Christmas Specials | MODERN ROYALISTS

Monarchs and mountebanks

Snobbery, sentiment, or the scent of power? What makes claimants to royal thrones, and their supporters, pursue their unlikely cause?

|

IT IS the stuff of fairy-tales, at least in the popular mind. Kings—wise if old, gallant if young—are banished by nasty politicians (typically communists). Sustained by a few faithful courtiers, the exiled royals live in elegant nostalgia, inspiring their countrymen until times change and they can return in triumph to claim their stolen thrones. An age-old story; and surely, in this age of democracies and microchips and espresso for the masses, an archaic one?

This article appeared in the Christmas Specials section of the print edition under the headline “Monarchs and mountebanks”

All sewn up?

From the December 20th 1997 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

Rosemont

Inside the last true political machine in America

What a town is like when one family runs everything

Lion at Steve Martin's working wildlife.

AI is stalking the last lions of Hollywood

The first actors to lose their jobs to artificial intelligence are four-legged


The truth about the passenger jet Putin’s men shot down

Investigating MH17, the crime that presaged the war in Ukraine


Meet the boffins and buccaneers drilling for hydrogen

The search is on for a clean fuel that could one day replace oil

The best sailors in the world

Why the vaka, vehicle for the extraordinary story of the peopling of Oceania, is enjoying a revival

Oceania’s wayfinding skills

The art of getting a vessel and its occupants from one place on a vast ocean to another