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YubNub News
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45 w

Top Star of ‘The Office’ Reveals Cancer Diagnosis
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Top Star of ‘The Office’ Reveals Cancer Diagnosis

Jenna Fischer — who starred in all 188 episodes of the NBC classic “The Office” — revealed that she had been quietly battling breast cancer for nearly a year. In honor of Breast Cancer Awareness…
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YubNub News
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All America’s Problems are Leftist Problems
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All America’s Problems are Leftist Problems

[Craving even more FPM content? Sign up for FPM+ to unlock exclusive series, virtual town-halls with our authors, and more. Click here to sign up.] The problem with solving problems is that once…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
45 w

Khamenei Taunts Israel on Anniversary of Oct. 7 Jihad Massacre
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Khamenei Taunts Israel on Anniversary of Oct. 7 Jihad Massacre

[Craving even more FPM content? Sign up for FPM+ to unlock exclusive series, virtual town-halls with our authors, and more. Click here to sign up.] Monday marked the first anniversary of Hamas’…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
45 w

The Danger of the Secularist Sensibility
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The Danger of the Secularist Sensibility

[Craving even more FPM content? Sign up for FPM+ to unlock exclusive series, virtual town-halls with our authors, and more. Click here to sign up.] Last week, Israel’s Minister of Defense, Benny…
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
45 w

Humanity Faces a Brutal Future as Scientists Warn of 2.7°C Warming
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Humanity Faces a Brutal Future as Scientists Warn of 2.7°C Warming

Earth is burning.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
45 w

Scientists Mapped The Human Brain's Sewage System For The First Time
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Scientists Mapped The Human Brain's Sewage System For The First Time

The plumbing goes deep.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
45 w

One Year Later Israelis Again Bomb Northern Gaza Signaling Start of Ethnic Cleansing Plan
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One Year Later Israelis Again Bomb Northern Gaza Signaling Start of Ethnic Cleansing Plan

by Brian Shilhavy, Health Impact News: Returning to northern Gaza almost exactly 1 year from the start of the Hamas-Israel war on October 7, 2023, the IDF is again attacking Palestinians and forcing all the remaining Palestinians to leave northern Gaza. Israel’s military says it has encircled Jabalya, northern Gaza and launched a new ground […]
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History Traveler
History Traveler
45 w

The Cold War & the Rise of Superpowers: US Elections in a Divided World (1945-91)
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The Cold War & the Rise of Superpowers: US Elections in a Divided World (1945-91)

  In 1945, the Cold War began between the United States and the Soviet Union as World War II came to a close. In Europe, the Soviets controlled all territory east of central Germany and set up pro-Soviet communist regimes in those countries. In Asia, the Soviets were aiding the communists in the Chinese Civil War. Quickly, communist governments were popping up throughout Asia, alarming the West. Simultaneously, the Soviets revealed that they had built their own atomic bomb. Many Americans were terrified of both communism and the threat of nuclear war. How did this affect presidential elections between the late 1940s and the 1980s? Did presidential candidates campaign on Cold War issues?   1945-48: Soviet Eastern Europe and the Berlin Airlift A map showing the military situation between NATO (allied with the United States) and the Warsaw Pact (allied with the Soviet Union) during the Cold War. Source: University of Richmond   In May 1945, World War II in Europe ended days after the Soviet Red Army captured all of Berlin, the capital city of Nazi Germany. During the war, it had been assumed that the Soviets would allow free and fair elections in the countries they had liberated from Nazi occupation. Instead, Soviet premier Joseph Stalin set up pro-Soviet satellite states in eastern Europe that were loyal to the USSR. Despite this violation of wartime agreements, there was little the US and Britain could do. The Red Army was massive, and American and British citizens did not want another war.   US President Harry S. Truman became the first Cold War president and, in 1948, had to decide what to do when the Soviets blockaded West Berlin. Truman knew that trying to break through the blockade with military vehicles might provoke a war, so he authorized an airlift instead. The airlift was successful in resupplying West Berlin, and the Soviets ended the blockade when they realized they had been outmaneuvered. This victory likely aided Truman in his upset victory for re-election, which many political analysts considered unlikely.   Truman’s Second Term: The Arms Race Begins A newspaper headline revealing that the Soviet Union had just created its own nuclear weapon, setting up the possibility of nuclear war. Source: National Park Service   Truman won re-election in 1948, aided by his geopolitical victory in Berlin. Nine months later, however, he faced a new Cold War challenge: the Soviets got “the bomb.” This sparked an arms race that would become a political issue several times over the next four decades. As both superpowers increased their number of atomic bombs, debates were sparked over when and how such weapons could be used. Many people were terrified of a nuclear war, but some thought the US should strike quickly while it still had a distinct advantage in bombs.   During the Korean War, Truman faced his first nuclear test. General Douglas MacArthur, a hero from the Pacific Theater of World War II, was the UN/US commander, and wanted to use atomic bombs to win the war. Truman disagreed, believing that conditions were not optimal for such weaponry and that public opinion would condemn their use. MacArthur refused to quiet down and so was relieved of his command in April 1951 by Truman, who felt that MacArthur’s behavior undermined Truman’s authority as commander-in-chief. This hurt Truman’s popularity, as MacArthur was publicly beloved, and Truman chose not to run again for re-election in 1952.   1952-56: Eisenhower, Korea, and the Red Scare President Dwight Eisenhower confers with anti-communist Secretary of State John Dulles (left) and Ambassador Charles Bohlen (right). Source: American Foreign Service Association   With Truman not pursuing re-election, the field was wide open for new leadership. Another World War II hero, former Supreme Allied Commander in Europe Dwight D. Eisenhower, won the presidency as the Republican nominee. Eisenhower was a political moderate who had been courted by both major parties and was seen as the only man who could end the Korean War honorably—Americans would accept his decision to do so. However, the end of the Korean War did not soothe Cold War tensions much—the Second Red Scare was heating up at home.   A 2016 press release commemorating the 1956 law that made “In God We Trust” the national motto during the Cold War to contrast the US with the USSR. Source: Congressman Gary Palmer   This Red Scare, also known as McCarthyism, focused on allegations that communists and communist sympathizers were highly placed throughout the government and Hollywood—and were effectively aiding the Soviet Union. Eisenhower disliked US Senator Joseph McCarthy (R-WI) and the man’s outspoken crusades but was afraid of being considered “soft” on communism. At first, Eisenhower supported legislation that was focused on being tough on suspected communists but eventually ordered his administration to put pressure on McCarthy behind the scenes in 1954.   1960: Two Anti-Communists Battle It Out A Cold War map from when both Democrat John F. Kennedy and Republican Richard M. Nixon were in the US House of Representatives. Source: Science History Institute Museum & Library   After McCarthyism ended with the downfall of Sen. McCarthy, the West enjoyed the brief Khrushchev Thaw with the Soviet Union. This era even saw Vice President Richard Nixon travel to Moscow in 1959, where he famously debated Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev over quality-of-life issues in a mock-up of an American kitchen at an exhibition. The following year, as Nixon ran for president to replace Eisenhower, the Cold War re-froze due to the U-2 Spy Plane Incident and the communist Cuban nationalization of US property. Tensions soared again between the two superpowers.   These new tensions directly affected the presidential campaign, with both Nixon and his rival, US Senator John F. Kennedy (D-MA), arguing that they were the best choice for America to remain ahead of the USSR. Nixon had been a staunch anti-communist as a member of the US House of Representatives Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), with Kennedy voicing similar hostility to expanding communism as a Senate candidate. In 1960, both major political parties were relatively in agreement on the threat posed by the Soviet Union and the Cold War; the only question was which candidate would do a better job at beating the Russians.   1964: The Daisy Ad and Armageddon Screenshots from the Daisy ad during the presidential election of 1964, when President Lyndon Johnson accused his Republican rival of warmongering. Source: University of Texas at Austin   Voters narrowly chose Kennedy, perhaps due to his more telegenic presence in their famed debate. True to his campaigning, Kennedy proved to be a Cold Warrior with his actions toward Cuba. The Bay of Pigs Invasion of 1961 led to the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 after a frightened Cuba sought a military alliance with the USSR. Kennedy held firm on demanding the removal of Soviet missiles from Cuba, and the crisis was resolved with a geopolitical win for the young president. Khrushchev was later removed from power, in part for his perceived loss in Cuba. Tragically, Kennedy was assassinated in November 1963, meaning his vice president, former Senate Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson, was elevated to the Oval Office.   Johnson ran for his own term in 1964. Despite the American victory in the Cuban Missile Crisis, the threat of communist expansion was growing in Vietnam. Since the end of the Eisenhower administration, the US had been quietly sending increasing numbers of military advisors to aid South Vietnam against communist North Vietnam. In August 1964, the Gulf of Tonkin Incident allowed Johnson to drastically escalate US efforts in the Vietnam War. Ironically, despite Johnson’s escalation of a Cold War conflict, his campaign pinned the warmongering on his rival, US Senator Barry Goldwater (R-AZ). The Daisy ad, which ran a month after the Gulf of Tonkin Incident, implied that Goldwater would trigger a nuclear war. Goldwater lost in a landslide.   1976: Ford and Eastern Europe Democratic presidential nominee Jimmy Carter (left) debates Republican president Gerald Ford (right) during the 1976 election. Source: University of Virginia (UVA)   Johnson’s second term saw the start of détente, or relaxed tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union. However, the benefits of detente were overshadowed by growing US casualties in the Vietnam War, hurting Johnson’s administration. Richard Nixon, returning from his 1960 loss, became the Republican presidential nominee again in 1968 and won the White House over Johnson’s vice president, Hubert Humphrey. As Nixon approached re-election, he began reducing the number of US troops in Vietnam and re-established diplomatic relations with communist China, scoring geopolitical (and campaign) wins.   In 1976, because of the Watergate scandal, it wasn’t Richard Nixon facing Democratic presidential nominee Jimmy Carter, but former Vice President Gerald Ford. Ford made an infamous gaffe in their televised debate, claiming that there was no Soviet domination of Eastern Europe. The blatant error made Carter the clear winner of the debate, and Ford lost his bid for his own presidential term. Critics felt that Ford was out of touch with the realities of the Cold War, which included continued Soviet control over eastern European “republics.”   1980: End of Détente Calls for a Defense Hawk Author Peter Robinson credits Republican president Ronald Reagan, elected in 1980, as being a Cold War icon. Source: Hoover Institution   Unfortunately for Carter, the realities of the Cold War would grow worse three years later during his own presidential term. In December 1979, the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan to prop up an ailing communist government. Coming on the heels of the Iran Hostage Crisis, while over fifty Americans were being held hostage by Iranian radicals, the Soviet invasion made President Carter look weak on foreign policy. That next year, Carter faced these foreign policy struggles in addition to a sputtering domestic economy as he ran for re-election.   Republican presidential nominee Ronald Reagan seized on Carter’s perceived weakness. Reagan argued that lack of defense spending had left America weak and a target for aggressors, such as Iranian revolutionaries and the Soviet Union. Famously, Reagan asked Americans during the debates whether they felt better about their lives and the world than four years ago. With the situation in Iran and Afghanistan making the world seem scarier, voters felt that things in 1980 were not better than in 1976…and put Reagan in the White House.   1984: Defense Spending Helps Save the Economy A graph showing the spike in defense spending in the 1980s under US President Ronald Reagan, who enjoyed economic growth as a result. Source: American Enterprise Institute   As a devout Cold Warrior, Reagan significantly increased defense spending and directly challenged the Soviet Union’s aggressive behavior. In March 1983, Reagan famously called the Soviet Union an “evil empire,” cementing his reputation as a defense hawk. That October, he sent US forces to invade the Caribbean island nation of Grenada and topple the regime of a radical communist leader. Operation Urgent Fury was a quick military victory for America and helped the nation overcome the sociocultural malaise from the unsatisfying end of the Vietnam War a decade earlier.   However, Reagan’s focus on growing the US military paid additional dividends in terms of economic growth. During much of Reagan’s first term, the economy still struggled with high inflation and unemployment. His 1981 tax cuts had been less successful than hoped, with taxes going back up over the next three years to restore federal revenue. However, by 1984, there was finally some economic improvement, which critics attributed to his aggressive military spending rather than supply-side growth. This spending-centered economic growth secured Reagan’s re-election by a landslide…but also greatly increased the national debt.   1988: Bush Rides Cold Warrior’s Coattails Soviet Premier Mikhail Gorbachev (left), US President Ronald Reagan (center), and President George Bush Sr. (right) in New York City in 1988. Source: Foreign Affairs   Reagan’s second term saw warming tensions with the Soviet Union again as a new, younger Soviet premier—Mikhail Gorbachev—pursued reforms. Beginning in 1985, Gorbachev met with Reagan in a series of international summits that secured arms control agreements. By 1987, the Soviet economy was secretly starting to crumble, and the USSR pursued warmer relations with the West. Benefiting from Reagan’s continued Cold War victories, including his speech at the Berlin Wall in the summer of 1987, was Vice President George Bush Sr.   By 1988, it looked like the United States was winning the international struggle for public opinion against Gorbachev’s quietly struggling Soviet Union. Bush largely campaigned to continue the policies of his boss, Ronald Reagan. He successfully made Democratic challenger Michael Dukakis look soft on crime and mocked the appearance of a grinning Senator Dukakis atop a tank. The infamous tank ad made Dukakis appear unready to be commander-in-chief—still a necessity in 1988, as the Cold War continued—and helped Bush clinch the election.   Aftermath: Despite Win, Voters Look to Move On Quickly Presidential nominee Bill Clinton (left) and running mate Al Gore (right) won the 1992 election as the first post-Cold War Baby Boomer ticket. Source: American Academy of Achievement   Bush’s World War II experience, Cold War bona fides, and victory over Iraq in the 1990-91 Gulf War were not enough to carry him to re-election in 1992. Although Bush enjoyed popularity ratings as high as 90 percent shortly after his victory in the Middle East, the 1991 economic recession quickly cooled his support. Even the collapse of the Soviet Union in December 1991 did not secure Bush’s popularity; much Cold Warrior credit went to his predecessor, Ronald Reagan, instead.   Young political rival Bill Clinton, Democratic governor of Arkansas, campaigned skillfully for president in 1992 by focusing on the economy. He also suggested that he and running mate Al Gore, the youngest ticket in modern times, were the key to bringing the United States into the future. Voters agreed, and Bush’s political victories between 1991 and 1992, which included the end of the Cold War, did not carry the day. Clinton won the White House, though critics argued that Bush only lost due to the presence of strong independent candidate Ross Perot, who appealed to some conservatives and cost Republicans some votes.
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History Traveler
History Traveler
45 w

What Did Americans Eat During the Great Depression?
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What Did Americans Eat During the Great Depression?

  As a result of stock market speculation and easy credit, Wall Street crashed in October 1929, sending the American economy and society on a downward spiral of despair. Known as the Great Depression, the phenomenon plunged 1930s America into a dark period of scarcity, poverty, and hardship. As food supplies and purchasing power reduced dramatically, Americans found ingenious methods to prepare their meals, maximizing the ingredients while feeding their families. Learn more about the innovative creations that made their way onto the dining tables of American households in the 1930s.   The Great Depression: Of Hardship and Turmoil People gathering in front of the New York Stock Exchange during the Wall Street Crash, 1929. Source: Library of Congress   The roots of the Great Depression can be traced to the unsustainable stock market bubble in the 1920s. An exuberant era filled with optimism and widespread societal changes, the Roaring Twenties was characterized by a booming economy and a vibrant stock market. However, the fact that the economic boom was fuelled by speculation and the availability of easy credit created a precarious situation.   This bubble would burst in October 1929, sending shockwaves and panic across the United States with its effects soon spreading to other continents. As panic at the stock market escalated, millions of Americans withdrew their savings, resulting in bank runs and frozen credit. Businesses fell into financial limbo and unemployment skyrocketed. By 1933, unemployment rates in the United States reached a shocking 25% and millions were in poverty and destitution.   Everyone Was in the Hot Soup… Kitchens People queueing up outside a soup kitchen ran by Al Capone during the Great Depression, 1930s. Source: National Archives   To combat hunger, soup kitchens became popular in the Depression-era United States, offering a crucial lifeline to millions of Americans. Soups were hailed as fuss-free and cost-effective meal options that could provide some level of nourishment to the hungry and poor. With cheap ingredients, soups could be prepared in large quantities to serve more people. Many would queue up for a piping hot bowl of soup in soup kitchens that were run by churches, private charities, and local communities. Even the notorious mob boss Al Capone operated a soup kitchen in Chicago during the Great Depression to feed hungry Americans. Although it was a laudable charitable act, some believed that Al Capone did so to clean up his unsavory image.   Stretching the Dollar in Times of Scarcity Farm family in Bradford, Vermont, eating dinner, 1939. Source: Library of Congress   As food supplies were scarce, Americans had to be creative to stretch the dollar and provide sustenance for themselves and their families. Many often turned to starchy staples, such as potatoes, rice, and flour, which were more filling and could fight off the hunger pangs. The humble potato attained a reverent status as its versatility gifted the impoverished a huge variety of dishes. Potato soups provided a hearty meal with minimal ingredients, while potato pancakes made for a fuss-free savory dish adored by both adults and children alike.   A potato harvest in Powell Butte, Oregon, United States, 1930. Source: The Madras Pioneer   During the Great Depression, Americans also looked to canned goods such as sardines that were inexpensive and afforded longer storage. Beans and vegetables were popular as they were good sources of nutrients and could be used for large pots of stews. Cheaper cuts of meat were also preferred. For example, when it came to steaks, housewives would opt for chuck instead of sirloin or ribeye. Some would also cut down on red meats which were more expensive and replaced them with other forms of meat. Offal—mostly referring to entrails or animal organs—was also found on the dining tables as it was often cheap. This is a sharp contrast to the present day as the practice of consuming offal today in the American context is rather rare.   Ingenuity Fuelled by Hardship A Nucoa margarine advertisement in Life magazine that appeals to budget-conscious consumers, promising to help them save “up to 14 cents a pound,” 1937. Source: New York Historical Society Library   To make the most of these ingredients, Americans came up with several ingenious and economical methods. The first golden rule was that no wastage would be tolerated.  Housewives would often take leftover meat and make them into sandwiches or pot pies. Even breads that had gone stale could be used as breadcrumbs or made into bread puddings. In addition, to feed more mouths and maximize the ingredients, rice and pasta would be used to bulk up stews and soups. Even milk was often watered down to make for larger portions or for diverse uses. Creativity knew no bounds as Depression-era Americans were also known to use various cheaper substitutes for meat. For example, mushrooms were often used to replace meat as they were thought to have similar textures.   Sowing Into the Thrift Gardens of Hope A pamphlet with images of Detroit’s Thrift Gardens, 1931. Source: Detroit Public Library   To further ease the grocery bills, households would also choose to make their own staples such as bread and crackers. This was highly efficient as they could better control the ingredients used and reduce their reliance on commercial food. To be more self-sustainable, some even ventured into growing their own produce. Backyard gardens became a popular alternative to buying fruit and vegetables. Sometimes also called Thrift Gardens, these farming plots were created to meet the immediate food needs of the people. In some communities, these plots were highly planned to ensure that a variety of crops were grown, including corn, broccoli, carrots, peas, lettuce, and radishes. In this way, every household would be contributing to the common cause and be taken care of in return. On a wider scale, these gardens could also help to alleviate the burden on government relief programs designed to combat hunger.   Enjoying the Sweets During Bitter Moments Jell-O was a popular ingredient for desserts recipes during the Great Depression thanks to its versatility and low cost, 1930s. Source: Food52   Americans have always had a sweet tooth. Even in the toughest of times, a little sweet treat never killed anybody. Some of the most popular Depression-era recipes were desserts that offered a sugary moment of solace amidst hardship. Baked apples, rice puddings, peanut butter cookies, and oatmeal cookies became popular classics that accompanied millions of Americans through the economic downturn. These sweet treats were comfort foods that required inexpensive and easily obtainable ingredients such as flour, sugar, and baking soda. Even the more luxurious desserts such as a chocolate cake could be enjoyed if one improvised on the ingredients. Instead of using chocolate, which was considered a luxury, homemakers used cocoa powder and milk as substitutes. America’s favorite powdered gelatin dessert—more commonly known as Jell-O—also enjoyed much popularity thanks to its versatility and vibrant colors.   Wacky Food Creations That Actually Tasted Great A tomato soup cake recipe (right), 1941. Source: Atlas Obscura   With low food supplies and tightened purse strings, Americans found ways to use unconventional ingredients to create some of the most peculiar yet tasty dishes. Made using sugar, flour, eggs, and apple cider vinegar, the infamous Vinegar Pie was one of these creations. Apple cider vinegar was touted as a cheaper alternative to lemons, which were not readily available during the Great Depression. Despite the unsavory name, the Vinegar Pie was praised for its complex tangy taste profile. In the same vein, the Tomato Soup Cake surprised many when it soared in popularity during the Great Depression. It turned out that the cheap tinned tomato soup contained the perfect ingredients for a moist cake—gelatinized starch from thickeners and pectin from tomatoes.   Legacy of the Food Culture of the Great Depression Tomato Soup Cake made from Campbell’s Tomato Soup. Source: TODAY   The trying times of one of the most tumultuous periods of history witnessed the creation of many innovative recipes. Many of the food creations initially thought to be strange during the Great Depression have even made their way onto our modern-day dining tables. Oatmeal cookies, meatloaves, and lentil soups have remained popular favorites despite their very humble origins associated with a less peaceful time. More importantly, the endless creativity and resourcefulness of Americans in times of trouble was noteworthy and deserving of praise. It showcased the best of American ingenuity and lent testament to the resilience of a generation of Americans.   A family in Pennsylvania, United States eating a simple meal during the Great Depression, 1937. Source: Library of Congress   Interestingly, significant events of recent times such as the COVID-19 pandemic and the subsequent lockdown have also inspired people to consider the historical parallels. The panic buying and tightened purse strings during the early days of the lockdown reminded many of what ensued during the Great Depression. Amateur bakers who picked up the hobby during quarantine also explored many Depression-era recipes, including the wacky cake that went viral on social media. The Wacky Cake—also known as the Depression Cake—did not require the usual suspects in baking, which were eggs, butter, and milk. Using just flour, sugar, and cocoa powder and finished with whipped cream, a simple and delectable cake was ready for consumption. This very timely throwback to the 1930s is a reminder that while history might not repeat itself, it most certainly almost always rhymes.
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45 w

Who Were Charlemagne’s Daughters
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Who Were Charlemagne’s Daughters

  On Christmas Day in the year 800, the Pope crowned Charlemagne as Emperor of the Romans. At Charles’ side were his daughters, Rotrude and Berta. His educated, liberated, and unmarried daughters went everywhere with their father. Why did they never marry? What role did they play in his reign?   Who Was Charlemagne Again? Coronation of Charlemagne, by Friedrich Kaulbach, 1863. Source: Time Toast   If you know of Charlemagne at all, you probably know him as the warrior king who forged an Empire that encompassed most of Western Europe. He spent almost every summer for 40 years at war and converted many to Christianity (sometimes by force). He also assembled the greatest scholars of Europe at his court.   Charles loved to collect things. Scholars. Old Greek and Roman manuscripts. The Lombard Crown. The vast Treasure of the Avars. A splinter of the True Cross, which he wore around his neck for protection. The Byzantine Empress, Irene, sent him the Sancte Chemise — the veil Mary supposedly wore when she gave birth to Jesus. The Caliph of Bagdad sent him a water clock and then an elephant which he took with him into battle.   The Father of Europe Portrait of Charlemagne, by Albrecht Durer c. 1515. Source: Britannica   Charles was the father of Europe in more ways than one. He had five wives, four named concubines, and many, many children, 19 of whom he acknowledged. Almost all people of Northern European descent have some of his DNA. His was the most successful of the barbarian empires that came after the fall of Rome.   Charles established his court in Aachen as a place of scholarship. He invited the greatest minds of his day to attend him. Together, they explored ideas, translated old texts for one another, and revived classical learning. They invented the Carolingian script—a combination of the Roman and Insular scripts—which is still a font today. They introduced the use of spaces between words, capitals at the beginnings of sentences, and periods at the end. While Italian, French, Romanian, and Spanish were emerging as true languages rather than regional dialects of Latin, court scholars regularized the spelling, grammar, and vocabulary of Latin, codifying not only the language of the Church but of scholarship for the next 900 years.   Most importantly, in a society that did not value literacy, Charles required monasteries to establish local schools. He established the Palace School at Aachen, where the children of the nobility would study the arts and sciences, and recruited the renowned scholar, Alcuin, to run it.   Charles was an unconventional man, who preferred the simple dress of a Frankish soldier to the pleated chlamys and formal wear of Rome. When it came to education at the palace school, he did not discriminate between those of his children born in wedlock or by concubines. His children by his concubines all had good careers as abbots and ministers. And further, he educated his daughters as if they were his sons.   The Daughters of Charlemagne Attend the Palace School Alcuin teaching, 9th century. Source: Wikimedia Commons   Rotrude and Berta and their younger sisters (Gisela, Rualhaid, Hiltrud, and Theodrada) only receive a few lines in history. Rotrude got three sentences in the Royal Frankish Annals, Berta had two, Gisela three, and the other three got nothing. The three older sisters also appear in the correspondence of the scholar Alcuin. Alcuin had come to Charlemagne’s court from the great Cathedral School of Durham. He was charged with founding the Palace School for the young nobles of Francia and teaching them the classical disciplines. One of his favorite pupils was Charles’s eldest daughter, Rotrude, whom he called, “Columba.” Berta was “Delia.” An older student, Angilbert, was called “Homer.” Alcuin named himself “Flaccus” and called King Charles, “David.”   Alcuin Taught Reading, Writing, and Problem Solving Alcuin’s puzzle, depicted in the Ormesby Psalter, 1300-1400. Source: The Bodleian Library, Oxford   Alcuin was a gifted teacher and taught his students the classic liberal arts: grammar, logic, rhetoric, arithmetic, astronomy, music, and geometry. In his classroom, he also used a book of logic problems which he’d created called Problems to Sharpen the Young.     Consider the following: “A man had to take a wolf, a goat, and a bunch of cabbages across a river. The only boat he could find had room for himself and one other. How can he get them all across the river safely – without the wolf being left alone to eat the goose or the goose being left alone to eat the cabbages?”   So, the daughters of Charlemagne not only learned to read and write but how to reason.   Uncommon Princesses  Kings and Queens of Francia, from the Costumes of all Nations, by Albert Kretschmer, 1882. Source: Coronationstone   At first, the eldest daughters, Rotrude and Berta, shared the traditional destiny of all princesses: a political marriage that was good for their father’s kingdom.   At the age of seven, Rotrude was engaged to marry Constantine VI, the Roman Emperor in Constantinople. Berta was sought after by Offa, the King of Mercia, for his son, Egfrith, in trade for allowing Charles’ eldest son to marry his daughter.   Charles’s decision to ally the Franks with the Pope in Rome ended the first engagement, and when Offa, a mere king of part of England, came bargaining for his daughter, Charles was so insulted that he closed all the ports of Francia to English ships.   In the next few years, Charles formally announced that his daughters would never marry. He gave as his reason that he could not bear to part with their company.   Permanent Princesses  Map of Charlemagne’s domains. Source: Wikimedia Commons   Most scholars assume that Charles wanted to avoid the political complications that accompany sons-in-law and their offspring. The tradition of Carolingian inheritance was to divide the kingdom among male heirs. Charles made his plans early.   His eldest son, Charles, was to rule Francia proper with him. In 787, his second son, Carloman, was rechristened with Charles’s father’s name, Pepin, and crowned king of the Italian peninsula.  The youngest, Louis, was sent to the Aquitaine on the border with Muslim Spain.   Whatever the reason, the result was this: his five legitimate daughters who survived childhood remained at court. They were not shipped off to another country at the age of twelve.   The mother of Rotrude, Berta, and Gisela was Charlemagne’s first Christian wife, Hildegarde. He had had an informal Germanic liaison with the mother of his first son, Pippin Hunchback, and his second marriage with a Lombard Princess was arranged for him by his mother. He sent her back to her father when he fell in love with the 13-year-old Hildegarde.   Hildegarde bore nine children, six of whom survived before she died at the age of 25. Theodrada and Hildtrud, the half-sisters of Rotrude and Berta, were born to his fourth wife, Fastrada. His fifth wife, Liutgard, who was only a year older than Rotrude, had no children before dying in 799.   Hildegarde, wife of Charlemagne, 19th century. Source: The Royal Collection Trust   So, Charles’s children grew up together in their father’s court, along with the children of his concubines. As even the concubine’s children went on to careers in the Church as abbesses and abbots, they apparently all studied together at the Palace School as well.   Rotrude, Berta, and Gisela won praise as students and writers. They ate meals with their father and loved to discuss poetry with Liutgard. When she died, he did not remarry, so, for the last 15 years of his reign, his older daughters effectively operated as his Queens, which meant the administration of his court was in their hands.   Charlemagne was a very smart man, but he never learned to write. It is possible to imagine that his literate daughters were privately helpful in composing the many Capitularies he issued to govern his Empire. However, that is not all they were up to.   Confidants, Companions, and Independent Women Charlemagne receives Alcuin 780, by Jean Victor Schnetz, 19th century. Source: Meisterdrucke   Two of Charles’s sons left the court at an early age — Louis was sent to rule Aquitaine and Pepin to rule Italy, with the help of counselors before they were adolescents. Only the eldest, Charles, who was to succeed his father as Emperor and King of Francia, remained at court with his sisters, half-sisters, and the children of his father’s concubines. In 810, Carloman died and all six of his daughters were sent to Charlemagne’s court for their education. The court was awash with bold, unmarried women.   The Crowned Doves Frankish Bird Brooch, 500-600. Source: The MET, New York   Alcuin’s letters to Charlemagne’s daughters are full of fond wishes that they “fare well and prosper in the practice of every virtue.” Rotrude remained a scholar her whole life and commissioned Alcuin to write a commentary on the Gospel of St. John. When she retired to the nunnery at Chelles where her aunt was the Abbess, the two of them set up an important scriptorium for the copying of manuscripts.   However, Alcuin changes his tone when he writes about the princesses to a young cleric who was coming to court: “May the Crowned Doves that fly about the rooms of the Palace not come to your windows, nor wild horses break through the doors of your room.” “Think carefully to whom you speak.” (Letters of Alcuin of York, by Stephen Allott, 1974. William Sessions Ltd. York, England, Letters 92 and 125)   Forbidden to marry, but surrounded by babies, concubines and courtiers, Charles’s daughters apparently decided they were entitled to act like their father. They couldn’t have husbands, so they took lovers. Their children, when they came, were simply added to the court.   Charles Blushes  Einhardt monument, Germany. Source: Wikimedia Commons   Einhardt, Charles’s biographer, had a few choice words to say about the girls: “He was so careful of the training of his sons and daughters that he never took his meals without them when he was at home, and never made a journey without them; his sons would ride at his side, and his daughters follow him, while a number of his body-guard, detailed for their protection, brought up the rear. Strange to say, although they were very handsome women, and he loved them very dearly, he was never willing to marry any of them to a man of their own nation or to a foreigner, but kept them all at home until his death, saying that he could not dispense with their society. Hence, though otherwise happy, he experienced the malignity of fortune as far as they were concerned; yet he concealed his knowledge of the rumors current in regard to them, and of the suspicions entertained of their honor.” (The Life of Charlemagne, Einhardt, trans by Samuel Eps Turner, NY Harper & Bros, 1880.)   The Wanton Heats of the Palace Courtly love, depicted in the Codex Mannesse, 1310-1340. Source: Wikimedia Commons   Berta had a long-standing affair with Angilbert, a nobleman who had grown up at court and became one of Charles’s most trusted emissaries to other courts. They had three children: Nithard, who became a historian during Louis the Pious’s reign, Hartnid, who became an abbot, and Bertrude, who married a count.   Rotrude did not form an attachment, but had at least one son — probably with one Rorgo, the Count of Maine. Their son, Louis, became the abbot of St. Denis, the most powerful abbey in France, and served as Archchancellor of Francia. Most of the younger daughters followed in their older sister’s footsteps. To say that the girls broke all the rules is an understatement.   Charles didn’t—or wouldn’t—acknowledge his daughter’s adventures; but it was an open secret. One Courtier described the atmosphere as being full of “wanton heats…caresses of delights and blandishments of passion.” (Vita Aldalhardi, from King and Emperor, Janet K Nelson, 2019 pp. 443-444). The courts of Europe were scandalized, as was Rotrude’s and Berta’s brother, Louis.   In 810-811, there was a terrible cattle plague that spread all over Europe. In 811, Pepin of Italy, and then Rotrude died. Charles, Charlemagne’s oldest son, died the following year.   Charlemagne was crushed. He crowned his youngest son, Louis, as King and Emperor in the year before his own death in the winter of 813. He was worried enough about his daughters that he provided monasteries and nunneries for them to go to, should no man wish to marry them. He admonished his sons, asking that they not stand in the way of their sisters marrying.   Louis the Pious and the Enormous Troop of Women The Persephone Sarcophagus, Roman, Early 3rd Century CE, Aachen Cathedral Treasury. Source: Wikimedia Commons   When Charlemagne died, it took the new Emperor Louis a month to arrive at the court at Aachen. His sisters were tasked with dressing their father’s body and his burial. The day he died, they washed his body, wrapped it in a purple and gold silk shroud, and laid him in an antique Roman sarcophagus, carved with the story of the Rape of Persephone.   When Louis arrived and ascended to the throne, he spent one-third of his father’s vast treasure on a memorial celebration, and satisfying the bequests of his father’s will, divided the remainder between himself and “those of his sisters who had been born in lawful wedlock.”    Then Louis cleared his court of this “enormous troop of women.” He ordered all of his various sisters to “remove themselves instantly from court to their monasteries.”     Charles had provided monasteries or nunneries for most of them to retire to. Berta was not eager to leave court but Louis was not interested in her thoughts on the matter. So, Berta became Abbess of a nunnery. It was possibly the one associated with the monastery of St. Requier in Amiens, where Angilbert had retired from foreign affairs to be the lay Abbot.   Unlike his father’s reign, Louis’s reign was fraught with division; his sons repeatedly went to war with each other. It is said that Berta, who died in 826, was buried near her sister Rotrude in the Nunnery at Chelles but the nunnery was destroyed during the French Revolution, so it is impossible to say. Whether Louis consulted Berta in times of trouble, we will never know.  Charlemagne’s daughters pass out of history and are not mentioned again.   Bibliography   King and Emperor, A New Life of Charlemagne,  Janet L. Nelson. University of California Press, 2019 Carolingian Chronicles (Royal Frankish Annals and Nithard’s Histories), translated by Bernhard Walker Scholz with Barbara Rogers.  Ann Arbor Paperbacks, University of Michigan Press. 1972. Alcuin of York – His Life and Letters, Stephen Allot, William Sessions Ltd. The Ebor Press, York, England, 1974.
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