The Retainer Reflex: Why Freelance Artists Treat One-Time Commissions as Standing Contracts, and How Client-Reputation Networks Govern the Commission Economy

Abstract. A writer who purchases a single illustration sometimes finds that the artist afterward behaves as though a continuing obligation had been created: expecting renewal, treating non-renewal as a breach, occasionally raising the prospect of legal action, and conveying a sense of claim over the buyer’s future work. This paper argues that these behaviors are predictable outputs of the freelance commission market’s structure rather than personal failings. Three structural features carry most of the explanatory weight: chronic income precarity under conditions of artist oversupply, the platform-era normalization of recurring patronage as the default funding frame, and the incompleteness of informal commission agreements, which leave scope and termination unmarked. The paper then addresses the empirical question of whether artists exchange information about clients, finding that they do, both informally and through dedicated warning and recommendation communities, and that this circulation of client reputation explains both why a paying press attracts heavy solicitation and why a buyer’s payment habits acquire a durable life of their own. A concluding section frames the wage-and-claim question in biblical terms, which cut in both directions, and offers practical implications for a press.

The structural condition: precarity within an oversupplied market

Every behavior examined here grows out of a single material fact about creative labor markets: artists are chronically oversupplied relative to paid demand, and the resulting income is episodic, uncertain, and thin. Menger (2014) describes artistic labor markets as governed by extreme uncertainty and a persistent surplus of aspirants competing for a small pool of paid work, while Abbing (2002) frames the willingness of artists to accept poor terms as a defining feature of an economy in which the supply of would-be professionals never clears. Standing (2011) situates such workers within the precariat, a class marked by unstable income and the absence of the security that standard employment confers. The practical consequence is that a freelance artist does not experience a paying client as one transaction among many. The client is a scarce, hard-won asset whose loss is felt acutely, because client acquisition is costly, uncertain, and rarely repeatable on demand.

This condition converts what looks like character — grasping, presumptuous, entitled — into the expected response of a rational actor facing feast-or-famine income and high client-acquisition costs. The sections that follow trace each observed behavior back to it.

The retainer reflex: why a sale is read as a subscription

The central puzzle is why a one-time purchase generates an expectation of continuation. Three mechanisms combine.

The first is income smoothing. A freelancer whose earnings arrive in unpredictable lumps has a strong interest in converting any episodic buyer into a recurring one, because a standing relationship turns volatile income into something closer to a wage. The rational move under precarity is to maximize the lifetime value of each acquired client, and the cheapest path to that value is renewal rather than fresh acquisition. The artist who presses for continuation is doing what the incentive structure rewards.

The second mechanism is the funding frame that the platform era has installed as a default. Patronage subscriptions and monthly art tiers have trained a generation of working artists to treat the renewing relationship, not the discrete sale, as the normal shape of a client tie. Where the underlying mental model is a subscription, the default is renewal-until-cancelled rather than completion-until-renewed, and the buyer’s silence after one piece reads not as a closed transaction but as a lapse in an expected continuation. Buyer and artist then operate two different defaults: the buyer’s is a single purchase, the artist’s is the onset of patronage. The dispute is less about facts than about which default governs an agreement that named neither.

The third mechanism is contract incompleteness, the feature that allows the first two to take hold. Caves (2000) shows that creative-industry agreements are chronically incomplete because quality, scope, and value cannot be fully specified in advance, and informal commission arrangements push that incompleteness to its limit. A handshake commission for a single drawing rarely states that the relationship ends on delivery, and the unmarked ending is precisely what produces the dispute. When nothing in the agreement closes the relationship, its end is read against each party’s prior expectation, and the artist’s expectation, formed under the pressures described above, is continuity. What the buyer experiences as a one-time deal the artist experiences as an open relationship the buyer has unilaterally abandoned.

The appearance of entitlement: gift, market, and relationship-as-asset

The sense that an artist feels owed the buyer’s future business has two further sources beyond the retainer reflex. The first is the long-noted tension between gift logic and market logic in creative work. Hyde (1983) argues that art is experienced by its makers as something given rather than merely sold, and Caves (2000) documents how creative producers attach personal and relational meaning to work that the buyer treats as a discrete commodity. When the maker experiences the transaction as the beginning of a relationship and the buyer experiences it as a purchase, a clean conclusion feels to the maker like the severing of a tie rather than the completion of a sale. The entitlement is, in part, the residue of relationship-thinking colliding with transaction-thinking.

The second source is the treatment of an established client tie as an acquired asset. Having secured a buyer, the artist has obtained something scarce in an oversupplied market, and the withdrawal of that tie registers as the loss of property rather than the lapse of an arrangement. Becker (1982) describes art production as embedded in cooperative networks held together by recurring relationships and shared conventions; within such a network, a paying client is not an interchangeable counterparty but a node whose loss diminishes the artist’s standing. The reaction that looks disproportionate from outside is proportionate to what has, from inside, been lost.

Legal threats as bargaining rather than litigation

The threat of legal action over refused recurring payment is best understood not as a credible plan to sue but as a low-cost coercive move in a setting where litigation is impractical. The sums at stake in commission disputes are typically far smaller than the cost of bringing suit, the parties are often in different jurisdictions, and the underlying agreement is usually too informal to support a clean claim. In that setting the legal threat functions as cheap talk: it costs nothing to send and may extract payment through intimidation from a counterparty who does not know how weak the claim is.

Two qualifications prevent this from becoming a blanket dismissal. Some artists honestly misunderstand the law, conflating a course of dealing with an enforceable continuing contract, or confusing a usage-and-copyright claim, where they may stand on firmer ground, with a claim for future payment, where they generally do not. And some threats are not empty, because in cases of genuine non-payment for work already agreed and delivered the artist’s grievance is real and may be actionable. The point is not that artists never have valid claims but that the recurring-payment threat specifically tends to be a bargaining instrument rather than a litigation plan. Its real force, as the next section argues, is reputational rather than legal: the threat that travels is the promise to tell other artists how a buyer behaves, and the legal language is often the opener for that more credible sanction.

Why a press draws heavy solicitation

The observation that an unusual number of freelance artists seek commission work from a fiction press follows from what a press looks like to a freelancer scanning the market. An individual one-off commissioner is a single uncertain transaction; a press is an institutional buyer with recurring content needs — covers, interior illustration, promotional art — and therefore the closest thing the commission economy offers to a stable, repeat-purchase client. Hesmondhalgh and Baker (2011) describe the freelancer’s search for the steadier institutional relationship as the central strategic problem of media work, and a press presents itself as a candidate solution. It is also far more discoverable than a private buyer: a press has a name, a public presence, and a contact point, which makes it a standing target for solicitation in a way that scattered individual clients are not. The asymmetry is structural. There are many artists and few institutional buyers, so any visible press experiences the aggregate of many artists’ search efforts as a flood directed at it in particular.

A press that has commissioned art even once compounds this, because the single fact most prized in the information networks described below is that a buyer pays. Having paid, the press is marked as a buyer who pays, and that mark — circulated through the channels examined next — converts a single transaction into a reputation that draws further solicitation.

Do artists communicate about clients? The reputation-network answer

The direct question is whether artists tell one another which authors are generous and which are not. They do, both as a matter of observable practice and as a matter of economic logic.

The logic comes first, because it explains why such communication is close to inevitable. The commission market is a textbook instance of the problem Akerlof (1970) identified: buyers vary in payment reliability, scope discipline, and ease of dealing, and the artist cannot verify these qualities before agreeing to work. In any market where quality is hidden before the transaction, participants who cannot rely on formal verification will pool private information to protect themselves. Reputation-sharing is the commission economy’s substitute for the credit ratings and escrow systems that more formal markets provide. Gandini (2016) describes precisely this dynamic among freelance creative workers, for whom reputation circulating through peer networks does the screening work that institutions do elsewhere. Granovetter’s (1973) account of how information travels through loose acquaintance ties rather than close ones explains why such warnings spread widely and quickly: it is the weak ties across a dispersed artist community, not the tight friendships within a studio, that carry a client’s name to people the client has never met.

The practice matches the logic. Artists circulate client information informally through group chats, server channels, and social-media threads, and more formally through dedicated communities built to warn against bad clients and to recommend good ones; the long-running Artists Beware community is the best-known instance of the type, collecting first-person accounts of clients who did not pay, demanded uncompensated revision, or behaved abusively. The information that travels is not limited to non-payment. It includes payment speed, tolerance for scope creep, clarity of direction, courtesy, and generosity. A buyer who pays promptly, pays fairly, and treats artists well acquires a positive reputation that draws solicitation; a buyer who underpays, delays, or disputes acquires a negative one that suppresses it or attracts the more aggressive operators who work the margins. A press therefore does not control whether it has a reputation among artists, only what that reputation is, and the inflow of solicitations it experiences is in part the visible effect of an information network the press cannot see.

The skeptic’s case

Several objections deserve a hearing. First, the pattern may be a generalization from a small number of difficult actors; the artists who press, threaten, and presume are likely overrepresented in memory precisely because they are unpleasant, while the many who delivered one piece and moved on leave no trace. Second, some share of what reads as entitlement may be a legitimate grievance over an ambiguous agreement in which the buyer did imply continuity, whether through language, repeated contact, or the structure of the project, so that the artist’s expectation of further work was reasonable rather than presumptuous. Third, the underlying conditions are not the artists’ invention. Precarity, oversupply, chronic underpayment, and the routine theft of creative labor are documented features of the field (Abbing, 2002; McRobbie, 2016; Banks, 2007), and behavior that looks grasping from the buyer’s side is often defensive from the seller’s. A buyer who has never had a client vanish without paying will underweight how rational the artist’s wariness is. None of this excuses treating a sale as a subscription or sending hollow legal threats, but a fair analysis holds the structural pressures on the artist in view alongside the buyer’s reasonable expectation that a purchase is a purchase.

A biblical frame for wages, freedom, and claim

Because the dispute is finally about wages, claim, and the limits of obligation, the biblical material speaks to it directly, and it cuts in both directions rather than vindicating either party wholesale.

On the side of the artist’s legitimate claim, Scripture is emphatic that agreed wages for work performed must be paid, and paid promptly. The Law forbids holding back a hired worker’s wages overnight (Leviticus 19:13) and commands that the poor laborer be paid the same day, before sunset, because his life depends on it (Deuteronomy 24:14–15). James warns the rich that wages withheld from laborers cry out against them (James 5:4), and the principle that the worker deserves his wages is affirmed by Jesus Christ and repeated by Paul (Luke 10:7; 1 Timothy 5:18). Where a press has received work it agreed to buy and then delayed or refused payment, the artist’s grievance is not entitlement but justice, and the biblical weight falls on the buyer to pay.

On the side of the buyer’s freedom, the parable of the laborers in the vineyard addresses the precise question of whether a past transaction creates a claim on future dealing. The householder hires for the day, pays what was agreed, and answers the complaint of those who wanted more by asserting his liberty to do what he chooses with what is his own (Matthew 20:1–16). The structure of that answer is instructive for the present case: the duty runs toward paying fully and fairly what was agreed, while the decision whether to hire again rests with the one whose resources they are. A buyer is free to commission once and no more; that freedom is not injustice, and a claim on the buyer’s future business is not owed. The biblical frame thus draws the line the market blurs. The obligation is to pay what was agreed, promptly and fairly; the obligation is not to keep buying. Proverbs’ warning that the borrower becomes servant to the lender (Proverbs 22:7) reinforces from the other direction why a buyer should resist being maneuvered, through guilt or threat, into a standing obligation never actually undertaken.

Conclusion and practical implications

The behaviors examined here are the readable outputs of a market structured by precarity and oversupply, reframed by platform-era patronage defaults, and left open by informal agreements that never mark their own end. The retainer reflex, the appearance of entitlement, and the bargaining use of legal threats are intelligible responses to that structure rather than evidence of unusual character, and the heavy solicitation a press attracts, together with the circulation of its payment reputation, follows from an information network among artists that exists for sound economic reasons and operates whether or not the press can see it.

The practical implications follow from the diagnosis. Because the dispute is rooted in unmarked scope and a clash of defaults, the most effective intervention is to mark the boundary in writing at the outset: a short statement that each commission is a discrete purchase, that it conveys specified usage rights, and that it creates no expectation of further work removes the ambiguity in which the retainer reflex grows. Because the artist’s real leverage is reputational rather than legal, a press protects itself best not by matching threats but by paying promptly and fairly what it agrees to, since a clean payment record is the single fact that travels furthest in the networks described above and is also, on the biblical reckoning, simply what is owed. And because heavy solicitation is structural, a press is wise to treat it as a screening problem rather than an affront, building a standard intake that states terms once and applies them to all, so that the asymmetry between one buyer and many sellers is managed by policy rather than negotiated case by case under pressure.

References

Abbing, H. (2002). Why are artists poor? The exceptional economy of the arts. Amsterdam University Press.

Akerlof, G. A. (1970). The market for “lemons”: Quality uncertainty and the market mechanism. The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 84(3), 488–500.

Banks, M. (2007). The politics of cultural work. Palgrave Macmillan.

Becker, H. S. (1982). Art worlds. University of California Press.

Caves, R. E. (2000). Creative industries: Contracts between art and commerce. Harvard University Press.

Gandini, A. (2016). The reputation economy: Understanding knowledge work in digital society. Palgrave Macmillan.

Granovetter, M. S. (1973). The strength of weak ties. American Journal of Sociology, 78(6), 1360–1380.

Hesmondhalgh, D., & Baker, S. (2011). Creative labour: Media work in three cultural industries. Routledge.

Hyde, L. (1983). The gift: Imagination and the erotic life of property. Vintage Books.

McRobbie, A. (2016). Be creative: Making a living in the new culture industries. Polity Press.

Menger, P.-M. (2014). The economics of creativity: Art and achievement under uncertainty. Harvard University Press.

Standing, G. (2011). The precariat: The new dangerous class. Bloomsbury Academic.

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When the Fear Is Warranted: The Victorious General as Usurper, with the Chaco War as Its Case

1. Why the suite needs this appendix

The thirteen papers of this suite have argued that the destruction of a national deliverer by the regime he saved is, in case after case, an injustice rooted in a fear that was groundless in fact. David spared Saul twice; Han Xin refused the empire when it was offered him; Belisarius declined the crown the Goths held out; Yi Sun-sin served unto death the court that had tortured him. In each the suite was at pains to demonstrate the deliverer’s innocence, because that demonstration is what distinguishes the phenomenon from the boundary case that Paper 1 set aside, the suppression of a general who genuinely did reach for power. The whole moral force of the suite depends on the deliverers having been faithful, on the regimes’ fear having been a dread of loyalty rather than a response to treason.

But the suite would be dishonest, and its argument would be the weaker, if it did not acknowledge that the boundary case is real and that the regimes’ fear is not always paranoia. The convertibility of military capability into political power, which Paper 1 named as the structural fact beneath the phenomenon, is a genuine convertibility, and the victorious general who turns his prestige and his army against the constitutional order is not a fiction invented to excuse the tyrants of the main suite but a recurring figure of history in his own right. The fear that destroyed David and Yue Fei and Tukhachevsky was groundless as to those men; it was not groundless as a general proposition, for the danger it dreaded does sometimes materialize. This appendix exists to make that admission squarely, to show that the same conditions that produce the unjust destruction of a faithful deliverer also sometimes produce the warranted dread of a disloyal one, and that the tragedy of the phenomenon is precisely that the regime cannot always tell, in advance, which kind of deliverer it has. The appendix thus strengthens the suite rather than undermining it, for an argument that admitted only the cases favorable to it would deserve less trust than one that faces the cases that cut the other way.

2. The Chaco War and the figures it produced

The case the appendix takes up is the Chaco War, fought between Paraguay and Bolivia from 1932 to 1935 over the disputed Chaco Boreal, a vast and barren region that both landlocked states claimed and that rumor held to contain oil. Paraguay won the military victory, though a truce and a final settlement were reached through mediation, and the arbitration that followed granted Paraguay the great bulk of the disputed territory. The deliverer of Paraguay in this war was José Félix Estigarribia, the commander whose generalship won the decisive victories. Estigarribia understood the key to victory in that waterless country, declaring that it would be a war of thirst and that he would drink to victory, and during the war he was promoted to general and then to commander-in-chief. His campaigns of encirclement destroyed Bolivian divisions in the field and carried the Paraguayan armies across the Chaco to the foothills of the Andes, and his standing as the architect of the victory was beyond dispute.

The course Estigarribia’s career then took is instructive precisely because it does not run in a single direction, and the appendix attends to it for that reason. In the immediate aftermath of the victory, Estigarribia was not the overthrower of the state but its victim, an instance of the very phenomenon the main suite documents. In 1936, Paraguay’s Liberal Party government under President Ayala, together with the heroic Marshal Estigarribia, was deposed in a military coup staged by rear-echelon hardliners outraged at the supposedly easy terms granted to Bolivia. The deliverer was cast out by disaffected elements of his own side who thought the peace too generous, the victorious general overthrown rather than overthrowing. Yet the same Estigarribia later returned to power, coming to the presidency in 1939, and in 1940 he assumed extraordinary powers under a new constitution that concentrated authority in the executive, a turn toward personal rule cut short only when he died in a plane crash later that same year. The deliverer who had been the victim of one coup became, within a few years, the architect of his own near-dictatorial concentration of power, and the duality of his career, victim of the phenomenon and then practitioner of the very consolidation that regimes fear, makes him an unusually apt figure for an appendix concerned with the genuine convertibility of military prestige into political power.

The Paraguayan figure in whom that convertibility was most fully and durably realized came later. Alfredo Stroessner, a general and veteran of the Chaco War, came to power in the aftermath of the 1954 coup d’état, and soon after taking office declared a state of siege and instituted laws and security reforms that gave him the power to suspend civil liberties, ruling for decades under what amounted to martial law until he was himself overthrown in 1989. Stroessner had been a junior officer in the Chaco War rather than its deliverer, and his seizure of the state came nearly two decades after the victory, but his long dictatorship, founded on his standing in the army and inaugurated by a coup, is the clearest Paraguayan instance of the victorious soldier who converts military standing into the mastery of the state. Between Estigarribia’s late turn toward personal rule and Stroessner’s outright seizure of power, the history surrounding the Chaco War furnishes ample evidence that the danger the regimes of the main suite feared is a real one.

3. The genuine convertibility: when the fear is warranted

The main suite’s deliverers refused the power they could have taken, and that refusal was the proof of their innocence. But the power was real, and the refusal was a choice, and history is full of victorious generals who made the opposite choice. The fear that the regimes of the main suite directed, wrongly, at faithful men was a fear of a real possibility, and the possibility is realized often enough that the dread cannot be dismissed as fantasy.

The Latin American history in which the Chaco War sits is itself a standing demonstration of this. The same region and era produced coup after coup in which the army, or its ablest and most prestigious commanders, set aside the constitutional order and installed themselves or their nominees in power. Bolivia, the defeated party in the war, illustrates the point as sharply as Paraguay: its conduct of the war was so resented at home that, as the contemporary record notes, its generals forestalled criticism by overthrowing the constitutional government and imposing their own president on the nation, the military turning on the civilian state and seizing power as a hedge against accountability. The pattern of the man on horseback, the general whose command of organized force and whose personal prestige allow him to brush aside the civilian government, is not a rare aberration in this history but something close to a norm, and Stroessner’s long dictatorship is only the most durable Paraguayan instance of it.

The theoretical literature that Paper 1 drew on names this convertibility as a permanent feature of the relation between armed force and political authority. Finer’s analysis of the military’s standing temptation toward political power treats the seizure of the state by its soldiers not as a pathology of particular nations but as a recurring possibility wherever an army’s capability and cohesion exceed the civilian order’s capacity to control them, and Huntington’s account of the difficulty of subordinating a competent military to civilian authority describes the same problem from the side of the institutions that must contain it. The general who has saved the nation possesses, by virtue of the saving, exactly the prestige and the command of force that the seizure of power requires, and the civilian authority that fears him is fearing a capability that genuinely exists and that has, in the historical record, genuinely been turned against the state more times than can be counted. The fear is not, as a general proposition, paranoia; it is a rational response to a real and recurrent danger.

4. The tragedy sharpened: the regime cannot tell in advance

If the fear is sometimes warranted, then the tragedy of the phenomenon is not that regimes fear their deliverers, but that they cannot always tell, in advance, which deliverers deserve the fear. This is the sharpened understanding that the appendix contributes to the suite, and it bears directly on the closing synthesis of Paper 13.

The deliverer who has just saved the nation presents the same outward facts whether he is a David or a usurper: the same prestige, the same command of a loyal and victorious army, the same demonstrated capability, the same unpayable debt owed him by the state. From the outside, in the moment when the decision must be made, the faithful deliverer and the dangerous one look very much alike, for both possess the capability to seize power and the question is only whether they will choose to use it, a question about the man’s character and intentions that the regime cannot answer with certainty and that the man himself may not have settled. Estigarribia’s own career shows how little the outward facts settle the question, for the same man was at one moment the faithful deliverer cast out by a fearful faction and at another the ruler concentrating extraordinary power in his own hands, so that even in a single career the faithful servant and the consolidator of personal rule were not two different men but one, divided only by circumstance and choice. The regime that must decide how to treat its victorious general is deciding under genuine uncertainty, knowing that some such generals have overthrown the states they saved and others have served them faithfully, and unable to be sure which kind it has. This uncertainty is the tragic core of the phenomenon, for it means that the regime’s fear, even when it falls on a faithful man and destroys him unjustly, is not simply wicked or irrational but is the misfiring of a caution that is, in general, prudent. Saul’s fear of David was groundless in fact, but a king’s fear of an over-mighty and popular general is not groundless as a rule, and the tragedy is that the rule destroyed the exception, that the prudent dread of the usurper fell upon the faithful servant and killed him.

This does not excuse the destructions the main suite documents, and the appendix is careful not to let it seem to. The faithful deliverers were innocent, and their destruction was unjust, and the demonstrations of their innocence, David’s sparing of Saul, Han Xin’s refusal of the empire, Belisarius’s refusal of the crown, stand as proof that in those cases the fear was misplaced. What the appendix adds is that the misplacement was the misfiring of a caution that had real ground, that the regimes erred not in fearing the convertibility of military power, which is real, but in failing to discern that these particular men had refused to convert it. The error was an error of discernment, not of principle, and the principle, that a victorious general’s capability is a genuine danger to the constitutional order, is sound. The injustice lay in the application of a sound principle to men who had proved themselves exceptions to it, and the tragedy lay in the impossibility of being certain, in advance, who the exceptions were.

5. The implication for the suite’s argument

The appendix’s admission refines the suite’s central argument in a way that makes it more defensible rather than less. Paper 13 argued that the destruction of the deliverer is driven by the regime’s fear of three intolerable facts, the rivalry, the threat, and the reproach, and that the fear, though it produces a self-defeating destruction, arises predictably under conditions of thin legitimacy, dependence on an irreplaceable agent, and a disposition to dread. The appendix adds that the second of the three facts, the deliverer as a demonstrated instrument of force, names a danger that is sometimes real, and that the regime’s fear of it is therefore not always the groundless dread that the faithful cases suggest.

The refined argument is this. The convertibility of military capability into political threat is a genuine convertibility, and the victorious general who seizes the state is a real and recurring figure. The regime’s fear of its deliverer is therefore, as a general matter, a rational response to a real danger, not mere paranoia. But the fear, rational in general, becomes unjust when it falls upon a deliverer who has in fact refused to convert his capability, who has proved his fidelity, who is no threat; and the phenomenon the suite documents is precisely the falling of this generally rational fear upon particular men who did not deserve it, the destruction of the faithful exception by the caution that the dangerous rule had made prudent. The injustice is real, and the main suite’s demonstrations of the deliverers’ innocence establish it; but the fear that produced the injustice is not, in its origin, irrational, and the appendix’s admission of this is what allows the suite to claim that it has faced the hard case rather than evaded it.

The deepest tragedy, then, which Paper 13’s synthesis can now state more precisely, is that the faithful deliverer suffers for the sins of the unfaithful one, that David is hunted because other men in David’s position have seized the throne, that Yi Sun-sin is tortured because victorious admirals are, in general, dangerous to the courts that command them. The regime’s inability to distinguish the faithful deliverer from the dangerous one, under the genuine uncertainty of the moment of decision, is what converts a prudent caution into a lethal injustice, and the deliverers of the main suite are the casualties of that inability, faithful men destroyed by a fear that other, unfaithful men had made reasonable. This is a harder and a truer account than one which held the regimes’ fear to be simple paranoia, and the suite is the stronger for admitting it. The fear of man that Scripture names a snare is, in this light, not always a groundless fear; it is sometimes a warranted dread misapplied, and the snare it sets catches the faithful along with, and sometimes instead of, the dangerous, which is why the proverb’s remedy is not the abolition of all caution but the trust that does not let a reasonable fear curdle into the destruction of the innocent.


Note

This appendix differs from the case papers of the main suite in that its central example does not fit the phenomenon cleanly, and the difference is the point. The deliverer of Paraguay in the Chaco War, Marshal José Félix Estigarribia, was overthrown by a coup in 1936 rather than being its author, and in that respect belongs with the victims the main suite documents; his own later assumption of extraordinary powers in 1940, cut short by his death in a plane crash that year, and the later seizure of the state by the Chaco War veteran Alfredo Stroessner in 1954, supply the evidence of the genuine convertibility of military prestige into political power on which this appendix’s argument rests. The appendix uses the case not to exhibit a clean instance of the deliverer who overthrew the regime he saved, which Paraguayan history does not straightforwardly provide, but to show that the danger the regimes of the main suite feared is real, that the same conditions producing the unjust destruction of a faithful deliverer also produce the warranted dread of a disloyal one, and that the tragedy lies in the impossibility of telling the two apart in advance.

A note on the apparatus: the references below rest on the standard English-language scholarship on the Chaco War, principally Zook’s military history and Farcau’s study, together with Lewis on the Stroessner regime and the theoretical works on civil-military relations already in the suite’s master list. I have not padded the list with works I cannot vouch for, consistent with the practice followed in the Nguyễn Trãi paper.


References

Farcau, B. W. (1996). The Chaco War: Bolivia and Paraguay, 1932–1935. Praeger.

Finer, S. E. (1962). The man on horseback: The role of the military in politics. Pall Mall Press.

Huntington, S. P. (1957). The soldier and the state: The theory and politics of civil–military relations. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.

Lewis, P. H. (1980). Paraguay under Stroessner. University of North Carolina Press.

Zook, D. H. (1961). The conduct of the Chaco War. Bookman Associates.


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The Logic of Devouring the Savior: On the Nature of the Phenomenon

1. The task of the synthesis

The eleven case studies have established, across a span of nearly three thousand years and through the histories of ancient Israel, classical Greece, Republican and late Imperial Rome, Byzantium, China, medieval France, Vietnam, Korea, and the Soviet Union, that the destruction of a national deliverer by the regime he saved is a recurring and structured phenomenon rather than a series of unrelated misfortunes. The cases differ in their settings, their instruments, and their outcomes. The deliverer is in some a king’s general, in others a city’s admiral, a republic’s hero, a dynasty’s founder, a tyrant’s marshal. The regime is in some a personal monarchy, in others a democracy, a republic, a dynastic empire, a totalitarian state. The instrument of destruction is in some a spear, in others a potsherd, a prosecution, a treacherous execution, a tablet of gold, an abandonment, an extermination, a torture, a bloodstained confession. The outcome is in some death, in others exile, disgrace, or ruin. But beneath these differences the cases display a common structure, and the task of this closing paper is to state that structure as a single account, to explain why regimes destroy the people who save them, and to render the moral judgment on the phenomenon that the suite, beginning as it did with Scripture, has been building toward from the first.

The account has three parts. The first states the three intolerable facts that the deliverer presents to the fearful regime and that together drive the destruction. The second states the mechanism by which the regime resolves the intolerable facts, the reclassification of the savior as a traitor through the forms of law. The third states the central irony the suite has documented, the self-defeating character of the destruction, the regime forfeiting the very capability that preserved it and hastening the collapse it sought to prevent. The paper then closes on the moral plane, where the suite began, reading the phenomenon against the frame of Scripture and naming it as an instance of the disorder that the fear of man produces and of the gap between an institution’s stated purpose and its actual behavior.

2. The three intolerable facts

The deliverer, once the deliverance is accomplished, presents the fearful regime with three facts that together it cannot tolerate, and the destruction is the regime’s resolution of all three at once. The three facts are distinct, and each contributes its own pressure toward the destruction, but they operate together, and it is their combination that makes the deliverer, in the fearful regime’s perception, an intolerable presence that must be removed.

The first intolerable fact is that the deliverer is a rival center of legitimacy. The deliverance generates a loyalty, a prestige, and a popular devotion that attach to the deliverer personally and that the regime did not bestow and cannot revoke. The people’s gratitude for their salvation fixes on the one who saved them, and that gratitude is a form of authority, a standing in the eyes of the people that rivals the regime’s own. The song that the women sang, that Saul had slain his thousands and David his ten thousands, is the type of the whole matter, the public transfer of devotion to the deliverer that the king experienced as a subtraction from himself, and every case displays its version of it, the unique honors voted to Themistocles, the half-divine eminence of Scipio, the founding prestige of Han Xin and Nguyễn Trãi, the popular devotion to Belisarius and Yi Sun-sin, the national hope vested in Yue Fei, the indebted legitimacy that Joan’s coronation conferred, the standing of Tukhachevsky in the army. A regime whose own legitimacy is in any degree thin or insecure cannot tolerate a second pole of loyalty around which the people might reorganize, and the deliverer, by the mere fact of the devotion his deliverance has earned, is such a pole. The more genuine his claim on the people’s gratitude, the more acute the rivalry, and the deliverer’s prestige, the just reward of his service, becomes in the regime’s perception the first of the facts that mark him for destruction.

The second intolerable fact is that the deliverer is a demonstrated instrument of force. The capability that defeated the external enemy is the same capability that could, in principle, be turned against the regime. The army that broke the invader can break the throne; the fleet that commanded the sea against the enemy commands it against the regime as well; the strategic and political skill that founded the dynasty could unmake it. The capability is neutral as to its direction, and the fearful regime sees in the victorious deliverer not only the instrument that saved it but the instrument that could destroy it. This is the convertibility that the suite has traced through every case, named most explicitly in Han Xin’s proverb of the boiled hound and in the advisers’ proposal that he seize the empire, demonstrated in the offer of the crown to Belisarius, calculated by every suspicious sovereign who looked at his victorious general and saw a man capable of more than victory. The deliverer’s capability, indispensable in the war, becomes in the peace the second of the facts that mark him for destruction, for a regime cannot rest easy with a subject who has proved that he possesses the means to overthrow it, however loyally he has declined to use them.

The third intolerable fact is that the deliverer is a permanent creditor. The debt of national survival can never be repaid. The regime owes the deliverer everything, its throne, its existence, the lives of its people, and a debt of that magnitude cannot be discharged. A debt that cannot be discharged becomes, over time, a burden and a reproach, and the burden curdles into resentment of the one to whom it is owed. The regime that can never repay its deliverer comes to resent the deliverer for the very magnitude of the service, for the standing reminder of an obligation it cannot meet, for the deference and gratitude that the deliverer’s service perpetually demands and that the regime perpetually fails to render in full. Saul’s confession in the cave, that David had rewarded him good and he had rewarded evil, names the reproach that the creditor’s presence constituted, and Scipio’s bitter withdrawal, Joan’s marginalization, the resentment that gathered around every deliverer in the suite, display the curdling of the unpayable debt into the resentment that contributed to the destruction. The deliverer’s service, the ground of the regime’s obligation, becomes the third of the facts that mark him for destruction, for the regime, unable to discharge the debt and resenting the burden of it, finds in the deliverer’s removal a release from the obligation it could never meet.

The three facts operate together. The deliverer is at once a rival legitimacy the regime cannot tolerate, a demonstrated force the regime cannot trust, and a permanent creditor the regime cannot satisfy, and it is the combination of the three, the rivalry, the threat, and the reproach, that makes him an intolerable presence in the fearful regime’s perception. The destruction resolves all three at once, removing the rival, neutralizing the threat, and canceling the debt, and the regime, in destroying the deliverer, frees itself at a stroke from the rivalry, the fear, and the reproach that his continued presence imposed.

3. The mechanism: reclassification through the forms of law

The regime resolves the three intolerable facts by a single mechanism, the reclassification of the savior as a traitor, accomplished almost always through the forms of law, and this mechanism is the most consistent feature of the phenomenon across all its cases, the device by which the destruction is accomplished and, more than accomplished, justified.

The reclassification transforms the deliverer from what he is, a savior to whom the regime owes everything, into what the regime needs him to be, a traitor whom the regime is justified in destroying. The charge of treason is the standard instrument, recurring in case after case, the imputation to the loyal deliverer of a plot, a conspiracy, a design against the throne, and its recurrence is not accidental but functional, for the charge of treason is the one charge that justifies the destruction of the deliverer and, in justifying it, reasserts the primacy of the regime. By condemning the deliverer as a traitor, the regime accomplishes three things at once. It justifies the destruction, giving the killing the color of a response to a crime rather than the expression of a fear. It reasserts that authority flows from the throne and the law rather than from the battlefield, that the deliverer’s capability and prestige, however great, do not place him above the regime’s power to judge and condemn him. And it denies, to the regime itself and to the people, that fear was the reason, transforming an act that would otherwise reveal the regime’s dread into an act that appears to demonstrate its righteousness.

The forms of law are essential to the mechanism, for it is through them that the reclassification is accomplished and legitimated. The regime does not, in most cases, simply murder its deliverer as murder; it convenes a tribunal, drafts a charge, extracts a confession, pronounces a sentence, clothing the destruction in the appearance of justice. The ostracism and the medism trial of Themistocles, the embezzlement prosecution of Scipio, the treason charges against Han Xin and Stilicho and Belisarius, the empty charge against Yue Fei, the heresy trial of Joan, the charge arising from the king’s death against Nguyễn Trãi, the disobedience charge against Yi Sun-sin, the fabricated conspiracy against Tukhachevsky, are all instances of the legal form deployed to accomplish the reclassification, the apparatus of justice supplying what the facts cannot. And the suite has found, in case after case, the confession of the form’s emptiness, Qin Hui’s admission that the charge against Yue Fei was a thing that perhaps existed, the bloodstained confession that marked the fabrication of the case against Tukhachevsky, the proof in Yi Sun-sin’s case that the disobedience the court charged was the sound judgment the court’s own disaster vindicated, the demonstration that the conspiracy charges were fabrications that the subsequent rehabilitations exposed. The legal form is the mechanism’s instrument, and its recurrence, together with the recurrent confession of its emptiness, is the suite’s clearest evidence that the destruction of the deliverer is accomplished not by the punishment of a real crime but by the manufacture of a false one, the reclassification of the savior as a traitor through forms that serve the regime’s fear rather than the truth.

The recurrence of the legal form across cases as different as the Athenian democracy and the Soviet state, the Chinese dynasty and the medieval French church court, is itself a finding of significance, for it shows that the need to legitimate the destruction, to present it as justice rather than fear, is a constant feature of the phenomenon, present even in regimes that possessed the power to destroy the deliverer openly. A regime that merely feared a man and wished him gone would not need to prove him a traitor unless it also needed to deny, to itself and to its people, that fear was the reason, and the universal recourse to the legal form is the evidence that the regime needs this denial, that the destruction of the deliverer is an act the regime cannot acknowledge for what it is and must clothe in the forms of justice to make it bearable and defensible. The mechanism of reclassification through the forms of law is thus the phenomenon’s most revealing feature, the device by which the regime both accomplishes the destruction and conceals its true nature, and the recurrent exposure of the form’s emptiness, by the confessions of the prosecutors and the verdicts of history, is the suite’s demonstration that the concealment, however necessary to the regime, did not survive the judgment of time.

4. The central irony: the self-defeating destruction

The suite has documented, in every case, the central irony of the phenomenon, that the destruction of the deliverer is self-defeating, that the regime, in removing the capability that preserved it, forfeits that capability and frequently hastens the very collapse it sought to prevent. This irony is the phenomenon’s most consequential feature, for it shows that the destruction is not merely unjust but, in the regime’s own terms, irrational, a maneuver that purchases a short-term security at the price of the capability on which the regime’s survival in the next crisis depends.

The self-defeat appears in every case, though in varying degrees of immediacy and scale. It is starkest in the cases where the collapse follows the destruction at once. Saul, having driven away the deliverer who had broken the Philistine champion, fell to the Philistines on Gilboa, losing the kingdom he had feared to lose to David to the enemy David had defeated. The late Roman court, having killed Stilicho who had broken Radagaisus, saw Rome sacked within two years, and having murdered Aetius who had broken Attila, saw the murdering emperor assassinated within months and the empire enter its final dissolution. The Korean court, having tortured and removed Yi Sun-sin who had commanded the sea, saw the fleet destroyed within months by his replacement and was compelled to recall the deliverer it had wronged. The Soviet state, having shot Tukhachevsky who had built the army, saw that army gutted of its leadership meet the German invasion and pay for the purge in the catastrophes of the war’s opening period. In these cases the connection between the destruction of the deliverer and the disaster is immediate and undeniable, the removal of the capability followed at once by the catastrophe it had prevented, and the self-defeat is demonstrated beyond the reach of coincidence, established by repetition across cases separated by every difference of setting and age.

The self-defeat appears in subtler forms in the cases where the collapse does not follow at once. Athens, having exiled Themistocles, forfeited the counsel of the man who had built its sea power and set a precedent of destroying its ablest men that weakened its capacity to be served well, the hemlock for Phocion and Socrates the later fruit of the same disposition. Rome, having driven Scipio into exile, demonstrated that it could not manage its relation with its over-great men and set on the road that ran toward the civil wars and the end of the Republic. Byzantium, having kept Belisarius in suspicion and withheld the forces that would have secured the reconquest, lost much of the reconquest in the generation after his death. In these cases the self-defeat is the squandering of a capability, the weakening of a capacity, the setting of a precedent, the longer-term cost that the destruction of the deliverer imposed, less immediate than the sack of Rome or the catastrophe of 1941 but real, the regime paying for its fear of the deliverer in the diminishment of its own capacity to survive and to be served.

The self-defeat appears, finally, in the moral register, in the verdict of history that reverses the verdict of the regime, and this moral self-defeat the suite has found in case after case. The regime destroys the deliverer and condemns him as a traitor; posterity reverses the judgment, vindicates the deliverer, and condemns the regime. Yue Fei, condemned as a traitor, became the nation’s symbol of loyalty, and the minister who killed him became the nation’s symbol of treachery, the iron statues kneeling forever before the venerated tomb. Joan, burned as a heretic, was rehabilitated and elevated to the honor of a national symbol. Nguyễn Trãi, exterminated with his line, was rehabilitated and honored as the architect of his country’s independence and the master of its literature. Yi Sun-sin, tortured and demoted, became the supreme national hero. Tukhachevsky, shot on a fabricated charge, was rehabilitated and the fabrication exposed. In every case the verdict of history reversed the verdict of the regime, the deliverer the regime had destroyed elevated to an honor that has far outlasted the regime’s fear, and the regime’s destruction of its deliverer condemned by the long judgment of mankind. This moral self-defeat is the phenomenon’s final irony, the regime’s reclassification of the savior as a traitor undone by the judgment of history, which saw through the legal form to the fear and the treachery beneath it and rendered against the regime a verdict more lasting than any security the destruction purchased.

The central irony, in all its registers, is that the destruction of the deliverer is self-defeating, that the regime forfeits the capability that preserved it, hastens or invites the collapse it sought to prevent, and earns the lasting condemnation of history, all to purchase a security that the destruction itself undermines. The maneuver is, in the regime’s own terms, irrational, and yet the suite has found it repeated across every age and every kind of regime, and the repetition raises the question that the suite must finally address, why a maneuver so self-defeating should recur with such regularity, why regimes should so consistently destroy the capability on which their survival depends.

5. Why the self-defeating maneuver recurs

The answer the suite proposes is that the phenomenon recurs because it is driven by a fear that overrides the knowledge of its consequences, a fear that is not corrected by the demonstration of its costs because it operates at a level deeper than the calculation of advantage. The late Roman court destroyed its second defender a generation after the catastrophe that followed the destruction of its first, and the repetition shows that the fear at the root of the phenomenon is not a corrigible error that experience can teach a regime to avoid but a structural disposition so deep that even the visible catastrophe of the first destruction did not prevent the second. The fear of the deliverer is not a miscalculation of advantage that better calculation would correct; it is a dread that arises from the regime’s insecurity and that overrides the calculation of advantage, so that the regime destroys the capability it knows it needs because the fear of the capability is stronger than the knowledge of the need.

The conditions under which the fear arises and overrides the knowledge are the conditions the suite has found in case after case, and they may be named as the three that together produce the phenomenon. The first is a thin or insecure legitimacy, a regime whose own claim to authority is in some degree weak, contested, or dependent, so that it cannot tolerate a rival pole of loyalty and is threatened by the deliverer’s prestige. The second is a dependence on a single irreplaceable agent, a regime whose survival has been mortgaged to the capability of one indispensable deliverer, so that the deliverer’s very indispensability makes him both necessary and dangerous, the asymmetry between the irreplaceable individual and the self-preserving institution at its most acute. The third is a ruler or a governing body disposed to fear, an insecure sovereign, a jealous court, a citizen body anxious for its equality, a tyrant determined to eliminate all rivals, in whom the dread of the deliverer’s greatness operates strongly and overrides the calculation of advantage. Where these three conditions are present, the fear of the deliverer arises and overrides the knowledge of the need, and the regime destroys the capability on which its survival depends, the self-defeating maneuver recurring because the fear that drives it is stronger than the knowledge that condemns it.

The suite proposes, then, that the phenomenon is best understood not as a series of miscalculations but as the working of a fear that arises predictably under certain conditions and that overrides, under those conditions, the knowledge of its own self-defeating character. This understanding explains the recurrence of the self-defeating maneuver across every age and kind of regime, for the conditions that produce the fear, thin legitimacy, dependence on an irreplaceable agent, a disposition to dread, recur across every age and kind of regime, and wherever they recur the fear arises and the phenomenon follows. The phenomenon is, in this account, a structural hazard of regimes whose legitimacy is thin and whose survival has been mortgaged to a single irreplaceable agent, a hazard that the fear of the deliverer’s greatness produces predictably and that the knowledge of its costs does not prevent, because the fear operates at a level deeper than the calculation it overrides.

6. The moral frame: the fear of man and the gap between purpose and behavior

The suite began with Scripture, and it closes there, for the moral judgment on the phenomenon belongs to the plane on which the suite opened, and the frame that Scripture supplies names the disorder that the secular cases display. The phenomenon is, in the language of Scripture, an instance of the fear of man, and the proverb that names it names the whole pattern the suite has traced: the fear of man bringeth a snare (Proverbs 29:25). Saul is the standing illustration, the ruler whose dread of a faithful servant’s prestige drove him to hunt the innocent, to slaughter the priests of Nob, to abandon the nation’s defense, and at last to his own destruction, the snare that his fear set catching not the deliverer alone but the king himself and his sons and his kingdom. And the secular cases display the same disorder, the same fear of man, in their own registers, the dread of the deliverer’s greatness driving the regime to destroy the one who served it and, in the destroying, to bring upon itself the catastrophe the deliverer had prevented. The fear of man that made Saul cast his spear at the harper who eased his torment is the fear that runs through them all, the dread of a ruler or a court or a citizen body for a subject whose greatness had become intolerable, and the snare it set caught, in case after case, not the deliverer alone but the regime that feared him.

The moral disorder that Scripture names is the inversion of the right relation between the regime and the deliverer, the rendering of evil for good, the repaying of deliverance with destruction. Saul’s own confession states it, that David had rewarded him good and he had rewarded David evil, and the moral weight of the whole suite falls on that inversion, the regime owing the deliverer everything and repaying the debt with the spear, the tribunal, the fire, the extermination, the bloodstained confession. Scripture names the wickedness of the inversion plainly, that whoso rewardeth evil for good, evil shall not depart from his house (Proverbs 17:13), and the self-defeat that the suite has documented is, in the moral frame, the working of that judgment, the evil that the regime rendered to its deliverer not departing from its house but returning upon it in the catastrophe that the destruction invited. The phenomenon is, in this light, not merely a structural hazard or an irrational maneuver but a moral disorder with moral consequences, the rendering of evil for good that brings evil upon the one who renders it, the fear of man that becomes a snare to the one who fears.

The suite proposes, as its final account, that the phenomenon is best understood as a particularly acute instance of the general gap between an institution’s stated purpose and its actual behavior, the gap in which a body that claims to exist for one end in fact serves another. The regime claims to exist for the safety and the good of the nation; its actual behavior, in the phenomenon, is the destruction of the one who secured the nation’s safety, the sacrifice of the common good to the regime’s self-preservation, the destruction of the deliverer to relieve the regime of the rivalry, the threat, and the reproach that his continued presence imposed. The phenomenon exposes the gap between the regime’s stated purpose and its actual behavior in its starkest form, for the regime that claims to serve the nation’s safety destroys the one who saved it, and the destruction reveals that the regime’s actual commitment is not to the nation’s safety but to its own preservation, that it will sacrifice the nation’s deliverer, and with him the capability the nation’s safety requires, to relieve itself of a presence it cannot tolerate. The conditions under which the gap opens widest, under which the regime’s self-preservation most starkly overrides its stated purpose, are the conditions the suite has named, thin legitimacy, dependence on an irreplaceable agent, and a disposition to fear, and where these are present the regime, claiming to serve the nation, destroys the nation’s savior, and the gap between its purpose and its behavior is laid bare.

7. The deliverer’s fidelity and the verdict of history

The suite closes on a note that the cases themselves supply, the fidelity of the deliverer and the verdict of history, for these stand against the regime’s fear as the answer that the deliverer’s character and the judgment of time return to the regime’s ingratitude. The deliverers of the suite were, in case after case, faithful to the regimes that destroyed them, faithful beyond what the regimes deserved and beyond what their own safety counseled. David spared Saul twice when he held the king’s life in his hand and the throne within his grasp. Han Xin refused the advisers’ counsel to seize the empire and chose loyalty to the founder who would destroy him. Belisarius declined the crown the enemy offered and held the conquest for the emperor who would disgrace him. Yi Sun-sin, tortured and demoted by the court he had saved, accepted the recall, rebuilt the shattered fleet, and died in the hour of his final victory, faithful unto death to the kingdom that had wronged him. The fidelity of the deliverers is the moral counterpart to the fear of the regimes, the demonstration that the deliverer was no threat, that the regime’s fear was groundless in fact, that the destruction was the destruction not of a rival but of a faithful servant whose greatness the regime could not bear.

And the verdict of history, which the suite has found in case after case, stands against the regime’s fear as the judgment that time returns to the destruction. The regime destroyed the deliverer and condemned him as a traitor; posterity reversed the judgment, vindicated the deliverer, and condemned the regime, elevating the destroyed savior to an honor that has far outlasted the regime’s fear and the security its destruction purchased. The iron statues that kneel before Yue Fei’s tomb, the rehabilitation of Joan and her elevation to the honor of a national symbol, the restoration of Nguyễn Trãi to the place of a revered figure of his nation’s history, the veneration of Yi Sun-sin as the supreme national hero, the exposure of the fabrication that destroyed Tukhachevsky, are the verdicts of history, the judgments that time returned to the regimes that destroyed their deliverers, and they constitute the moral self-defeat of the phenomenon, the regime’s reclassification of the savior as a traitor undone by the judgment of mankind, the deliverer the regime sought to destroy and to condemn elevated instead to an honor the regime can neither share nor diminish.

The phenomenon, then, is the destruction of a national deliverer by the regime he saved, driven by the regime’s fear of the rivalry, the threat, and the reproach that the deliverer’s prestige, capability, and unpayable service impose, accomplished through the reclassification of the savior as a traitor by the forms of law, and self-defeating in its forfeiture of the capability that preserved the regime and in the verdict of history that condemns the regime and vindicates the deliverer. It arises under the conditions of thin legitimacy, dependence on an irreplaceable agent, and a disposition to fear, and it recurs across every age and kind of regime because those conditions recur and because the fear they produce overrides the knowledge of its costs. It is, in the moral frame of Scripture, an instance of the fear of man that becomes a snare, the rendering of evil for good that brings evil upon the one who renders it, and a particularly acute instance of the gap between an institution’s stated purpose and its actual behavior, the regime that claims to serve the nation’s safety destroying the one who secured it. And it is answered, in the cases themselves, by the fidelity of the deliverers, who served the regimes that destroyed them beyond what those regimes deserved, and by the verdict of history, which reversed the regimes’ judgment and elevated the deliverers to an honor that has far outlasted the fear that destroyed them. The fear of man set its snare, and caught the regime; the deliverer, faithful unto destruction, was vindicated by the judgment of time; and the suite closes where it began, on the proverb that names the whole pattern, that the fear of man bringeth a snare, but whoso putteth his trust in the LORD shall be safe.


References

Conquest, R. (2008). The great terror: A reassessment (40th anniversary ed.). Oxford University Press.

Erickson, J. (2001). The Soviet high command: A military-political history, 1918–1941 (3rd ed.). Frank Cass. (Original work published 1962)

Finer, S. E. (1962). The man on horseback: The role of the military in politics. Pall Mall Press.

Huntington, S. P. (1957). The soldier and the state: The theory and politics of civil–military relations. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.

Kaplan, E. H. (1970). Yüeh Fei and the founding of the Southern Sung [Doctoral dissertation, University of Iowa].

King James Bible. (1987). Oxford University Press. (Original work published 1611)

Machiavelli, N. (1985). The prince (H. C. Mansfield, Trans.). University of Chicago Press. (Original work published 1532)

Pernoud, R., & Clin, M.-V. (1998). Joan of Arc: Her story (J. D. Adams, Trans. & Rev.; B. Wheeler, Ed.). St. Martin’s Press.

Taylor, K. W. (2013). A history of the Vietnamese. Cambridge University Press.


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The Marshal and the Bloodstained Confession: Tukhachevsky and the Modern Purge

1. Why the phenomenon’s survival into the modern age matters

The cases examined to this point belong to the ancient, medieval, and early modern worlds, to monarchies, city-states, and dynastic empires whose institutions and assumptions are remote from those of the modern age. A reader might suppose that the phenomenon is a relic of those older orders, a hazard of personal monarchy and dynastic insecurity that the modern bureaucratic state, with its rationalized institutions, its professional armies, and its mechanisms of accountability, would have outgrown. The Tukhachevsky case refutes that supposition, and its refutation is the first and principal reason the suite gives it the place of the final case study, the demonstration that the phenomenon survives into the twentieth century and into the modern totalitarian state, and survives not in a softened form but in an intensified one, equipped with the instruments that the modern state had developed and that made the destruction of the deliverer more thorough, more systematic, and more lethal than the older orders could achieve.

The modern state did not soften the phenomenon; it industrialized it. The same fear of the over-capable and popular soldier that had thrown Saul’s spear and convened Yue Fei’s tribunal was now equipped with a secret police of vast reach, with techniques of interrogation and fabrication refined into a system, with the apparatus of the show trial that could manufacture confessions and stage the appearance of justice on a scale the older regimes could not approach, and with a totalitarian control of information and society that allowed the destruction of the deliverer to be accompanied by the destruction of the entire officer corps of which he was the foremost. The phenomenon in the modern case is the phenomenon of all the earlier cases, the same fear, the same convertibility, the same legal form serving a predetermined end, but pressed through the machinery of the modern state into a destruction more comprehensive and more devastating than any the suite has examined, and this intensification is the modern case’s distinctive contribution, the demonstration that the modern state, far from outgrowing the phenomenon, gave it instruments that made it deadlier.

The second reason the case belongs is the clarity and the catastrophic scale of its self-defeat, for the destruction of Tukhachevsky was not the removal of a single deliverer but the decapitation of the officer corps of a great army on the eve of the largest war in history, and the cost of that destruction, paid in the catastrophes of the war’s opening period, is the suite’s most enormous demonstration of the self-defeating character of the regime’s fear. Where the late Roman court lost Rome and the Korean court lost a fleet, the Soviet state, in destroying Tukhachevsky and the officers who fell with him, gutted the leadership of the army that would have to meet the German invasion, and paid for it in the disasters of that war’s first year, a cost measured in the loss of vast armies and territories and in deaths beyond counting.

The third reason is the bloodstained confession from which this paper takes its title, the physical evidence of the fabrication and the torture that produced the case against the marshal, for the surviving record of Tukhachevsky’s confession is reported to bear the stains of his own blood, the mark of the violence by which the confession was extracted, and this physical trace of the torture is the modern case’s equivalent of Qin Hui’s confession that the charge against Yue Fei was a thing that perhaps existed, the tangible proof that the legal form was empty and the destruction predetermined.

2. The deliverance: the saving of the regime and the building of the army

The deliverance Tukhachevsky rendered, the first criterion of the phenomenon, was twofold, his service in the civil war that established and secured the Bolshevik regime, and his subsequent work in building and modernizing the Red Army into a force capable of the warfare the coming conflict would demand, and the two together made him both a savior of the regime in its founding struggle and the principal architect of the army on which its survival in the next war would depend (Conquest, 2008; Erickson, 2001).

In the civil war that followed the Bolshevik revolution, when the new regime fought for its existence against the various forces arrayed against it, Tukhachevsky rose to high command and rendered the regime the service of a capable general in the struggle that secured its survival, his commands contributing to the victories by which the Bolshevik state established and defended itself (Conquest, 2008; Erickson, 2001). His service in this founding struggle placed him among the soldiers who had saved the regime in its infancy, the generals whose capability had defended the new state against the forces that sought to destroy it, and it gave him the standing of a hero of the civil war, one of the founding military figures of the Soviet state.

His more consequential deliverance, though it was the building of a capability against a future war rather than the winning of a present one, was his work in modernizing the Red Army and developing the military theory and the forces that the coming war would require. Tukhachevsky was the foremost military thinker and reformer of the Soviet army, the architect of its modernization, the developer of the theories of mechanized and deep warfare that anticipated the character of the war to come, and the builder of the forces and the doctrines that would be needed to meet a modern enemy (Erickson, 2001; Butson, 1984). His work made the Red Army a more capable and more modern force than it had been, and his theories anticipated the kind of warfare that the next war would demand, so that his contribution was the building of the very capability on which the regime’s survival in that war would depend. The first criterion is met in this twofold service, the saving of the regime in the civil war and the building of the army for the war to come, and Tukhachevsky stands as a deliverer in both registers, the general who had helped save the regime and the reformer who had built the army it would need.

3. The turn: the dictator’s fear and the fabricated conspiracy

The phenomenon’s third criterion, fear as the operative factor in the destruction, takes in the Tukhachevsky case the form of the dictator’s fear of an over-capable and popular soldier, the suspicion of a man whose ability, prestige, and standing in the army made him, in the dictator’s calculation, a potential threat to be eliminated, and the case shows the destruction proceeding from the fear of a ruler whose power was vast and whose suspicion was murderous, equipped with the machinery to act on that fear with a thoroughness no earlier regime could match.

The dictator Stalin, whose rule rested on the elimination of all potential rivals and threats, regarded the army and its leadership with the suspicion that a tyrant directs at any institution capable of organized force, and he regarded its most capable and most prominent figures with a particular dread, for they were the men who, if any could, might oppose him or supplant him (Conquest, 2008; Erickson, 2001). Tukhachevsky, as the foremost and most capable of the Soviet commanders, the architect of the army’s modernization, a hero of the civil war, and a figure of standing and prestige, was precisely the kind of man the dictator’s fear marked for elimination, his ability and his prominence making him, in the dictator’s calculation, a potential threat that must be removed before it could become an actual one. The fear was the familiar one of the suite, the dread of a ruler for an over-capable and popular soldier, intensified by the dictator’s general determination to eliminate all who might threaten his power and equipped with the machinery of the modern police state to act on that dread.

The destruction was accomplished through a fabricated conspiracy, the manufacture of a charge that Tukhachevsky and other senior officers had plotted treason, conspired with the foreign enemy, and planned a military coup, a charge constructed by the security apparatus through fabricated evidence and confessions extracted by torture (Conquest, 2008; Erickson, 2001). The historian must consider, as the method requires, whether the charge of conspiracy had any truth, whether Tukhachevsky and the officers destroyed with him had in fact plotted against the regime, and the judgment of history, confirmed by the subsequent rehabilitation of the victims and the exposure of the fabrication, is that the conspiracy was a fabrication, the charge manufactured by the security apparatus to justify the destruction the dictator’s fear had determined upon. The evidence was fabricated, the confessions were extracted by torture, and the conspiracy existed only in the constructions of the police apparatus that manufactured it, the charge serving, as in every case in the suite, the fear rather than the fact, the predetermined destruction given the color of a response to a treason that had never occurred. The operative cause of the destruction was the dictator’s fear of an over-capable and popular soldier; the charge of conspiracy was the instrument, the fabricated treason by which the destruction was accomplished and given the appearance of justice.

4. The destruction: the bloodstained confession, the secret trial, and the shot

The destruction itself was accomplished through arrest, torture, a secret trial, and execution, and the case displays the modern state’s machinery of destruction in its full development, the fabricated charge, the confession extracted by torture, the staged trial whose verdict was predetermined, and the execution that removed the deliverer, all carried out with a speed and a thoroughness that the modern police state made possible.

Tukhachevsky was arrested, and under interrogation he was tortured into a confession, the violence of the interrogation leaving its physical trace on the surviving record, for the confession document is reported to bear stains identified as the marshal’s own blood, the spattered marks of the violence by which the confession was extracted (Conquest, 2008). The bloodstained confession is the case’s defining physical evidence and the source of this paper’s title, the tangible proof of the torture and the fabrication, the document on which the marshal’s forced admission of a conspiracy that never existed is written in his own words and marked with his own blood, the physical trace of the violence that produced it. No other case in the suite preserves so tangible a proof of the fabrication, the very paper of the confession bearing the marks of the torture that extracted it, and the bloodstained confession stands as the modern case’s equivalent of the prosecutor’s confession in the Yue Fei case, the physical proof that the legal form was empty and the destruction accomplished by violence and fabrication.

Tukhachevsky was tried in secret, with the other senior officers charged with him, in a proceeding that was not a trial in any meaningful sense but the staging of a predetermined condemnation, the forms of a trial gone through to give the destruction the appearance of justice, and he was condemned and shot, executed along with the other officers in the first blow of a purge that would decapitate the Soviet officer corps (Conquest, 2008; Erickson, 2001). The execution of the marshal was followed by the destruction of the officer corps on a vast scale, for the fabricated conspiracy was made the pretext for a purge that swept through the army’s leadership, removing, imprisoning, and killing officers in numbers that gutted the command structure of the Red Army, the destruction of the deliverer becoming the occasion and the model for the destruction of the entire leadership of which he was the foremost (Conquest, 2008; Erickson, 2001). The modern case thus extends the destruction beyond the individual deliverer, as the Nguyễn Trãi case had extended it to the kindred, but here the extension is to the whole officer corps, the institution of which the deliverer was the leading figure, and the scale of the destruction, the gutting of the leadership of a great army, is the modern case’s distinctive enormity, the phenomenon’s destruction of the deliverer become, through the machinery of the modern state, the destruction of an entire military leadership.

5. The self-defeat: the gutted command and the catastrophe of 1941

The self-defeat that the suite finds in every case reaches in the Tukhachevsky case its most enormous scale, for the destruction of the marshal and the officer corps gutted the leadership of the army that would, within a few years, have to meet the German invasion, and the cost of that destruction was paid in the catastrophes of the war’s opening period, the disasters that the absence of the destroyed leadership made worse and that constitute the suite’s largest demonstration of the self-defeating character of the regime’s fear.

The purge that began with Tukhachevsky destroyed a vast proportion of the Soviet army’s senior leadership, removing the experienced and capable officers and replacing them, where they were replaced at all, with men less experienced, less capable, and cowed by the demonstration of what befell those who rose too high (Conquest, 2008; Erickson, 2001). When the German invasion came, the Red Army met it with a leadership that had been gutted of its ablest men, deprived of the experience and the capability that the purged officers had possessed, and burdened with the consequences of the doctrines and the modernization that the destruction of Tukhachevsky and his school had disrupted (Erickson, 2001). The catastrophes of the war’s opening period, the vast encirclements, the enormous losses of men and territory, the near-collapse of the Soviet defense, were made worse by the absence of the destroyed leadership, the army paying in the disasters of the invasion the cost of the purge that had removed its ablest commanders on the eve of the war.

The self-defeat is the suite’s largest in scale, for the cost of the destruction of the deliverer was not the loss of a city or a fleet but the crippling of the leadership of a great army at the moment of its greatest trial, paid in the losses of the war’s opening period, in armies destroyed and territories lost and deaths beyond counting. The regime’s fear of its ablest soldier, pressed through the machinery of the modern state into the destruction of the entire officer corps, produced the self-defeat that the suite finds in every case, the removal of the capability on which the regime’s survival depended, but on a scale that the modern state’s machinery made vast, the gutting of an army’s leadership on the eve of the war that army would have to fight. The dictator destroyed the marshal who had built the army and the officers who would have led it, and paid for the destruction in the catastrophes of the invasion, the self-defeat of the regime’s fear demonstrated on the largest scale the suite has examined.

6. The phenomenon analyzed: the four concepts in the modern case

The four analytical concepts of Paper 1 are present in the destruction of Tukhachevsky, and the case displays them in the particular register of the modern totalitarian state and the industrialized purge.

The convertibility of capability into threat appears in the dictator’s calculation that the most capable and prominent soldier was the most dangerous, that Tukhachevsky’s very ability and standing made him the man most to be feared, most capable of opposing or supplanting the dictator, and therefore most necessary to eliminate. The capability that had saved the regime and built the army was, in the dictator’s fear, the capability that could be turned against him, and the marshal’s prominence as the ablest of the commanders made him the foremost object of the fear, the convertibility operating in the tyrant’s calculation that the best soldier was the greatest threat. The modern case shows the convertibility pressed to its logical extreme by a dictator whose fear marked the most capable for destruction precisely because they were the most capable, the ability that the regime needed becoming the threat that the regime’s fear could not tolerate.

Prestige as a rival source of legitimacy appears in Tukhachevsky’s standing as a hero of the civil war and the foremost figure of the army, a prestige that made him, in the dictator’s fear, a potential rival, a man whose standing in the army and the regime might serve as the basis of an alternative authority. In a regime whose legitimacy rested on the dictator’s supremacy and that could tolerate no rival pole of standing, the prestige of the most prominent soldier was a threat to be removed, the marshal’s standing in the army a potential basis for opposition that the dictator’s fear could not permit to exist. The prestige of the deliverer was, as in every case, a rival source of standing that the regime could not coexist with, and its removal was part of the purpose of the destruction.

The asymmetry between the irreplaceable individual and the self-preserving institution appears in the modern case with a particular and terrible irony, for the institution, the regime, in acting to preserve itself against the imagined threat of its ablest soldier, destroyed the very capability on which its survival in the coming war would depend, and the asymmetry was resolved in favor of the regime’s fear at a cost that the regime would pay in the catastrophes of the invasion. The dictator, acting on the institution’s, and his own, overriding interest in the elimination of all potential threats, destroyed the deliverer and the officer corps, resolving the asymmetry by the removal of the capability that the regime’s survival required, and the cost of that resolution, paid in the disasters of the war’s opening period, is the suite’s largest demonstration of the self-defeating character of the institution’s fear. The modern case shows the asymmetry resolved with the machinery of the modern state, the destruction of the capability accomplished on a vast scale, and the cost paid on a vast scale, the institution’s self-preserving fear producing the near-destruction of the institution in the war it had crippled itself to meet.

The use of legal form to legitimate the destruction appears in the fabricated conspiracy, the secret trial, and the bloodstained confession, the modern state’s machinery of fabrication and staged justice deployed to give the destruction the appearance of a response to a real treason. The regime did not destroy the marshal openly as the elimination of a feared soldier; it manufactured a conspiracy, extracted confessions by torture, staged a trial, and pronounced a sentence, clothing the destruction in the forms of justice with a thoroughness that the modern state’s machinery made possible. The bloodstained confession is the proof of the fabrication, the physical trace of the torture that produced the forced admission of a treason that never existed, and it stands as the modern case’s exposure of the legal form’s emptiness, the equivalent of the prosecutor’s confession in the Yue Fei case, the tangible proof that the form was a covering for a destruction accomplished by violence and fabrication. The modern state’s machinery made the legal form more elaborate and more thorough than in any earlier case, the fabricated conspiracy and the staged trial and the extracted confession a system of fabrication that the older regimes could not approach, but the function was the same, to clothe the regime’s fear in the appearance of justice and to present the destruction of the deliverer as the punishment of a traitor.

7. The modern variant and the standard of the suite

Read against the cases that precede it, the Tukhachevsky case confirms the phenomenon’s structure and contributes the modern variant, the survival and intensification of the phenomenon in the modern totalitarian state, the destruction of the deliverer accomplished through the machinery of the modern police state and extended to the destruction of an entire officer corps. As in Saul’s pursuit of David, in Athens’s exile of Themistocles, in Rome’s persecution of Scipio, in the Chinese executions, in the late Roman murders, in Justinian’s suspicion of Belisarius, in the judicial murder of Yue Fei, in the abandonment of Joan of Arc, in the extermination of Nguyễn Trãi, and in the torture of Yi Sun-sin, a genuine deliverer is destroyed in consequence of the regime’s fear of the capability and prestige the deliverance created. The Tukhachevsky case is distinguished by its modern setting, by the machinery of the modern state that made the destruction more thorough and more lethal, by the extension of the destruction to the entire officer corps, and by the enormous scale of the self-defeat, the gutting of an army’s leadership on the eve of the largest war in history.

The modern case’s principal contribution to the suite is the demonstration that the phenomenon is not a relic of the older orders but a hazard that the modern state, far from outgrowing, equipped with deadlier instruments. The same fear that had thrown Saul’s spear and convened Yue Fei’s tribunal was, in the modern case, equipped with a secret police, a system of fabrication and torture, the apparatus of the show trial, and a totalitarian control of society, and these instruments made the destruction of the deliverer more thorough, more systematic, and more lethal than the older regimes could achieve, extending it from the individual to the entire officer corps and accomplishing it with a machinery of fabrication that the older orders could not approach. The phenomenon in the modern case is the phenomenon of all the earlier cases, the same fear, the same convertibility, the same prestige feared, the same legal form serving a predetermined end, but pressed through the machinery of the modern state into a destruction of unprecedented thoroughness and scale, and this demonstration, that the modern state intensified rather than outgrew the phenomenon, is the modern case’s distinctive and disturbing contribution to the suite.

The Tukhachevsky case gives the suite its largest demonstration of the self-defeat that the closing paper will argue, the cost of the destruction of the deliverer paid in the catastrophes of the war the regime had crippled itself to meet, and it shows the self-defeating character of the regime’s fear on a scale that the modern state’s machinery made vast. The dictator destroyed the marshal who had built the army and the officers who would have led it, and paid for the destruction in the disasters of the invasion, the regime’s fear of its ablest soldier producing the near-destruction of the regime in the war that soldier had built the army to fight. The bloodstained confession, the physical trace of the torture that produced the fabricated charge, stands as the modern case’s emblem, the tangible proof that the destruction of the deliverer was accomplished by violence and fabrication, the legal form an empty covering marked with the blood of the man it was used to destroy, and the verdict of history, which rehabilitated the marshal and exposed the fabrication, rendered against the regime the judgment that the suite finds in every case, the deliverer vindicated and the regime’s destruction of him condemned. The marshal who built the army was shot on a fabricated charge, and the army he built, gutted of its leadership by the purge his destruction began, paid for the regime’s fear in the catastrophes of the war, the self-defeat of the phenomenon demonstrated, in the modern case, on the largest and most terrible scale the suite has examined.


References

Butson, T. G. (1984). The Tsar’s lieutenant: The Soviet Marshal. Praeger.

Conquest, R. (2008). The great terror: A reassessment (40th anniversary ed.). Oxford University Press.

Erickson, J. (2001). The Soviet high command: A military-political history, 1918–1941 (3rd ed.). Frank Cass. (Original work published 1962)


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Tortured by the Court He Saved: Yi Sun-sin and the Imjin War

1. Why this case is the suite’s most acute instance of the central cruelty

The phenomenon, in most of its instances, completes its work after the deliverance is accomplished, the regime turning on the savior once the danger has passed and the deliverer’s capability is no longer needed. Saul hunted David after the Philistine champion was slain; Athens exiled Themistocles after Salamis; the Chinese founders destroyed their generals after the empire was won; the late Roman court killed its defenders after the invasions were broken. The Yi Sun-sin case is different, and its difference is the source of its peculiar horror and the reason the suite treats it as the most acute instance of the phenomenon’s central cruelty. For the Korean court turned on its admiral not after the war was won but in the midst of it, not when his capability was spent but when it was still desperately needed, and it tortured and imprisoned the one man who was winning the war while the war still hung in the balance and the enemy still threatened the kingdom. The regime did not wait for the deliverance to be complete before destroying the deliverer; it nearly destroyed the deliverer and the deliverance together, removing the admiral in the midst of his victories and very nearly losing the war as the immediate and direct consequence.

This is the phenomenon’s cruelty in its most concentrated form, the deliverer literally tortured by the regime he was in the act of rescuing, and the case displays a feature that the others show only in the longer view, the immediate and near-fatal self-defeat of the regime’s fear. When the late Roman court killed Stilicho, Rome was sacked within two years; the interval, though short, was an interval. When the Korean court removed Yi Sun-sin, the fleet was destroyed within months by his replacement, and the kingdom stood on the edge of the catastrophe the admiral had been preventing, and the court was compelled to recall him, to acknowledge by the recall that no one else could do what he did, and to restore to the man it had tortured the command it had stripped from him. The self-defeat in this case is not merely visible but undeniable and immediate, the removal of the deliverer producing within months the disaster he had prevented, and the recall constituting the regime’s own confession that its fear had nearly cost it the war.

The second reason the case is central is the richness of the deliverer’s own testimony, for Yi Sun-sin kept a war diary throughout the conflict, a record in his own hand of the campaigns, the court politics, the slander, the imprisonment, and the torture, and this diary gives the suite something it has nowhere else, the voice of the deliverer himself recording in his own words the deliverance he wrought and the ingratitude he suffered (Yi, 1592–1598/1977). The other cases reach the deliverer’s experience through the report of historians; the Yi Sun-sin case reaches it through the deliverer’s own pen, and the diary’s record of a man winning a war for a court that imprisoned and tortured him is among the most affecting documents the phenomenon has produced.

The third reason is the completeness of the deliverance and the clarity of the deliverer’s skill, for Yi Sun-sin was a commander of the very first rank, undefeated in a long series of naval engagements, the designer of innovative warships, and the architect of victories so lopsided and so consequential that his standing among the great commanders of naval history is secure. The case presents a deliverer whose capability is beyond dispute, whose victories saved the kingdom, and whose destruction by the court he saved is therefore the destruction of a manifest and indispensable savior, the phenomenon’s pattern displayed with a deliverer of unquestionable greatness.

2. The deliverance: the command of the sea against the Japanese invasion

The deliverance Yi Sun-sin rendered, the first criterion of the phenomenon, was the command of the sea against the Japanese invasion of Korea in the 1590s, the war known as the Imjin War, in which Yi Sun-sin’s naval victories severed the Japanese supply lines, frustrated the invasion’s strategy, and saved the kingdom from the conquest that the Japanese armies, victorious on land, had seemed certain to accomplish (Hawley, 2005; Turnbull, 2002).

The Japanese invasion was a vast enterprise, the attempt of the Japanese ruler to conquer Korea as the prelude to an invasion of China, and the Japanese armies, landing in great numbers and equipped with firearms, swept up the Korean peninsula, taking the capital and driving the Korean court into flight, the war on land going disastrously for Korea (Hawley, 2005; Turnbull, 2002). But the Japanese strategy depended on the sea, on the shipment of supplies and reinforcements along the coast to support the advancing armies, and it was at sea that the invasion was frustrated, for there the Korean navy, under Yi Sun-sin, won a series of victories that severed the supply lines on which the land campaign depended and denied the Japanese the command of the sea their strategy required.

Yi Sun-sin’s victories were a succession of triumphs without defeat, won through superior tactics, superior gunnery, and the innovative warships he employed, including the armored vessels known as turtle ships, covered craft bristling with guns that proved formidable in the close fighting of the Korean coast (Hawley, 2005; Turnbull, 2002). In engagement after engagement Yi Sun-sin destroyed Japanese fleets while losing few or no ships of his own, his tactical mastery and the discipline of his fleet producing victories so lopsided that they astonished both sides, and by these victories he severed the Japanese supply lines, frustrated the invasion’s strategy, and saved the kingdom from the conquest that the land campaign had threatened. The deliverance was real, decisive, and attributable to the admiral’s skill, for it was Yi Sun-sin’s command of the sea that denied the Japanese the supply and reinforcement their strategy required and turned the course of a war that had been going disastrously on land, and the first criterion is met as fully as anywhere in the suite, for Yi Sun-sin was the commander whose capability saved Korea from the Japanese conquest.

3. The turn: the slander, the false intelligence, and the court’s credulity

The phenomenon’s third criterion, fear as the operative factor in the destruction, takes in the Yi Sun-sin case the form of the slander and faction at court that worked on the king’s suspicion and credulity, the rivalry and intrigue that turned the court against its victorious admiral in the midst of the war, and the case shows the destruction proceeding not from a single sovereign’s dread but from the combination of court faction, rival ambition, and a king disposed to believe the worst of a subject whose success and prestige had grown great.

Yi Sun-sin’s very success made him a figure of consequence and therefore a target for the faction and rivalry of the court, and his prestige, the standing his victories had given him, made him an object of the suspicion and jealousy that great success provokes. The court was riven by faction, and Yi Sun-sin had rivals, in particular another commander whose partisans worked to advance their man at Yi Sun-sin’s expense and to discredit the victorious admiral (Hawley, 2005; Turnbull, 2002). The occasion of the destruction came through a piece of false intelligence, a stratagem by which the Japanese, who had every reason to wish Yi Sun-sin removed, fed the Korean court a deceptive report designed to induce the court to order the admiral into a trap or to discredit him when he refused to act on the false information (Hawley, 2005; Turnbull, 2002). The court, credulous and worked upon by the faction hostile to Yi Sun-sin, accepted the false intelligence and ordered the admiral to act upon it, and when Yi Sun-sin, recognizing the report as a deception or judging the ordered movement to be a trap, declined to act as ordered, his disobedience, in fact the sound judgment of a commander refusing to lead his fleet into a trap, was made the ground of the charge against him.

The king, disposed by the slander and the faction to believe the worst of his admiral, and offended by the disobedience, turned against Yi Sun-sin, and the case shows the operative cause of the destruction to be the combination of the court faction’s hostility, the rival’s ambition, the Japanese deception, and the king’s credulity and suspicion, all working on the prestige and the success that had made the admiral a target. The historian must consider, as the method requires, whether Yi Sun-sin’s disobedience was a genuine offense that justified his punishment, and the answer the case yields is a clear negative, for the disobedience was the refusal of a commander to lead his fleet into a trap set by a deceptive report, the sound judgment of a man who knew the sea and the enemy better than the court did, and the subsequent destruction of the fleet by his replacement, who did act as the court wished, demonstrated that Yi Sun-sin’s judgment had been correct and the court’s order disastrous. The operative cause of the destruction was the fear and suspicion that the admiral’s success and prestige had provoked, worked on by faction and deception; the charge of disobedience was the instrument, the offense seized upon to accomplish the destruction that the hostility sought.

4. The destruction and the proof of its folly: torture, demotion, and the catastrophe of the replacement

The destruction itself was accomplished through the admiral’s arrest, imprisonment, torture, and demotion, and its folly was demonstrated, more immediately and more completely than in any other case in the suite, by the catastrophe that followed his removal, the destruction of the fleet by his replacement and the kingdom’s descent toward the disaster the admiral had been preventing.

Yi Sun-sin was arrested, brought to the capital, imprisoned, and subjected to torture, the victorious admiral who had saved the kingdom from the Japanese fleet treated as a criminal by the court he had saved, interrogated under torture, and very nearly put to death (Hawley, 2005; Turnbull, 2002). That the man who was winning the war should be tortured by the court he was winning it for is the phenomenon’s central cruelty in its most concentrated form, and the diary and the records of the period preserve the bitter fact of it, the deliverer in the hands of the regime’s torturers while the enemy he had defeated waited offshore. Yi Sun-sin escaped execution, in part through the intercession of those who recognized his value, but he was stripped of his command and demoted to the ranks, reduced from the admiral who commanded the fleet to a common soldier, the deliverer humiliated and degraded by the court he had saved (Hawley, 2005; Turnbull, 2002).

The folly of the destruction was demonstrated at once. Yi Sun-sin’s command of the fleet passed to his rival, the commander whose faction had worked against him, and this replacement, acting as the court wished and lacking Yi Sun-sin’s skill, led the fleet to catastrophe, engaging the Japanese in circumstances that Yi Sun-sin would have avoided and suffering a disastrous defeat in which the Korean fleet that Yi Sun-sin had built and led to victory after victory was almost entirely destroyed (Hawley, 2005; Turnbull, 2002). The command of the sea that Yi Sun-sin had won and held was lost in a single battle by his replacement, the supply lines the admiral had severed were reopened, and the kingdom stood again on the edge of the conquest that Yi Sun-sin’s victories had prevented, the catastrophe following directly and immediately from the removal of the admiral. The self-defeat of the regime’s fear was thus demonstrated with a completeness and an immediacy unmatched in the suite, for within months of removing the deliverer the court had lost the fleet, lost the command of the sea, and brought upon itself the disaster the deliverer had been holding off, and the connection between the removal and the catastrophe was undeniable, the replacement’s defeat the direct proof that the court had destroyed the one man capable of its defense.

5. The recall and the final victory: the court’s confession and the deliverer’s death

The sequel to the catastrophe is the case’s most telling demonstration of the phenomenon’s self-defeat and the regime’s dependence on the deliverer it had destroyed, for the court, faced with the disaster its fear had produced, was compelled to recall the man it had tortured, to restore to him the command it had stripped from him, and thereby to confess, by the recall itself, that no one else could do what he did and that its destruction of the deliverer had been a catastrophic error.

With the fleet destroyed and the kingdom in peril, the court recalled Yi Sun-sin and restored him to the command, the man who had been tortured and demoted to the ranks raised again to the admiralty because the catastrophe had proved that he alone could save the situation (Hawley, 2005; Turnbull, 2002). The recall is the regime’s confession, the acknowledgment, forced by the disaster, that the deliverer it had destroyed was indispensable, that its fear had nearly lost it the war, and that it had no choice but to restore the man it had wronged. And Yi Sun-sin, restored to a command that was now almost nothing, for the fleet had been all but destroyed and he is said to have had only a handful of ships remaining, accomplished the most famous of all his victories, the battle in which, with his tiny remnant fleet, he confronted a vast Japanese armada in a narrow strait and, exploiting the currents and the terrain as he had always done, destroyed a large part of the enemy fleet and turned back the advance, a victory against odds so overwhelming that it stands among the most remarkable in naval history (Hawley, 2005; Turnbull, 2002). The deliverer, restored to the command the court had stripped from him, rebuilt the shattered navy and once more denied the Japanese the command of the sea, saving the kingdom a second time after the court’s fear had nearly thrown away the salvation he had first achieved.

The end came in the hour of his final victory. In the last great battle of the war, as the Japanese sought to withdraw and Yi Sun-sin pressed the attack to destroy the retreating enemy fleet, the admiral was struck by a bullet and killed in the moment of his triumph, dying as the battle was being won, and it is recorded that, knowing his wound was mortal, he ordered his death to be concealed lest it dishearten his men and cost them the victory, so that the battle was won and the enemy destroyed before his death was made known (Hawley, 2005; Turnbull, 2002; Yi, 1592–1598/1977). The deliverer died in the act of his final deliverance, killed in the hour of the victory that completed the salvation of the kingdom, and the manner of his death, the concealment of his wound that the victory might be won, is the last testimony to the devotion of a man who had been tortured by the court he served and who served it still, unto death, in the winning of its war. He died the savior of Korea, the admiral undefeated in battle, killed by the enemy in the moment of victory after he had been tortured by the kingdom he saved, and the contrast between the court’s treatment of him and his service to the court is the phenomenon’s cruelty and the deliverer’s fidelity displayed in their starkest opposition.

6. The phenomenon analyzed: the four concepts in the Korean case

The four analytical concepts of Paper 1 are present in the destruction of Yi Sun-sin, and the case displays them in the particular register of the mid-war destruction and the immediate self-defeat.

The convertibility of capability into threat appears in the Yi Sun-sin case in the form of the admiral’s success and prestige making him a figure of consequence and therefore a target for the faction and suspicion of the court, his very victories, the proof of his capability, drawing upon him the jealousy and hostility that great success provokes. The capability that saved the kingdom made the admiral a great figure, and his greatness made him a target, the success converting into the prestige that drew the factional attack and the suspicion. The case shows the convertibility operating even in the midst of the war, the admiral’s success making him so great a figure that his greatness became a liability at court while his capability was still needed at sea, the very victories that saved the kingdom feeding the prestige that endangered him.

Prestige as a rival source of legitimacy appears in Yi Sun-sin’s standing as the victorious admiral, the savior of the kingdom at sea, whose prestige made him a person of consequence in the factional struggles of the court and a rival whose standing the hostile faction sought to diminish. The admiral’s prestige, rooted in his victories, was a form of standing that the court faction found threatening and that the rival commander coveted, and the destruction of the admiral was, in part, the removal of a prestige that stood in the way of the faction’s ambitions. The case shows the prestige of the deliverer becoming a stake in the factional struggles, the standing that the victories had earned made the object of the rivalry and the slander that sought to bring the admiral down.

The asymmetry between the irreplaceable individual and the self-preserving institution appears in the Yi Sun-sin case with a cruel twist, for here the institution’s act against the individual was nearly its own destruction, and the immediacy of the self-defeat exposed the asymmetry with unusual clarity. The court, acting on the faction’s hostility and the king’s suspicion, removed the admiral whose capability was the kingdom’s defense, and the removal at once produced the catastrophe, the destruction of the fleet and the loss of the command of the sea, so that the institution’s action against the individual nearly destroyed the institution itself. The recall was the institution’s forced acknowledgment of the asymmetry, the confession that the individual was indispensable and that its action against him had been a catastrophic error, and the case shows the asymmetry resolved first in favor of the institution’s fear, with near-fatal consequences, and then, under the compulsion of the disaster, reversed by the recall that restored the indispensable individual. The Korean case is the suite’s clearest demonstration that the institution’s fear of the deliverer can be not merely costly but immediately and nearly fatally self-defeating, the removal of the indispensable individual producing at once the disaster he had prevented.

The use of legal form to legitimate the destruction appears in the charge of disobedience, the offense seized upon to accomplish the destruction, the admiral’s sound refusal to lead his fleet into a trap made the ground of his arrest and punishment. The court did not destroy the admiral openly as the removal of a too-great subject; it charged him with disobedience to the king’s order, the legal form by which his correct judgment was made an offense and his destruction given the color of justice. And the subsequent catastrophe, the destruction of the fleet by the replacement who obeyed the order the admiral had refused, demonstrated that the order itself had been disastrous and the admiral’s disobedience correct, exposing the charge as the instrument of the destruction rather than the punishment of a real offense. The legal form in the Korean case served, as in the others, to clothe the destruction in the appearance of justice, the charge of disobedience providing the ground, and the proof of its emptiness came swiftly in the disaster that followed the obedience the court had demanded.

7. The Korean variant and the standard of the suite

Read against the cases that precede it, the Yi Sun-sin case confirms the phenomenon’s structure and contributes its most acute instance, the destruction of the deliverer in the midst of the war he was winning, the torture of the savior by the court he was saving, and the immediate and near-fatal self-defeat of the regime’s fear. As in Saul’s pursuit of David, in Athens’s exile of Themistocles, in Rome’s persecution of Scipio, in the Chinese executions, in the late Roman murders, in Justinian’s suspicion of Belisarius, in the judicial murder of Yue Fei, in the abandonment of Joan of Arc, and in the extermination of Nguyễn Trãi, a genuine deliverer is destroyed in consequence of the regime’s fear of the success and prestige the deliverance created. The Yi Sun-sin case is distinguished by the timing of the destruction, in the midst of the war rather than after it, by the central cruelty of the torture of the savior by the court he was saving, and by the immediacy and completeness of the self-defeat, the removal of the deliverer producing within months the catastrophe he had prevented and compelling the recall that confessed his indispensability.

The Korean case gives the suite its sharpest demonstration of the self-defeat that the closing paper will argue, for here the connection between the destruction of the deliverer and the disaster is not merely visible but immediate and undeniable, the removal of the admiral followed within months by the destruction of the fleet and the loss of the command of the sea, and the recall constituting the regime’s own confession that its fear had nearly cost it the war. Where the late Roman cases showed the self-defeat in the sack that followed the killing by an interval of years, the Korean case shows it in the catastrophe that followed the removal by an interval of months, and where the late Roman regime did not survive to confess its error, the Korean court was compelled by the disaster to recall the deliverer it had tortured and thereby to acknowledge, in the act of recall, that no one else could do what he did. The case is the suite’s clearest proof that the destruction of the deliverer is self-defeating, the regime’s fear producing the very disaster the deliverer had prevented, and the recall the regime’s forced confession of the folly of its fear.

The Yi Sun-sin case also gives the suite its most affecting testimony to the deliverer’s fidelity, for the admiral, tortured and demoted by the court he had saved, served that court still, accepting the recall, rebuilding the shattered fleet, winning the impossible victory in the strait, and dying in the hour of his final triumph, faithful unto death to the kingdom that had wronged him. The contrast between the court’s treatment of the admiral and the admiral’s service to the court is the phenomenon’s cruelty and the deliverer’s devotion displayed in their starkest opposition, the regime tturing and degrading the savior while the savior, undeterred by the wrong, served on to the death in the winning of the regime’s war. The deliverer’s diary, his record in his own hand of the deliverance he wrought and the ingratitude he suffered, is the suite’s most direct testimony to the experience of the phenomenon’s victim, the voice of a man winning a war for a court that imprisoned and tortured him, and it stands as the deliverer’s own witness to the cruelty the suite examines and to the fidelity that the cruelty could not break. Yi Sun-sin died the savior of Korea, undefeated in battle, killed by the enemy in the moment of victory after he had been tortured by the kingdom he saved, and his memory is honored in Korea as that of the supreme national hero, the verdict of history elevating the deliverer whom the court had tortured to the highest place in the nation’s regard, the savior the regime had wronged becoming the figure the nation reveres above all others.


References

Hawley, S. (2005). The Imjin War: Japan’s sixteenth-century invasion of Korea and attempt to conquer China. Royal Asiatic Society, Korea Branch.

Turnbull, S. (2002). Samurai invasion: Japan’s Korean war 1592–1598. Cassell.

Yi, S.-s. (1977). Nanjung ilgi: War diary of Admiral Yi Sun-sin (T.-h. Ha, Trans.; P.-h. Lee, Ed.). Yonsei University Press. (Original work written 1592–1598)


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The Mat of Lychee Garden: Nguyễn Trãi and Extermination to the Third Degree

1. Why this case extends the phenomenon into collective punishment

The cases examined to this point have concerned the destruction of the deliverer as an individual, the spear aimed at one man, the potsherds cast against one citizen, the tribunal convened for one general, the fire kindled for one woman. The Nguyễn Trãi case introduces a dimension that the other cases touch only at the margins, in the slaughter of the priests at Nob and the extermination of Han Xin’s clan, but that here becomes the defining feature, the extension of the destruction beyond the deliverer to his entire kindred, the punishment not of the man but of the line, the extermination across three generations that Vietnamese and Chinese law knew as the gravest penalty the state could impose. This is the first reason the suite gives the case a full treatment, for it shows the phenomenon’s fear pressed to its furthest extent, the regime’s dread of the deliverer so complete that it destroys not only the man but his family, his descendants, and his ascendants, wiping out the line as though to erase the deliverer from the earth altogether.

The extension to collective punishment is analytically significant because it reveals something about the nature of the fear that drives the phenomenon. When a regime destroys not only the deliverer but his kindred, it acts on a fear that is not satisfied by the removal of the individual, a fear that sees in the deliverer’s very blood a continuing threat, in his descendants potential avengers or claimants, in his line a danger that must be extirpated root and branch. The collective punishment shows the fear in its most extreme and least rational form, for the descendants and kindred of the deliverer have, by hypothesis, done nothing, and their destruction can be explained only by a fear that has passed beyond any response to act or capability and become a determination to annihilate the deliverer’s existence entirely. The case thus extends the suite’s understanding of the fear that drives the phenomenon, showing that it can reach a pitch at which it is no longer the removal of a threatening individual but the extirpation of a feared line, and this extremity illuminates, by its very excess, the depth of the dread that the deliverer’s greatness can provoke.

The second reason the case belongs is its extension of the suite into Southeast Asia, into the Vietnamese tradition, which shared with the Chinese the conception of the loyal minister and the recurring pattern of the founding general destroyed by the dynasty he founded, and which here gives the suite an instance from a tradition outside both the Western and the Chinese cores that the earlier papers have explored. The recurrence of the phenomenon in the Vietnamese context, with its own version of the founding pattern and its own conception of the collective punishment, confirms the phenomenon’s cross-cultural character and shows that it is not confined to the traditions the suite has so far examined but appears wherever the conditions that produce it, an insecure throne, a dependence on an indispensable founder, and a fear of the prestige that founding confers, are present.

The third reason is the particular vulnerability that the deliverer’s very centrality to the founding created, for Nguyễn Trãi’s intimate association with the founder and the new dynasty, which had been the source of his eminence, became, once the founder was gone, the source of his exposure, and the case shows how the founding figure’s closeness to the throne, his indispensability to the new order, made him uniquely vulnerable to the suspicions and factional struggles that followed the founder’s death.

2. The deliverance: the strategist of the war of independence

The deliverance Nguyễn Trãi rendered, the first criterion of the phenomenon, was his service as the strategist, the propagandist, and the political architect of the Vietnamese war of independence that expelled the occupying Ming and established the new Lê dynasty, a deliverance in which Nguyễn Trãi was the indispensable counselor and the mind behind the cause, the man whose strategy and whose words gave the war its direction and its justification (Taylor, 2013).

Vietnam in the early fifteenth century had been conquered and occupied by the Ming empire of China, its independence extinguished, its institutions subjected to the occupier, and the war of independence was the struggle to expel the Ming and restore the country’s self-rule. In this struggle Nguyễn Trãi attached himself to the leader Lê Lợi, who became the head of the resistance and the eventual founder of the new dynasty, and Nguyễn Trãi served as his foremost counselor, the strategist who shaped the conduct of the war and the writer whose proclamations gave the cause its voice and its moral force (Taylor, 2013). His contribution was that of the mind rather than the sword, the strategy that guided the resistance to victory and the propaganda that rallied the people and justified the cause, and his most famous work, the great proclamation issued on the victory, stands as a foundational text of Vietnamese national literature, the declaration of the country’s independence and the justification of the war that won it.

The war succeeded. The Ming were expelled, Vietnamese independence was restored, and Lê Lợi established the new Lê dynasty as its founding emperor, with Nguyễn Trãi as one of the principal architects of the victory and a leading figure of the new order (Taylor, 2013). The deliverance was real and consequential, the restoration of the country’s independence and the founding of a new dynasty, and Nguyễn Trãi’s part in it, as the strategist and propagandist whose mind and words had guided the cause, satisfies the first criterion, for he was among the indispensable authors of the deliverance, the counselor without whom the founder’s victory and the dynasty’s establishment would have been the harder and perhaps the impossible. His service was of the kind the suite recognizes, the deliverance of the nation through a skill, here the skill of strategy and statecraft, that made him a founding figure of the new order and gave him the eminence that would later expose him.

3. The turn: the founder’s death and the deliverer’s exposure

The phenomenon’s third criterion, fear as the operative factor in the destruction, takes in the Nguyễn Trãi case the form of the factional suspicion that gathered around a founding figure after the founder’s death, the vulnerability of the deliverer whose very closeness to the new dynasty made him a target once the protecting hand of the founder was removed, and the case shows how the eminence that founding conferred became, in the insecure aftermath of the founder’s death, the exposure that destroyed the founding figure.

During the founder’s lifetime, Nguyễn Trãi’s position, though not without its difficulties and periods of disfavor, was secured by his association with Lê Lợi and his standing as an architect of the victory. But the founding of a new dynasty creates a particular instability, for the founder’s death leaves a throne not yet firmly established, a succession that may be contested or insecure, and a court full of the founder’s companions and counselors, each with claims to eminence and each a potential threat or rival in the factional struggles that follow. The founding figures, who owed their eminence to the founder and whose standing had depended on his favor, became in the aftermath of his death the objects of the suspicions and rivalries of the new reign, their very prominence and their closeness to the founding making them targets for those who feared their influence or coveted their position (Taylor, 2013). Nguyễn Trãi, as one of the most eminent of the founding figures, the strategist and propagandist of the victory, was particularly exposed, his prestige and his association with the founding making him a figure of consequence in the factional struggles and therefore a figure at risk.

The occasion of his destruction came through the suspicious death of the king, the founder’s successor, during a visit, an event that became the pretext for the destruction of Nguyễn Trãi and his family. The young king, the son and successor of the founder, died suddenly while visiting or staying at a place associated with Nguyễn Trãi, and the suspicion of responsibility for the king’s death fell, or was made to fall, upon Nguyễn Trãi and those close to him, in particular upon a woman of his household who had been in attendance on the king (Taylor, 2013). The circumstances of the king’s death and the assignment of responsibility for it are obscure and were very likely manipulated by the factions at court who wished the destruction of Nguyễn Trãi, and the suite, following its method, must consider whether the charge was true, whether Nguyễn Trãi or his household was in fact responsible for the king’s death. The evidence does not permit a confident verdict, for the circumstances are obscure, but the weight of the case and the judgment of Vietnamese history, which rehabilitated Nguyễn Trãi and treated his destruction as an injustice, tell against the charge, suggesting that the king’s death was the pretext seized upon by the factions hostile to the deliverer rather than a crime genuinely committed by him. The operative cause of the destruction was, on this reading, the factional suspicion and hostility that the deliverer’s eminence had provoked, the vulnerability of the founding figure in the insecure aftermath of the founder’s death, and the king’s death was the occasion that allowed that hostility to accomplish the destruction it sought.

4. The destruction: the Lệ Chi Viên affair and extermination to the third degree

The destruction itself was accomplished through the charge arising from the king’s death and the imposition of the gravest penalty the law knew, the extermination of the deliverer’s line across three generations, and it is this collective punishment that gives the case its distinctive character and its place in the suite, the destruction not of the man alone but of the kindred, the extirpation of the line.

The affair takes its name from the place where the king died, the Lychee Garden, from which this paper draws its title, and the events there became the basis of the charge against Nguyễn Trãi (Taylor, 2013). Held responsible for the king’s death, whether through the woman of his household or through his own supposed complicity, Nguyễn Trãi was condemned, and the sentence imposed was the extermination of three generations, the penalty by which the condemned man’s line, his descendants, his kindred, and his ascendants within the defined degrees, were put to death along with him, a punishment designed to annihilate the entire family of the condemned (Taylor, 2013). This was the gravest sentence the law provided, reserved for the most serious offenses, in particular for treason and for crimes against the throne, and its imposition on Nguyễn Trãi meant the destruction not only of the deliverer but of his whole kindred, the extirpation of the family of the man who had been among the architects of the dynasty’s founding.

The extermination was carried out, and Nguyễn Trãi died along with the members of his family who fell within the degrees of the sentence, the deliverer and his line destroyed together by the dynasty he had helped to found (Taylor, 2013). The collective punishment is the case’s defining feature and the form the phenomenon takes here, the fear of the deliverer pressed to the extremity of destroying his entire family, and it shows the phenomenon at its most extreme, for the kindred who died with Nguyễn Trãi had, by hypothesis, no part in any crime, and their destruction can be explained only by the determination to extirpate the deliverer’s line entirely, to leave no descendant who might avenge him or claim his standing, to erase the family from the earth. The historian notes that one descendant is traditionally held to have survived, a son or grandson who escaped the extermination and through whom the line continued, a detail that, if true, parallels the escape of Abiathar from the slaughter at Nob and that made possible the eventual continuation of the family and the later rehabilitation of its founder.

5. The afterlife: the rehabilitation and the national honor

The Nguyễn Trãi case, like the cases of Yue Fei and Joan of Arc, is distinguished by a moral reversal that followed the deliverer’s death, the rehabilitation that cleared his name and the elevation that made him one of the supreme figures of Vietnamese history and literature, and the suite attends to this afterlife because it bears on the closing argument about the verdict of history reversing the verdict of the regime.

Some decades after his destruction, under a later king of the same dynasty, Nguyễn Trãi was rehabilitated, his name cleared, his honor restored, and his descendants, through the surviving line, recognized, the unjust destruction acknowledged and reversed (Taylor, 2013). Nguyễn Trãi passed into Vietnamese tradition as one of the greatest figures of the national history, honored as the strategist and propagandist of the war of independence, revered as the author of the great proclamation that stands among the foundational texts of Vietnamese literature, and remembered as the loyal minister and founding figure unjustly destroyed by the dynasty he had served. His standing in Vietnamese culture became that of a national hero and a literary master, his memory honored across the centuries, and in the modern era his eminence has been recognized internationally as well, his name honored as one of the great figures of his country’s history and culture.

The rehabilitation and the subsequent honor constitute the reversal of the regime’s judgment, the declaration that the condemned man was wrongly condemned and the elevation of the destroyed deliverer to the honor his service had merited, and they show, as in the cases of Yue Fei and Joan of Arc, the verdict of history reversing the verdict of the regime, the deliverer the dynasty destroyed becoming the nation’s revered figure, the founding minister exterminated with his line becoming the honored architect of the country’s independence and the master of its literature. The collective punishment that sought to extirpate the line was answered by the survival of a descendant and the eventual restoration of the family, and the destruction that sought to erase the deliverer from the earth was answered by his elevation to a place among the nation’s greatest, the verdict of history undoing the regime’s attempt at annihilation and fixing the deliverer’s memory more securely than the extermination had sought to remove it.

6. The phenomenon analyzed: the four concepts in the Vietnamese case

The four analytical concepts of Paper 1 are present in the destruction of Nguyễn Trãi, and the case displays them in the particular register of the founding figure’s vulnerability and the collective punishment.

The convertibility of capability into threat appears in the Nguyễn Trãi case in the form of the founding figure’s eminence becoming, after the founder’s death, a source of danger in the factional struggles of the new reign. Nguyễn Trãi’s capability, the strategic and political skill that had made him an architect of the founding, gave him an eminence and an influence that, while the founder lived, served the dynasty, but that, after the founder’s death, made him a figure of consequence in the contests for influence and a target for those who feared or envied his standing. The capability that had delivered the nation and founded the dynasty became the eminence that exposed the deliverer to the suspicions and hostilities of the insecure aftermath, the founding skill converting, in the changed circumstances of the founder’s death, into the prominence that drew the factional attack.

Prestige as a rival source of legitimacy appears in Nguyễn Trãi’s standing as a founding figure whose eminence derived from his part in the deliverance and the founding, a prestige that made him a person of consequence whose influence others feared and whose standing made him a rival in the factional struggles of the new reign. The founding figure’s prestige, rooted in his contribution to the dynasty’s establishment, was a form of authority and standing that the factions of the new reign found threatening, and the destruction of the deliverer was, in part, the removal of a prestige that complicated the contests for influence and the consolidation of the new order. The collective punishment extended this concern to the deliverer’s line, for the prestige of the founding figure attached in some measure to his family, and the extermination sought to remove not only the deliverer’s standing but the standing of his kindred, to extirpate the prestige of the line along with the line itself.

The asymmetry between the irreplaceable individual and the self-preserving institution appears in the divergence between the deliverer’s eminence, which had been an asset to the founding, and the new reign’s interest in consolidating its own authority and managing the factional struggles, in which the eminence of the founding figures became a complication to be removed. While the founder lived and the dynasty was being established, Nguyễn Trãi’s capability and eminence served the institution; after the founder’s death, the institution’s interest shifted to the consolidation of the new reign’s authority and the resolution of the factional contests, and the eminence of the founding figure became an obstacle, a source of rivalry and suspicion to be removed. The institution, acting on its interest in its own consolidation, resolved the asymmetry by the destruction of the founding figure, and the collective punishment extended that resolution to the deliverer’s line, the institution’s self-preserving interest pressed to the extremity of extirpating the family of the man whose eminence had become a threat.

The use of legal form to legitimate the destruction appears in the charge arising from the king’s death and the imposition of the legally prescribed penalty of extermination, the destruction accomplished through the forms of a legal process that assigned responsibility for the king’s death and imposed the gravest sentence the law provided. The charge of responsibility for the king’s death was the legal form, the instrument by which the factional hostility found a basis for the destruction, and the sentence of extermination was the legally prescribed penalty for the gravest offenses, applied to accomplish the extirpation of the deliverer and his line. The legal form in the Nguyễn Trãi case served, as in the other cases, to clothe the destruction in the appearance of justice, the assignment of responsibility for the king’s death providing the ground and the prescribed penalty providing the means, and the obscurity of the circumstances of the king’s death, very likely manipulated by the hostile factions, shows the form serving a predetermined end, the destruction of the deliverer and his kindred accomplished through a charge whose truth the evidence does not support.

7. The Vietnamese variant and the standard of the suite

Read against the cases that precede it, the Nguyễn Trãi case confirms the phenomenon’s structure and contributes the collective-punishment variant, the destruction of the deliverer extended to his entire line, the extermination across three generations that shows the phenomenon’s fear pressed to its furthest extent. As in Saul’s pursuit of David, in Athens’s exile of Themistocles, in Rome’s persecution of Scipio, in the Chinese executions, in the late Roman murders, in Justinian’s suspicion of Belisarius, in the judicial murder of Yue Fei, and in the abandonment of Joan of Arc, a genuine deliverer is destroyed in consequence of the regime’s fear of the eminence and prestige the deliverance created. The Nguyễn Trãi case is distinguished by the extension of the destruction to the deliverer’s kindred, the collective punishment that sought to extirpate the line, and by its setting in the vulnerable aftermath of a dynasty’s founding, where the eminence of the founding figures became their exposure once the founder was gone.

The collective-punishment variant extends the suite’s understanding of the phenomenon’s fear in a significant way, for it shows that the fear can reach a pitch at which it is no longer satisfied by the removal of the threatening individual but demands the extirpation of his line, the destruction of descendants and kindred who have done nothing, on the basis of a fear that sees in the deliverer’s very blood a continuing threat. This extremity illuminates the depth of the dread that the deliverer’s greatness can provoke, for the destruction of the kindred can be explained only by a fear that has passed beyond any response to act or capability and become a determination to annihilate the deliverer’s existence entirely, to leave no descendant who might avenge him or inherit his standing. The collective punishment is the phenomenon’s fear in its most extreme and least rational form, and the suite includes the case to show that the dread of the deliverer can reach this pitch, that the fear that elsewhere removes the individual can here demand the extirpation of the line.

The Nguyễn Trãi case shares with the cases of Yue Fei and Joan of Arc the moral reversal that followed the destruction, the rehabilitation and the elevation that made the destroyed deliverer a revered national figure, and it shows, as those cases do, the verdict of history reversing the verdict of the regime. The dynasty destroyed the deliverer and exterminated his line, seeking to erase him from the earth; but a descendant survived, the family was restored, and the deliverer was elevated to a place among the nation’s greatest figures, the founding minister exterminated with his kindred becoming the honored architect of the country’s independence and the master of its literature. The verdict of history undid the extermination’s attempt at annihilation, fixing the deliverer’s memory more securely than the destruction had sought to remove it, and the suite finds in this reversal, as in the kneeling statues at Yue Fei’s tomb and the rehabilitation of Joan, the moral self-defeat of the phenomenon, the regime’s destruction of its deliverer condemned by the long judgment of history and the deliverer it sought to erase elevated to an honor that has far outlasted the regime’s fear. The dynasty sought to extirpate the line of the man who founded it; history restored the line and crowned its founder, and the mat of the Lychee Garden, on which the deliverer and his kindred were condemned, is remembered now not as the place of a traitor’s just punishment but as the scene of an injustice that the nation has never ceased to mourn.


References

Taylor, K. W. (2013). A history of the Vietnamese. Cambridge University Press.


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The King She Crowned: Joan of Arc and the Abandonment of a Deliverer

1. Why the abandonment variant belongs in the suite

The cases examined to this point share a common structure in which the regime that destroys the deliverer is also the regime that wields the instrument of destruction, the spear, the potsherd, the prosecution, the tablet of gold, the executioner’s sword. The regime fears, and the regime strikes. The Joan of Arc case introduces a variant in which the structure holds but the mechanism divides, in which the regime that the deliverer saved does not itself strike the blow but instead abandons her to the enemy who does, and this division is the first reason the suite gives the case a full treatment. For Joan was not killed by the French crown she had secured; she was killed by the English and their Burgundian allies, the enemy she had fought, through a tribunal of churchmen in the enemy’s service. The hand that lit the fire was not the hand she had saved. And yet the case belongs unmistakably to the phenomenon, because the regime she saved, the French crown she had crowned, abandoned her to that fire, neither ransoming nor rescuing nor making any serious effort to save the deliverer who had given the king his throne, and gained by being rid of a figure whose prestige and independent authority had become inconvenient.

The abandonment variant is analytically valuable precisely because it separates two things that the other cases combine, the regime’s fear of the deliverer and the regime’s action against the deliverer. In the abandonment case the regime does not act; it refrains from acting, and the refraining is itself the instrument of destruction. The deliverer falls into the enemy’s hands, and the regime she saved, which could ransom or rescue her, does nothing, and by doing nothing allows the enemy to destroy her. This is a subtler form of the phenomenon than the spear or the tribunal, for it accomplishes the deliverer’s destruction without the regime’s fingerprints upon the deed, and it requires the historian to demonstrate not what the regime did but what it conspicuously failed to do, and to show that the failure served the same fear and the same interest that drove the more active destructions. The case thus extends the phenomenon’s range to include the destruction by abandonment, the regime’s calculated inaction that delivers the savior to the enemy, and it shows that the fear of the deliverer’s prestige can express itself as a failure to save as readily as a determination to kill.

The second reason the case belongs is the unusually pure form in which it presents the deliverer’s prestige as the source of the regime’s discomfort, for Joan possessed a prestige and an independent authority of a kind that the French court found difficult to assimilate even while it depended on her, and her capture relieved the court of a figure who had become as much an embarrassment as an asset. The case shows the phenomenon’s fear in the form of relief rather than dread, the regime’s quiet gladness to be rid of a deliverer whose continued prominence would have been awkward, and this register of the fear, the relief at an inconvenient savior’s removal, is one the suite finds nowhere so clearly.

The third reason is the legal machinery of the condemnation, which makes the case another instance of law deployed against a deliverer, though here the law was the enemy’s law and the tribunal the enemy’s tribunal, used to destroy the savior under the forms of an ecclesiastical trial whose verdict was determined before it began. The suite attends to this machinery because it shows the same device the other cases display, the destruction of the deliverer through legal forms that serve a predetermined end, operating here in the register of a heresy trial conducted by the enemy with the abandoned deliverer in their power.

2. The deliverance: Orléans, the road to Reims, and the crowning of the king

The deliverance Joan rendered, the first criterion of the phenomenon, was the turning of the tide in a war that France was losing, the relief of the besieged city whose fall would have opened the way to the conquest of what remained of the French cause, and the bringing of the disinherited heir to his coronation, by which his contested claim to the throne was given the sanction that transformed his fortunes. France in the early fifteenth century, in the long war with England, was in desperate case, much of the country in English or Burgundian hands, the heir to the French throne uncrowned and his legitimacy in question, and the war going so badly that the French cause seemed near collapse (Pernoud & Clin, 1998; DeVries, 1999). Into this situation came Joan, a young woman of the common people who declared that she was sent to save France and to bring the heir to his coronation, and who, against all the expectations of the age, was given a place in the war and proceeded to justify it.

Her first and greatest deliverance was the relief of Orléans, the city whose siege was the focus of the war and whose fall would have been a catastrophe for the French cause. Joan came to the besieged city, raised the spirits of its defenders and the French forces, and in a series of assaults broke the siege and drove off the English, a victory that astonished France and Europe and that marked the turning of the war’s tide (Pernoud & Clin, 1998; DeVries, 1999). The relief of Orléans was a deliverance in the strict sense the suite requires, the turning aside of a threat whose realization would have been disastrous, accomplished through Joan’s leadership and the spirit she gave to forces that had been losing, and it made her at a stroke the most celebrated figure of the French cause.

Her second deliverance, no less consequential though political rather than purely military, was the bringing of the heir to his coronation. After Orléans, Joan urged the march to Reims, the traditional place of the coronation of French kings, deep in territory that had to be crossed or taken to reach it, and she carried the heir and the army there through a campaign that secured the route, so that the heir was crowned king at Reims as Charles VII, his contested claim given the sacred sanction of the coronation that transformed him from a disputed pretender into the anointed king of France (Pernoud & Clin, 1998; DeVries, 1999). This was the deliverance that gave the case its title, for Joan crowned the king, secured for the heir the throne whose legitimacy had been in question, and made him, by the coronation she brought about, the king he had not securely been before. The first criterion is met fully, for Joan turned the war and crowned the king, delivering the French cause from the collapse it had faced and giving Charles the throne he owed to her.

3. The turn: the inconvenient deliverer and the failure of the crown

The phenomenon’s third criterion, the regime’s fear as the operative factor in the destruction, takes in the Joan of Arc case the particular form of the court’s growing discomfort with a deliverer whose prestige, independence, and continued military ambition had become as much a liability as an asset, and whose capture the court received with a relief that expressed itself in the failure to save her. The fear here is not the dread of a rival to the throne, for Joan claimed no throne and threatened no one’s position; it is rather the discomfort of a court with a figure too prominent, too independent, and too much a reminder of how much the king owed to a peasant girl, a figure whose continued presence had become awkward and whose removal would be a quiet convenience.

After the coronation, the relation between Joan and the court cooled. The king and his advisers, having gained the coronation and the turning of the war, were inclined toward negotiation and caution, while Joan pressed for continued vigorous campaigning, for the recovery of Paris and the prosecution of the war to victory, and her ambition increasingly diverged from the court’s policy (Pernoud & Clin, 1998; DeVries, 1999). An assault on Paris, which Joan urged and led, failed, and the failure diminished her standing and gave the cautious party at court reason to set her aside. The court’s enthusiasm for the deliverer waned as her usefulness seemed to pass and her independence and continued military ambition became inconvenient, and Joan found herself increasingly marginalized, supported less, given less of a part in the policy she wished to pursue. The deliverer who had crowned the king had become, within a year of the coronation, a figure the court was content to see diminished, her prestige now an awkwardness and her ambition a complication.

It was in this state of cooled relations and diminished support that Joan was captured. In a skirmish at Compiègne, Joan was taken prisoner by the Burgundians, the French allies of the English, and the manner of her capture, with the gates of the town closed behind her and no rescue mounted, has raised the question, never resolved, of whether she was simply unlucky or whether the closing of the gates reflected the indifference or worse of those who might have saved her (Pernoud & Clin, 1998; DeVries, 1999). Whatever the truth of the capture itself, what followed is the heart of the abandonment case, for once Joan was in enemy hands the French crown that owed her its throne did nothing to save her.

4. The abandonment: the ransom not paid and the rescue not attempted

The abandonment is the case’s defining feature and the form the phenomenon takes here, and it consists in the conspicuous failure of the French crown to ransom, rescue, or make any serious effort to save the deliverer who had given the king his throne, a failure that delivered Joan to the enemy who destroyed her.

By the custom of the age, a prisoner of war of standing could be ransomed, and Joan, the most celebrated figure of the French cause, the woman who had crowned the king, was a prisoner whose ransom the French crown could have sought and very possibly secured. The Burgundians who held her sold her to the English, who wanted her destroyed, and at no point in the long process by which she passed into English hands and was brought to trial did the French crown make any serious effort to ransom her, to rescue her, or to intervene on her behalf (Pernoud & Clin, 1998; DeVries, 1999). The king she had crowned, who owed his throne to her deliverance and his coronation to her insistence, did nothing. He raised no ransom, mounted no rescue, made no diplomatic effort to save the deliverer from the enemy who meant to burn her, and his silence and inaction through the months of her captivity and trial are the abandonment that the suite identifies as the phenomenon’s form in this case.

The historian must consider whether the failure to save Joan reflected mere incapacity rather than calculated abandonment, for it might be argued that the French crown lacked the means to ransom or rescue her. The argument does not hold. The French crown was capable of diplomacy and of raising funds, and the woman in question was the most valuable prisoner of the war on the French side, the deliverer of Orléans and the maker of the king; had the crown wished to save her, it had means to attempt it, and its complete failure to make any serious effort cannot be explained by incapacity alone. The failure is better explained by the court’s diminished attachment to the deliverer, by the convenience of her removal, and by the awkwardness that her continued prominence had come to represent. The court that had cooled toward Joan, that found her independence and ambition inconvenient, that was content to see her diminished, was a court for which her capture by the enemy was a quiet relief, the removal of an embarrassment by a hand other than its own, and its failure to save her was the expression of that relief, the calculated inaction that allowed the enemy to do what the court itself would not have dared and need not now trouble to prevent. The operative cause of Joan’s destruction was, on the French side, this abandonment, the failure of the regime she saved to save her, and the abandonment served the same fear and the same interest, the discomfort with a too-prominent deliverer, that drove the more active destructions in the other cases.

5. The destruction: the trial, the threat of torture, and the fire

The destruction itself was accomplished by the enemy, through a tribunal of churchmen in English service, and though the hand was the enemy’s the suite attends to the legal machinery because it is another instance of law deployed against a deliverer, the destruction accomplished through the forms of a trial whose verdict was determined in advance.

Joan was tried by an ecclesiastical court on charges of heresy and related offenses, a tribunal presided over by a bishop in the English interest and composed of churchmen who served the enemy’s purpose, which was to destroy the deliverer and, by convicting her of heresy, to discredit the king she had crowned by tainting his coronation with the condemnation of the witch or heretic who had brought it about (Tisset & Lanhers, 1960–1971; Pernoud & Clin, 1998). The trial was conducted with the forms of legal and ecclesiastical process, the examinations, the articles of accusation, the deliberations, but its outcome was determined by the interest of those who had convened it, and the records of the condemnation trial, preserved and edited, show a proceeding in which the deliverer, held in harsh conditions and worn down by relentless examination, was maneuvered toward a condemnation that had been intended from the first (Tisset & Lanhers, 1960–1971). Joan was held not in the church’s custody, as was proper for an ecclesiastical prisoner, but in a secular prison in chains, guarded by enemy soldiers, denied the conditions and the counsel that the proceeding’s own forms should have afforded her, and she was threatened with torture to extract the confession the tribunal sought (Tisset & Lanhers, 1960–1971; Pernoud & Clin, 1998).

The end came through a condemnation for relapse. Joan, worn down and momentarily induced to a recantation, afterward resumed the conduct the tribunal had condemned, and was declared a relapsed heretic, the condemnation that carried the sentence of death, and she was burned at the stake, the deliverer of France destroyed by fire at the hands of the enemy she had fought, abandoned by the king she had crowned (Tisset & Lanhers, 1960–1971; Pernoud & Clin, 1998). The destruction was complete, accomplished through the forms of a trial whose verdict served the enemy’s purpose, with the French crown that owed her its throne standing by in silence, and the deliverer who had turned the war and crowned the king died in the flames while the king she had made did nothing to save her.

6. The afterlife: the rehabilitation and the verdict reversed

The Joan of Arc case, like the Yue Fei case, is distinguished by a moral reversal that followed the deliverer’s death, the rehabilitation that cleared her name and the eventual elevation that made her one of the supreme national symbols of France, and the suite attends to this afterlife because it bears, as in the Yue Fei case, on the closing argument about the verdict of history reversing the verdict of the regime.

Years after Joan’s death, when the war had turned decisively in France’s favor and the king she had crowned had recovered his kingdom, a process was opened to reconsider the condemnation, and the original trial was examined, its irregularities exposed, its witnesses re-heard, and its verdict overturned, so that Joan was declared to have been wrongly condemned and her name was cleared (Pernoud & Clin, 1998). It is not lost on the historian that the king who had abandoned her had an interest in the rehabilitation, for the condemnation of Joan as a heretic had tainted his coronation, and the clearing of her name served to cleanse the title that her condemnation had stained; the rehabilitation that vindicated the deliverer also served the interest of the regime that had abandoned her, removing the stain that her condemnation had placed on the king she had crowned. But whatever the mixed motives of the rehabilitation, its effect was the reversal of the regime’s, or rather the enemy’s, judgment, the declaration that the condemned heretic had been wrongly condemned, and over the centuries that followed Joan rose to become one of the supreme symbols of France, venerated as the maid who saved the nation, eventually canonized, her memory honored as that of the deliverer betrayed and vindicated.

The afterlife of the Joan of Arc case differs from that of Yue Fei in that the regime’s abandonment, being a failure to act rather than an active destruction, did not leave so clear a villain to be condemned by posterity as the minister Qin Hui, and the verdict of history fell more heavily on the enemy who burned her than on the king who abandoned her. But the verdict reversed the destruction nonetheless, declaring the deliverer innocent and elevating her to honor, and the king’s abandonment, though less remembered than the enemy’s fire, stands in the historical record as the failure it was, the silence of the crown that owed her its throne. The suite holds that the abandonment was the phenomenon’s form in this case, and that posterity’s vindication of the deliverer is the reversal of the judgment, the enemy’s and the abandoning crown’s alike, that had allowed her to be destroyed.

7. The phenomenon analyzed: the four concepts in the abandonment case

The four analytical concepts of Paper 1 are present in the Joan of Arc case, though the abandonment variant gives several of them a distinctive form.

The convertibility of capability into threat appears in the Joan of Arc case in an altered register, for Joan’s capability did not threaten the king with displacement, since she claimed no throne, but it threatened the court’s control of policy and its comfort, for her military success had given her an independent authority and a prestige that made her difficult to direct and her continued ambition an obstacle to the court’s preferred course of caution and negotiation. Her capability had made her a power in her own right, a figure whose prestige rivaled the influence of the court’s own counsels, and the court’s discomfort with a deliverer it could not fully control is the form the convertibility takes here, the capability that won the war becoming the independence that the court found inconvenient. When her capability seemed to wane, after the failure at Paris, the court found it the easier to set her aside, and when she was captured the court found her removal a convenience rather than a loss.

Prestige as a rival source of legitimacy appears in the awkward fact that the king’s throne rested, in part, on the deliverance of a peasant girl, and that Joan’s prestige was a standing reminder of how much the king owed to her and how little to his own power. A king whose coronation had been brought about by a young woman of the common people, whose throne had been secured by her deliverance, held a legitimacy that was in a sense indebted to her, and her continued prominence kept that debt visible. The removal of the deliverer removed the reminder, and the court’s relief at her capture was, in part, relief at the removal of a figure whose prestige complicated the king’s own claim to have won his throne. The rehabilitation’s service to the king’s title, the cleansing of the coronation from the stain of the condemnation, shows the same concern from the other side, the regime’s interest in managing the relation between the deliverer’s prestige and the king’s legitimacy.

The asymmetry between the irreplaceable individual and the self-preserving institution appears in the divergence between Joan’s interest and ambition, which was the vigorous prosecution of the war to victory, and the court’s interest, which was the consolidation of what had been gained and the pursuit of negotiation, and in the court’s readiness to set aside the deliverer once her usefulness seemed to pass. While the war hung in the balance and the coronation was to be won, Joan’s capability was indispensable and her prominence was tolerated; once the coronation was achieved and the court turned toward caution, her capability was no longer needed and her independence became an obstacle, and the institution, acting on its preference for its own preferred policy and its comfort, was content to set her aside and, when she was captured, to let her go. The asymmetry was resolved, as always, in favor of the institution, here through the abandonment that allowed the enemy to remove the deliverer the court no longer wished to accommodate.

The use of legal form to legitimate the destruction appears in the heresy trial, though here the form was the enemy’s and the tribunal the enemy’s, used to destroy the deliverer under the appearance of an ecclesiastical proceeding whose verdict served the enemy’s purpose. The trial clothed the destruction in the forms of law and religion, the examinations and articles and deliberations of a heresy proceeding, but the outcome was determined by the interest of those who had convened it, and the records of the trial show the forms manipulated toward a predetermined condemnation. The French crown’s part in this was not the wielding of the legal form, which was the enemy’s, but the abandonment that allowed the enemy to wield it, the failure to save the deliverer from the tribunal that the enemy had convened to destroy her, and so the legal form’s function in this case was served by the regime’s inaction as much as by the enemy’s action, the destruction through law made possible by the abandonment that delivered the deliverer to the law’s enemy hands.

8. The abandonment variant and the standard of the suite

Read against the cases that precede it, the Joan of Arc case confirms the phenomenon’s structure and contributes the abandonment variant, the destruction of the deliverer accomplished not by the regime’s own hand but by the regime’s calculated failure to save her from the enemy who destroyed her. As in Saul’s pursuit of David, in Athens’s exile of Themistocles, in Rome’s persecution of Scipio, in the Chinese executions, in the late Roman murders, in Justinian’s suspicion of Belisarius, and in the judicial murder of Yue Fei, a genuine deliverer is destroyed in consequence of the regime’s fear of and discomfort with the prestige and independence the deliverance created. The Joan of Arc case is distinguished by the division of the mechanism, the regime fearing and abandoning while the enemy strikes, and by the register of the fear as relief and convenience rather than dread, the court’s quiet gladness to be rid of an inconvenient deliverer expressing itself in the failure to save her.

The abandonment variant extends the suite’s range in an important way, for it shows that the phenomenon does not require the regime to wield the instrument of destruction, that the regime’s fear of the deliverer can accomplish her destruction through inaction as readily as through action, by allowing the enemy to do what the regime itself wished done but would not do with its own hand. This is a subtler and in some ways a more insidious form of the phenomenon, for it accomplishes the destruction without the regime’s overt guilt, the deliverer destroyed by the enemy while the regime that abandoned her preserves the appearance of innocence, and it requires the historian to read the destruction in the regime’s silence and inaction rather than in its deeds. The suite holds that the abandonment is the phenomenon nonetheless, that the regime that fails to save its deliverer from the enemy, having the means and refraining from the act, has destroyed her as surely as if it had struck the blow, and that the fear and the interest served by the abandonment are the same fear and interest that drove the active destructions.

The case differs from the late Roman cases in that the regime that abandoned Joan did not at once collapse, for France went on, under the king she had crowned, to win the war and recover the kingdom; the self-defeat in this case is the moral one, the stain that the abandonment and the condemnation placed upon the king’s title and the dishonor that the failure to save the deliverer fixed upon the crown, a stain that the rehabilitation sought to cleanse but that the historical record preserves. The king won his kingdom, but he won it having abandoned the woman who gave it to him, and the verdict of history, which elevated Joan to the honor of a national symbol and remembered the abandonment as the failure it was, rendered against the regime the moral judgment that the suite finds in every case, the deliverer vindicated and the regime’s treatment of her condemned. The king she crowned let her burn, and history crowned her in her turn, the deliverer abandoned by the throne she made becoming, in the long verdict of the nation, greater than the throne and the king alike.


References

DeVries, K. (1999). Joan of Arc: A military leader. Sutton Publishing.

Pernoud, R., & Clin, M.-V. (1998). Joan of Arc: Her story (J. D. Adams, Trans. & Rev.; B. Wheeler, Ed.). St. Martin’s Press.

Tisset, P., & Lanhers, Y. (Eds.). (1960–1971). Procès de condamnation de Jeanne d’Arc (Vols. 1–3). Société de l’histoire de France.


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Twelve Tablets of Gold: Yue Fei and the Judicial Murder of a Deliverer

1. Why this case is the suite’s archetype of judicial murder

The phenomenon expresses itself through many instruments. Saul threw a spear and then loosed a manhunt; Athens cast potsherds and then convened a treason court; Rome prosecuted for embezzlement; the late Roman court used a treacherous execution and a palace knife; Justinian used recurrent recall and a final confiscation. Among all these instruments, one recurs with special frequency and a special significance, the conversion of the deliverer into a traitor through the empty forms of legal process, the judicial murder in which a tribunal, a charge, and a sentence are deployed to kill a man whom the regime fears, with the apparatus of justice supplying what the facts cannot. The suite takes Yue Fei as the archetype of this instrument, and this is the first reason it receives a full and central treatment. No case in the whole set displays the judicial murder of a deliverer more purely, for in the Yue Fei case the emptiness of the legal charge was not merely a fact to be inferred by the historian but an emptiness confessed, in so many words, by the very minister who prosecuted it.

The phrase that confessed it has become one of the most famous in Chinese history and gives the suite its sharpest single piece of evidence. When Yue Fei had been imprisoned and another official protested that there was no proof of the crime charged against him, the minister Qin Hui is reported to have answered that the charge was, perhaps, not necessarily groundless, or in the form in which the phrase entered the language, that it was a charge of something that perhaps existed, the three characters that have ever since stood in Chinese as the byword for a fabricated accusation and a judicial murder (Kaplan, 1970; Wilhelm, 1962). The minister’s answer was an admission that the evidence did not exist, that the charge was a thing that might be, a possibility dressed as a fact, and that the deliverer was to be killed not because he had done wrong but because the regime had determined that he should die. No clearer confession of the phenomenon’s mechanism survives anywhere in the suite, for here the prosecutor himself acknowledged, in the act of prosecuting, that the legal form was a covering for a predetermined destruction.

The second reason the case is central is the explicitness of the political motive, which the sources lay bare with unusual clarity. Yue Fei was not killed because his prestige had grown vaguely threatening or because a suspicious sovereign feared what he might someday do. He was killed because his military success threatened a specific and concrete political interest of the emperor, the security of the emperor’s own hold on the throne, in a way the sources state plainly. The case thus joins the demonstrated emptiness of the charge to a demonstrated and specific motive, and the combination makes it the suite’s clearest example of the judicial murder of a deliverer for reasons of the throne’s self-preservation.

The third reason is the case’s extraordinary afterlife, the transformation of the executed general into the supreme national symbol of loyalty and of his prosecutor into the supreme symbol of treachery, a moral reversal so complete and so enduring that it constitutes posterity’s verdict on the phenomenon, rendered and re-rendered for nearly nine centuries. The suite attends to this afterlife because it is the clearest instance in the whole set of the judgment of history reversing the judgment of the regime, the deliverer the state condemned as a traitor becoming the nation’s emblem of fidelity, and the minister who killed him becoming the figure at whose image men still spit.

2. The deliverance: the defense of the Song against the Jin

The deliverance Yue Fei rendered, the first criterion of the phenomenon, was the defense of the Chinese Song state against the Jin invaders who had overrun the north, a defense in which Yue Fei was the foremost commander and the one general who seemed capable of reversing the catastrophe that had befallen the dynasty. In the early twelfth century the Jurchen Jin had invaded the Song empire, captured the Song capital, and carried off into captivity the reigning emperor and his father, the retired emperor, an almost unparalleled humiliation in which the rulers of China were taken prisoner by the barbarian enemy and the north of the country was lost (Kaplan, 1970). A surviving prince established a new Song court in the south, becoming the emperor known by his temple name Gaozong, and the Southern Song fought to hold what remained and, if possible, to recover what had been lost.

In this war Yue Fei rose to be the greatest of the Song generals, a commander whose armies were disciplined, loyal, and effective in a degree that set them apart, and whose campaigns against the Jin met with a success that no other Song commander could match (Kaplan, 1970; Wilhelm, 1962). His troops were famed for their discipline and their refusal to plunder the people they defended, and the saying attributed to his army, that they would freeze to death rather than tear down houses for firewood and starve to death rather than plunder, became proverbial as the mark of an army that served the people rather than preying upon them. Yue Fei drove back the Jin in a series of victories, recovered territory, and at the height of his success stood poised, by his own account and the judgment of the sources, to press on into the north, to break the Jin power, and to recover the lost capital and the lost provinces, even to liberate the captive emperors and restore the empire to its former extent (Kaplan, 1970). His deliverance was real and it was the Song state’s best hope, and the first criterion is met in the strict sense, for Yue Fei was the commander whose skill stood between the Southern Song and the Jin who had already destroyed the Northern Song, and whose victories offered the dynasty not merely survival but restoration.

3. The turn: the emperor’s fear and the twelve tablets of gold

The phenomenon’s third criterion, fear as the operative motive, is met in the Yue Fei case with a specificity that distinguishes it, for the emperor’s fear can be named precisely and its object identified concretely. The motive was not a generalized dread of the general’s power but a specific calculation about the consequences of the general’s success for the emperor’s own hold on the throne, and the sources state it with a clarity that makes the case the suite’s most legible.

The emperor Gaozong sat on the throne only because his father and brother, the former emperors, were captives of the Jin. Were Yue Fei to succeed in his ambition, to break the Jin and recover the north and liberate the captive emperors, the result would be the return of the very men whose captivity had made Gaozong emperor, and the restoration of the former emperor would call into question Gaozong’s own legitimacy and threaten his position (Kaplan, 1970; Wilhelm, 1962). The general’s victory, in other words, threatened the emperor with the return of his predecessors, and Gaozong, whatever his public commitment to the recovery of the north, had a concrete and personal interest in a war that did not succeed so completely as to bring the captive emperors home. To this was joined the influence of the chief minister Qin Hui, the architect of a policy of peace and accommodation with the Jin, who for reasons of state policy, of personal ambition, and, in the judgment of his countrymen ever after, of treachery, sought an end to the war and the removal of the general whose victories made peace impossible (Kaplan, 1970). The emperor’s fear of his predecessors’ return and the minister’s commitment to peace combined into a determination to halt the war and to destroy the general who was winning it.

The means by which the war was halted gives this paper its title and stands as one of the most striking images in the whole suite. At the height of Yue Fei’s success, when his armies were advancing and victory seemed within reach, the emperor recalled him, and recalled him not once but by a succession of urgent orders, the tradition holding that twelve gold-lettered tablets, the most peremptory form of imperial command, were sent to him in a single day, ordering him to abandon his advance and return (Kaplan, 1970; Wilhelm, 1962). The general, bound by his loyalty and by the absolute claim of the imperial order, obeyed, abandoning the campaign at the moment of its promise and turning back from the north he had hoped to recover, lamenting that the achievement of years was undone in a day. The twelve tablets of gold are the emblem of the case, the regime using the supreme authority of the throne not to support its deliverer but to halt him, to call him back from the victory that threatened the emperor’s interest, and the image of the general obeying, recalled from triumph by the very sovereign he was triumphing for, captures the phenomenon’s inversion exactly, the throne employing its highest command to undo its own salvation.

4. The destruction: the empty charge and the confession of its emptiness

The recall was the prelude to the destruction. Once Yue Fei had been called back and stripped of his command, the determination to be rid of him entirely followed, for a general of his prestige and his commitment to the war could not be left alive to threaten the peace policy or to serve as a focus for those who wished the war continued. Yue Fei was arrested, imprisoned, and charged, and the charge was the familiar one of the suite, treason, the imputation to the loyal deliverer of a plot against the throne he had served (Kaplan, 1970; Wilhelm, 1962).

The emptiness of the charge is the case’s defining feature, and it was established not by the later judgment of historians but by the contemporary record of the prosecution itself. The general Han Shizhong, a fellow commander, is reported to have confronted Qin Hui and demanded to know what evidence there was for the charge against Yue Fei, and Qin Hui gave the answer that has echoed through Chinese history ever since, that the matter was perhaps not groundless, that the charge concerned something that perhaps existed (Kaplan, 1970; Wilhelm, 1962). The three characters of that answer became, and remain, the standard expression in the Chinese language for a trumped-up accusation, a charge fabricated to destroy a man against whom no real evidence exists, and their currency for nearly nine centuries is testimony to how clearly the contemporaries and all who came after understood that Yue Fei was killed on a charge that the prosecutor himself could not affirm to be true. The minister’s answer is, for the suite, the purest single piece of evidence of the phenomenon’s mechanism, for it is the prosecutor’s own confession that the legal form was empty, that the charge was a possibility dressed as a fact, and that the deliverer was to be killed regardless of whether he had done anything wrong.

Yue Fei was put to death in prison, killed on the empty charge, and his son and a lieutenant died with him (Kaplan, 1970; Wilhelm, 1962). The judicial murder was complete, the deliverer of the Song destroyed by the Song through the forms of a justice that the prosecutor admitted to be a covering for a predetermined death. The historian must ask, as the method requires, whether there could have been any truth to the charge of treason, and the answer the case yields is the clearest negative in the suite, for the prosecutor’s own confession that the charge concerned something that “perhaps” existed is an admission that there was no proof, and the whole subsequent judgment of Chinese history, which made Yue Fei the symbol of loyalty and Qin Hui the symbol of treachery, rests on the universal recognition that the general was innocent and the charge fabricated. The operative cause of the destruction was the emperor’s fear that the general’s success would bring back the captive emperors and threaten his throne, joined to the minister’s commitment to peace; the charge of treason was the instrument, the empty legal form confessed to be empty by the man who wielded it.

5. The afterlife: the verdict of history reversed

The Yue Fei case is distinguished from every other in the suite by the completeness and endurance of the moral reversal that followed his death, the transformation of the condemned traitor into the national symbol of loyalty and of his prosecutor into the eternal symbol of treachery, and the suite attends to this afterlife because it constitutes posterity’s verdict on the phenomenon, rendered with a clarity and a permanence that no other case can match.

Within a generation of his death, Yue Fei was rehabilitated. A later emperor reversed the verdict, cleared the general’s name, restored his honors, and had him reburied with full ceremony, and Yue Fei passed into Chinese culture as the supreme exemplar of the loyal minister and the patriotic general, the man who served his dynasty faithfully and was destroyed by its treachery, the embodiment of loyalty to the country (Kaplan, 1970; Wilhelm, 1962). A temple was raised at his tomb, and he became an object of veneration that endured through the centuries and endures still, his name a byword for fidelity and patriotic devotion, his story told and retold in history, drama, and popular tradition as the very type of the faithful servant betrayed.

The reversal extended to his destroyers, and here the verdict of history took a form unusually concrete and unusually lasting. At Yue Fei’s tomb were placed iron statues of Qin Hui and his wife and the others held responsible for the general’s death, kneeling in eternal submission and disgrace before the tomb of the man they had killed, and for centuries visitors expressed their judgment on the betrayal by spitting upon or striking these statues, so that the figures of the minister and his accomplices became the physical objects of the nation’s contempt, kneeling forever in penance before the deliverer they had murdered (Kaplan, 1970). The name of Qin Hui became, and remains, the Chinese byword for a traitor, as Yue Fei’s became the byword for a loyal patriot, and the contrast between the two, the venerated general and the despised minister, the honored tomb and the kneeling statues, constitutes a verdict of history more complete and more enduring than any other in the suite. Posterity reversed the regime’s judgment utterly, declaring the condemned traitor a hero and the prosecuting minister a traitor, and it inscribed that reversal in temple and statue and language so that it might never be forgotten.

The suite attends to this afterlife because it bears on the closing argument about the nature of the phenomenon. The reversal shows that the regime’s reclassification of the deliverer as a traitor, accomplished through the empty forms of law, did not survive the test of time, that the judgment of history saw through the legal form to the fear and the treachery beneath it, and restored to the deliverer the honor the regime had stripped from him. The kneeling statues of Qin Hui are the phenomenon’s self-defeat in the moral register, the destroyer of the deliverer condemned by posterity to an eternal disgrace that has far outlasted whatever security his treachery purchased, while the deliverer he killed is venerated still. The regime won the immediate contest, killing the general and making its peace with the Jin, but it lost the verdict of history utterly, and the loss is written in iron at the tomb.

6. The phenomenon analyzed: the four concepts in the Yue Fei case

The four analytical concepts of Paper 1 are present in the destruction of Yue Fei, and the case displays them in the particular register of the judicial murder, the destruction accomplished through the empty forms of law.

The convertibility of capability into threat appears in the specific and concrete form that the Yue Fei case gives it, for here the general’s capability threatened the throne not through the abstract possibility that it might be turned against the emperor but through the concrete consequence that its success would bring back the captive emperors and undermine Gaozong’s legitimacy. Yue Fei’s very victories, the proof of his capability, were the threat, for the more he succeeded the nearer came the restoration of the former emperor and the calling into question of the reigning emperor’s title. This is the convertibility in an unusually direct form, the capability threatening the throne not by what it might do to the emperor but by what its success would accomplish, the return of the men whose absence made the emperor’s reign possible. The deliverer’s skill, exercised in the dynasty’s service, struck directly at the reigning sovereign’s interest, and this is why the sovereign halted it with twelve tablets of gold and then destroyed the man who possessed it.

Prestige as a rival source of legitimacy appears in Yue Fei’s standing as the foremost and most successful of the Song generals, the commander whose victories and whose disciplined, devoted army made him a figure of national hope and a focus for all who wished the war continued and the north recovered. This prestige was a rival pole of authority and policy, for the general’s commitment to the recovery of the north stood in direct opposition to the court’s policy of peace, and Yue Fei’s standing made him a potential rallying point for opposition to the accommodation with the Jin. The court could not pursue its peace policy while the most celebrated general in the empire was winning a war and calling for its continuation, and the destruction of the general was, in part, the removal of a prestige that stood in the way of the regime’s chosen course. The deliverer’s standing was a competitor not only to the emperor’s legitimacy but to the minister’s policy, and both the emperor and the minister had an interest in its removal.

The asymmetry between the irreplaceable individual and the self-preserving institution appears in the divergence between the general’s interest, which was the prosecution of the war to victory and the recovery of the north, and the institution’s interest, which was the security of the reigning emperor’s throne and the minister’s policy of peace. While the war’s outcome was uncertain, the general’s capability was needed; once the court had determined on peace, the general’s capability became not merely unnecessary but actively obstructive, for his victories made peace impossible and his success threatened the throne. The institution, acting on its commitment to the emperor’s security and the minister’s policy, resolved the asymmetry by halting the general and then destroying him, preferring the security of a peace that left the throne unthreatened to the recovery of the north that the general’s capability offered. The self-preserving interest of the institution, the protection of the reigning emperor’s hold on the throne, overrode the national interest in the recovery of the lost provinces, and the deliverer was sacrificed to the throne’s security.

The use of legal form to legitimate the destruction appears in the Yue Fei case in its purest and most fully confessed version, the judicial murder accomplished through a treason charge that the prosecutor himself admitted to be empty. The court did not kill the general openly as the removal of an obstacle to its policy; it charged him with treason, imprisoned him, and put him to death through the forms of a legal process, clothing the destruction in the appearance of justice. And the minister’s confession, that the charge concerned something that perhaps existed, is the suite’s clearest exposure of the function of the legal form, for it is the prosecutor’s own acknowledgment that the form was empty, that the charge was a covering for a predetermined death, and that the apparatus of justice was being used to accomplish what the facts could not justify. The legal form in the Yue Fei case is the phenomenon’s instrument laid bare, confessed by the man who wielded it to be the empty covering that the suite has argued it to be throughout.

7. The Chinese judicial variant and the standard of the suite

Read against the cases that precede it, the Yue Fei case confirms the phenomenon’s structure and contributes the archetype of the judicial murder, the destruction of the deliverer through the empty forms of law, confessed to be empty by the prosecutor himself. As in Saul’s pursuit of David, in Athens’s exile of Themistocles, in Rome’s persecution of Scipio, in the founding executions of Han Xin and Bai Qi, in the late Roman murders, and in Justinian’s suspicion of Belisarius, a genuine deliverer is destroyed by the regime he served, out of fear of the consequences of the capability and prestige the deliverance created, through a legal form that serves the fear rather than punishes any real crime. The Yue Fei case is distinguished by the purity of the judicial murder, the specificity of the political motive, and the completeness of the moral reversal that posterity rendered.

The case shares with the Chinese founding cases of Paper 5 the explicitness with which the phenomenon’s logic was understood and articulated by the contemporaries, but it adds a dimension the founding cases lacked, the confessed emptiness of the legal charge. Where Han Xin named the phenomenon’s mechanism in his proverb of the boiled hound, the Yue Fei case gives the mechanism in the prosecutor’s own confession that the charge was a thing that “perhaps” existed, the destroyer’s acknowledgment that the destruction rested on no fact. The two Chinese contributions together, the victim’s diagnosis and the prosecutor’s confession, make the Chinese material the suite’s most self-aware, the cases in which the phenomenon’s participants, both the destroyed and the destroyers, stated in plain words what was being done and why.

The Yue Fei case also gives the suite its clearest instance of the self-defeat in the moral register, the verdict of history reversing the verdict of the regime. The regime killed the general and made its peace, securing for the moment the throne and the policy; but posterity reversed the judgment utterly, making the condemned traitor the nation’s symbol of loyalty and the prosecuting minister the nation’s symbol of treachery, and inscribing the reversal in the venerated tomb and the kneeling iron statues so that it endures to this day. The regime’s destruction of its deliverer, accomplished through the empty forms of law, did not survive the judgment of history, which saw through the form to the fear and the treachery beneath it and rendered against the regime a verdict more lasting than any security the destruction purchased. The closing paper returns to this moral self-defeat, the way the phenomenon, whatever its immediate success, stands condemned by the long judgment of mankind; the Yue Fei case gives it its sharpest form, the deliverer venerated and the destroyer despised, the twelve tablets of gold that halted the savior answered, across the centuries, by the iron statues that kneel forever before his tomb.


References

Kaplan, E. H. (1970). Yüeh Fei and the founding of the Southern Sung [Doctoral dissertation, University of Iowa].

Wilhelm, H. (1962). From myth to myth: The case of Yüeh Fei’s biography. In A. F. Wright & D. Twitchett (Eds.), Confucian personalities (pp. 146–161). Stanford University Press.


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The Reconqueror Disgraced: Belisarius and the Suspicion of Justinian

1. Why this case requires the historian to separate fact from legend

Every case in the suite obliges the historian to distinguish the true motive of a destruction from the charge that disguised it. The Belisarius case adds a second and rarer task, the separation of documented fact from durable legend, and this is the first reason the suite gives it a full treatment. For Belisarius is the subject of one of the most famous stories in the whole history of ingratitude, the tale that the greatest general of his age, the man who reconquered half the lost Roman world for the emperor Justinian, was in his old age blinded by that emperor’s order and reduced to begging in the streets of Constantinople, a blind old man holding out a bowl and crying for a coin to be given to Belisarius. The image is unforgettable, and it has been painted, dramatized, and retold for centuries as the very emblem of a regime’s cruelty to its savior. It is also almost certainly false.

The historian’s duty here is therefore twofold and delicate. The legend of the blinding must be set aside as a later invention unsupported by the contemporary sources, for to build a case on a fabrication would violate the discipline the suite imposes on itself and would expose the whole argument to the charge of resting on a fable. But the documented facts, once the legend is stripped away, establish the phenomenon as surely as in any case in the suite, for what actually happened to Belisarius, the recurrent recalls at the height of his success, the chronic withholding of support and reward, the confiscation of his property, the disgrace of his last years, is itself a clear instance of a regime’s fear and ingratitude toward the deliverer whose capability it could not do without and could not bear to honor. The case thus requires the historian to perform a double operation, to reject the famous legend and to demonstrate that the unglamorous truth is damning enough, and the performance of that operation is itself part of the case’s value, for it shows that the phenomenon does not need the embellishment of legend to be real, and that the legend grew up precisely because the documented treatment of Belisarius was recognizable, even to later ages, as the kind of ingratitude that such a story would fit.

The second reason the suite takes up the case is the unusually clear traceability of the emperor’s fear to the general’s popularity and demonstrated capacity, rather than to any failure or treason. Belisarius never lost a war that mattered, never rebelled, and gave the most striking proof of his loyalty when he had the opportunity and the means to take the throne and declined it. The suspicion that dogged him therefore cannot be explained as a response to anything he did; it can only be explained as the response of an insecure emperor to the existence of a subject too capable and too beloved to be left unwatched. The case isolates the phenomenon’s motive with particular clarity, for there is so little else to which the emperor’s treatment of his general can be attributed.

2. The deliverance: Africa, Italy, and the reconquest of the lost West

The deliverance Belisarius rendered, the first criterion of the phenomenon, was on a scale that few commanders in history have matched, the recovery for the Roman Empire of vast territories long lost to barbarian kingdoms, accomplished repeatedly with forces so small that his victories astonished his contemporaries and have puzzled military historians since. Belisarius was the foremost general of the emperor Justinian, who in the sixth century conceived the ambition of reconquering the western provinces of the Roman Empire that had fallen, in the preceding century, to the Vandals, the Ostrogoths, and other peoples, and it was Belisarius who made that ambition, so far as it was realized at all, a reality (Hughes, 2009).

His first great deliverance, though it was the salvation of the regime itself rather than the conquest of new territory, came at the very outset, in the Nika riots at Constantinople, when a popular insurrection nearly overthrew Justinian and the emperor was on the point of fleeing his capital. It was Belisarius, with the empress Theodora’s resolve stiffening the emperor’s nerve, who put down the rising and saved the throne, an early service that placed Justinian directly in his general’s debt for the preservation of his crown (Procopius, ca. 552 CE/1914, Wars, 1.24). The phenomenon’s bitter logic is already visible here, for Belisarius’s first service to Justinian was the saving of his throne, the very throne whose security would later make the emperor fear the general who had secured it.

The conquests followed. Sent against the Vandal kingdom of North Africa with a modest force, Belisarius destroyed it in a single swift campaign, defeating the Vandal army, taking Carthage, and capturing the Vandal king, restoring to the empire the rich African provinces that had been lost for a century (Procopius, ca. 552 CE/1914, Wars, 3–4; Hughes, 2009). Then, sent against the Ostrogothic kingdom of Italy, he conducted a longer and harder campaign that recovered Sicily, took Naples and Rome, held Rome through a famous and desperate siege against a far larger Gothic army, and at length captured Ravenna, the Gothic capital, and with it the Gothic king, so that Italy too seemed restored to the empire (Procopius, ca. 552 CE/1914, Wars, 5–7; Hughes, 2009). These were deliverances and conquests of the first magnitude, the recovery of the heartlands of the old Western Empire, accomplished by a general operating with forces that were always inadequate to the task and that he made adequate by skill, and they made Belisarius the most celebrated soldier of the age and the chief instrument of his emperor’s glory. The first criterion is met not by a single rescue but by a career of deliverance that returned to the empire what it had thought lost forever.

3. The proof of loyalty: the crown declined at Ravenna

The Belisarius case contains, like the cases of David and Han Xin, the decisive demonstration that the deliverer was no threat to the throne, the moment when he held supreme power within his grasp and refused it, and in Belisarius’s case the demonstration is especially pointed because the throne offered to him was the imperial throne itself. At the climax of the Italian campaign, as Belisarius besieged the Goths in Ravenna, the Goths, despairing of victory but unwilling to submit to Justinian, made Belisarius an extraordinary offer: they would surrender and accept him as emperor of the West, ruling over them and over Italy as their sovereign (Procopius, ca. 552 CE/1914, Wars, 6.29; Hughes, 2009). Belisarius had the opportunity to make himself an emperor, to take a throne that the enemy themselves were offering him, and he had the military power to hold it.

He pretended to accept the offer in order to gain entry to Ravenna and complete the conquest, and then, having taken the city, he set aside the crown entirely and held Italy for Justinian, refusing to make himself the sovereign he had been offered and remaining the loyal general of the emperor he served (Procopius, ca. 552 CE/1914, Wars, 6.29–30; Hughes, 2009). This is the proof, exactly parallel to David’s sparing of Saul and Han Xin’s refusal of the advisers’ counsel, that the deliverer was genuinely no threat to the throne, that he had the power and the opportunity to seize sovereignty and declined it out of loyalty. And as in those cases, the very episode that proved his loyalty deepened the suspicion against him, for when the report reached Constantinople that the Goths had offered Belisarius the empire and that he had entered Ravenna in possession of the king and the royal treasure, the emperor’s fear was not allayed by the general’s refusal but excited by the demonstration that the throne had been within his reach. A subject to whom the enemy could offer an empire, and who had the power to take it, was a subject the emperor could never afterward trust, however loyally he had declined, for the loyalty might not last and the capability remained. Belisarius’s refusal of the crown saved Justinian the trouble of a usurpation and earned him, in return, a lifetime of suspicion, the same inversion the suite has found throughout, in which the deliverer’s demonstrated fidelity becomes the measure of the danger he is feared to represent.

4. The turn: recall, suspicion, and the withholding of support

The phenomenon’s third criterion, fear as the operative motive, is met in the pattern of Justinian’s treatment of his general across the decades of his service, a pattern of recurrent recall, chronic suspicion, and the persistent withholding of the support and reward that the general’s achievements had earned. The fear did not express itself, as in the cases of Stilicho and Aetius, in a single act of destruction, but in a sustained policy of distrust that hampered the general throughout his career and disgraced him at its end.

The recalls came at the height of success. Twice, when Belisarius stood on the verge of completing a conquest, Justinian recalled him, whether from suspicion of his growing power, from jealousy of his glory, or from the influence of courtiers who worked on the emperor’s fears (Hughes, 2009). After the conquest of Africa, Belisarius was recalled to Constantinople, and though he was honored with a triumph, the first granted to a private citizen in centuries, the triumph itself was a calculated display in which the general walked through the streets not as a conqueror in his own right but as the emperor’s servant presenting captives and spoils to the imperial majesty, the honor carefully framed to exalt Justinian rather than Belisarius (Procopius, ca. 552 CE/1914, Wars, 4.9; Hughes, 2009). The recall at the moment of the offer of the Western crown removed him from Italy when his presence might have completed and secured the reconquest. And throughout his campaigns, Justinian persistently denied Belisarius the reinforcements, the money, and the supplies that his thin forces desperately needed, so that the general was perpetually compelled to win his victories with inadequate means, a pattern that the sources attribute in part to the emperor’s reluctance to entrust his general with a force large enough to make him dangerous (Hughes, 2009). The withholding of support is itself a form of the phenomenon’s fear, the emperor preferring to risk the loss of his conquests rather than to give his too-capable general the army that would have secured them, the fear of the deliverer’s power outweighing the desire for the deliverer’s success.

The disgrace of his last years completes the documented pattern. In his old age, Belisarius fell under the emperor’s displeasure, was accused of complicity in a conspiracy against Justinian, was brought into disgrace, and had his property and fortune confiscated, the rewards of a lifetime of service stripped from him by the emperor he had served (Hughes, 2009). The conspiracy charge, as in the other cases of the suite, served the fear rather than the fact, for there is no credible evidence that Belisarius, who had declined an emperor’s crown in his prime, conspired against his sovereign in his age; the charge was the instrument by which the emperor’s chronic suspicion found at last an occasion to disgrace and despoil the general. Though Belisarius was eventually restored to favor before his death and died in possession of at least some of his honors, the disgrace and confiscation of his last years were real, documented, and characteristic, the final expression of a lifetime of imperial fear and ingratitude toward the man who had reconquered the West.

5. The legend and its rejection: the blinded beggar

The historian must now address the legend directly, for it is so famous that to ignore it would leave the case incomplete, and so false that to credit it would corrupt the case. The story holds that Justinian, in the end, had Belisarius blinded and that the great general spent his last days as a blind beggar in the streets of Constantinople, holding out a bowl and asking passersby to give an obol to Belisarius. The image has had an extraordinary afterlife in art and literature, painted by masters, dramatized on the stage, and retold as the supreme example of a sovereign’s cruelty to his savior (Hughes, 2009).

The legend must be rejected, and the grounds for rejecting it are clear. It does not appear in the contemporary sources, neither in Procopius, who chronicled Belisarius’s campaigns in his Wars and excoriated Justinian and the general both in his bitter Secret History, nor in any reliable account of the period (Procopius, ca. 552 CE/1914, Wars; Procopius, ca. 550 CE/2007, Secret History; Hughes, 2009). Procopius, who hated Justinian and would have had every motive to record so damning a cruelty, says nothing of any blinding, and his silence, together with the silence of the other contemporary record, is decisive, for a punishment so public and so spectacular could not have escaped the notice of the sources had it occurred. The story appears only centuries later, a legend that grew up in the medieval period and was elaborated and popularized in the centuries after, an invention rather than a record (Hughes, 2009). The disciplined historian, bound to the contemporary evidence, must therefore set the blinding aside as a fable, and the suite does so without reservation, for to rest the case on it would be to commit the very fault, the building of an argument on a fabrication, that the suite is at pains to avoid.

But the rejection of the legend is not the end of the matter; it is, for the purposes of the suite, the beginning of a more interesting observation. The legend, though false, is evidence of something true, namely that the documented treatment of Belisarius was recognized, even by the later ages that invented the story, as the kind of ingratitude to which such a story would fit. Legends do not attach themselves at random; the tale of the blinded beggar grew up around Belisarius rather than around some honored and well-rewarded general because the real Belisarius had in fact been disgraced, despoiled, and ill-used by the emperor he saved, and the legend was an embellishment, in the lurid colors of later imagination, of a reality that already had the shape of the phenomenon. The fable of the blinding is, in this sense, the popular memory’s recognition of the documented fact, the later ages reaching for an image extreme enough to capture an ingratitude that the bare record, though real, stated too quietly. The historian rejects the legend as fact and retains it as testimony, the testimony of posterity that Belisarius’s treatment was felt, across the centuries, to be a betrayal of a savior, and that feeling, the suite holds, was just, for the documented disgrace was betrayal enough.

6. The phenomenon analyzed: the four concepts in the Byzantine case

The four analytical concepts of Paper 1 are present in Justinian’s treatment of Belisarius, and the case displays them in the particular register of a sustained policy of suspicion rather than a single act of destruction.

The convertibility of capability into threat appears in the emperor’s evident calculation that the general who could reconquer kingdoms could also seize the empire, a calculation that the offer of the Western crown at Ravenna made concrete. Belisarius’s capability was demonstrated on a scale that left no doubt of what he could do, and a general who could destroy the Vandal kingdom in a single campaign and recover Italy from the Goths was manifestly a general who could, if he chose, turn that capability against the throne. The offer of the crown proved that others saw this too, that the enemy themselves recognized in Belisarius a man fit to be an emperor, and Justinian’s lifelong refusal to trust his general, his withholding of the forces that would have made him too strong, was the throne’s response to the convertibility of the capability it depended upon. The emperor needed the general’s power to win his wars and feared the same power as a threat to his crown, and he resolved the contradiction by using the general while never trusting him, employing the capability while perpetually guarding against it.

Prestige as a rival source of legitimacy appears in the popularity and glory that gathered around Belisarius and in the care Justinian took to subordinate that glory to his own. The general’s victories made him the most celebrated man in the empire, beloved by the people and the soldiers, and this prestige was a rival pole of standing that the emperor could not ignore. Justinian’s framing of the African triumph, in which the general’s victory was carefully presented as the emperor’s own, the captives and spoils laid at the imperial feet, shows the throne’s anxiety to prevent the deliverer’s prestige from becoming an independent claim to honor, to absorb the glory of the conquest into the legitimacy of the crown rather than allowing it to accrue to the conqueror. The emperor could not destroy the prestige, which the victories had earned, but he could and did labor to subordinate it, and the labor itself is evidence of the threat the prestige represented.

The asymmetry between the irreplaceable individual and the self-preserving institution appears in the long arc of Justinian’s reliance on and suspicion of his general. Throughout the reign, Belisarius’s unmatched capability was indispensable to the emperor’s ambitions, and the emperor employed it again and again, recalling the general from disgrace whenever a new crisis required his skill. But the institution’s commitment to its own security meant that the general could never be allowed the full reward, trust, and power that his capability merited, for those would have made him a danger to the throne. The asymmetry was managed rather than resolved, the emperor neither destroying the general, whose skill he needed, nor honoring him, whose power he feared, but keeping him in a permanent condition of useful subordination, employed when needed and disgraced when not, his property confiscated in his age as a final assertion that whatever the deliverer possessed he held at the emperor’s pleasure. The Byzantine case shows the phenomenon in its chronic rather than its acute form, the fear expressed not in a single killing but in a lifetime of calculated distrust.

The use of legal form to legitimate the destruction appears in the conspiracy charge of Belisarius’s last years, the accusation that gave the emperor the occasion to disgrace and despoil his general under the appearance of justice. As in the other cases, the charge served the fear rather than the fact, providing the legal color for an act whose true motive was the emperor’s chronic suspicion of a subject too capable and too celebrated to be trusted. The form was the standard one, the imputation of treason to the loyal deliverer, and its function was the standard one, to convert the throne’s fear into a punishable offense and to justify the despoiling of the general as the punishment of a plot rather than the expression of a fear.

7. The Byzantine variant and the standard of the suite

Read against the cases that precede it, the Belisarius case confirms the phenomenon’s structure and contributes two distinct values to the suite, the chronic variant of the phenomenon and the methodological demonstration of the separation of fact from legend. As in Saul’s pursuit of David, in Athens’s exile of Themistocles, in Rome’s persecution of Scipio, in the Chinese founding executions, and in the late Roman murders, a genuine deliverer is ill-used by the regime he saved, out of fear of the capability and prestige the deliverance created, through forms, here recurrent recall and a final conspiracy charge, that serve the fear rather than punish any real crime. The Byzantine variant is distinguished by the chronic and sustained character of the fear, expressed across a lifetime of suspicion rather than in a single destruction, and by the fact that the deliverer, having declined an emperor’s crown, gave the clearest possible proof of the loyalty that his sovereign nonetheless refused to trust.

The case’s methodological value is its demonstration that the phenomenon stands on the documented record without need of legend, and indeed that the legend, false as fact, is true as testimony to the documented ingratitude that gave rise to it. By rejecting the blinding and retaining the disgrace, the suite shows that its cases rest on evidence rather than on the lurid embellishments that have gathered around them, and it shows at the same time that the popular memory’s reach for so extreme an image was a recognition, across the centuries, of the reality of the betrayal. The historian who insists on the truth, that Belisarius was not blinded but was disgraced and despoiled, does not weaken the case but strengthens it, for the truth is damning enough and the discipline of holding to it guards the whole suite against the charge of trading in fables.

Belisarius differs from Stilicho and Aetius in that the regime that ill-used him did not at once collapse, for Justinian’s empire survived the general’s disgrace and outlasted him; the self-defeat in this case is the subtler one, the squandering of the reconquest that the general’s victories had achieved, much of which was lost again in the generation after his death for want of the forces and the support that the emperor’s fear had always withheld. The fear of the deliverer’s power, which kept Justinian from ever giving Belisarius the army that would have secured the reconquest, is part of the reason the reconquest did not endure, so that here too, though less starkly than in the dying West, the regime’s fear of its savior cost it the fruits of his salvation. The deliverer who reconquered the West for an emperor who feared him saw the West reconquered with means too thin to hold it, because the emperor’s fear would not entrust the means to the man, and the empire kept its suspicion and lost, in time, the conquests, the chronic form of the self-defeat that the suite finds in every case, the regime preferring the security of its fear to the fruits of its salvation.


References

Hughes, I. (2009). Belisarius: The last Roman general. Westholme Publishing.

Luttwak, E. N. (2009). The grand strategy of the Byzantine Empire. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.

Procopius. (1914). History of the wars (H. B. Dewing, Trans.). Harvard University Press. (Original work published ca. 552 CE)

Procopius. (2007). The secret history (G. A. Williamson, Trans.; P. Sarris, Rev. & Ed.). Penguin Books. (Original work published ca. 550 CE)


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Two Hands of a Dying Empire: Stilicho and Aetius in the Late Roman West

1. Why this case is the suite’s clearest demonstration of self-defeat

Every case in the suite illustrates the phenomenon’s self-defeating character to some degree, for the destruction of a deliverer always removes a capability the regime may later need. But in most cases the self-defeat is visible only in the longer view, inferred from what the regime forfeited rather than displayed in an immediate and undeniable collapse. Saul fell to the Philistines, but a reign separated the driving-out of David from the disaster on Gilboa. Athens forfeited the counsel of Themistocles, but the Persian danger had already been broken and the city endured for generations. Rome lost the services of Scipio, but Carthage was already defeated and the Republic’s decline lay a century off. The late Roman West is different, and this is the reason the suite gives it a full case and pairs its two figures in a single paper: here the self-defeat is immediate, visible, and twice repeated, the destruction of the deliverer followed within months or a few years by the very catastrophe the deliverer had been holding off.

Stilicho was executed, and Rome was sacked within two years. Aetius was murdered, and the emperor who killed him was himself assassinated within months, the Western government collapsing toward its final dissolution thereafter. In each case the regime removed the one man capable of its defense and was overtaken almost at once by the disaster he had prevented, so that the cause and the consequence stand close enough together to be seen in a single glance. The late Roman West offers the phenomenon’s self-defeating arithmetic stripped of the delay that elsewhere obscures it, and it offers it twice, in two successive generations, which establishes beyond the reach of coincidence that the connection between the destruction of the deliverer and the collapse of the regime is causal and not accidental. This is why the two figures are studied together: they are not two separate cases that happen to resemble each other but a single demonstration, repeated, of what it costs a regime to devour its defenders, performed by an empire in the act of dying.

The pairing carries a second value. Stilicho and Aetius were the two great defenders of the Western Empire in its last century, the two men whose capability stood between Rome and the forces that would destroy it, and the destruction of each by the court he defended shows that the phenomenon was not the misfortune of one general or the failing of one emperor but a settled disposition of the dying regime, a court so consumed by fear, faction, and the protection of imperial prestige that it twice killed the man holding the frontier and twice paid the immediate price. The suite reads them as a matched pair precisely to make this point, that an empire facing destruction could not refrain, even once and even at the edge of the abyss, from turning on the men who were saving it.

2. The first defender: Stilicho and the holding of the frontier

The Western Empire that Stilicho served had passed its zenith and faced pressures along the Rhine and Danube that the divided and weakened state could barely contain. Stilicho, a general of Vandal descent who had risen to the highest military command, became the effective ruler of the West as guardian of the young emperor Honorius, son of the emperor Theodosius who had entrusted his children to Stilicho’s protection. For more than a decade Stilicho was the bulwark of the Western Empire, the one commander whose skill held the frontier against the gathering storm, and his deliverance of Rome from destruction, the first criterion of the phenomenon, rests above all on his defeat of two great invasions that, unchecked, would have overwhelmed Italy itself (Hughes, 2010).

The first was the invasion of Alaric and his Goths, which Stilicho contained through a combination of battle and negotiation across years of campaigning, repeatedly checking the Gothic threat to Italy. The second and more spectacular deliverance was the destruction of the vast host led by Radagaisus, a horde of barbarian peoples that crossed into Italy in numbers the sources describe as overwhelming, threatening to swamp the peninsula and to take Rome itself. Stilicho gathered what forces he could, trapped Radagaisus’s host in the hills near Faesulae, and destroyed it utterly, capturing and killing the leader and breaking the invasion that had seemed certain to end the Western Empire then and there (Hughes, 2010; Heather, 2006). This was deliverance in the strict and undeniable sense the suite requires, the turning aside of an existential threat to the survival of Rome, attributable to the skill and resolve of one commander, and it placed Stilicho at the summit of his prestige as the savior of Italy.

That very prestige, and the power that went with it, made Stilicho the object of the court’s fear, and the phenomenon’s third criterion, fear as the operative motive, is met in the intrigue that gathered against him. Stilicho’s position as the indispensable general and effective master of the West, his control over the young emperor, his barbarian ancestry that his enemies used against him, and the sheer magnitude of his power made him the target of a court faction that worked on the fears of Honorius, persuading the weak and suspicious emperor that his guardian and general aimed at too much, that he was dangerous, that his power must be broken (Hughes, 2010). The accusations were the usual ones, ambition, treachery, designs upon the throne or upon the succession, and as in the other cases of the suite the historian must ask whether they were true. The evidence will not sustain them. Stilicho had served the dynasty faithfully for years, had been entrusted with the empire by the dying Theodosius, had defended Honorius and the West through invasion after invasion, and there is no credible sign that he sought to overthrow the emperor he protected. The charges were the instrument of a court faction’s fear and ambition, the means by which the indispensable general was reclassified as a threat, and they worked upon an emperor temperamentally disposed to believe the worst of the man whose power overshadowed his own.

3. The destruction of Stilicho and the sack that followed

The destruction, when it came, was swift and treacherous. In the year 408, Honorius, worked upon by the faction and gripped by fear of his too-powerful general, ordered Stilicho’s arrest. The soldiers loyal to the court turned against him, his supporters were massacred, and Stilicho, who had taken sanctuary in a church, was induced to come out on a promise that his life would be spared and was then seized and beheaded on the emperor’s order, submitting to the execution without resistance though his own troops might have saved him, choosing not to plunge the empire he had defended into civil war on his behalf (Hughes, 2010; Heather, 2006). The general who had destroyed Radagaisus and held the frontier for over a decade was killed by the court he had saved, on the orders of the emperor he had raised and protected, on charges that served the fear of his power rather than the punishment of any crime. The manner of the killing, the false promise of safety, the treacherous seizure, is the same device the suite has met before, the regime luring the deliverer to his death under a guarantee it does not honor.

What followed is the self-defeat that makes the case the suite’s clearest demonstration. With Stilicho dead, the court compounded the catastrophe by turning on the families of the barbarian soldiers in Roman service, massacring them, and driving tens of thousands of those soldiers, the men who had fought under Stilicho, into the arms of Alaric (Heather, 2006). Alaric, no longer checked by the general who had contained him for a decade, marched on Italy unopposed, for there was now no Stilicho to stop him and no army loyal enough or capable enough to take his place. He besieged Rome, and in the year 410, two years after the execution of the man who had defended it, Alaric’s Goths entered and sacked the city of Rome itself, the first time in eight hundred years that the city had fallen to a foreign enemy, a blow that resounded across the whole Roman world and that Christians and pagans alike understood as a sign of the empire’s mortality (Heather, 2006). The connection between the two events is not the historian’s inference but the plain sequence of cause and effect: the court removed the one man capable of defending Italy, drove his soldiers to the enemy, and within two years the enemy took Rome. The deliverer was killed, and the city he had delivered was sacked, and the interval between the two was short enough that no one could mistake the relation. The regime’s fear of its savior produced, with terrible speed, the disaster the savior had been preventing.

4. The second defender: Aetius and the breaking of Attila

A generation later the Western Empire, by then much diminished and clinging to a precarious existence, found in Aetius a second defender of the first rank, and the phenomenon repeated itself with a precision that establishes its structural character. Aetius was the dominant military and political figure of the West through the middle decades of the fifth century, the general who held together what remained of the Western Empire through a combination of arms, diplomacy, and the management of the barbarian peoples now settled within and around the imperial frontiers (Hughes, 2012). His deliverance of the West, the first criterion, rests above all on the campaign that broke the most fearsome threat the age produced, the invasion of Attila and the Huns.

When Attila led his vast confederation into Gaul, threatening to overrun the Western provinces and to extinguish what remained of Roman power, it was Aetius who met him. By a feat of diplomacy as much as of arms, Aetius assembled a coalition of Romans and Visigoths and other peoples, persuading the Visigothic king Theodoric to join him against the common danger, and with this combined force he confronted Attila at the battle of the Catalaunian Plains, one of the decisive battles of the age (Hughes, 2012). The fighting was immense and the Visigothic king fell, but Attila was defeated and forced to withdraw, his aura of invincibility broken, and though he invaded Italy the following year he was turned back without conquering it, and his empire dissolved soon after his death. Aetius’s defeat of Attila was a deliverance of the West and indeed of more than the West from a threat that had seemed unstoppable, and it placed him, like Stilicho before him, at the summit of his prestige as the savior of the empire and the one man whose capability stood between Rome and destruction.

That prestige, and the power it represented, made Aetius the object of the same court fear that had destroyed Stilicho, and the phenomenon’s mechanism repeated. The emperor Valentinian III, weak, resentful, and worked upon by courtiers who feared or envied the general’s dominance, came to see Aetius not as the defender of his throne but as a threat to it, a man whose power so overshadowed the emperor’s own that the emperor felt himself a cipher in his own palace (Hughes, 2012). The fear was the familiar one, the resentment of a sovereign for a general whose capability and prestige had grown beyond what the throne could tolerate, sharpened by the intrigues of a court faction that worked on the emperor’s insecurity. As before, there is no credible evidence that Aetius sought the throne or plotted against the emperor he had served; he had defended Valentinian’s empire for decades and broken its deadliest enemy, and the charge that he was a danger to the throne served the fear of his power rather than any real treason.

5. The murder of Aetius and the right hand cut off by the left

The destruction of Aetius was even more direct than that of Stilicho, for Valentinian did not delegate it to soldiers or hide it behind a trial but performed it with his own hand. In the year 454, the emperor summoned Aetius to the palace, and there, in the midst of a discussion of state business, Valentinian suddenly drew his sword and, with the help of a courtier, fell upon the unarmed general and killed him on the spot, the emperor himself striking down the man who had saved his empire (Hughes, 2012). The murder was as treacherous as Stilicho’s execution and more personal, the sovereign cutting down his defender in his own palace, and it provoked the remark that gives this section its title and that the suite treats as one of the phenomenon’s defining utterances. A Roman, asked by the emperor whether he had not done well to rid himself of Aetius, is reported to have answered that whether well or ill he could not say, but that the emperor had cut off his right hand with his left (Hughes, 2012). The saying states the self-defeat exactly, the regime destroying with one hand the instrument that was its own defense, mutilating itself in the act of striking down its servant, and it stands beside Tan Daoji’s cry of the demolished Great Wall as the phenomenon’s own diagnosis of its folly, spoken this time not by the victim but by an observer who saw at once what the emperor had done to himself.

The self-defeat followed at once and was total. Having murdered the one man capable of defending the West, Valentinian survived him by only months, for in the following year two retainers of the dead Aetius, loyal to their murdered general, assassinated the emperor in revenge, cutting him down in his turn (Hughes, 2012). The murder of the deliverer thus destroyed not only the deliverer but, within the year, the murderer, and with both the general and the emperor dead the Western Empire entered its final descent, the throne passing through a rapid succession of short-lived and powerless emperors until the Western imperial office was extinguished altogether some two decades later. The defender was killed, the emperor who killed him was killed in turn, and the empire that had been held together by the defender’s capability fell apart for want of it. As with Stilicho, the interval between the destruction of the deliverer and the catastrophe was short enough to make the causal connection undeniable, and the repetition of the pattern in two successive generations removes any possibility that the connection was coincidence.

6. The phenomenon analyzed: the four concepts in the late Roman cases

The four analytical concepts of Paper 1 are present in both destructions, and the pairing allows them to be seen operating twice in the same dying institution.

The convertibility of capability into threat appears in the dual character of both generals’ power. The military capability and the control of armies that made Stilicho and Aetius the defenders of the West were the same capability and control that could, in a suspicious emperor’s imagination, be turned against the throne. Each man, as the indispensable general and effective master of the Western state, held a power that overshadowed the emperor’s own, and that power, indispensable against the external enemy, presented itself to the court as a standing internal danger. The very magnitude of the threat each man defeated, Radagaisus’s horde, Attila’s confederation, was the measure of the capability the court then feared, for a general great enough to break such enemies was great enough to be feared by the throne he served. The capability that saved the empire was the capability the empire’s rulers could not control, and they destroyed it.

Prestige as a rival source of legitimacy appears in the way both generals’ standing eclipsed that of the emperors they served. Honorius and Valentinian were weak emperors, their legitimacy resting on dynastic descent rather than on any capability or achievement of their own, while Stilicho and Aetius possessed the prestige of demonstrated deliverance, the loyalty of armies, and the practical mastery of the state. This asymmetry of standing between a feeble emperor and a capable general was intolerable to the throne, for the general’s prestige was a rival pole of authority that made the emperor feel, and appear, a nullity in his own empire. The court factions worked precisely on this, on the emperors’ resentment of being overshadowed, and the destruction of each general was, in part, the throne’s attempt to reassert its own primacy by removing the man whose prestige exposed its emptiness.

The asymmetry between the irreplaceable individual and the self-preserving institution appears with a cruel twist in the late Roman cases, for here the institution’s act of self-preservation was its self-destruction. In the other cases of the suite the regime survived the destruction of its deliverer, paying the cost in a weakened capacity for future crises; in the late Roman West the regime’s removal of its defender brought the crisis at once, so that the institution, acting to protect the throne from the general’s power, destroyed the throne’s own defense and brought down upon itself the disaster the general had prevented. The asymmetry was resolved, as always, in favor of the institution’s perceived self-interest, but the perception was catastrophically wrong, for the institution’s true interest lay in the general’s survival, and its fear of his power blinded it to its dependence on that power. The right hand was cut off by the left, and the body died of the wound.

The use of form to legitimate the destruction appears in both cases, though in degraded versions that reflect the dissolution of the regime’s institutions. Stilicho’s killing was framed as the execution of a traitor on the emperor’s order, the charges of ambition and treachery providing the legal color, and the false promise of safety the means of the seizure. Aetius’s murder was barely clothed at all, the emperor striking him down in person with only the pretext of his supposed danger to the throne, a killing so direct that it dispensed with the forms almost entirely. The contrast between the two is itself instructive, for it shows the phenomenon’s legal apparatus eroding as the regime decayed, the careful trial of Scipio and the constitutional ostracism of Themistocles giving way, in the dying empire, first to a treacherous execution and then to a naked palace murder. The fear remained constant; the forms that had once disguised it fell away as the institution that maintained them collapsed.

7. The late Roman variant and the standard of the suite

Read against the cases that precede it, the late Roman material confirms the phenomenon’s structure and contributes its starkest demonstration of self-defeat, the variant in which the destruction of the deliverer is followed not in the long term but at once by the catastrophe he had prevented. As in Saul’s pursuit of David, in Athens’s exile of Themistocles, in Rome’s persecution of Scipio, and in the Chinese founding executions, a genuine deliverer is destroyed by the regime he saved, out of fear of the capability and prestige the deliverance created, through forms, here a treacherous execution and a palace murder, that serve the fear rather than punish any real crime. The late Roman variant is distinguished by the immediacy and visibility of the self-defeat and by its repetition in two successive generations, which together make the case the suite’s clearest proof that the destruction of the deliverer is not merely unjust but self-destroying.

The pairing of Stilicho and Aetius establishes a further point that the closing paper will develop, that the phenomenon can become a settled disposition of a regime, a pattern repeated rather than an isolated act. The Western court did not destroy its defender once and learn from the catastrophe that followed; it destroyed a second defender a generation later, in the same way and for the same reasons, and paid the same price a second time. This repetition shows that the fear at the root of the phenomenon is not a corrigible error that experience can teach a regime to avoid but a structural feature of certain kinds of regime, a disposition so deep that even the visible catastrophe of the first destruction did not prevent the second. The dying empire could not stop itself from killing the men who were saving it, even when the cost had been demonstrated within living memory, and this incorrigibility is among the most disturbing of the suite’s findings, for it suggests that the phenomenon arises not from ignorance of its consequences but from a fear that overrides the knowledge of them.

The two sayings the case has preserved, the right hand cut off by the left and, behind it, the emperor’s question whether he had done well, stand as the late Roman contribution to the phenomenon’s self-understanding. Where the Chinese deliverers named the mechanism and the folly from within, the late Roman observer named the folly from without, seeing at once that the emperor who killed his general had mutilated himself. The empire that did this twice, and fell, is the suite’s demonstration that a regime governed by fear of its deliverers will destroy itself by their destruction, and that the fear of man, which Scripture names a snare, can become the settled policy of a state and the instrument of its dissolution. Honorius killed the man who broke Radagaisus and lost Rome; Valentinian killed the man who broke Attila and lost his own life and his empire’s future; and the dying West, twice offered salvation in the person of a great defender, twice destroyed it, and died.


References

Heather, P. (2006). The fall of the Roman Empire: A new history of Rome and the barbarians. Oxford University Press.

Hughes, I. (2010). Stilicho: The Vandal who saved Rome. Pen & Sword Military.

Hughes, I. (2012). Aetius: Attila’s nemesis. Pen & Sword Military.


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