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This Week in Books
Apologies for the delayed post. Things. Suddenly it was 21:00 and I threw my hands.
I wanted to take a break from the history of the Mediterranean's historical competition and look at some of the good things going on in Europe, specifically the art of Italy during this time period, with the book Michelangelo & the Pope's Ceiling, Ross King, Walker Publishing Company 2003.

However, the combination of the proposition that the Huguenot movement as a foundation for the 2nd Amendment, the mentioning of La Rochelle, and even today the book topic at Ace of Spades concerning the behavior of the various Native Americans spurred me to stay on the path.

Champlain's Dream
David Hackett Fischer
Simon and Schuster, 2008

If a person were to read Roger Crowley's series, Champlain's Dream is a great relay as it begins in this same time period, late 16th century, and covers what was going on in France and Europe in general, something only mentioned in the Mediterranean centric series by Roger Crowley, and I mean no offense as it would have clogged Mr. Crowley's focus. Champlain's Dream is better described as complimentary to that series.

David Hackett Fischer writes with the same fluidity as Roger Crowley, but in a bit different fashion, and in a way makes quoting the book a bit difficult in a good way. Mr. Fischer's style is a fine weave a paragraphs where making an accurate quote in context would require pages a reference. I will do my best.

The books of Mr. Fischer I have read would read best in this order: Champlain's Dream, Paul Revere's Ride, then Washington's Crossing. If I were a betting man I would put Albion's Seed in between Champlain's Dream and Paul Revere's Ride.

To tie in with badanov's This Week in Guns, to understand the 2nd Amendment's history Mr. Fischer's books are a must read. Were the Huguenots solely responsible for the concept of citizens desire to be armed? In my opinion, and in a word, no. The United States, specifically the English colonies, were populated by numerous peoples who fled their respective local persecutions and violence of what was then a very unstable Europe. One could argue that it was France's interest in the New World which would eventually lead to what we would call The French-Indian War where random attacks on a civilian population would require local militia to defend themselves. So to propose the Huguenots led to this attitude, then Samuel de Champlain would have had a leading role; but then, who was Samuel de Champlain?

Champlain's Dream approaches France's difficulties in this time. Mr. Fischer begins his book with a ponder of Champlain and his book's cover art. The first illustration in the book is the block print, "Deffaite des Yroquis au Lac de Champlain," 1613.

The print offers an explanation in the presence of a small figure who stands alone at the center of the battle. His dress reveals that he is a French soldier and a man of rank. He wears half-armor of high quality: a well fitted cuirass on his upper body, and protective britches of the latest design with light steel plates on his thighs. His helmet is no ordinary morion, or crude iron pot of the kinds that we associate with Spanish conquistadors and English colonists. It is an elegant example of what the French call a casque bourgignon, a Burgundian helmet of distinctive design that was the choice of kings and noblemen - a handsome, high-crowned helmet with a comb and helm forged from a single piece of metel. Above the helmet is a large plume of white feathers called a panache - the origin of our modern word. Its color identifies the wearer as a captain in the service of Henri IV, first Bourbon king of France. Its size marks it as a badge of courage worn to make its wearer visible in battle.

The French captain is not a big man. Even with his panache, the Indians appear half a head taller. But he has a striking presence, and in the middle of a wild melee he stands still and quiet, firmly in command of himself. His back is straight as a ramrod. His muscular legs are splayed apart and firmly planted to bear the weight of a weapon which he holds at full length. It is not a conventional matchlock, as historians have written, but a complex and very costly arquebuse a rouet, a wheel-lock arquebus. It was the first self-igniting shoulder weapon that did not require a burning match, and could fire as many as four balls in a single shot.

....

We look back at the French captain and catch a glimpse of his face. He has a high forehead, arched brows, eyes set wide apart, a straight nose turned up at the tip, a fashionable mustache, and a beard trimmed like that of his king, Henri IV. The key below the print gives us his name, the "sieur de Champlain."

This small image is the only authentic likeness of Samuel de Champlain that is known to survive from his own time.

...

Other images of Champlain would be invented after the fact. Many years later, when he was recognized as the father of New France, he was thought to require a proper portrait. Artists and sculptors were quick to supply a growing market. Few faces in modern history have been reinvented so often and from so little evidence. All these images are fictions. The most widely reproduced was a fraud, detected many years ago and still used more frequently than any other.


Mr. Fischer's eleven pages in introduction must simply be read. As to Mr. Fischer's approach to history, his well researched topic, and honesty I include this quote: (page 7)

Champlain was a leader, but he was not a saint. We do not need another work of hagiography about him. He was a mortal man of flesh and blood, a very complicated man. He made horrific errors in his career, and some of his mistakes cost other men their lives. He cultivated an easy manner, but sometimes he drove his men so hard that four of them tried to murder him. His quest for amity and concord with the Indians led to wars with the Mohawk and the Onondaga. His private life was deeply troubled, particularly in his relations with women. Champlain lived comfortably as a man among men, but one discovery eluded this great discoverer. He never found the way to a woman's heart. It was not for want of trying. He was strongly attracted to women, but his most extended relationship ended in failure.


And then I smiled, as this was what I was taught: (page 8)

At the start of the twentieth century, a very large literature ran heavily to hagiography, and celebrated Champlain as a saintly figure. After 1950 the inevitable reaction set in. Popular debunkers and academic iconoclasts made Champlain a favorite target. These attacks were deepened by a fin-de-siècle attitude called political correctness, with its revulsion against great white men, especially empire-builders, colonial founders, and discoverers.

Incredibly, some apostles of political correctness even tried to ban the word "discovery" itself. Historian Peter Pope met this attitude on the 500th anniversary of John Cabot's northern voyage of discovery. He recalls: "I was asked by a servant of the P.R industry in June 1995 to summarize Cabot's achievement without using the term discovery. She told me it had been banned. Any talked of 'discovery' is understood as an endorsement of conquest." Pope was ordered to "describe what the Venetian pilot did without using the D-word."


The book is well referenced. The illustrations are of good quality and topic. Mr. Fischer's style engaging. The story so full that it is impossible to quote without re-typing the book in full. Where there is controversy, Mr. Fischer notes it. Where is discussion, Mr. Fischer brings in all sides fairly. And so Mr. Fischer begins in Brouage, its history, the region's culture, and who was a young Samuel de Champlain.
Posted by: swksvolFF 2016-01-17
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=442334