaced she can't and she knows it so she's just not at all bothered about how they think about her which is great just in bullet point form she is funny she's got a disgusting laugh really dirty laugh she's greedy she loves food she loves stuff in her face she's got no problem being dicks to people if she doesn't like them but she's also very sweet and very caring as well with her female relatives and she is that kind of grandmother to Europe in the end like Alex of Hess is one of the big ones so alice her daughter dies very young and those children are left without a and she really does step in as a mother figure for those grandchildren because she would have only been sort of around early 40s herself anyway at the time when alex was growing up don't think of her as an old lady grandmother she's a middle-aged woman who's stepping into that role for her granddaughters who have lost that mother figure and also as well like she's ridiculous at times and i love it one of the things she used to do every time she crossed the border on a train into Scotland or in a carriage she'd suddenly assume this pseudo Scottish accent and everyone would be like why is she talking funny what's she doing and she'd just basically pretend to be Scottish the whole time that she was there as if people wouldn't notice but then i think also as well don't underestimate her and think that she's not smart because she is and she's smart in the same way as George V is smart and i keep going back to him because he's my main royal focus he wasn't the smartest man in the room book smart but he did get people and he did read people and he knew his people and she's very unsqueamish about the realities of her job and what it involves so she loves the idea of britain having an Empire and ruling the world and everything but she understands that that only comes through hideous violence she's okay it's not a stance we would appreciate today but she understands that there's no nice way to do it and that it's going to be done through bloodshed so she's not dumb by any means she's hilarious she's needy as well and also as well i just think she's incredibly human i think she's more human than any other monarch i've had to look at like obviously i don't go back into your weird little era where they're all riding around wearing tights and stuff but i find her incredibly human and that's despite people trying to strip her of that humanity that's despite lord isha who's a monster who was the first person to publish any of her papers after she died that's despite him not using any of the correspondence she had with women because women have got nothing interesting to say to each other yeah if i tell you that this was a man who had very few women in his outlook and did all his own son then you'll appreciate that his opinions necessarily weren't that great across the board but also as well that people have like written out the feminine side it's why when i did that chapter on her i made it all about the feminine side i did it to annoy lord isha i made the whole chapter revolve around the fact that she had a vagina because people pretended she didn't for so long and they took that away from her and what they did was take away the amazing job she did in doing two jobs at once not only has she got to populate the throne as a female as a queen but she has also she's the number one on the throne as well which was a rarity so i just think there's so much more to her than grumpy old lady but grumpy old lady she definitely could do that vibe if she wanted to |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' amongst many other things as well. What would you say then is Victoria's biggest legacy? We associate her with so much she rules for so long she's given her name pretty much to a century of history. Do you think she has one big standout legacy? |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' Yeah, modern royal family i credit George V with implementing it and making it the standard but in terms of that we need to be approachable to normal people we need not to be these absolute dicks like George IV on a pedestal spending huge exorbitant amounts of money while our people starve who never come in contact with a normal person we can't be those people and expect to survive and the experimental stuff and the realization for that happens with her and Albert as well so we associate Victorians with a lot of things some of them quite bad like misogynistic and racist as well we would say that our forebearers thought very little of people who weren't white and i say this is someone whose dad comes from the Empire well he was born 12 weeks after partition so not really but what she is not and the reason that the royal family then transcend this kind of legacy for me in this period she's not a racist Edward VII not a racist like i say she completely embraced Abdul Kareem and his influence and learning about india and there was no semblance of shade about believing herself to be superior to non-white people Edward VII i really don't like that man but him as well he was absolutely disgusted at his peers attitude that they might be superior to someone who was black or brown and George V just does not have a racist bone in his body at all and i think it's interesting that the royal family as an institution which people look at and go they're crazy why do they still have that now it's because they stood above stuff that would have destroyed them like that like the terrible behavior like the racism although they are stupendously rich and depressingly well off they do work hard at the job they have made for themselves because that job is born with Prince Albert he's the one that first goes running off to the midlands when they said no it's a hotbed of sedition in Birmingham they'll kill you and he says i don't care i want to go and meet some of these people living on the bread line and find out what their lives are like i want to be approachable so they can tell me how i can change things and he didn't get to fulfill his work and it took more decades to happen because he wasn't around the fact that the royal family identified what needed to be done to sort of be palatable to a public going on as well that definitely starts in her reign. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah it sounds like her and Albert managed to bridge between the old world and the new world and the old world was seeing so many monarchies being kicked off their thrones that being that bridge making that transformation is what has kept a monarchy alive in England, or Britain until today. |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' What's really interesting is that it does seem deliberate but it is a bit haphazard and i think the difference between it starting but not fully taking root in Victoria's reign obviously it's because Albert's not there and he was doing more of it than she was but she was on board with it but she was not leading it like he would have had he been alive so it feels a bit haphazard and things don't stick and then they come back and then they try something different so there is a blatant realization that something needs to change to distance them far far away from the decades preceding them but because of the work that they did by the time we do get to George V and the first world war which propels him into the public arena more than any normal reign would have done because he was like what can i do i can get out there every day and work my ass off and meet everybody and talk to everybody and be part of the war effort with them the structure was there for him to do that because of them so he didn't have to do so much trial and error because they've done it before him so definitely although Albert had his moments yeah definitely Albert and Victoria are the basis for the monarchy we have today. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Thank you so much for joining us Alex it's been really nice to get to know Victoria a little bit better I think and to understand a bit more about her reign which hopefully provides a little bit of context for the syndicate in Victorian London where can people find you if they want to hunt you down and learn more about George V in particular. |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' Okay so I have a substack which is like an online magazine that I produce articles for every week which you can find that a.churchill@substack.com or I have History Hack which is another podcast which is obviously not nearly as good as History Hits podcast but we try and also as well just generally great war group it's my charity which is aimed at not doing just the normal white men on the western front history of the First World War so basically anyway you can't get away from me I'll be down at chalk valley if this goes out before then and also we have Ways Fest as well talking about the Pacific. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Fabulous I subscribe to your substack and would recommend it to anyone and having been on History Hack a couple of times I would recommend that to anyone as well. Plenty of places for you to find Alex thank you so much for joining us Alex it's been great to chat to you. |
| | * '''Alexandra Churchill:''' Thank you. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' I hope you've enjoyed this episode of Echoes of History a Ubisoft podcast brought to you by History Hit next time we'll be stepping into the emerging world of the professional police force something syndicate players have had to get to grips with as we knock on the door and avoid the handcuffs at Scotland Yard don't forget to subscribe or follow echoes of history wherever you get your podcasts and if you're enjoying it you can leave us a review too. See you next time among the echoes of history. |
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| | '''''How The Metropolitan Police Shaped London''''' |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Welcome to Echoes of History, the place to explore the rich stories from the past that bring the world of Assassin's Creed to life. I'm Matt Lewis. Today we're taking another dark turn into the murky underbelly of Victorian London. Home to Assassin's Creed Syndicate, the setting for today's episode is a place that ought to have been a shining beacon in the gloom, a place that was home to the Metropolitan Police Force. Formed in 1829, following the examples of Paris and Glasgow, London was the third city to establish a police force. We're going to explore a name that has become synonymous with London's Metropolitan Police to this day, Scotland Yard. But what did a Victorian police station look like and what went on inside? Picture the scene. The year is 1868, the 31st year of Queen Victoria's reign. You find yourself walking along Whitehall on a typically smoggy day in London. Horse-drawn carriages painted in deep black speed past you. The rickety wheels clatter against cobblestones lining the street floor. You can hear the distant holler of newspaper sellers in Trafalgar Square just up the road, failing to convince passers-by to part with their cash. As you walk you're passed by all sorts of people. Milkmaids hauling huge tin barrels, workmen covered in soot and dust, and a surprising number of well-dressed politicians. But this is no coincidence. Whitehall is the beating heart of the city, the place where real power lies. You turn left and up into an open courtyard lined with trees swaying in the gloom. The yard is surrounded by iron railings and gas lampposts pockmarked with flecks of rust. Parked up at the side are more carriages but these have bars welded across the windows. The word police is painted in searing white across the wooden side panels. Milling about are several men dressed in dark blue tailcoats and capes. One of them wears a belt from which hangs a long and hefty truncheon. Another has a shining polished whistle hung around his neck. On their heads they all wear steel-ringed helmets embossed with a star and crown, the mark of a policeman. At the opposite end of the courtyard stands an imposing building with a grand arched doorway. This is Great Scotland Yard, the headquarters of the newly founded Metropolitan Police Force. Blue-clad police officers walk in and out like ants scurrying about their work. Its brick walls, the colour of red ochre, are cut through by rows upon rows of white rimmed windows. You walk in and are instantly greeted by a bustling hive of activity. A cacophony of clicks fills the air as telegraph receivers relay a multitude of messages. Uniformed officers and plainclothes detectives talk in hushed tones. The room is packed with desks littered with reams of paper as officers diligently note down shreds of information that might later bear importance. On a balcony up above you catch a glimpse of the holding cells used to detain delinquents and troublemakers who breach the peace. A piercing screech cuts through the hubbub as a policeman swings a cell door shut. The prisoner protests but the metallic clink of the lock seals his fate. He's spending the night in Scotland Yard. You walk on past the cells and approach a row of offices. Ahead of you is a wooden door, slightly ajar. Thin beams of light cascade out of the gap. You peer in and see two figures. One is wearing the distinctive navy blue uniform that marks him as a police officer. The other though is dressed in a black tailcoat, a top hat and wields a long thin cane. The man in black hands a thick wad of banknotes to the officer but the wad is far too thick and the policeman is far too smug for this to be his usual wage packet. It can only be one thing. This is a backhander, a bribe, the unmistakable mark of corruption. So much for Scotland Yard being a shining beacon in the gloom. You begin to move away not wanting to attract attention but it's too late. The man in black has spotted you through the back. You've been caught. The constable raises his whistle to his lips and then all hell breaks loose. This is how Scotland Yard is introduced to us in Assassin's Creed Syndicate. So to further explore the history, today I'm joined by Dr. Jonah Miller, lecturer in early modern British history at King's College London. Together we'll delve into when and how Scotland Yard became the headquarters of the Metropolitan Police, what role it played in shaping Victorian London and most importantly why it's called Scotland Yard despite being over 300 miles away from the Scottish border. Join us as we cross the contours of time and hear the real echoes of history resonating from Assassin's Creed Syndicate. Jonah, thank you so much for joining us on Echoes of History. I can't wait to find out more about Scotland Yard. |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' Great to be here, thank you for inviting me. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' To start us off with, maybe people in London know precisely what we're talking about when we say Scotland Yard but for those of us who live in the murky darkness beyond London, what are we talking about when we say Scotland Yard? What do we mean? |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' Well Scotland Yard is a place but it's also a way of referring to an institution. So it's a place, it's in Whitehall and it's where the headquarters of the Metropolitan Police were for most of the 19th century. So Scotland Yard kind of became synonymous with the police and with detectives as a whole. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And today we need to be a little bit careful because the Metropolitan Police isn't the only police force in London, so Scotland Yard actually means something really, really specific in London. |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' Yeah, so the Metropolitan Police Force was set up in 1829 and it's the first modern, organised, professional, hierarchical police force in Britain, not the first in the UK because several earlier versions were set up in Ireland and they were kind of the inspiration for it. And it starts off just being the area of Westminster, Whitehall and a few miles around. It's not the City of London, very importantly for people who are proud of the city's traditions, the city has its own police force. And then it expands so for most of the 19th century it's a 15 mile radius from Charing Cross, is the Metropolitan Police District. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And why was Scotland Yard the Metropolitan Police? Why was it located on that spot in Whitehall? Why was it put there? |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' This is kind of one of the interesting things about what 19th century policing actually was and the legacy that it's left to us. Earlier forms of policing had been very, very localised and very much under kind of local control of parishes and wards in cities. And what really changes with 1829 is the Met was directly connected to the government, the central government, through the Home Office. So the reason that the Met headquarters were in this place called Scotland Yard, which is basically on Whitehall, where the civil service was, is that originally it was basically a branch of the Home Office. So the Metropolitan Police Commissioners answered directly to the Home Secretary, as they still do, and this kind of link between central government and policing is really one of the big changes in 1829. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' The one thing we haven't addressed yet is why on earth the Metropolitan Police located in Whitehall are called Scotland Yard? Where does that name come from? |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' It's actually, the address is number four Whitehall Place. So this is a set of kind of piggledy-piggledy Victorian government buildings off a little side street off Whitehall, which is the big road that connects Trafalgar Square and Parliament Square. This number four Whitehall Place backs onto a place called Scotland Yard, which is a yard. It's a courtyard. And when it was first created, there were kind of two functions for this building. One was that it was an administrative office for the commissioners. There were the commissioners and their clerks and lots of people doing lots of paperwork. And the other one, it was this police station for Division A of the Metropolitan Police, which is sometimes called the Home Division, which kind of policed Whitehall, basically. And their station looked out onto the back onto Scotland Yard. So their force became known as the Scotland Yard Force and the name stuck, basically. So then the whole setup began to be referred to as Scotland Yard. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' It's an interesting evolution of the name, isn't it? So people would maybe say, I'm going to Scotland Yard, meaning I'm going to the entranceway to the Metropolitan Police building at Whitehall. And Scotland Yard is the bit that weirdly stuck as the name for the whole organisation. |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' Yeah, I mean, I guess number four Whitehall Place doesn't quite roll off the tongue in the same way. And I mean, the thing that really kind of entrenches that name, Scotland Yard, is the creation of a detective force, which comes a little bit later. It's 1842 is the first detective, as it's known. And they operate out of this kind of back set of buildings, looking over Scotland Yard. So they are the people who really get associated with that name, Scotland Yard, you know, so-and-so of the yard. And that obviously lasts well into the 20th century. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Do we have any idea why a square, a yard in the middle of Whitehall is named Scotland Yard? Is there a connection to Scotland at all? |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' There is. It's a little bit murky. Whitehall was a royal palace for a very, very long time before it became the kind of centre of the civil service. And in the late medieval period and into the early modern period, this particular part of Whitehall may have been where visiting Scottish royals would stay when they came to visit English monarchs. That's the kind of the story that's told. And it's probably more or less true, but there's-there's really very little documentation, so it's quite hard to be certain. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' I mean, tenuous and murky stories being connected with Scotland Yard in the 19th century is maybe something we need to be wary of. Who then is responsible for the rise of a police force and its basing in Whitehall? Why does London suddenly need a police force? |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' The person who is sort of most strongly associated with this is Robert Peel. So he's the one who gives police officers some of their nicknames, like Peelers and Bobbies. So Bobbies is from Robert, Peelers is from Peel. Yeah, exactly. Slightly oddly, this is almost more a story about Ireland than about London. Robert Peel, later on in the 19th century, he becomes prime minister. But the point where we're talking about him, he's his home secretary. But before that, he has been chief secretary for And what he's done in that job is create police forces. So he's created a couple of different police forces, and they're the first people to be known as Peelers in Ireland. And then when he becomes home secretary in London in the 1820s, there are lots of people worrying about rising crime rates. And this is a bit of, again, slightly murky issue in that crime statistics of all kinds are difficult to interpret. Early 19th century crime statistics are especially difficult to interpret because often this is the first time that statistics are actually being gathered on a particular type of crime. So it's basically impossible to say whether the figures are going up or down. But some people think that they are going up. And Robert Peel likes setting up police forces. He likes the idea of government having a kind of set of men who can carry out orders and keep order and enforce law in a kind of centralized way. So he basically takes advantage of this atmosphere of some people saying that, you know, crime rates are going up and we need to do something. And he pushes through an act for the improvement of the police of the metropolis, which is the 1829 Act that creates the Metropolitan Police. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' It's interesting that it's an Irish template in a place called Scotland Yard that is so intimately associated with the city of London. It's a fascinating set of connections there. |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' There are more Irish connections as you go forward as well. I mean, so the first two police commissioners who Peel chooses, Colonel Charles Rowan, who is an Irish soldier and an Irish barrister called Richard Mayne. And the idea is that both of them know how police forces work because they've got experience of the Irish police forces. Maybe we'll come on to some of the later Irish connections, but it runs all the way through. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah, fascinating. There's a perception in London, I guess, whether the statistics back it up or not, there's a perception that crime is growing. Is this a symptom of London itself expanding as a city, the increasing urbanisation of society? We're heading full steam into the Industrial Revolution period. Is there a sense that as more people pile in there, there needs to be some form of organised policing of the law in the city? |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' Absolutely. So, I mean, the population of London is going absolutely through the roof in the sort of late 18th and early 19th century. And lots of people say that the old institutions just can't handle it. They're not up to it. And so there are lots of kind of stories about parish-based night watchmen who are chasing a suspect and then they get to the border with the next parish and they have to stop. Those stories are probably not true. There are people who are kind of propagandists for police reform who like to put stories like that about. And what does happen even before 1829 is that quite a lot of the local authorities carry out police reform on a kind of micro level. So a lot of parishes and the City of London, the old Corporation of London in the Square Mile, all of them in the early 19th century are sort of getting local acts of Parliament passed. They're doing a kind of tinkering with their local law enforcement structures. So they do have professional officers out on the beat, particularly at night. And one of the kind of curiosities of 1829 is that there's all this big fanfare and, you know, Peel announces that there's a new police for the metropolis. But at first, there are actually fewer officers on the beat after 1829 than there were before, because a lot of the old kind of parochial night watch forces get swept away and they're replaced with this new centralised force, which at the beginning doesn't have the numbers. I mean, they haven't recruited enough and they just can't operate on that scale at first. So it's sort of a curious situation where everybody is worried about the growth of London, about the perceived increase in crime. People at a local level are responding to that, but then there's this big central government intervention which is supposed to kind of really tackle it head on, and which initially may actually be less effective than the kind of localised responses. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And those local parish-level police forces, presumably if they're not put in place by the government, they're being run by parish councils. It's coming down to how good the parish council is, how interested they are in law and order, how much money they have to spend. So presumably the wealthy areas, who maybe have less crime anyway, are the ones who weirdly can afford to be better policed than the areas who might need better policing. And maybe that's the intended benefit of a unified police force, that everywhere will get covered. |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' Absolutely. Before 1829, the parishes that have the best, the largest at least, night watch forces are places in West London where the membership of the parish, like half the people on what would be called the vestry rather than the parish council, half the people on the vestry are titled. They're perfectly happy to kind of splash a bit cash to have lots of people protecting their property from burglars. Whereas in East London, around the docks, there are parishes where you don't have a And so people are paying for local law enforcement through local taxes, through parish taxes. That doesn't mean they have nobody working on the beat, but it does mean that they don't have the kind of same scale of resources as in West London. That said, what they do have is some control over local law enforcement. So if you're a parish ratepayer, you pay your parish taxes, then you're effectively the boss of the night watch. I mean, you can sort of, you know, if you bump into a night watchman at night, you can tell them, head over there because I heard something going on. Or you can, if you're a bit drunk, you can get them to kind of guide you home. There's a much closer connection between the sort of respectable residents of the area and the people doing law enforcement than there is after 1829. And that's one of the things that some people really complain about, that policing is kind of taken out of their hands and suddenly it's all being run by the Home Office rather than by, you know, sort of upstanding parishioners. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' I have absolutely no desire to get political with this. I'm just struck as we're talking about how some things really haven't changed. You know, we get increasing populations in cities that lead to a perception that there's an increase in crimes, that we're currently grappling with problems of, is it better to devolve power to local regional police forces and mayors and things like that? Or is it better to have it all centralised? It seems like these were things that they were thinking about and juggling with 200 years ago, and we almost haven't gone entirely away from them. So not meant as any kind of political comment on anything, just an observation that the world never really changes, does it? So Syndicate, the game is set in 1868, so we're 40 years into the life of the Metropolitan Police Force here. If you and I walked into Scotland Yard to report a crime in 1868, do we know what that building might have looked like? What might have welcomed us as we walked through the door? |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' The first thing we would see, I think, would be just enormous piles of paper everywhere. It was almost immediately overwhelmed by the amount of bureaucracy required to run a kind of city-wide police force. And these were old, slightly dilapidated buildings that all had labyrinthine corridors connecting them together. There's a nice quote from The Times that describes Scotland Yard as a dingy collection of mean buildings in a state of hopeless confusion. It's a sort of Dickensian image of a kind of chaotic bureaucracy. Huge stacks of paper everywhere, clerks running around between them trying to find the right document. Also, of course, a load of police officers who, in 1868, have just had a kind of major reform of their uniform. They've just got helmets rather than reinforced top hats. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Whoa, wait, wait. Reinforced top hats? This is what police are wearing? |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' That's amazing. From 1829 until the 1860s, the uniform of the Metropolitan Police Officer is a reinforced top hat, a cape, and a kind of a big overcoat, all dark blue. And then in the 1860s, partly because they are increasingly worried that police officers are basically not properly protected, they start getting helmets. Though that's also connected to a kind of call from some quarters for a more military style of police. So again, around the same time as you get helmets introduced, you get military style drill. You get lots of calls for police officers to be armed. This is from around the middle of the 19th century. The Colt revolver is appearing more and more in London in the hands of suspected criminals. And there are these cartoons showing a burglar with a Colt revolver up against a police officer with a reinforced top hat and a stick. The suggestion is the police need more defence and more equipment. So there are some people saying that police should carry guns. There are some people saying they should at least carry cutlasses. And this is when they get their helmets. They've also just at this point recently been allowed to grow beards for the first time. So in 1829, they're forbidden to have moustaches or beards. And that's kind of relaxed in the 1860s. And also in the 1860s, this is the first time that they are allowed to appear in public, not in uniform, even when off duty. From 1829 until the 1860s, police officers have to wear their uniform all the time. And the only signifier that they're on duty is a little sort of armband, which they don't wear when they're off duty. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' I'd never known that. That's absolutely unbelievable that you would have to wear your work uniform all the time, even when you're not at work, is something I think we would find incredibly weird today. And whilst I'll say I find that weird, I'm also writing myself a note to start a petition immediately after this to bring back reinforced top hats and capes for police officers. I mean, stab vests and everything else, absolutely great. Reinforced top hats and capes has got to be where it's at. We're still having conversations about arming the police today, aren't we? So again, 150 years later, these are still questions that are being bandied around and questioned today that existed right from almost the beginning of the police force. While we're on the uniformed police officers, do we know what kind of equipment they would have carried? You mentioned, you know, they're not armed with pistols. There's that cartoon of them with a reinforced top hat and a stick. Do we know what actual policing equipment they would have carried that we might recognise today? |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' Yeah, so they do. They have truncheons all the way through. They have truncheons. So that's kind of the baseline. I guess the things that change are that periodically they do get issued with cutlasses and periodically they do also get issued with revolvers. In every instance, this is very controversial. From the beginning, there are lots of people who are very, very nervous about having a police force like this at all. This is why in the aftermath of the 1829 Act, so in the 1830s, it's really pretty touch and go. There are lots of people saying, we should just go back on this. We should abolish them and go back to the old sort of localised system. The key kind of argument for that is that this is a form of military rule and it's worse in the eyes of a 19th century British person. It's French-style military rule. This idea of police officers with weapons controlled by the central government is very strongly associated with France and France is associated with tyranny and despotism. It's the of the free-born Britain to be policed by people who are not militarised agents of central government. So that's why when police do turn up with weapons, it causes a big backlash and the Home Office is constantly trying to navigate these kind of conflicting priorities. Another thing to say about that, about the kind of militarisation thing, is things like barracks. So the police officers live in station houses which look quite like military barracks. And the fact of the blue uniform, which is now embedded in our police mythology, is all about suggesting that police officers are not soldiers. They don't have a red uniform and the blue is supposed to be a kind of softer, more civilian-friendly way of showing that these are figures of authority. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Did they carry handcuffs during this period? Did they have the famous whistle? We think of those kinds of things around at this time too. |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' Handcuffs go way back. They predate the creation of the new police forces. The whistle, I'm not sure exactly when the whistle comes in. In the early 19th century they tend to have a rattle. Not totally dissimilar to a kind of toddler's rattle, a thing that you shake and it makes a very loud noise. Further back in time there are bells, so there's a kind of crossover between the watchman and the bell man. There are various ways that police officers can use these kind of instruments to call on each other. But yes, the whistle does appear at some point in the 19th century. I'm not sure exactly when. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And you mentioned a little bit earlier that we've also entered the period in which there are detectives, so non-uniformed police officers. Do we have any idea of how London has reacted to plainclothes police? Because if you're expecting your police force to be in their uniform all of the time, even when they're not on duty, how do they translate that into a force that don't wear any uniform at all and don't identify themselves as policemen? |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' They're not popular. The story, I guess, really starts before the actual creation of a detective branch, when the Metropolitan Police in the 1830s send some officers in plainclothes to spy on radical political meetings. So there's a guy called Sergeant Popeye who goes to spy on the meetings of the National Union of the Working Classes. He basically becomes an agent provocateur, so he pretends that he's a kind of out-of-work painter and starts suggesting that they blow up government buildings and do really radical, dangerous things. He's then recognised when he's on duty in uniform by one of his supposed comrades from the National Union of Working Classes and this becomes a massive scandal. It triggers a royal commission to investigate the Metropolitan Police and there's a whole newspaper explosion about the idea that there are these spies everywhere who are going to control people and suppress their political rights and lead them to do crazy things like So that's the background and then when you actually get detectives in 1842, essentially to combat that there's a huge propaganda effort to say that these aren't spies, these are a kind of useful branch of the police system and they can help us make sure that burglars and murderers are brought to justice. Part of that propaganda campaign is Charles Dickens, who writes lots of articles. He's best friends with one of the first leading inspectors who's Charlie Field and Charlie Field and Dickens kind of have dinner together and they talk a lot about detective work and Dickens writes these articles for newspapers describing accompanying Charlie Field out walking around the East London slums at night. Then we have Inspector Bucket in Bleak House who's the kind of iconic Victorian detective and that sort of leads to the subsequent 19th century boom in detective fiction and that is all in a way part of this propaganda effort to say it's all right to have plainclothes police officers, they're not spying on you, they're not trying to kind of trick you into doing something that will land you in prison, they are actually useful parts of the system. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' It feels like if we walked into Scotland Yard, if we stepped into Syndicate 1868, we walked in there, we're going to be entering a fairly chaotic building, a labyrinth full of paper, bustling with people, men with newly grown beards because they're allowed to now, some in uniform, some out of uniform, so it feels like a fairly recognisable police force but maybe a more chaotic experience than we might expect it to be today. |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' Yeah, I think so. The detective branch does exist at this point and it is operating out of Scotland Yard but it's not really been kind of separated off from the main metropolitan police structure at this point so I think you might not really be able to tell the difference between a detective and one of the clerks. There's more of a sense that this is basically a government office which occasionally has people in uniform kind of charging through it rather than what you might associate now with walking into a police station where you're kind of very clearly moving into a space where everybody has a different role in society. This is more like a kind of a branch of the home office that just has these sort of slightly old beardy men in uniform. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And so outside of the station, the building of Scotland Yard, in Syndicate you will encounter police officers roaming around the streets all of the time. Do we have any concept of how they policed London? Are there surviving instruction manuals? Do we how violent they were? Did they arrest people in the same way that we do today? Obviously they must have had different policing methods. Do we know how effective they were? Did people support this idea of a police force once it had got itself established? |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' There are lots of surviving instructions and the thing that's really striking about them, I guess, and the thing that becomes very controversial, is that the way that the new police, as well as being centralised and run by the home office, the way that the new police are different is that they basically launch a kind of an assault on working class street life. So they go for street gambling, they go for people playing games and causing obstructions of traffic, they go for sex workers, they go for essentially any activity that looks disorderly and that interferes with idealised middle class version of the city where everybody who's moving around the city is on legitimate business and is going about making money. It's this very Victorian industrial era commercial attitude to what London life is supposed to be like and lots of working class people don't fit into that idealised image. This means that in the early years in particular the kind of interference metropolitan police bring to street life, I mean they're raiding pubs all the time because they're unlicensed premises, and to gambling as well in particular, that kind of interference makes them extremely unpopular with lots of working class people. Sounds like they're becoming the fun police at this point. Yeah absolutely, absolutely, and I mean there is a kind of backing down essentially. I mean in part they're being given a completely impossible task which is to stop the huge number of people in this rapidly growing city from spending their leisure time more or less as they want and it's just not possible. After the first sort of decade or so, or maybe the first couple of decades, the instructions do sort of start to emphasise you really shouldn't be interfering where it's not absolutely necessary, you shouldn't be interfering where there isn't some kind of breach of the peace going on, you don't need to crack down on every 12 year old boy who has set up a little stall for people to gamble on dog race. A notorious example is street boys as they were called playing with hoops which is an image we sort of associate more with the early 20th century but is very much a Victorian pastime, running through the streets with hoops, and there are cartoons of police officers arresting boys for running around with these hoops and it's clearly taking the piss out of the police. I mean that the idea that they're spending their time and therefore spending taxpayers money pursuing these really pretty harmless activities rather than, as people would say now, focusing on proper crime. So that dynamic, that sense of why are you going after kids on the streets who aren't really doing any harm rather than the really serious criminals, that's a very old dynamic. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah again and one that hasn't entirely gone away has it? There are still arguments today about what the police should be doing, shouldn't be doing, where they should spend their time and what they should investigate. So I'm amazed by how relevant some of these early policing questions still are today. So Scotland Yard isn't in Scotland Yard anymore and yet we still call it Scotland Yard, we still associate that place with the institution. Why do you think that has stuck? And I mean something that is going to maybe leap out at lots of people is Scotland Yard's involvement in something like Jack the Ripper murders in the later 19th century. They become really closely associated with that. Ultimately it's a case that never gets solved and yet as an institution they survive those kinds of problems, still exist today and we still call it Scotland Yard. Why do you think it became so immortal? I don't know. |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' I think there's a couple of things. Maybe one is that the police were a new thing in the first half of the 19th century and people were kind of calling them all sorts of different things. I mean so there's the famous, you know, there's the Peelers and the Bobbies. |
| | * They're also a lot more very rude names or sort of hostile names. I mean they get called bludgeon men, they get called blue locusts, they get called all sorts of things. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' What's the rudest name they get called? What's the most insulting one you can think of? |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' There are some that I probably shouldn't say. So the blue locust one actually has some sort of interesting layers to it. It's a name that some working class people call the police, particularly in the north of England but also in London. And it's really the idea that police officers are locusts in the sense that they don't do any work and they eat everything up. And this is because from the point of view of a working class person in industrial Britain, what the police do is they walk around all day. They're not in a factory or a shipyard or even doing the kinds of portering and all the kind of heavy lifting labour that goes on in London, moving things from one place to another. They're just walking around and they're paid from taxation. So there's this sense that, you know, they're taking our money and they're not doing anything. So the blue locust is a real kind of emblematic name of that sort of working class hostility to the police. But the thing about Scotland Yard, I think, the name is that it's a name that doesn't highlight the connection with central government. So it's quite a nice name from the point of view of the Met. They're quite happy to kind of hang on to it because it isn't, you know, number four Whitehall Place, which makes you think of Whitehall, which makes you think of the Home Office or the Civil Service. And it means that they're not called the government police or the state police or any of these things that they're trying to avoid being called. So Scotland Yard is actually quite handy for them because it sort of doesn't have any of those associations. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah, that's a really interesting point that hadn't occurred to me because they don't have to mention, as you say, the connection to government, Whitehall, the Home Office. They don't have to use the word metropolitan, which implies some widespread power and authority. They don't even use the word police if they call themselves Scotland Yard. So all of the words that might have a negative connotation for an early police force can be circumvented by just naming it after the place where it is. I'd never thought of it like that, but it actually works, doesn't it? |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' The place itself, actually. I mean, you mentioned the Whitechapel murders and the place itself does kind of get more attention in the 1880s, partly because of the Whitechapel murders and just lots and lots of talk about what the detectives are doing, but also because Scotland Yard is bombed in 1884 by so-called Fenians, by Irish nationalists. They sort of don't place the bomb in quite the right place, so they blow up an empty office which is attached to Scotland Yard and they also blow up a neighbouring pub called The Sun with nobody in it. The landlord of The Sun then makes loads of money by charging people to come and see the wreckage of his pub. But that kind of draws lots of attention to Scotland Yard as a place and as a kind of, I guess, British institution which is seen as being under attack from Irish nationalism and, in fact, it's in the aftermath of that bombing that what's called the Special Irish Brunch, which later becomes Special Brunch, is created. So that sense of the Metropolitan Police being a kind of core British institution that has to be protected partly comes from that kind of 1880s moment, at the same time as they're being criticised at length for failing to do anything about the Whitechapel murders. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Just to round off our conversation about the idea of Scotland Yard and the place of Scotland Yard, I guess, why is it not at Scotland Yard anymore? Presumably at some point it has to move for some reason. |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' Yeah, so this is 1890 when basically they move because, I mean, the stacks of paper get too high and there are so many clerks that they start kind of colliding with each other in the corridors. Essentially they outgrow the buildings and so they move to what is called New Scotland Yard, which is a building on the embankment. So this is part of the story of Victorian London that, you know, part of the Thames kind of disappears under the Victorian embankment. And it's initially a site that was supposed to be a new National Opera House, but then the person who's kind of trying to do that runs out of money and so the Mets step in and say, we'll buy this. It's a sort of grand red Victorian building. Somebody calls it a very constabulary kind of castle. So New Scotland Yard, they have this huge building to themselves and that sort of works for about 70 years into the 20th century. But then in 1967 essentially the same problem occurs again, which is that there's too much paper and too many people, too many administrators. So they move again to what is now New Scotland Yard, but probably ought to be called New New Scotland Yard, which is the present site with the kind of big rotating sign that you see on the menu. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' That's my image of New Scotland Yard. So it's interesting to know where that emerged from and the steps that have been gone through to get there. So Assassin's Creed Syndicate is the first game in which players have to deal with a police force who are trying to prevent you from what you're trying to do everywhere else. You've kind of had a free reign to run around. To what extent do you think the emergence of a police force helped to shape 19th century London and redefine people's to law and order on the streets? |
| | * '''Jonah Miller:''' It's part of the reshaping of the city and it's part of this drive by government to make London, which in the 18th century was an incredibly chaotic city, to make it orderly and to kind of constrain the huge mass of people to kind of conform to certain ideas of how people are supposed to behave in urban space. And this is why, for example, I mean we didn't mention this earlier, but this is why one of the kind of signature moves of the Victorian police officer is to say move on, to move people on. But what this is really about is kind of stopping blockages in the circulation of the city system. Anybody whose activities don't fit with the kind of idealized model of how the city is supposed to operate, they become the targets of the new police. And it doesn't work in a sort of basic way. I mean they don't manage to kind of make London an incredibly orderly and perfectly harmonious city, but it does mean that people are now kind of navigating this system in their daily lives. So people see police officers on the beat all the time. They become part of the kind of furniture of the city. It means that the government and the state, if you want, are kind of very, very present in everyday life in a new way. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And have been ever since, I guess, to this very day. Well, thank you so much for joining us, Jonah. It's been absolutely fascinating to explore the beginnings, the origins of the idea of a name of Scotland Yard, the transitions that it went through, and the kind of 19th century impact that they had, the appearance of the officers. It's been absolutely incredible to trace all of that. And I am definitely off to start a petition for the return of reinforced top hats and capes for all police officers. I think that is something we're missing today. But thank you so much for joining us, Jonah. It's been brilliant. I hope you've enjoyed this episode of Echoes of History, a Ubisoft podcast brought to you by History Hit. Next time, we'll be exploring a key driver of the seismic changes that drove the development of London and England during this period, as we take a closer look at the Industrial Revolution. Don't forget to subscribe and follow Echoes of History wherever you get your podcasts. And if you're enjoying it, you can leave us a review to make my day too. See you next time among the echoes of history. |
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| | '''''The Industrial Revolution: The Birth Of Modern London''''' |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Welcome to Echoes of History, the place to explore the rich stories from the past that bring the world of Assassin's Creed to life. I'm Matt Lewis. Today we're continuing our journey into the underbelly of Victorian London, home to Assassin's Creed Syndicate, and exploring an event that defined the era. The Industrial Revolution began in Britain in the late 18th century, giving birth to an industrial age that continued for over 200 years. The period was characterized by rapid economic, social, and technological growth. These innovations completely overturned the way of life in Britain, and later spread across Europe and the rest of the world. But what was life like for those living through history's most rapid and radical period of technological, economical, and social change? To start, let's follow Syndicate into the smoggy heart of the Revolution. The stink. It's overwhelming as you step into the street. The great stink of London. This close to the River Thames, the air is thick with the smell of sewage. Along the street, the muskier animal smell of horses, tobacco from the cabman's pipe. And of course, the ever-present industrial smoke. The year is 1868, and it's early in the morning. The city around you is just waking up. Gas streetlights guide you down the road. The sun has not yet fully risen, but the working day will soon begin. You join the bustle of the morning traffic, the tide of men, women, and even children who shuffle deeper into London's East End. These are London's working poor. Many have come from the countryside to find jobs in the warehouses and factories that chug out plumes of grey-green smog. Some have come from Europe, some from even further away, from the farthest reaches of the mighty British Empire. They live in the cramped tenement housing you walk past, the most unfortunate in slums. The wealthy, meanwhile, live in comfortable townhouses, often right next door. Jostled by a passerby, you sidestep into a muddy puddle. It splashes up over your boots, a reminder of why you prefer to travel the city by carriage. Over the thrum of the morning rush, you hear the scream of a steam train engine in the distance. Great hulking locomotives carrying people and goods to and fro across the country. You look up in wonder to see the trail of steam above the tightly packed rooftops. Passing small street vendors and women holding infants on doorsteps, you overhear two workers chatting. There's a new Prime Minister, they say, although they didn't vote for him. They can't vote. They don't own enough property. They can't read the newspapers or pamphlets that lay trampled at the side of the road. But nonetheless, they talk about trade unions, about the promise of improving working conditions. Rounding the corner, your eyes start to burn, smoke blowing into your face. You can feel ash and soot coating your skin and your clothes. Chimneys tower above you, reaching from long brick factory buildings. The workers are being called through the gates. Dockers carry on towards the river, ready to welcome cargo from across the world into London's ports. You linger along the edge of the street, watching people as they hurry to beat the whistle that signals the start of a gruelling 12 hour shift. Today on Echoes of History, I'm joined by Tom Ferber of the London Archives, which is owned and funded by the City of London Corporation. Together, we're going to be talking about how Victorian Britain was shaped by the Industrial Revolution, delving into some of the inventions that changed ordinary people's lives, how they responded to those changes, and why London ended up at the centre of it all. Welcome to Echoes of History, Tom. It's fantastic to have you here. Thank you very much for having me. I'm delighted to be here. I can't wait to get into this episode all about the Industrial Revolution, because this is my neck of the woods. Parts of my family is from Willanall, firmly in the Black Country, and I am sitting here not too far away from Ironbridge. So this is an area that's really protective about its Industrial Revolution history. So this is one I'm really looking forward to finding out more about. |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' Wonderful. And me too. And I'm quite parochial, I must say, as I work for the London Archives, so I'm quite London-focused. But hopefully between the two of us, we can put our heads together, put our hats together, and we can cover all the areas of the Industrial Revolution. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' In our introduction, we've tried to paint a picture of industrial London, where the syndicate takes place. What would life have been like in Britain, kind of on the eve of the Industrial Revolution, before all of this really kicks off? |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' Yeah, so that's a really good question. And not for the first time today, you're going to hear me say, well, that depends when you start something. So one of the things I'm sure we'll kind of touch on a lot as the conversation unfolds is how historians sort of disagree about when this happens, when that happens, or they disagree about what you call a certain thing. So it's hard to say exactly when the Industrial Revolution starts. But a safe bet, I'm not going to get in too much trouble if I say about 1750 is sort of a common date, around 1750 is the start of the Industrial Revolution. So what was life like in London and the UK before 1750? Well, the first thing to say is it would be far more rural, that is, most people lived in the countryside, and far more agricultural, so most people would have worked on the land. Around 1500, we can say about 75% of people worked in agriculture, worked in farming, and about another sort of, a little under 20%, we might say, sort of 18% would have worked in the countryside or not in the land, and only about 7% of people would have worked in an urban setting, so town, town or city. By 1750, that's starting to change. In rough numbers, 25% of people live in towns and cities, and the rest live in the countryside. But interestingly, the proportion of people working on the land, as opposed to working in what we might call a proto-industry, has changed. So about 45% of people work on the land, and the rest work in the countryside, but in sort of small domestic workshop settings. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Okay, so the profile of people across the country is beginning to change even before we hit the Industrial Revolution period proper? |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' Absolutely. So one of the things that we will find is that it's a gradual, it's a gradual process, and we can kind of always go kind of further and further back and look at antecedents of things are changing. But that's right, there is a changing pattern of work, and many historians think that that's the key to why the Industrial Revolution happened in Britain, kind of grows out of that. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yes, I think there's always a danger to think that one day someone out in a field somewhere struck a bit of coal in the ground, and then suddenly everyone moved to the city, and it was all smoggy, and that's it, it happened overnight. |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' Exactly that. And then maybe the term itself has something to blame, Industrial Revolution, that does imply something that happens quite, quite quickly. Maybe the term is a bit misleading. I think we could think of it as a gradual change, and the revolution comes in with the significance of the change, not necessarily the speed of it. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' More like an industrial evolution. |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' Indeed, I believe undergraduates across the land have to write essays on evolution or revolution, yeah. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And what are some of the factors that are contributing to that change? So in the build-up to the Industrial Revolution, what is causing people to move away from working the land and towards town and city life more and more? |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' So there's quite a few, it's quite an exhaustive list that kind of all kind of come together at the same time. We can start with changes on the land itself. So before the Industrial Revolution, historians often talk about an agricultural revolution. So the agricultural revolution starts in the 17th century, the upshot of which is that the land is more productive in general, a given bit of land is more productive, more land is brought under cultivation. So less people are needed to work the land, and each of those people working the land can produce more stuff. So lots of lots of lots of good things. That comes about for kind of quite a few reasons. It's to do with better, better seeds, better soil preparation through selective breeding, selective breeding of animals. And this allows fields to be no longer left fallow. So it used to be to make sure you got all kind of the proper nutrients in your soil to make sure that the soil was super productive, you would leave your field fallow, you wouldn't grow any plants every four years. But basically advances in understanding how you can regenerate your fields by planting turnips, planting clover, rotating your crops, meant that you could you could eradicate that fallow process so more food could be grown. There's also another very important factor here that was very contentious at the time for the people that lived through it, and is now contentious in quite what it means for the agricultural revolution, productivity, and that's something called enclosure. And this is actually one of these things, there's a real folk memory in some sort of parts of British society about the dangers, one of the dangers, the evil consequences of enclosure. So what was enclosure? As the name suggests, it was when fields were fenced off. So it used to be before enclosure, that there was things called common fields. So people in agricultural society, they had a bit of field that they could farm for themselves, feed themselves, feed their family, maybe some surplus would be sold for profit. And then throughout the, starting in the 17th century, these are enclosed. So that means they're brought together. The idea being this is more efficient, more efficient, you don't have people kind of ploughing one bit of land on this side of the village, another bit of land on that side of the village. These kind of new processes that we've talked about can be applied across the fields as a whole. All well and good, except if you don't have a legal claim to your bit of common land, you might get kicked off that land and you're no longer able to farm it. So what enclosure does is it means there's lots of people that used to work in the countryside who no longer, who no longer can. So that's very important as well. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' And I guess that also contributes to our current picture of England as this kind of, you know, the patchwork of fields and the hedgerows and all of that kind of stuff that we think of as quite a romantic image of Britain, but it's actually a hangover of land being taken out of people's hands, rights being removed from people who had enjoyed those rights for centuries. It's a kind of physical scar, albeit we think of it as quite an attractive scar, but it's a physical scar of that change. |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' Absolutely. So that if you fly over Britain one way or another and you look down, there is that distinctive, that distinctive field pattern. If you look closely, or if you look at aerial photography, you can actually sometimes still see the individual stripes of the older field patterns, which is quite interesting. You've hit on something I think really important, and we talk about romanticisation. So it's easy to think of a bucolic vision of the countryside working in tune with the land. We're going to talk about some of the hardships of moving to a factory system later, I'm sure, but we shouldn't underestimate the hardship of working in the land. You could work very, very hard and not have any food at the end of the season. Hunger was a common experience pre-agricultural revolution. Absolutely right to not romanticise that. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' I love it when I accidentally make a good point. |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' It's good, yeah. Me too. Monkeys and typewriters, for me, comes to mind, not for you. Yeah, of course. So we have the agricultural revolution. So what this means is that less people are required to work the land, and this frees people up to work in the city. If less people are needed to work on the land, a smaller rural population can support a bigger urban population. And one of the factors in the Industrial Revolution is we see population grow. Before about 1750, population is remarkably steady, around about five million, with a big old blip for the Black Death in the medieval period, but it's about five million people. After 1750, it grows and grows and grows and grows and grows. It's about 17 million by 1851, and continues growing again. Of course, it's about 67 million today, and that's a really important consequence of industrialisation. So there's changes afoot in the countryside. There's also changes afoot in the political system. So 17th century is a very tumultuous century in British history, Reformation, Civil War, Beheaded Kings, all those sorts of grisly things. But from about 1689, it largely settles down. There is still a few important rebellions, the so-called Jacobite rebellions. But largely speaking, we have a stable political system from 1689. And this is really important, because, you know, what comes to mind when you think of the Industrial Revolution, factories, machines, improvement, all that is investment. You don't invest your money in something expensive and stationary, if you don't think it's going to be around. If there's civil war, and there's rebellion, stuff gets damaged, stuff gets stolen, all that sort of thing. You're not going to be investing in buildings and stuff. So this political stability is very important as well. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' It's a fascinating collection of building blocks that almost needed to be in place for this to happen, that all seem to have aligned at around about the right time, all in the one place too. You mentioned before that 1750 is quite a safe date to go for, for the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. Safe-ish. Ish, ish, yeah. Ish, ish, ish. What is it in particular that happens around then that makes it a good point to kick things off at? |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' A good point. So what I might do is I might duck that for a minute. And we might talk about what we're really talking about when we talk about the Industrial Revolution. And then with that in mind, we can say, well, why actually is it quite tricky to kind of put a date to it? Why are historians so kind of broad in their estimation of their date? So at the heart of the Industrial Revolution is finding kind of new forms of power. So new ways to kind of fuel, fuel activity to kind of create useful stuff. We talked about life before the Industrial Revolution, it was hard work. If you wanted something doing, with a few exceptions around water and windmills, it needs to be muscle power, either your own or animal power. But the Industrial Revolution brings in new sources of power to do useful work. It starts in the British context as coal. Coal is used to heat steam, steam is used to drive an engine. So this is what it comes down to, this new source of power. Kind of running in parallel to that, there's a sense that you can, even if you don't have an extra source of power, you can make your kind of muscle power more efficient by the use of machines, by mechanisation, through clever use of machines, gears, pulleys, all those various things that we think about when it comes to the Industrial Revolution, we can kind of get more work out of, we can be more efficient in the way we use our time to produce raw materials, particularly in cotton and wool, and cotton in particular at this stage. So we've got new power and new machines, we can then use the new power to power the machines. And now production is massively, massively increasing. But because we need steam to drive, we need big steam engines to drive our machines, we can't work in our homes anymore, we can't work in these literal cost industries anymore, we need to bring people together. And that gives birth to the factory system. Steam doesn't travel in the way electricity travels, you need that power, you need to be local. So these three things combined, new sources of power, mechanisation, and kind of bring people together, leads to our kind of final output of the Industrialisation. And that's when manufacturing, making stuff, takes over from growing stuff as the kind of the main source of the economy when manufacturing takes over from agriculture. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah, I guess I'm struck slightly on the human level here that people have dealt with the agricultural revolution that's meant less people are required to do the same amount of work in the countryside, which has driven them to towns. And then all of a sudden, once they're there, they're faced by a situation where there are now changes in technology that mean that less people are required to do the muscle work there, because machines are beginning to take over. And so this is all about a kind of reduction in the importance of individuals in these things as well. Everywhere, people are being replaced by technology. |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' Absolutely. So it's in a French context rather than English context, but it's quite a symbolic moment when a French factory owner put some flowers on a machine saying that was my most productive worker of the week, where we have employee of the week, he was giving his machine employee of the week. And absolutely right. And there was a real sense that something had changed and something was changing people, not overnight, over a course of generations. But people were learning a new way of working. And there was a lot of early resistance to this. There was a quite sort of harsh discipline on the terms and quite harsh discipline when it came to getting people to learn this new way of work. So one obvious thing there is people had to learn what's called clock time. We take it for granted that we can tell the time. We have watches, we have clocks on phones, computers, all this sort of thing. Actually, you didn't need to know the time to that level of accuracy. We talked about agricultural work, you got up when it was it was light, you kind of went to bed, maybe when it was dark, maybe you had some lighting, but not basic lighting, that was that. It doesn't matter if you start working your field at 10 past six or 10 past seven, loosely, loosely speaking. But the factory owners were keen that people would work from a fixed time, often six till six, and a minute late was a minute was a minute too late. So factory discipline is really important. Often factories had clock big clock towers. And the first thing that you would do when being sort of brought into this factory system is you'd be taught how to tell the time. And you'd learn if you were that minute late for work, you'd be fined half a day's pay, for example. There's this idea that because so much money and capital has been put into the machines, they have to they have to keep on working, they have to keep working very long days. I don't know about you, but if I'm trying to justify an expensive purchase, I might be now what's the cost per wear? What's the cost per use? And if I can say, well, actually, this might be more expensive, but if I use it more often, the cost comes down. A similar logic is at work by the factory owners, they've paid for these machines, they need to keep them working. And it's the machine that sets the pace and not the person. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah, fascinating. And I think it's striking, again, how you can see the slow gradual move from a situation in which the people are in control, albeit regulated slightly by nature. But then all of a sudden, thump, the machines are in command. And the people are now having to work to the rule of the machine and the factory owner. And I guess, you know, that's where we will eventually get lots of industrial relations problems, because the people are starting to not matter as much as as this inanimate object that is driving everything. |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' Absolutely right. And that is one of the facts of the Industrial Revolution is the work becomes less interesting, you have less ownership of it, you're de-skilled, it becomes monotonous. And there are benefits for workers, we shouldn't kind of go too far the other way. But one definite downside is that work becomes boring, it's not something it's something that's much harder to enjoy. And there's risk associated as well. So you really only doing it because you have to you have to do it. And there's a sense, I think, that the early industrialists with their kind of harsh, harsh discipline, their factory discipline, really set back later, sort of industrial relations, because it was really that us and them sort of environment that was set up. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah. And I guess the last question, I'm conscious that we still haven't even got the Industrial Revolution underway yet. But this is all such fascinating stuff. One of the questions I wanted to ask before we get it, it properly underway, is why Britain? Is it too reductive to say, empire equals the right environment for the Industrial Revolution? |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' I would say so. But it's a really tricky one. And I must say I have a bit of trepidation about answering this question at all, because it's still quite sort of heated and vociferous debate about what causes it. And it's not always entirely friendly debate either. But you know, fools rush in where angels fear to tread. So here's here's my take on it. I'm quite persuaded by what's known as called the labour and resources hypothesis. And this basically is pretty simple, arguably reductive, but I think it I think it works. The Industrial Revolution, the background is all the things that we've talked about agricultural revolution, capital, colonialism, all those sorts of things. What makes it happen in Britain and anywhere else is two quite simple factors. Wages are high, and cold is cheap. We talked didn't we about 1750, people are starting to work in a different way. There's a development, there's developments in the economy that already happened. The economy is quite sophisticated. And as a result of that people are able to charge, you know, demand for labour means they're able to charge a bit more. Around this time as well, Britain has been very heavily deforested. Wood was used for cooking for building and empire link again, building ships, warships and merchant ships as well. So wood's becoming very expensive. From about the 16th century onwards, people have started to turn to coal to heat their homes and things like that. And Britain is abundant in is abundant in coal. Wages are expensive, coal is cheap. So actually, in the long run, you can save money if you use coal to power your machines rather than rather than people, lots of things follow from that. That's not the only explanation, I should say it's not kind of it's not at all, but there is a degree of support for that. And I quite like that one. I think it answers some of the counterfactuals. I think people do often respond very well to what's concretely in front of them, these kind of material conditions, and the more sort of abstract things, they're important. But I think quite often people respond to say quite concrete things like that. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah. And these advances, I guess we can call them advances are driven quite often by individuals. There are some names that we associate quite closely with this period, James Watt, Alexander Graham Bell is someone that players of syndicate will encounter and interact with in the game. How important are some of those individuals and who are maybe some of the key individuals in driving this forwards? |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' Yeah, so the individual individuals are very important. You can tell that one very popular way to tell the story of the Industrial Revolution is through a series of inventions and inventors. I think we've got to be careful about leaving the people out entirely, you know, the working people out entirely. But at the same time, people, there were some clever people out there and they invented some very clever things and someone had to invent it. So James Watt's a really good example. And in many ways, sort of is a microcosm of what happens in terms of inventions in the Industrial Revolution. So he's sometimes said to have invented the steam engine and that's not accurate. The steam engine was invented beforehand, but he improved the steam engine. And this is what we see as a really important trend and of people, they take something and think this is good, but it could be better because and it moves forward. So going back to this idea of coal, the first working, the first practical steam engines, the so-called beam engine or the Newcomen engine was used to pull water out of coal mines. So there's a lot of coal in the UK, as we've heard, but the mines are very prone to flooding. So Thomas Newcomen and Thomas Savoy are the names most associated with this. They created a steam engine, a beam engine. And what this does, and I'm not the most mechanically minded people, so please no one at home be too cross if I get this wrong. I hope the details are at least okay, is you have a cylinder that's heated by a boiler. This creates steam. This drives a piston upwards. This cylinder is then closed with a valve and cold water is sprayed into the cylinder. And this creates a vacuum which pulls the cylinder back down. The pressure of the atmosphere brings it back down. So another name you'll hear is an atmospheric engine. So we've got a piston that's gone up by the heating of steam and it comes down through cooling. Attached to this piston is a beam, hence beam engine, and this beam is then used to empty the coal mine on the other end. So that's the beam engine. So around about 1764, James Watt is tasked with repairing one of these engines and he works out, he spots this inefficiency, and he builds a separate condenser to keep the heat going. So you lose less time, you lose less energy. So that's this idea of an improvement. And he then realises that up and down is a useful motion, it's a reciprocal motion, it's a useful motion. But even more useful for driving machinery would be a rotary motion, so called sun and planet gear. And he adds a pressure gauge and other things as well. So you can see we have a technology, you know, from 1712 up to 1764 and so it goes on. So he's a useful figure. And he is obviously remembered in the Watt, which is a unit of measurement of power. And Alexander Graham Bell as well. So he's a bit of a later, he's a later figure, and he does appear in the game. One of my favourite ways to do the kind of the gang stronghold missions is to fire the hallucinogenic darts into the braziers to thin out, thin the amount of enemies you have to deal with. There's no evidence of that, sadly, but maybe in a particularly dark corner of an archival strongroom I might be able to find it and that would be a good day. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah, no evidence of it so far doesn't mean it didn't happen. We can hold on to that idea. |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' Exactly. Absence of evidence isn't necessarily evidence of absence, as they say, in a different context. So Alexander Graham Bell's another really interesting figure. So he's touched on, he's touched on in the game. He spends Scottish-born early life in London and then his most sort of celebrated discovery, invention, excuse me, is the telephone. And that's really an American story that takes place. We know that he has spent his early life working in elocution. He had some family connections with deafness, his mother in particular. So he was interested in devices that might help with that. And he was more broadly interested in sort of science invention as well. And these sort of come to a head in 1875. He invents the first working telephone. So he's in this room, his assistant Watson is in the other, and he simply says, Mr. Watson, come here. I want to see you. So and that's the first words spoken on the telephone. It might be apocryphal, but we hear that he wanted the standard greeting on telephone not to be hello, that was Edison's idea. He wanted it to be ahoy. So you'd pick up the phone and be ahoy, if Bell had had his way. And the other funny thing about Alexander Graham Bell on the telephone is he refused to have one in his office, because it was too distracting. That's something that we can all sympathise with today, as phones have become grown and done all manner of things that Alexander Graham Bell probably didn't imagine as well. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah, yeah, fascinating when someone invents something that they wouldn't touch themselves with a bargepole, for reasons that we would utterly recognise and appreciate today. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' What are some of the main notable kind of technological advancements? We've talked a bit about steam engines, which I guess lead to trains, almost directly. We've talked about the telephone, electricity we associate with this period as well. Are these all of the things that are building up to speed up the Industrial Revolution and keep a head of steam going, for want of a better phrase? |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' Absolutely. So for me, the railways is the big one. I'm quite parochial in my historical interest these days. I'm very much sort of a London-focussed, and the railways have had such a massive impact on London history, on the kind of connectivity in London and the rest of the country and the world. So railways goes back to coal once again. Railways were used in coal fields as a way of, before steam engines, railways, that is having a cart that runs on rails running on the ground, was used to help move heavy loads of coal from pithead to mine, that sort of thing. But drawn by horse. And then that pattern we're going to see as well. We have one technology that works quite well, another technology comes along that kind of sits into it, something labour-saving that can be fuelled and powered with the new technology, steam, in this case. So James Watt's steam engines could run machines, but they couldn't move. The figure that we associate with the first sort of locomotive steam engine, steam engines that move, is Richard Trevithick, a Cornish mining engineer that applied a lot of his trade in Wales, but even got as far as Peru in quite an interesting life. So he produces the first sort of locomotives, but it's a figure called George Stevenson we talk of as the father of the railways, because Trevithick was moved on from various projects, he didn't sort of stay with one project necessarily to see it through to commercial fruition. So George Stevenson is the father of the railways. The first railways are really a northern phenomenon, so the Stockton and Darlington Railway is part freight, part passenger. The freight was moved by steam, the passengers were moved by horses because they weren't quite sure it was safe yet. And then the London to Manchester Railway, and here we're talking 1820s, the London to Manchester Railway is the first intercity railway. And in the 1830s what was one of the most celebrated Victorian building projects is started and finished remarkably. So in five years an engineering project which the Victorians thought were on par with the pyramids was finished, and this was 112 mile London to Birmingham Railway. This is something called the first long distance intercity railway, and it was the first railway that linked London to other cities. And this is one of those things, I think it's hard to sort of overstate how important this was. It just collapses the distance between cities. Pre-industrial revolution, two and a half weeks to get from London to Edinburgh. You can probably do it, as that technology moves on, you can do it less and less and less. We complain when it takes six to eight hours today to get from Euston to Edinburgh or Glasgow, but a lot less time than two and a half weeks. So the railway brings people together, but it also has other kind of impacts as well. Before pre-industrial revolution, Britain was a very regional place, there was a regional dialect, regional accents, even sort of local time zones, local customs. Bringing people together starts to kind of erode those distances, those differences between time and place. And the railway, as well as sort of bringing, being a kind of big capital project in itself, it also created sort of further investment. And the period from 1830s to around 1860s is sometimes known as the railway mania, because people got wind that they had some money, you could invest it in the railway, and you could often get a lot of that money, a lot of that money back, often sort of return as high as eight percent or something like that. So various private companies compete to open more and more railway lines. And if people are familiar with London, you will know there's just a silly amount of stations, there's just all kind of all dotted rounds near the outskirts of central London. I tend to, I grew up sort of just north of London in Watford, so I'm more familiar with the northern end on the Euston Road or near the Euston Road, we have Marylebone, Euston, St Pancras and King's Cross, King's Cross station. And they're not hugely efficient, quite annoying if you have to change trains quite quickly, and that's because they were all private lines. And one of, I think, the really quite special things about the Victorian railways, as well, was the pride they took in their work. And you see this across all kind of Victorian engineering. They were celebrating, they were celebrating the work that they did. The Cathedral, sometimes called Cathedrals of Steam, the big stations. St Pancras could be, you know, looks like the Houses of Parliament's huge Gothic building. Euston station, sadly, was remodelled after the 1960s, I want to say, but that was famous for a neoclassical design, so it looked like something out of ancient Greece or ancient Rome. It used to go through the Euston Arch, which was, I mean, not so hot in my Greek mythology, but I believe there was a particular symbolic purpose of this arch. It signified a journey from the one realm or one zone to the other. Very symbolic, very symbolic, what was happening on the joining of these two cities. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' |
| | * Yeah, it's absolutely fascinating. And I guess, interesting for Assassin's Creed Syndicate, that you would pick the railways when a lot of the game is centred around moving about the city using the railways and using a railway carriage as a base and all of that kind of thing. So really pulling in that idea that this is a revolutionary thing that is changing the country, the world. |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' Absolutely, indeed. It's just, again, hard to use too many superlatives about the changes that it makes. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah. And just returning, if we can, we've talked a bit about some of the individuals, and we don't want to move away too far from talking about the other people, everybody that was affected by this. How does rapidly industrialising a and the changes that that brings, how does that impact normal working people? I guess you've got more of them being crammed into smaller spaces in the city, being forced to work in factories to this rule of a machine rather than any kind of rule of nature. But you mentioned earlier as well that there's an increase in consumerism. So we know there's lots of negatives, I guess. Are there some positives to balance those things out? |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' Absolutely. And I think it's one of those things where the average person does well, but if you're, that means people, that average means some people are doing very well, and some people are doing badly. So the industrial revolution brings levels of comfort and abundance that are unknown previously in human history. As I understand the econometrics, the measures of what's happening when, from about, historians don't really know whether it was good or bad for your average person for pre-1800. It's controversial from 1800 to 1850. And from 1850 onwards, there is a general rise in living standards. So your average person is doing, has more clothes, is better fed, has more money, all those sorts of things. But as we alluded to, that does disguise very great differences within that. But there is no doubt that people are doing better out of it in some way. And that life in the countryside is often crushingly poor as well. So that's really important to bear in mind. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah, I guess we are at risk again of romanticising and idealising that life in the countryside, you know, this was all skipping through fields, playing with the birds and all that sort of stuff. It was actually at least as much of a grind in the countryside as it was in the factories. It's just a different environment. |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' Absolutely. One way I've heard it described is that you can be toiling all day in the fields and you won't get fed at the end of the season if the weather's bad. If you're toiling in the factory, you will get paid. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah, I mean, and that's a pretty stark, you know, however hard the factories were, you're guaranteed money, which means food on the table. |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' Indeed. And I mean, I'm always careful saying this because I wouldn't want to work in a factory. It sounded very, very difficult. 12 hour days were the norm, noisy, dangerous. But the real problems came for people not so much when they were working as when they weren't working. So it was the precarity of work or people that had only casual work. We're talking a bit later now, but there's a very famous figure in London history called Charles Booth. He produced one of the iconic documents, I think, of urban London 19th century called the Booth Poverty Map. And this is a colour coded map of London with the various colours denoting the amounts of wealth or poverty in London, ranges from gold all the way to black for the kind of people with the least resources. And this is the result of a 16 volume survey into what's called life and labour in London. And what he found is the people that really suffered are the people that were out of work through injury, illness, old age, or that couldn't work often, couldn't work often enough. Casual labour was a really big thing. And those are the people that really sort of suffer, I think, from the Industrial Revolution, the people that can't get the work or can't get enough work. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah. So the zero hours contracts and the gig economy, nothing ever changes really, does it? |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' There are definite striking parallels to today. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah. How did people then during this period of fairly rapid but continual change, how did people react to that? Because we… Can we blame this period for the increase in political emancipation and the desire for people to have more say over what's happening? There's the emergence of things like trade unions. Is that a reaction to this dominance of the machine and the factory owner? |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' I think so. So we can... I think a very useful date, I think, is 1867. So 1867, lots of things happened that year. But the three that I'm interested in, make sure I get these right, they're in the right order. The second Great Reform Act, and what this basically gives some portion of the working population the vote. I say some portion because it's linked to how much income you have. So in 1832, there's the first Great Reform Act that allows effectively the middle classes to vote. The second Great Reform Act allows people who are… And it's determined by class because it's due to your property ownership. So if you own property, you can vote. In the second Great Reform Act of 1867, you can rent as people who rent are allowed to vote, but only to pass a certain price point. If you pay more than a certain amount of rent, you're allowed to vote. And this was deemed to be... It shows if you were invested properly in society, you were responsible, effectively that you weren't going to sort of vote away private property and the property of the wealthy, that idea. So 1867 is the Great Reform Act. So before then, a lot of sort of reform politics campaigning was dedicated to getting that. We talk about the Chartist Movement. And the Chartist, that name comes from the Charter, the Great Charter, their list of demands of which voting was on them. But after we have the vote, there is more an emphasis on getting better wages and kind of working within the system. So in 1867, we have the Great Reform Act. 1867 is also the year that the first volume of Capital, Karl Marx's Das Kapital, was published. Obviously, a revolutionary tradition, the idea being that saying that capitalism is inherently exploitative, and that the only way for sort of fairness to arrive is so that workers' families seize the means of production. You're only going to get a fair deal if you own the factory, not if someone else owns the factory, to summarise a very, very complex book and a huge body of theory in that two sentences. So I hope that will be okay. Again, apologies to the Marxist scholars out there. So we have Kapital. And then the other thing we have, I think, interestingly, is a Royal Commission on Trade Unions. So trade unions are effectively, in broad terms, illegal up until this point. There's some grey areas around the side, but we're not going to go too far wrong if we say trade unions are illegal in 1867. A Royal Commission recommends the legalisation of trade unions because they say they're actually better for workers and for owners, and they're legalised in 1871. And what we tend to see in the British sort of tradition, even the sort of British social tradition, is not a desire to overthrow the system, but a desire to sort of do better within that system. Better wages, better conditions, all those sorts of things. And what social traditions they are, tend to focus on gradual change, often more than always, enacted through the ballot box. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' This might be a difficult question to answer, I guess, but why does London become considered the heart of the industrialised world? |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' That really is quite a tricky question. It's quite a nuanced question as well, because up until quite recently, there was a prevailing view among historians that London didn't industrialise at all, which I think really kind of flies in the face of what we think of London. We think, you know, talking about syndicate, it's this quite smoky, I mean, I think it probably could even be even dirtier, this sort of smoky kind of dense centric production. So what does that, so why would you say it's not industrialised? And then if it hadn't industrialised, how could it claim to be the heart of the industrialised world? So the first thing to say is that was probably a bit of a mischaracterisation that didn't industrialise at all. But the kernel of truth in that is that factories were less prevalent or less dominant parts of the London economy than they were in somewhere like Manchester, for example, where factories were kind of the, cotton factories were kind of the dominant sort of economic form. There are factories in London, there are very big factories in London. But what we also see in London is a survival, and indeed, almost a boosting, because of industrial revolution, of an older system than a factory, often in houses and small workshops. So London is famous, not necessarily for producing the raw goods of industrialisation, but for finishing, finishing goods. So there's that element to it. Jerry White, a very famous London historian, talks about how districts of London almost act like factories. So Whitechapel, obviously one of the levels in Assassin's Creed, is famously associated with the textile trade, but not necessarily making cotton and cloth in the way Manchester is, but in finishing that cloth, turning that cloth into usable, usable garments. So that's part of it. But really, London's claim to be the heart of industrial world stands on two things, and it's the port, and it's the city of London. So throughout the 18th and 19th century, London was the busiest port in the world. One of my favourite bits of Assassin's Creed is hopping from boat to boat across the Thames, because today we don't think of London as a port city. It still is a very big port, but that activity takes place quite far down the river, sometimes actually in Kent, rather than in London, in big container ships. But in the 18th and 19th century, that activity took place on the river. And I say huge amount of trade going back and forth, and there is, of course, an imperial connection here. London's not just the capital of Britain at this point, it's the capital of the British Empire, and it's a real central hub of all that trade coming through, coming to and fro. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah, I think as someone who's interested in medieval history, for me, you think of the rivers as being kind of the highways of the medieval age, and the Thames would have been an incredibly busy motorway system almost, and by the time you get to the 19th century, we need to remember, I think, that the Thames is probably something like a log-jammed motorway. You know, you're sitting in traffic, it's just constantly packed with boats and ships. We'll see speedboats zipping up and down it today, and tourist ships and stuff like that, but it would have been, you know, chocker with ships coming in and out to the point where you could leap across them as you do in the game, and we forget how busy it was. And I think the nearest equation for me is like a motorway in rush hour kind of thing. |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' Absolutely, we have some really wonderful photographs in our collections of the river looking just that, of the docks being unloaded, but also just the sheer volume of traffic is quite exceptional. One of the most famous London landmarks today is, of course, Tower Bridge, which people outside of London in the UK might actually think of as London Bridge. This is the one that looks like a castle that sort of opens up and down in the middle. Well, when that was built at the very end of the 19th century, it was that part of the Thames called the Pool of London. You couldn't build a bridge there that couldn't allow to open because too many ships, it would like be blocking, like you say, blocking the M1 or blocking the M25. Today it opens once, about once a day, about 300 times a year, I think off the top of my head, not very often, but then it opened multiple times a day. You couldn't block the Thames, you had to put all this engineering effort into having it open. And the Tower Bridge, of course, sits right by the City of London, right by the Tower. And the City of London is the other very important economic factor in this story. So throughout the 19th century, it becomes the financial centre that we know it is today. Stockbrokers, insurance, banking, all those sorts of things start to concentrate in that area. And just as physical goods are going up and down the Thames, financial goods and financial products are flowing in and out of the city. Lots of the business of empire, the profits that are taking place are coming through the city at this point. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah, yeah. I'm also, before someone turns my fader down, I'm going to give a shout out to the West Midlands as the industrial centre of the world, but never mind. |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' But the point is, you say that, but the point is the connection, isn't it? This is exactly the point of the distribution that it's, don't get me wrong, it's fun to sort of fly our flags through our little corner of the planet. But the very point is that goods from Birmingham are coming on the train to London, to the docks, and going away again, and vice versa. Some of those little barges we're hopping on and off across on Assassin's Creed, they're coal barges. The coal is coming from the northeast of England. The Stockton-Darlington Railway is built to get that from the Coalhead to the River Tea, I think it is, to come down, the colliery trade that comes down, the shipping trade on the east coast of Britain. It all connects. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah, and I'm being slightly facetious just for the sake of it, really. But I think the point is really that London provides the hub of the wheel. All of these spokes come together and they pour into London. And London is where they're able to bring all of this together from every corner of the country and every corner of the empire. And that's where it, therefore, that's where it is all focused, you know. I mean, London is the centre. There you go, I said it. Can we give an end date to the industrial revolution, evolution? Does it finish at any given time? |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' I think seeing my earlier comment about how hard it is to start, to give the start, if we can't start it, can we end it? So now it's my turn to be facetious. One of the things that is a bit tricky about this time period is that we have like general senses of what a word means. If I say industrial revolution, that means something to you, means something to most people, will probably mean something to most people listening to this podcast. It doesn't necessarily mean the same thing to historians who use it. They often have a technical meaning of what industrial means based on processes and econometrics, that sort of thing. And it overlaps just enough with our shared meaning of it that we think we know what they're talking about. But maybe we don't because they're talking about something quite specific. So you will read dates to the end of the industrial revolution as 1830, 1850, 1867. And this gets a bit confusing because if it starts in 1830 and finishes in 1840, according to different historians, surely it lasts more than 10 years. That doesn't make any sense. So one kind of useful way of this puzzle is to think actually in terms of not industrial revolution, but industrial revolutions. And one kind of version of that theory has first, second, even third and fourth, living through the fourth industrial revolution. And now you might say that's linked to computer technology. I don't mean to be dismissive about that scholarship. And something is important changing in sort of the middle of the 19th century, whatever we call it. And that's where this idea of first and second industrial revolution comes in. So something is sort of finishing and then something changes in the middle of that century. And what I think really important, that really important change is Britain stops being the centre of the industrial revolution round about the 19th century. If you like the Germany, excuse me, Germany and Europe more generally, North America, Japan as well, they start to industrialise on a scale as well. This is sometimes called the second industrial revolution. So the first industrial revolution is about cotton, steam, coal. Different products drive the second industrial revolution. Probably latterly electricity is most important, but steel and the chemical industry are important as well. And then those raw materials are important, but new forms of production take place as well. Mass production and also this idea of interchangeable parts. So we talked about London as a place where things are finished. As the second wave of industrialization goes on, more of those things can be manufactured that don't need to be finished by hand. And that kind of brings it on to another level. And people will often date the end of the second industrial revolution, it's a convenient date, as the start of the First World War in 1914. And we've talked about some of the negative sides of the industrial revolution. The carnage, I don't know if there's any other word for the First World War, is a direct product of industrialisation. This is the first time that fully industrialised powers have gone to war on this scale. There's some hints of it in the American Civil War in the middle of the 19th century, but kind of the full horror of industrial warfare is sort of first comes through in the First World War. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Yeah, I mean, I wanted to end by asking you whether there is a single standout legacy of the industrial revolution. But it sounds from our conversation like it has effectively crafted what we consider to be everyday life today, that we go to work at a certain time, that we finish at a certain time, that we check our watches all day, that we consume a lot more than we ever used to in the past, all of those facets of it. And to add into that kind of the industrialisation of warfare, you know, it sounds like some of the worst horrors of the 20th century were a legacy of the industrial revolution. |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' I think that's, I think that's right. I think that what it comes down to for me, the legacy of industrial revolution, is it's the most profound change in sort of human history, probably, well, not probably, it is the most profound change in human history, since we started farming 12,000 years ago. And something of that magnitude is going to encompass all the good and all the dark as well. To add one more not very cheery thing to the dark list as well, when we talked about the industrial revolution hinging on new forms of power, fossil fuels, we have to add climate change to that list as well. This is where I get slightly beyond my expertise. But my understanding is that climate change, some of it has already happened, some of it will already continue to happen. But depending on the sort of the political, economic and technological choices of the next few decades, we'll find out quite how much climate change we have. And then maybe at that point, we can sort of really say what the legacy industrial revolution was. Yeah, yeah, it's a slightly frightening one. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Well, thank you so much for joining us, Tom. It's been fascinating to explore this all encompassing huge shift in human history, I guess. And to have done all of that in less than an hour is testament to your ability to get that across. So thank you so very, very much for compressing all of that for us into an understandable portion. Where can people find more from you and more about your work? |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' So I'm an Engagement Learning Officer at the London Archives, which is owned and funded by the City of London Corporation. If you're interested in anything that happened in London from 1067 onwards to the present day, we'll have something that interests you in our collection. And one of the aspects of our collection that is very strong is around the industrial revolution, in particular, this idea of urbanisation. So if you're interested in how those changes affected London and Londoners, this is a really good place to go. My suggestion as a place to start would be put a little search for either the London Archives or the London Picture Archive. The London Picture Archive will take you through to our image collection, available online. It's about quarter of a million images from about 1600 onwards, something like that. And you'll be able to find out. You could probably even do frame by frame some of the cities of the game, what it looks like in the game, what it looks like, what it looked like in the 19th century as well. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Oh, well, that's the rest of my day sorted out. I'll go and find some of that. Thank you very much for joining us, Tom. It's been an absolute pleasure to talk to you. |
| | * '''Tom Furber:''' No, the pleasure's all mine, Matt. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Thank you very much. I hope you've enjoyed this episode of Echoes of History, a Ubisoft podcast brought to you by History Hit. Next time, we'll be stepping into the Animus with Holly to explore how the world of Assassin's Creed Syndicate is created and how the history is wrapped around the game. Don't forget to subscribe and follow Echoes of History wherever you get your podcasts. And if you're enjoying it, you can leave us a review too. See you next time among the Echoes of History. |
| | |-|4= |
| | '''''The Crown's Greatest Jewel: The Koh-i-Noor Diamond''''' |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' Welcome to Echoes of History, the place to explore the rich stories from the past that bring the world of Assassin's Creed to life. I'm Matt Lewis. For the past few weeks we've explored the dark underbelly of Victorian London, the setting of Assassin's Creed Syndicate. We've seen how the Industrial Revolution forever changed the face of London's buildings and its people. We've investigated how Scotland Yard played a crucial role in policing crime in the ever-expanding metropolis. And we've uncovered the true personality of the woman who gave her name to the era, Queen Victoria. Today I want to examine the literal jewel of Victoria's crown, the Koh-i-Noor diamond. In Assassin's Creed Syndicate, players get the opportunity to be part of the history of this famous treasure as they protect it from the evil Templars by liberating it from the Tower of London. In the mythology of Assassin's Creed, the Koh-i-Noor is a fascinating addition to a story that spans centuries. But the diamond has a riveting and tragic history all of its own. Due to a malfunction with our animus, I've handed over to my friend Dan Snow, who sat down with historian Shrabani Basu to shed light on the mystery of the Koh-i-Noor. How did a symbol of Mughal power become a feature of the British coronation ceremony? The answer is complex and Victorian. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' The Koh-i-Noor diamond, a mountain of light in Persian, is one of the largest cut diamonds in the world, over a hundred carats. And it was, for the last, well over a hundred years, part of the crown jewels of the United Kingdom. It's one of the most famous stones in the world, it always was, right from its beginning. It was owned by various rulers on the Indian subcontinent, then in Iran and Afghanistan. And it passed to the British as they expanded their domination of India. Queen Victoria was made Empress of India, but she was a slightly reluctant one. She wrote to her eldest daughter, Victoria, the mother of Kaiser Wilhelm, and she said in the 1870s no one feels more strongly than I do about India or how much I opposed our taking those countries and I think no more be taken for it's very wrong and no advantage to us. You know how much I dislike wearing the Koh-i-Noor? Well she was certainly wrong about no more territory being taken in the subcontinent. The British Empire in Asia expanded into places like Burma after she said that. But she was ahead of her time in realising that the Koh-i-Noor itself would attract great controversy. Today various groups in India and further afield ask for the diamond back regularly. It was at the time and it still is, I suppose, a symbol of Britain's violent seizure of a vast empire in India. In this episode of the podcast I've got Shravani Basu, she's a journalist, she's a best-selling author, she's been on the podcast before, she talked about her book For King in Another Country Indian Soldiers on the Western Front 1914 to 18. She's a great commentator on Indian history and the British Empire in India. It's great to have Shrabani back on the podcast. Here are her thoughts about the Koh-i-Noor. |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' It's lovely to be here, Dan. Thanks for inviting me. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' Tell me about diamonds. I mean India was a great source of diamonds traditionally, wasn't it? |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' It was. It was the one big source before the South African mines were discovered. So all the diamonds actually came from India at this stage. And of course, you know, everybody loved diamonds, so it was the big thing. You had these mines in South India, the Golconda mines. The diamond we're going to talk about today, that's where it came from. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' Tell me about the diamond, the Koh-i-Noor. |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' Right. Well, it didn't have that name. When I go back to the history, apparently the history of this diamond is like 5,000 years old. It was mined in South India near the Golconda mines. It actually floated up on the beds of the Godavari River. So it is on the river bed. They say it was mentioned in ancient Hindu texts of 5,000 years old. But we'll park that for a moment and sort of take the facts as it were. We know where it was mined. And then the story goes that it was probably used, this big chunk of rock was in a temple as the eye of the idol, you know, like the third eye. So it was on the forehead of this idol. And then you have the invasion from the north of the Muslim rulers. They desecrated a lot of temples. So they probably got the Koh-i-Noor from one of these temples and took it up north. And it would have been the Delhi Sultan, so the Lodis, the Tughlaqs. And it stayed in the north till, of course, Babur, the founder of the Mughal dynasty, he gets this diamond. And then we have a mention of this large diamond, the size of a hen's egg. It is probably the Koh-i-Noor, though he had other diamonds as well. And of course, this goes down the Mughal dynasty till we see it with Shah Jahan, one of his descendants, the famous Shah Jahan, who made the Taj Mahal, loved architecture, loved jewellery, and liked to put precious stones in his monuments. And he put the Koh-i-Noor in the Peacock Throne, which was in Delhi. Tell us what the Peacock Throne was. Well, this was this elaborate gold throne with gems and jewels with the wings of a peacock and the head is where the Koh-i-Noor was apparently kept, the head of the peacock. This is seen by travellers and everybody knows it. But even at this time, it's not actually called the Koh-i-Noor, it's called the Mughal diamond or just Babur's diamond. So it has different names and that's how it's referred to. So it stays with the Mughals until, of course, we have this date, which is 1738, when a warlord from Persia, and he's Nadir Shah, he invades Delhi. Now the Mughals at this time, their power is declining. But of course, the Peacock Throne is still there, the Koh-i-Noor is still there. And Nadir Shah loots Delhi, plunders Delhi, kills civilians, it's very violent. And then of course, he takes the Mughal treasures and takes them away. And he is the one, when he looks at this big diamond, he says, this is the mountain of light, it's the Koh-i-Noor. So he is the one who actually names it the Koh-i-Noor and that name has stuck. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' And it's interesting because we Brits talk a lot about our own role in the destruction of Mughal India. But the Nadir Shah invasion and sack of Delhi, I mean, that was devastating for the Mughal regime, wasn't it? |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' It was brutal because civilians were killed, massacred, and all the treasures were taken. So the Koh-i-Noor, the Peacock Throne, the other diamonds, there's this other large diamond called the Darya-e-Noor, all these were taken to Persia. The Koh-i-Noor now moves to Iran and it stays there. But of course, he's a warlord, so the wars are continuing. And he is assassinated in 1747, he's dying. And of course, he's got the Koh-i-Noor strapped on his arm, he wears it as an armband. And his general, his name is Ahmed Shah Abdali, he takes the Koh-i-Noor from him and he takes it away. And of course, this general then goes all the way to Afghanistan and he goes to Kandahar. And there in Kandahar, he changes his name to Ahmed Shah Durrani, and he becomes the ruler of Afghanistan for the next few years. So now the Koh-i-Noor moves from Persia to its new home in Afghanistan. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' Was the diamond famous outside the subcontinent and outside Iran at this point? And indeed, was it famous there? Did it already have an extraordinary reputation? |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' It did, because travellers would write about this diamond. There were so many accounts, starting from Babur Nama in Babur's own memoirs, to other travellers who would visit the court. It is described, it was in the peacock throne, it's gone to now Iran. So, it is a much coveted diamond. And so, when it's come to Afghanistan, again, it's got this history where it goes missing, it's lost, it's found, it ends up in a cave, where apparently there's a mullah who's using it as a paperweight. So, all sorts of stories. |
| | * But these rulers of Afghanistan, the Durranis, now they are eyeing the Punjab, because they want to expand their kingdom. So, of course, we now have the next players in the game, and these are the Sikhs. They are going to clash with the Sikhs and the Sikh kingdom. And of course, the big person in the Sikh kingdom is a man who has one eye and his face has a small box marked, but he is known as the Lion of Punjab. And so, the Afghans have to take on this Sikh general. He was actually a general in their army, his name is Ranjit Singh. And of course, he imprisons Shah Shuja. Ranjit Singh expands the Sikh kingdom, it goes to Kashmir, so it covers Punjab and Kashmir. And now he arrests Shah Shuja and imprisons him in Kashmir. And he wants the Koh-i-Noor, he desperately wants his hands on this diamond. He does a bargain with Shah Shuja. He says, I'll release you if you give me the Koh-i-Noor. And so, the Koh-i-Noor now goes one more journey. It now goes to Maharaja Ranjit Singh, and it's now moved from Kandahar to Lahore, and that is its new base. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' So, Ranjit Singh, so he is an extremely able commander. He's carved out this empire in what is now Northern India and Pakistan and beyond. But he now faces an enemy as well, doesn't he, Srimani? |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' Of course, it's a real bloody history. I mean, the one thing you can say, Dan, about this diamond is that it does not have a tag saying one careful owner, because it has passed through so many hands. And there's just so many people who want it, who will do anything for it, blinding, torture, assassination, name it. It's all happening because of this diamond. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' Every jewel in every myth, whether it's Norse mythology or Greek mythology, every jewel has to be cursed. Is there a little curse going on here? It doesn't seem like whoever is in possession of this hangs on to it very long. |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' Oh yeah, it was famous as a cursed diamond. I mean, there were two ways. They said one who possesses this will rule the earth, and the other was it's a cursed diamond. We have literature about cursed diamonds. We have writing, Moonstone, etc. So also the romance of this cursed diamond, you know, it continues. It's just legends and folklore that goes on. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' Yeah, it's a shame it's so ambiguous. If you get this diamond, you're either cursed or you rule the world. |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' I mean, okay, great. Thanks very much. There's no two ways about it. |
| | * Yeah. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' Okay, so Ranjit Singh has this diamond. Tell us about him. Is he ruling the world? |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' He is. Well, he's, as they say, the Lion of Punjab. His territories extend from Lahore to Kashmir. But of course, he dies in 1839. And once more, there is carnage after his death, because there's bloodshed, all his successors, everyone is killing everybody, and there's plotting. And eventually, it's 1843 when this five-year-old little boy with large eyes, he is the one who inherits this throne. His name is Maharaja Dilip Singh. And he's going to the Koh-i-Noor for the next five years. He wears it as an armband. |
| | * It's strapped on his plump little arm. And that's how it is. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' And Shrabani, has it been shaped and polished and made to look all nice at some stage from that temple in southern India to the present? It must have been all fancied up. |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' It is. So it's a rose-cut diamond. It hasn't been cut. The descriptions are that it is the of a hen's egg. So it weighed about 190.3 metric carats. So it's a large chunk of rock. It's trapped, as I said, as an armband on Dilip Singh, onto this little Maharaja. But of course, there is so much violence. There is now the next players in this game. And of course, it is these men in red coats with muskets and arms and enter the British. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' I've heard of them. I've heard of these guys. |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' Yeah, so they are there. And of course, Punjab is so important to them, because this is the 19th century, early 19th century. We have the great game with Russia. Afghanistan is important. And Punjab is crucial because that's going to be the focus for Afghanistan. So they are looking at the Sikh kingdom. And of course, they go to war. And of course, because the Sikh kingdom after Singh is going to pieces, the five-year-old Maharaja there, it's just perfect for picking. So there we go. We have two wars. And the second Anglo-Sikh war is 1849. The Sikhs are defeated. And this 10-year-old Maharaja signs the deed. It's the Treaty of Lahore. So one of the terms is, of course, the kingdom is annexed. The treasury is annexed. And one of the items is the Koh-i-Noor will be handed over. And the exact wordings, I'll read them. It says, the gem called the Koh-i-Noor, which was taken from Shah Shuja-ul-Mulk by Maharaja Ranjit Singh, shall be surrendered by the Maharaja of Lahore to the Queen of England. So it's written there. It's one of the clauses of the treaty. And this 10-year-old has to take it off and give it. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' So it was a famous thing. Like it was something that the Brits, they didn't just want Punjab. They wanted this diamond as well. |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' They want this diamond because everybody wants this diamond. And the new Governor-General, he's in his 30s. He's a fairly young man, Lord Dalhousie. He has his eyes on this diamond and Punjab. And he writes to his bosses in the East India Company, and he writes about the Koh-i-Noor. He says, the Koh-i-Noor has become in the lapse of ages, a sort of historical emblem of conquest in India. It has now found its proper resting place. You can see from his words that this diamond is so coveted. It's travelled, as we said, from this temple in South India to Persia, to Afghanistan, to Lahore, and now the Brits have it. So it's put into a little bag and he's going to send it in a little, actually purpose-built, little kid bag, sewed together by Lady Dalhousie. And he himself, he goes to Lahore to take the diamond personally. So he travels up from Calcutta, takes the train to Lahore, puts this diamond in the big bag and actually has it sewn onto his waist. He's going to travel like that. He is so scared that there's going to be an attack, somebody else will want it. It's got such a bloody history. So he takes it. He's taking no chances. It's trapped onto him and he carries it to Bombay himself on his person before it's loaded onto the ship in several caskets and finally arrives at the offices of the East India Company in Leadenhall Street in London in 1850. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' Can you imagine how stressful that was for the captain of that ship to get the navigation right? Oh my goodness. |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' Everything. I mean, imagine Dalhousie. It was a long train journey from Lahore to Calcutta with the diamond strapped to him. I mean, everything about this diamond was so stress-inducing. It's a wonder they really want it. But it was a lot of stress as well for anyone who got it. And then to hold on to it was the next thing. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' Okay, so the diamond comes to the UK. Does Queen Victoria, does it get handed over to her personally? |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' Of course, yes. It was meant for the Queen, so it's handed to the Queen. But it's handed on a day that she is really upset because she just got the news that Lord Peel has died, a former Prime Minister who she was very close to. This is Robert Peel. She is distracted and distressed and this diamond is given, so she receives it. But actually she doesn't write too much about it. It's just a mention in her journals, which is very unusual because normally she would have written a lot about it and we'd have had a hundred opinions about the diamond, but she just mentions that she received this. But of course it's 1850 and the next year we're going to have this big exhibition, 1851, the Great Exhibition. It's decided that the Koh-i-Noor is going to be the centrepiece of this exhibition. It's going to go on display to the public for the first time. The posters are there and the crowds, they come milling to see this diamond. It's put in a sort of cage, but horror of horrors, it only gets a two-star review because the Crystal Palace, where this Great Exhibition takes place, is open glass. So this diamond, which is rose cut, which is a different sort of cutting, it's not the sort of European cutting, it doesn't actually glitter. It doesn't catch the light in such a way. So everyone's a bit underwhelmed. The Queen is also a bit disappointed. They tried their best, they put it on a dark velvet cloth, they put lamps on it to make it shine, but none of it really works. So after the exhibition, it's taken and the Queen gives it to Albert and Albert is like, what do we do with this? How do we get this right? He consults jewelers and diamond experts and he decides to have it cut, European style. So now a hammer and chisel are going to be brought to this diamond. And it's going to be cut and horror again, it loses half its weight with the cutting. So from 190 carat, this big hen's egg is now reduced to a quail's egg. It's become 90 something carat. That's it. It's lost half its weight, but it does shine. So it's given to Queen Victoria. She's happy to have it, but she has mixed feelings because she does realise that Dilip Singh has been through a lot. Well, what's happened to Dilip Singh in the meantime is actually really tragic, because when he was nine, when all this was happening, his mother was torn from his side and imprisoned. So this young prince is nine years old, his mother is taken from him. And the next year his kingdom is taken from him. And then he himself is taken from Lahore. And he's sent 200 miles away to Fort Fatehgarh, where he is now to be looked after by a Scottish doctor, a very kindly man called Dr. Logan and his wife, Lena. So he's brought up in this very lonely, he's just a child, plays with toys by himself, very English upbringing. And when he's 14, he decides, he says, I want to become a Christian. He wants to give up his faith. He's a confused young boy. His mother is not there to guide him. Kingdom is gone. On his 11th birthday, he actually really tragically, Dr. Logan wants to give him a present and says, can I have some of the treasures back and give him a few jewels, a few bits and bobs to please him. And so they bring these out and they give it to him. And he says that on my 10th birthday, I wore the Koh-i-Noor. So it's really sad. And it does make Dr. Logan and his wife, who are very kindly people, feel terrible about it. They never want to bring up the Koh-i-Noor to Dilip Singh. But meanwhile, Dilip Singh now decides he wants to travel to England. So at the age of 15, he travels to England and it's going to change his life because now he's going to meet Queen Victoria and see the Koh-i-Noor again. And that's quite a story. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' Wow. He comes face to face with the Koh-i-Noor again. |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' Yeah. So it's actually, this story is told by Lena Logan, Lady Logan. And she says it was absolutely embarrassing because the Queen was actually very anxious about the Koh-i-Noor. And after it's been cut, she wants to show it. She wants to know what Dilip Singh, this young boy, feels about it. She's very fond of Dilip Singh. And she keeps asking Lady Logan, does he talk about the Koh-i-Noor? What does he say? She's really curious. Can I show it to him? And Lady Logan says, well, okay. So there's this one day, 1854, Dilip Singh is dressed to the nines like a Maharaja. He's wearing all his Indian clothes and jewels. His portrait is being painted in Buckingham Palace by Franz Winterhalter. This portrait actually hangs in Osborne House. It's a beautiful portrait. So while this portrait is being painted, Dilip Singh is modelling in all his fabulous clothes, looking really handsome. He was a very handsome young prince. Suddenly, Queen Victoria enters the room, followed by some guards, and they're holding a box. And she opens it and it's the Koh-i-Noor. And she gives it to Dilip Singh and says, what do you think? Do you recognise it? Dilip Singh, he looks at this, he can barely recognise it. It's this little stone now. It's shining, it's cut differently. His face sort of changes when he looks at the new diamond. He walks to the window and holds it up in the light. Lady Logan thinks for one moment that he's so upset, he's going to throw it out of the window. And she is really anxious and very embarrassed. And then he just turns around, he takes the diamond and he bows and he gives it to Queen Victoria. And he says, as your humble servant, I hereby present my sovereign with the Koh-i-Noor. So it was a really embarrassing scene. And well, Queen Victoria takes the diamond and she now wears it as a brooch. No qualms about that. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' How does it end up in the crown jewels? |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' She wears it as a brooch. Even when she goes into mourning, it's there on this black outfit of hers. And she loves wearing it on special occasions. She always mentions it in her diary that, you know, the Maharaja and so and so came, I wore this and I wore my Koh-i-Noor. It is very prominently worn. And then, well, it's after her death in 1901 that this Koh-i-Noor is now placed for the coronation of her son Edward VII. It is now worn in the crown of Queen Alexandra. So that is the movement when it goes to the crown. So it is placed in her crown and that tradition continues. So it is always worn by the queen consort after Edward VII's death in 1911. It is worn by Queen Mary in her crown at the coronation of George V. So again, the queen consorts are wearing it. And so for those who said this diamond is cursed, there was this theory that, well, as long as it's not worn by a male monarch, you're okay. So Victoria was a queen, so she was safe. And if queen consorts wear it, that's fine. So I think it continued to be worn and it ends up in the coronation crowns. And then it passes to Queen Elizabeth. So when George VI, at his coronation, she has a new crown and the Koh-i-Noor is placed in the centre of that. And that is where it stays. The queen mother wears this at the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. So 1953 she wears it. Well, of course it's housed in the Tower of London where everybody can see it. On her death in 2002, it is placed on the coffin. Once again, the Koh-i-Noor is there front and centre, sparkling. And of course it leads to lots of controversy. People don't like it back in India. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' How interesting. And so let's come to the controversy in a minute, but presumably if tradition continued, it's not the sovereign wears it, it's the consort. And we now have a female consort again. So Camilla should be wearing it at the coronation. |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' Well, this is exactly what came up. So once the queen died and suddenly all the crowns were on display again, there was this murmur, which became more than a murmur. Everybody realised that the next coronation, the queen consort will be wearing the Koh-i-Noor in her crown in all possibilities. So it really became a controversy. And in India, one of the politicians from the ruling party said that if this Koh-i-Noor was worn again, it would bring back the painful past of colonial history, etc. So there were a lot of murmurings. And also, of course, the demand, once again, bring back the Koh-i-Noor started all over again. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' Now, why is the Koh-i-Noor more sensitive than much of the other loot captured by the Brits over the centuries, some of which have found their way into ceremonial jewellery and events? What is it about the Koh-i-Noor, do you think? |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' It's really interesting because, you know, as far as jewels go, there's a lot that was taken as loot and these include Tipu Sultan's treasury, Tipu Sultan, the Tiger of Mysore. He was defeated by the East India Company, Arthur Wellesley's army, 1799. His treasures, his golden throne, all of these were taken, his swords, his throne, even his tent, they were all taken here. And the beautiful Bird of Paradise, which was on top of his throne, that is with the royal estates. But these things, these treasures are all locked away, they're in the vaults, you don't see them. I think the history of the Koh-i-Noor, the way it was taken, the way it was coveted by so many rulers from all across, that gives it this romance. And in the way it was seized from Punjab, from this young 10-year-old Maharaja, whose mother was taken away, so this whole tragic history to it brings it to the fore. And then, of course, the Koh-i-Noor is worn when it's placed in the crown, it is there for people to see, it is very much on display. Front and centre, glittering in the crown, it is, you know, the jewel in the crown, the jewel, the most famous diamond in the world. So, it attracts that attention, it becomes the symbol of colonial rule, much more than the other treasures do, because you don't see them, you don't see them glittering on this crown. So, when it went out on the Queen Mother's coffin, that's when a lot of the murmuring started. When Prime Minister David Cameron went to India, he was asked repeatedly, you know, give back the Koh-i-Noor. And they said, no, there's no negotiation, it's staying there. If we start returning things, the British Museum will be emptied. So, all this comes up. But I think the main thing about the Koh-i-Noor is it is the symbol, it is the one symbol of colonial rule, where it was taken. And, of course, it's one rock, it's a diamond. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' The fact that the royal family, the British government, have retired the Koh-i-Noor for this coronation, what do you think that tells you about the state of relations between Britain and India and the nerves, the awareness of Britain's imperial legacy? |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' Oh, absolutely. I think Prince Charles is quite sensible. The last thing he would want is more controversy. I mean, goodness knows there's enough. He would not want any focus going on the Koh-i-Noor once again, and all the controversy, if Camilla was to wear this. So, I think they took the decision that she would wear Queen Mary's crown, which has a replica Koh-i-Noor, and the actual Koh-i-Noor will not be placed on it. Instead, there will be these Cullinan diamonds from South Africa, which were worn as brooches by Queen Elizabeth II. So, those will be placed on the newly structured Queen Mary's crown. And so, that takes the Koh-i-Noor away from, you know, being front and centre and on display. But, of course, I mean, the murmuring will continue, but I think it was a sensible decision not to wear this. And, of course, there's so many other things. You know, there's a trade deal at stake. So, you don't want bad relations with India at the moment. Post-Brexit trade with India is important. This trade deal is hanging on the edge and they need to complete it. So, I think the government advice would also have been, keep that low. Let's keep the bling down. Let's not ruffle any feathers. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' Wow. Do you think one day the Koh-i-Noor will end up heading back to the subcontinent? By the way, if so, who gets it? Is it Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Iran? Who gets the Koh-i-Noor? I don't think it'll ever go back. |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' I think it's here now for good at the end of the day. A, there are too many contenders for it. So, you know, Iran would want it. Afghanistan, the Taliban actually claimed it in 2000, which is quite hilarious. And then Pakistan says that after partition, Lahore is part of Pakistan. So, that's where the diamond had its last place. So, way back in the 1970s, actually, when Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto was prime minister, they put in a claim for the Koh-i-Noor, which was dismissed. And India, the cases keep coming and going, you know, every now and then there'll be a case and bring back the Koh-i-Noor. It's like background music that keeps going on. But I don't think it'll ever go back. What I do think is that people get really annoyed that they have to pay to go. I mean, this jewel was taken at gunpoint. It was not a gift. Everybody knows that. And it is the most famous diamond. So, I think people really get annoyed with the fact that they have to pay to go see the Koh-i-Noor if they want to see it. So, I feel that maybe if it went to one of the museums, one of the national museums where the public could see it, that would probably be a better home for it. So, you know, the V&A or the Queen Victoria's crown is already there in the V&A. This could join that. And then people can go and see it. And well, that's just my theory. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' So interesting that the story of the Koh-i-Noor is absolutely not yet over. It could keep moving. |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' Oh yes, it would. It's just like it kept moving. Well, it's been sitting in the tower for many years now. Let's see how things shape. But I think it could, under pressure, it won't go back to India. It definitely won't go to Pakistan. I mean, if anything, India has the claim on it because the diamond did come from the Golconda mines there. It was part of the Mughal Empire. The Sikh Empire is also seen as largely part of India. But the point is, it's too controversial and it's just better off here. But it might move to a different place. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' Well, thank you so much for talking us through that. The controversy doesn't look like it's going anywhere, Shrabani. It's not going anywhere anytime soon. |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' No, we're not getting rid of the bling yet. |
| | * '''Dan Snow:''' Thank you very much for coming on the podcast. That's fantastic. |
| | * '''Shrabani Basu:''' Thank you. It's lovely to be here, Dan. |
| | * '''Matthew Lewis:''' I hope you've enjoyed this episode of Echoes of History, a Ubisoft podcast brought to you by History Hit. I'll be back next time as we move on to our next sequence of episodes about how Assassin's Creed Odyssey brought ancient Greece to life. In the next episode, I'll consult with the medical legend that was Hippocrates and promptly pick that legend apart. Don't forget to subscribe and follow Echoes of History wherever you get your podcasts. And if you're enjoying it, you can leave us a review too. I'll see you next time among the echoes of history. |
| | </tabber> |
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| | |
| | ==''Assassin's Creed: Black Flag Resynced''== |
| | DO '''NOT''' ADD TO ARTICLE. |
| | |
| | '''''Assassin's Creed: Black Flag Resycned''''' is a 2026 action-RPG remake of the 2013 action-adventure video game ''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]''. It was developed by Ubisoft ??? <s>as opposed to Ubisoft Montreal</s>, the studio behind the original. |
| | It was released on ?? March 2026 on Microsoft Windows, Xbox Series X/S, and PlayStation 5. A Nintendo Switch 2 port was released on ??/??/????. |
| | |
| | ===Gameplay=== |
| | In contrast to the original, ''Resynced'' is an action-roleplaying game similiar to the modern games. ''Resynched'' will also include the ability to make in-game purchases.<ref name="IGN Resynched PEGI">{{Cite web| url=https://www.ign.com/articles/assassins-creed-black-flag-resynced-is-the-name-of-ubisofts-long-awaited-pirate-remake| title=Assassin's Creed Black Flag Resynced Is the Name of Ubisoft's Long-Awaited Pirate Remake| author=Phillips, Tom| publisher=''{{Wiki|IGN}}''| date= 10 December 2025| accessdate=14 December 2025| archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20251214030507/https://www.ign.com/articles/assassins-creed-black-flag-resynced-is-the-name-of-ubisofts-long-awaited-pirate-remake| archivedate=14 December 2025}}</ref> |
| | |
| | ===Development=== |
| | Long since rumored to be in production, ''Resyched''{{'}}s existence was proven by a PEGI rating listing in December 2025.<ref name="IGN Resynched PEGI"/> |