Irrational Forces: Christopher Dawson on the Modern Age

By |2024-05-24T20:56:54-05:00May 24th, 2024|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, History, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

Evil, according to Christopher Dawson, is a progressive force, and it has grown mightily over the centuries since the Reformation first tore apart the West. The Reformation led to secularization, and secularization led to the creation of a machine-like society, dehumanizing all citizens of the world. The modern world is the world of the anti-Christ, [...]

The Conversion of John Randolph

By |2024-05-25T23:30:53-05:00May 23rd, 2024|Categories: Christianity, History, John Randolph of Roanoke, Timeless Essays|

Few who knew John Randolph in his youth ever imagined him embracing the tenets of the Gospel or admitting the reality of Original Sin. He was raised in an orthodox Christian home. He lived in a conservative place, around people who identified as traditionalists. But as Christianity waned in his day, he embraced new vogues. [...]

R.J. Rummel’s Chilling “Death by Government”

By |2024-05-20T17:34:47-05:00May 20th, 2024|Categories: Books, Bradley J. Birzer, Death, Featured, History, Timeless Essays, War|

State-sponsored murder was the primary fact of the twentieth century—not the rise of democracy or the liberation of peoples, as many have been taught, but the devastating horrors of the gulag, the holocaust, and the killing fields. It was in June 1996 that I picked up a book that, for all intents and purposes, changed my [...]

Glaucon’s Fate: History, Myth, and Character in Plato’s “Republic”

By |2024-05-17T12:26:49-05:00May 17th, 2024|Categories: Books, Character, Culture, History, Myth, Philosophy, Plato, Socrates, Timeless Essays|

Glaucon’s story is part of a well-known political tragedy that swept up many of Plato’s friends and fellow citizens, including Socrates. The evidence for his personal tragedy, however, is deeply embedded in the text. Like a three-dimensional image hidden within a two-dimensional picture, it requires a special adjustment of the eyes to perceive. Perhaps the [...]

Bonapartism and the Populist Empire

By |2024-05-16T18:43:13-05:00May 16th, 2024|Categories: Economics, Europe, History, Populism, Revolution, Timeless Essays|

Under Louis Napoleon III, the Second French Empire was more successful than the first, and more successful than any political administration in France up to that point. An Empire focused on domestic order and growth had finally brought the liberty and prosperity that Republics and Monarchies had failed to achieve. How could such a successful [...]

Divine Providence: The Witness of Two American Heroes

By |2024-04-29T16:41:41-05:00April 29th, 2024|Categories: American Republic, American Revolution, Catholicism, Communism, George Washington, History, Timeless Essays|

In very different historical circumstances, two strong-willed, athletic men with intelligence and leadership ability survived multiple dangers, but neither attributed his survival to his abilities or to sheer willpower. Instead, both men consistently and publicly credited Divine Providence. Their stories are well-known, but worth reviewing, since they serve as witnesses to us in our own [...]

The Divisions & Trade Wars Leading to the Monroe Doctrine

By |2024-04-28T09:05:58-05:00April 27th, 2024|Categories: American Republic, Bradley J. Birzer, Economics, England, Free Trade, History, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

Even though President James Monroe could not fix the economy or dismiss the Missouri question, he could certainly distract the nation from its problems. In his second inaugural address, he gleefully announced a new target for American anger: The British were not allowing free trade between the United States and the English-occupied West Indies. Whatever [...]

George Ticknor: The Autocrat of Park Street

By |2024-04-26T14:22:23-05:00April 26th, 2024|Categories: American Republic, Aristocracy, Conservatism, Democracy, History, Michael J. Connolly, Senior Contributors|

The importance of George Ticknor lies in contrasts, which bring into relief another America. As an old Federalist who worked to undergird volatile American democracy with traditions, Ticknor and his Brahmin compatriots “wove a tapestry of conviction and hope, doubt and despair, which became a conservative testament.” In July 1836, a European statesman and an [...]

Virgil on History

By |2024-04-20T18:14:21-05:00April 20th, 2024|Categories: History, Imagination, Letters From Dante Series, Louis Markos, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays, Virgil, Wisdom|

You seem to think that history signifies nothing more than one meaningless event after another. But you only do so because you lack eyes to see. Behind that course of events that you dismiss as chaotic and haphazard is a hidden line of purpose that is moving us and our world toward a good end [...]

Handicapping History

By |2024-08-08T09:46:40-05:00April 18th, 2024|Categories: Civilization, Culture, History, Ideology, St. Dominic, Timeless Essays|

We have no way of knowing whether the twenty-first-century collapse is yet another momentary stumble or finally the Dark Age. Like good Carolingians, however, we keep looking backwards for our recovery, trying to rebuild what we once had. Christopher Dawson’s prophetic The Making of Europe (1932) ends where the Gentle Reader might expect such a book to [...]

Battles of Lexington & Concord: The American Revolution Begins

By |2024-04-19T08:32:26-05:00April 18th, 2024|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, American Revolution, History, Timeless Essays, War|

During the first six decades of the eighteenth century, the American colonies were mostly allowed to govern themselves. In exchange, they loyally fought for Great Britain in imperial wars against the French and Spanish. But in 1763, after the British and Americans won the French and Indian War, King George III began working to eliminate [...]

An Oration on the Scholar’s Mission

By |2024-04-17T10:59:32-05:00April 16th, 2024|Categories: Christianity, Classics, Education, Equality, Ethics, Faith, Featured, History, Timeless Essays|

The end of the scholar is not to be a scholar; but a man, doing that which cannot be done without scholarship. The end is never the production of a work of art, however grand in conception, successful in execution, or exquisite in finish; but the realization of a good to which art is subsidiary. [...]

The Ghosting of Thomas Jefferson

By |2024-04-12T18:46:04-05:00April 12th, 2024|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, History, Politics, Thomas Jefferson, Timeless Essays|

The sanitizing of Thomas Jefferson has played a role in the crippling of public discourse. Nowadays, anyone who would discuss something so anodyne as political decentralization or states' rights has to walk on eggshells, lest he find himself attacked and stigmatized by enforcers of political orthodoxy. We should question an American political establishment that obfuscates [...]

The Victorian Jacobites

By |2024-04-11T18:11:17-05:00April 11th, 2024|Categories: Books, Conservatism, England, History, Timeless Essays|

Like their British counterparts, the American Jacobites bitterly criticized the damage done to the working class and cities by the industrial system and listening to their neo-feudal critiques one sees similarities with Progressivism and Populism. While these latter movements analyzed from the perspective of the political left, the Jacobites did so from the political right. [...]

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