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Perfidious Albion

"Perfidious Albion" is a pejorative phrase used within the context of international relations diplomacy to refer to acts of diplomatic slights, duplicity, treachery and hence infidelity (with respect to perceived promises made to or alliances formed with other nation states) by monarchs or governments of the United Kingdom (or England prior to 1707) in their pursuit of self-interest.

A WW1-era German propaganda poster invoking the "Perfidious Albion" trope.

Perfidious signifies one who does not keep his faith or word (from the Latin word perfidia), while Albion is an ancient and now poetic name for Great Britain.

Origins and use

The use of the adjective "perfidious" to describe England has a long history; instances have been found as far back as the 13th century.[1] A very similar phrase was used in a sermon by 17th-century French bishop and theologian Jacques-Bénigne Bossuet:[2]

The coinage of the phrase in its current form, however, is conventionally attributed to Augustin Louis de Ximénès, a French-Spanish playwright who wrote it in a poem entitled "L'Ère des Français", published in 1793:

In this context, Great Britain's perfidy was political. In the early days of the French Revolution, when the revolution aimed at establishing a liberal constitutional monarchy along British lines, many in Great Britain had looked upon the Revolution with mild favour. However, following the turn of the revolution to republicanism with the overthrow and execution of Louis XVI, Britain had allied itself with the other monarchies of Europe against the Revolution in France. This was seen by the revolutionaries in France as a "perfidious" betrayal.[3]

"La perfide Albion" became a stock expression in France in the 19th century, to the extent that the Goncourt brothers could refer to it as "a well-known old saying". It was utilised by French journalists whenever there were tensions between France and Britain, for example during the competition for colonies in Africa, culminating in the Fashoda Incident. The catch-phrase was further popularized by its use in La Famille Fenouillard [fr], the first French comic strip, in which one of the characters fulminates against "Perfidious Albion, which burnt Joan of Arc on the rock of Saint Helena". (This sentence mixes two major incidents in French history that can be related to the UK's perfidy: Joan of Arc, whose execution may have been due to English influence; and Napoleon, who died in exile on Saint Helena. He may have died by being poisoned, according to the Swedish toxicologist Sten Forshufvud.[4])

In German-speaking areas, the term "das perfide Albion" became increasingly frequent, especially during the rule of the German Empire (1871–1918) against the backdrop of rising British-German tensions.[5]

Examples of usage

  • The term often refers to the English reneging on the Treaty of Limerick of 1691, which ended the Williamite War between the predominantly Roman Catholic Jacobite forces and the English forces loyal to William of Orange, giving favourable terms to the Irish Catholics, including the freedoms to worship, to own property and to carry arms, but those terms were soon repudiated by the Penal Laws of 1695.[6][7]
  • The Irish ballad "The Foggy Dew" includes the term in its lyrics. The song concerns the Easter Rising and the perceived hypocrisy that England is concurrently fighting World War I so that "Small Nations might be free", while Ireland's struggle for freedom is forcibly suppressed.[8][9]
  • In Portugal, the term was widely used after the 1890 British Ultimatum, after Cecil Rhodes' opposition to the Pink Map. Portugal and England had been allied since 1386.[10]
  • Bastiat uses the term sarcastically in his satirical letter "The Candlemakers' Petition", first published in 1845.[11]
  • It is used by Ian Smith in his memoirs (The Great Betrayal, 1997) to describe his opposition on the British handling of Rhodesian independence.[12]
  • In his book I'm Not the Only One (2004), British politician George Galloway expressed the opinion that Kuwait is "clearly a part of the greater Iraqi whole, stolen from the motherland by perfidious Albion".[13]
  • In 2012, Fabian Picardo, the Chief Minister of Gibraltar, used the phrase to describe the UK government's position on the UN Decolonisation Committee: "Perfidious Albion, for this reason ... The position of the United Kingdom is as usual so nuanced that it's difficult to see where they are on the spectrum, but look that's what Britain's like and we all love being British".[14]
  • The father of Israeli novelist Amos Oz wrote pamphlets for the Irgun that attacked "perfidious Albion" during the British rule in Palestine.[15]
  • The Italian term "perfida Albione" (perfidious Albion)[16] was used in the propaganda of Fascist Italy to criticise the global dominion of the British Empire. Fascist propaganda depicted the British as ruthless colonialists, who exploited foreign lands and peoples to feed extravagant lifestyle habits like eating "five meals a day".[17] The term was used frequently in Italian politics after the Second Italo-Abyssinian War, because despite having gained large colonial territories for itself, Britain approved of trade sanctions in the wake of Italian aggression against Ethiopia. The sanctions were depicted as an attempt to deny Italy its "rightful" colonial dominions, while at the same time, Britain was trying to extend its own influence and authority.[18] The same term was used after World War I related to the so-called mutilated victory.[19]
  • The term was used in reference to a possible United Kingdom withdrawal from the European Union in the run up to the referendum on the issue in 2016. An article in the French newspaper Le Parisien claimed that a poll showing that only 54% of French people supported UK membership of the EU (compared to 55% of British people) showed that "the British will always be seen as the Perfidious Albion".[20] In contrast, the editor of the Financial Times, Lionel Barber, has written that "Too many people in the UK are under the illusion that most European countries cannot wait to see the back of perfidious Albion."[21] Eventually, the United Kingdom voted to leave the EU.[22]
  • In arguing for a "hard" Brexit, and the EU rejecting a possible extension requested by the UK of the deadline to leave the EU, the Brexit-supporting British MP Mark Francois said to the Bruges Group in April 2019: "My message to the European Council ... If you now try to hold on to us against our will, you will be facing Perfidious Albion on speed. It would therefore be much better for all our sakes if we were to pursue our separate destinies, in a spirit of mutual respect."[23]
  • After their victory against England at the 1950 World Cup, the president of the Spanish Football Federation (Armando Muñoz Calero) sent a telegram to Spanish dictator Francisco Franco that read, "we have beaten Perfidious Albion."[24]

See also

References

  1. ^ Schmidt, H. D. (1953). "The Idea and Slogan of 'Perfidious Albion'". Journal of the History of Ideas. 14 (4): 604–616. doi:10.2307/2707704. JSTOR 2707704.
  2. ^ Jacques Bénigne Bossuet, "Sermon pour la fête de la Circoncision de Notre-Seigneur" in: Oeuvres complètes, Volume 5, Ed. Outhenin-Chalandre, 1840, p. 264
  3. ^ Dictionnaire des usages socio-politiques (1770-1815): Tome 4, Désignants socio-politiques 2. Dictionnaire des usages socio-politiques (in French). Klincksieck. 1989. pp. 37–39. ISBN 978-2-252-02694-6.
  4. ^ Jean-Michel Hoerner, "La Famille Fenouillard: une œuvre prémonitoire ?", Hérodote, 2007/4 (no. 127) ISBN 9782707153555, doi:10.3917/her.127.0190
  5. ^ Geiser, Alfred. "Das perfide Albion". via Archelaus.
  6. ^ Carruthers, Gerard; Kidd, Colin (2018). Literature and Union: Scottish Texts, British Contexts. Oxford University Press. p. 99. ISBN 9780198736233. Retrieved 29 August 2018 – via Google Books.
  7. ^ Schwoerer, Lois G. (1992). The Revolution of 1688-89: Changing Perspectives. Cambridge University Press. p. 236. ISBN 9780521526142. Retrieved 29 August 2018 – via Google Books.
  8. ^ "History – British History in depth: Ireland and World War One". BBC. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  9. ^ Giotto, Labri. . Outreach Ethnomusicology – An Online Ethnomusicology Community. Archived from the original on 18 March 2020. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  10. ^ Saramago, José (2010). The Revolution of 1688–89: Changing The Collected Novels of José Saramago. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 122. ISBN 978-0547581002. Retrieved 29 August 2018 – via Google Books.
  11. ^ Bastiat, Frédéric (2007). The Bastiat Collection. Institute. p. 228. ISBN 9781933550077. Retrieved 29 August 2018 – via Google Books.
  12. ^ White, Luise (2015). Unpopular Sovereignty: Rhodesian Independence and African Decolonization. University of Chicago Press. p. 101. ISBN 9780226235196. Retrieved 29 August 2018 – via Google Books.
  13. ^ Hitchens, Christopher (30 May 2005). "Unmitigated Galloway". Weekly Standard. pp. 1–3. This essay is reprinted in Cottee, Simon; Cushman, Thomas, eds. (2008). Christopher Hitchens and His Critics: Terror, Iraq, and the Left. New York & London: New York University Press. pp. 140-50, 144–46, 149. The text of Galloway's book differs in reprints.
  14. ^ "Fabian Picardo (Chief Minister of Gibraltar) discusses politics in Spain and Gibraltar" – via YouTube.
  15. ^ Gorenberg, Gershom (31 July 2014). "'Perfidious America': Behind Netanyahu's hostility to Kerry". Haaretz. Retrieved 4 August 2014.
  16. ^ Palla, M. (1993). Mussolini e il fascismo. Giunti. p. 112. ISBN 9788809202726. Retrieved 15 October 2014 – via Google Books.
  17. ^ Borelli, Gian Franco; Luchinat, Vittorio (2012). Benito Mussolini privato e pubblico. INDEX. ISBN 9788897982067. Retrieved 15 October 2014 – via Google Books.
  18. ^ "Italy's place in the sun". The Age. 31 May 1926. p. 11. Retrieved 15 October 2014 – via Google News.
  19. ^ H. James Burgwyn. "Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period 1918–1940". BJC McKercher and Keith Neilson (eds.), Praeger Studies of Foreign Policies of the Great Powers.
  20. ^ Samuel, Henry (1 April 2016). "French more keen on Brexit than British, says major poll". The Telegraph. Retrieved 10 June 2016.
  21. ^ Barber, Lionel (16 April 2016). "Could Brexit be a good thing for Europe?". Financial Times. Retrieved 10 June 2016.
  22. ^ Erlanger, Steven (23 June 2016). "Britain Votes to Leave E.U.; Cameron Plans to Step Down". New York Times. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
  23. ^ Sparrow, Andrew; Jones, Sam; Oltermann, Philip (9 April 2019). "Brexit: ERG Tories tells Brussels it will regret letting 'Perfidious Albion' remain in EU beyond Friday – live news". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 9 April 2019.
  24. ^ "Spanish stars' Premier League moves have been of mutual benefit". ESPN.

perfidious, albion, magazine, magazine, pejorative, phrase, used, within, context, international, relations, diplomacy, refer, acts, diplomatic, slights, duplicity, treachery, hence, infidelity, with, respect, perceived, promises, made, alliances, formed, with. For the magazine see Perfidious Albion magazine Perfidious Albion is a pejorative phrase used within the context of international relations diplomacy to refer to acts of diplomatic slights duplicity treachery and hence infidelity with respect to perceived promises made to or alliances formed with other nation states by monarchs or governments of the United Kingdom or England prior to 1707 in their pursuit of self interest A WW1 era German propaganda poster invoking the Perfidious Albion trope Perfidious signifies one who does not keep his faith or word from the Latin word perfidia while Albion is an ancient and now poetic name for Great Britain Contents 1 Origins and use 1 1 Examples of usage 2 See also 3 ReferencesOrigins and use EditThe use of the adjective perfidious to describe England has a long history instances have been found as far back as the 13th century 1 A very similar phrase was used in a sermon by 17th century French bishop and theologian Jacques Benigne Bossuet 2 L Angleterre ah la perfide Angleterre que le rempart de ses mers rendoit inaccessible aux Romains la foi du Sauveur y est abordee England oh perfidious England Shielded against the Romans by her ocean ramparts Now receives the true faith The coinage of the phrase in its current form however is conventionally attributed to Augustin Louis de Ximenes a French Spanish playwright who wrote it in a poem entitled L Ere des Francais published in 1793 Attaquons dans ses eaux la perfide Albion Let us attack perfidious Albion in her waters In this context Great Britain s perfidy was political In the early days of the French Revolution when the revolution aimed at establishing a liberal constitutional monarchy along British lines many in Great Britain had looked upon the Revolution with mild favour However following the turn of the revolution to republicanism with the overthrow and execution of Louis XVI Britain had allied itself with the other monarchies of Europe against the Revolution in France This was seen by the revolutionaries in France as a perfidious betrayal 3 La perfide Albion became a stock expression in France in the 19th century to the extent that the Goncourt brothers could refer to it as a well known old saying It was utilised by French journalists whenever there were tensions between France and Britain for example during the competition for colonies in Africa culminating in the Fashoda Incident The catch phrase was further popularized by its use in La Famille Fenouillard fr the first French comic strip in which one of the characters fulminates against Perfidious Albion which burnt Joan of Arc on the rock of Saint Helena This sentence mixes two major incidents in French history that can be related to the UK s perfidy Joan of Arc whose execution may have been due to English influence and Napoleon who died in exile on Saint Helena He may have died by being poisoned according to the Swedish toxicologist Sten Forshufvud 4 In German speaking areas the term das perfide Albion became increasingly frequent especially during the rule of the German Empire 1871 1918 against the backdrop of rising British German tensions 5 Examples of usage Edit The term often refers to the English reneging on the Treaty of Limerick of 1691 which ended the Williamite War between the predominantly Roman Catholic Jacobite forces and the English forces loyal to William of Orange giving favourable terms to the Irish Catholics including the freedoms to worship to own property and to carry arms but those terms were soon repudiated by the Penal Laws of 1695 6 7 The Irish ballad The Foggy Dew includes the term in its lyrics The song concerns the Easter Rising and the perceived hypocrisy that England is concurrently fighting World War I so that Small Nations might be free while Ireland s struggle for freedom is forcibly suppressed 8 9 In Portugal the term was widely used after the 1890 British Ultimatum after Cecil Rhodes opposition to the Pink Map Portugal and England had been allied since 1386 10 Bastiat uses the term sarcastically in his satirical letter The Candlemakers Petition first published in 1845 11 It is used by Ian Smith in his memoirs The Great Betrayal 1997 to describe his opposition on the British handling of Rhodesian independence 12 In his book I m Not the Only One 2004 British politician George Galloway expressed the opinion that Kuwait is clearly a part of the greater Iraqi whole stolen from the motherland by perfidious Albion 13 In 2012 Fabian Picardo the Chief Minister of Gibraltar used the phrase to describe the UK government s position on the UN Decolonisation Committee Perfidious Albion for this reason The position of the United Kingdom is as usual so nuanced that it s difficult to see where they are on the spectrum but look that s what Britain s like and we all love being British 14 The father of Israeli novelist Amos Oz wrote pamphlets for the Irgun that attacked perfidious Albion during the British rule in Palestine 15 The Italian term perfida Albione perfidious Albion 16 was used in the propaganda of Fascist Italy to criticise the global dominion of the British Empire Fascist propaganda depicted the British as ruthless colonialists who exploited foreign lands and peoples to feed extravagant lifestyle habits like eating five meals a day 17 The term was used frequently in Italian politics after the Second Italo Abyssinian War because despite having gained large colonial territories for itself Britain approved of trade sanctions in the wake of Italian aggression against Ethiopia The sanctions were depicted as an attempt to deny Italy its rightful colonial dominions while at the same time Britain was trying to extend its own influence and authority 18 The same term was used after World War I related to the so called mutilated victory 19 The term was used in reference to a possible United Kingdom withdrawal from the European Union in the run up to the referendum on the issue in 2016 An article in the French newspaper Le Parisien claimed that a poll showing that only 54 of French people supported UK membership of the EU compared to 55 of British people showed that the British will always be seen as the Perfidious Albion 20 In contrast the editor of the Financial Times Lionel Barber has written that Too many people in the UK are under the illusion that most European countries cannot wait to see the back of perfidious Albion 21 Eventually the United Kingdom voted to leave the EU 22 In arguing for a hard Brexit and the EU rejecting a possible extension requested by the UK of the deadline to leave the EU the Brexit supporting British MP Mark Francois said to the Bruges Group in April 2019 My message to the European Council If you now try to hold on to us against our will you will be facing Perfidious Albion on speed It would therefore be much better for all our sakes if we were to pursue our separate destinies in a spirit of mutual respect 23 After their victory against England at the 1950 World Cup the president of the Spanish Football Federation Armando Munoz Calero sent a telegram to Spanish dictator Francisco Franco that read we have beaten Perfidious Albion 24 See also EditPerfidy Anti British sentimentReferences Edit Schmidt H D 1953 The Idea and Slogan of Perfidious Albion Journal of the History of Ideas 14 4 604 616 doi 10 2307 2707704 JSTOR 2707704 Jacques Benigne Bossuet Sermon pour la fete de la Circoncision de Notre Seigneur in Oeuvres completes Volume 5 Ed Outhenin Chalandre 1840 p 264 Dictionnaire des usages socio politiques 1770 1815 Tome 4 Designants socio politiques 2 Dictionnaire des usages socio politiques in French Klincksieck 1989 pp 37 39 ISBN 978 2 252 02694 6 Jean Michel Hoerner La Famille Fenouillard une œuvre premonitoire Herodote 2007 4 no 127 ISBN 9782707153555 doi 10 3917 her 127 0190 Geiser Alfred Das perfide Albion via Archelaus Carruthers Gerard Kidd Colin 2018 Literature and Union Scottish Texts British Contexts Oxford University Press p 99 ISBN 9780198736233 Retrieved 29 August 2018 via Google Books Schwoerer Lois G 1992 The Revolution of 1688 89 Changing Perspectives Cambridge University Press p 236 ISBN 9780521526142 Retrieved 29 August 2018 via Google Books History British History in depth Ireland and World War One BBC Retrieved 18 March 2020 Giotto Labri The Foggy Dew Processes of change in an Irish Rebel song Outreach Ethnomusicology An Online Ethnomusicology Community Archived from the original on 18 March 2020 Retrieved 18 March 2020 Saramago Jose 2010 The Revolution of 1688 89 Changing The Collected Novels of Jose Saramago Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 122 ISBN 978 0547581002 Retrieved 29 August 2018 via Google Books Bastiat Frederic 2007 The Bastiat Collection Institute p 228 ISBN 9781933550077 Retrieved 29 August 2018 via Google Books White Luise 2015 Unpopular Sovereignty Rhodesian Independence and African Decolonization University of Chicago Press p 101 ISBN 9780226235196 Retrieved 29 August 2018 via Google Books Hitchens Christopher 30 May 2005 Unmitigated Galloway Weekly Standard pp 1 3 This essay is reprinted in Cottee Simon Cushman Thomas eds 2008 Christopher Hitchens and His Critics Terror Iraq and the Left New York amp London New York University Press pp 140 50 144 46 149 The text of Galloway s book differs in reprints Fabian Picardo Chief Minister of Gibraltar discusses politics in Spain and Gibraltar via YouTube Gorenberg Gershom 31 July 2014 Perfidious America Behind Netanyahu s hostility to Kerry Haaretz Retrieved 4 August 2014 Palla M 1993 Mussolini e il fascismo Giunti p 112 ISBN 9788809202726 Retrieved 15 October 2014 via Google Books Borelli Gian Franco Luchinat Vittorio 2012 Benito Mussolini privato e pubblico INDEX ISBN 9788897982067 Retrieved 15 October 2014 via Google Books Italy s place in the sun The Age 31 May 1926 p 11 Retrieved 15 October 2014 via Google News H James Burgwyn Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period 1918 1940 BJC McKercher and Keith Neilson eds Praeger Studies of Foreign Policies of the Great Powers Samuel Henry 1 April 2016 French more keen on Brexit than British says major poll The Telegraph Retrieved 10 June 2016 Barber Lionel 16 April 2016 Could Brexit be a good thing for Europe Financial Times Retrieved 10 June 2016 Erlanger Steven 23 June 2016 Britain Votes to Leave E U Cameron Plans to Step Down New York Times Retrieved 1 August 2016 Sparrow Andrew Jones Sam Oltermann Philip 9 April 2019 Brexit ERG Tories tells Brussels it will regret letting Perfidious Albion remain in EU beyond Friday live news The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 9 April 2019 Spanish stars Premier League moves have been of mutual benefit ESPN Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Perfidious Albion amp oldid 1127348864, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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