Memoirs Illustrating the History of Jacobinism

Memoirs Illustrating the History of Jacobinism  
Author(s) Abbé Augustin Barruel
Translator Robert Clifford
Country England
Language English
Publisher Hudson & Goodwin
Publication date 1798-1799

Memoirs Illustrating the History of Jacobinism (written in French, but translated into English and first published in 1797-1798) is a book by the French Jesuit, the Abbé Augustin Barruel.

In the book, Barruel claims that the French Revolution was the result of a deliberate conspiracy or plot to overthrow the throne, altar and aristocratic society in Europe. The plot was allegedly hatched by a coalition of philosophes, Freemasons, and the Order of the Illuminati. The conspirators created a system that was inherited by the Jacobins who operated it to its greatest potential. The Memoirs purports to expose the Revolution as the culmination of a long history of subversion. Barruel was not the first to make these charges but he was the first to present them in a fully developed historical context and his evidence was on a quite unprecedented scale. Barruel wrote each of the first three volumes of the book as separate discussions of those who contributed to the conspiracy. The fourth volume is an attempt to unite them all in a description of the Jacobins in the French Revolution. Memoirs Illustrating the History of Jacobinism is representative of the criticism of the Enlightenment that spread throughout Europe during the Revolutionary period.

Barruel's Memoirs is considered one of the founding documents of the right-wing interpretation of the French Revolution.[1] It became popular immediately after it was published and was read and commented on by most of the important literary and political journals of the day.[2] The four volumes of the text were published in a number of languages and created a debate about the role of the philosophes, their ideas, and the Enlightenment in the French Revolution. They remained in print well into the 20th century and contributed to the historical interpretation of the late 18th century in France. The success of Barruel's work is testimony to the anti-philosophe discourse that spread in the aftermath of the revolution. Barruel left behind a construction of the Enlightenment that was destined to influence subsequent interpretations. He wound accusations tightly around his foes and tied them into positions from which they could not escape.[3] The text created a link between the Enlightenment and the Revolution and this connection remains a topic of historical debate.

Contents

Background

Abbé Augustin Barruel (1741–1820) became a Jesuit in 1756 but by 1762 anti-Jesuit feeling in France had become so strong that he left and travelled for many years, returning only in 1773.[4] The events of the French Revolution in 1792 caused him to leave again and take refuge in England. His dislike and hostility towards the philosophes was well know and well developed before 1789 as he had been on the editorial staff of the popular anti-philosophe literary journal Année littéraire decades before the Revolution.[5] In 1797, when living in exile in London, he wrote the Memoirs. It was published in French by the French publishing company at 128 Wardour Street, Oxford Street, London.[6] An English edition was issued the same year, and the work quickly became a commercial success.[7] The multi-volume work went through four revised French editions by 1799 and was translated into English, German, Italian, Spanish, Swedish, and Russian as editions were issued in London, Hamburg, Augsburg, Luxembourg, St. Petersburg, Dublin, Naples and Rome before the fall of Napoleon.[8]

Synopsis

Outline of the work

In his "Preliminary Discourse", Barruel defines the three forms of conspiracy as the "conspiracy of impiety" against God and Christianity, the "conspiracy of rebellion" against kings and monarchs, and "the conspiracy of anarchy" against society in general.[9] He sees the end of the 18th century as "one continuous chain of cunning, art, and seduction"[10] intended to bring about the "overthrow of the altar, the ruin of the throne, and the dissolution of all civil society".[11]

The first volume examines the anti-Christian conspiracy that was begun by Voltaire in 1728 when Barruel claimed that Voltaire "consecrated his life to the annihilation of Christianity".[12] Barruel returned to the principal texts of the Enlightenment and found reasons to draw close links between the philosophism of the time and the anti-Christian campaigns of the Revolution.[13] Here he found that the philosophes had created an age of pretend philosophy which they used in their battle with Christianity. Their commitment to liberty and equality were really commitments of "pride and revolt".[14] Barruel claimed that the proponents of the Enlightenment led people into illusion and error and refers to the philosophes as "Writers of this species, so far from enlightening the people, only contribute to lead them into the path of error".[15] He alleged that Voltaire, d'Alembert, and Frederick II, the King of Prussia, planned the course of events that lead to the French Revolution. They began with an attack on the Church where a "subterranean warfare of illusion, error, and darkness waged by the Sect"[16] attempted to destroy Christianity. The influence of the philosophes could not be underrated according to Barruel. They created the intellectual framework that put the conspiracy in motion and controlled the ideology of the secret societies. Barruel appears to have read the work of the philosophes and his direct and extensive quotes shows a deep knowledge of their beliefs. This is unusual among the enemies of the Enlightenment, who rarely distracted themselves by reading the works and authors they were attacking.[17] Barruel believed the philosophes were important as the original villains that seduced the population and made Enlightenment, and subsequently revolutionary, ideals favorable.

The second volume focuses on the anti-monarchical conspiracy that was led by Jean Jacques Rousseau and Baron de Montesquieu. These conspirators sought to destroy the established monarchies under the guise of "Independence and Liberty".[18] Barruel analyses and criticizes Montesquieu's The Spirit of Laws and Rousseau's Social Contract because the application of the ideas expressed in these books had "given birth to that disquieted spirit which fought to investigate the rights of sovereignty, the extent of their authority, the pretended rights of the free man, and without which every subject is branded for a slave - and every king a despot".[19] He believed that the influence of these two writers was a necessary factor in the enactment of the French Revolution. He agreed with the revolutionaries as they themselves placed the remains of Voltaire and Rousseau in the Pantheon to pay homage to the "fathers of the revolution". Barruel believed that the philosophes had created a lasting influence as their spirit survived through their writings and continued to promote anti-monarchical feelings within the Jacobins and the revolutionaries. The destruction of monarchies in Europe led to the triumph of the Jacobins as they trampled "underfoot the altars and the thrones in the name of that equality and that liberty which summon the peoples to the disasters of revolution and the horrors of anarchy".[20] Barruel equated the rejection on monarchy with a rejection of any type of order and government. As a result, the principles of equality and liberty and their attacks against the monarchy were attacks against all governments and civil society. He presented a choice to his readers between monarchy and the "reign of anarchy and absolute independence".[21]

Barruel's third volume addresses the antisocial conspiracy that was the objective of the Freemasons and the Order of the Illuminati. The philosophes and their attacks against the church and the throne paved the way for the conspiracy that was led by these secret societies. These groups were believed to have constituted a single sect that numbered over 300,000 members who were "all zealous for the Revolution, and all ready to rise at the first signal and to impart the shock to all others classes of the people".[22] Barruel surveyed the history of Masonry and maintained that its higher mysteries had always been of an atheist and republican cast.[23] He believed the Freemasons kept their words and aims secret for many years but on August 12, 1792, two days after the fall of the French monarchy, they ran though the streets openly announcing their secrets. The secret words were "Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity" and the secret aim was the overthrow of the French monarchy and the establishment of the republic.[24] Barruel claimed he heard them speak these words in France but that in other countries the Masons still kept their secrets. A division of the group into numerous lodges ensured that if the secrets of one lodge were discovered, the rest would remain hidden. He believed that it was his job to warn all governments and people of the goals of the Freemasons. Barruel described in detail how this system worked in the case of the Illuminati. Even after Johann Adam Weishaupt, the leader of the sect, was discovered and tried in court, the proceedings could not uncover the universal influence of the Illuminati and no steps were taken against the group.[25] The majority of the secret societies could always survive and carry on their activities because of the organization of the group. The Illuminati, as a whole, functioned to radicalize the movement against the throne and altar and influenced more members of the population to subscribe to their hidden principles.[26] They refined the secret structure that had been provided by the Masons basic framework.

For Barruel, the final designs of the coalition of the philosophes, the Freemasons and the Illuminati were achieved by the Jacobins. These clubs were formed by "the adepts of impiety, the adepts of rebellion, and the adepts of anarchy"[27] working together to implement their radical agenda. Their guiding philosophy and actions were the culmination of the conspiracy as they directly wanted to end the monarchy and the church. Barruel believed that the only difference between the Jacobins and their precursors was that the Jacobins actually brought down the church and the throne and were able to institute their basic beliefs and goals while their precursors only desired to do these things without much success.[28]

The Memoirs and the French Revolution

According to Barruel, the first major assault on the Enlightenment came during the French Revolution. In the minds of many, the Enlightenment was inextricably connected to the Revolution that followed. This presumed link resulted in an explosion of literature that was hostile to the Enlightenment. When the leaders of the Revolution canonized Voltaire and Rousseau and made the Enlightenment themes of reason, progress, anti-clericalism and emancipation central to their own revolutionary vocabulary, it created a link that meant any backlash against the Revolution would increase opposition to the Enlightenment.[29] The advent of what Graeme Garrard has called the "continuity thesis" between the Enlightenment and the Revolution – the belief that they were connected in some intrinsic way, as cause and effect- proved damaging to the Enlightenment.[30]

For Barruel, the Revolution was not a spontaneous popular uprising expressing a long-suppressed general will. It was instead the consequence of a united minority group who used force, subterfuge and terror to impose their will on an innocent and unsuspecting population.[31] Barruel believed that the Revolution was caused by Voltaire, Rousseau and the other philosophes who conspired with secret societies to destroy Catholicism and the monarchy in France. He argued that the writings of the philosophes had a great influence on those who would lead the Revolution and that Voltaire and his followers were responsible for the training of revolutionaries. It was from the followers of the philosophes "that the revolutionary ministers Necker and Turgot started up; from this class arose those grand revolutionary agents, the Mirabeaux, Sieyes, Laclos, Condorcets; these revolutionary trumps, the Brissots, Champforts, Garats, Cheniers; those revolutionary butchers, the Carras, Frerons, Marats".[32]

The Encyclopédie

Within the Memoirs, Barruel alleged that Diderot's Encyclopédie was a Masonic project. He believed that the written works of the philosophes penetrated all aspects of society and that this massive collection was of particular significance. The Encyclopédie was only the first step in philosophizing mankind and was necessary to spread the impious and anti-monarchical writings.[33] This created a mass movement against the church and society. Barruel believed that the conspirators attempt to "imbue the minds of the people with the spirit of insurrection and revolt"[34] and to promote radicalism within all members of society. This was believed to be the main reason behind the Encyclopédie as it was "a vast emporium of all the sophisms, errors, or calumnies which had ever been invented against religion".[35] It contained "the most profligate and impious productions of Voltaire, Diderot, Boulanger, La Mettrie, and of other Deists or Atheists of the age, and this under the specious pretence of enlightening ignorance".[36] Barruel believed the volumes of the Encyclopédie were valuable in controlling the minds of intellectuals and in creating a public opinion against Christianity and monarchy.

Philosophism

Philosophism was a term used by Barruel within the Memoirs to refer to the pretend philosophy that the philosophes practiced. It was originally coined by Catholic opponents of the philosophes but was popularized by Barruel.[37] It referred to the principles that were shared by philosophes, Freemasons, and Illuminati. Barruel defined philosophism as "the error of every man who, judging of all things by the standard of his own reason, rejects in religious matters every authority that is not derived from the light of nature. It is the error of every man who denies the possibility of any mystery beyond the limits of reason if everyone who, discarding revelation in defence of the pretended rights of reason, Equality, and Liberty, seeks to subvert the whole fabric of the Christian religion".[38]

The term had a lasting influence as by the end of the 18th century it had become a popular term of abuse used by conservative journals to refer to supporters of the Revolution.[39] These journals accused those who practiced philosophism as having no principles or respect for authority. They were skeptics who failed to believe in the monarchy and the church and thus, had no principles. The use of the term became pervasive in the Anti-Jacobin Review and contributed to the belief in a connection between the Enlightenment and the Revolution and its supporters. Philosophism became a powerful tool of anti-revolutionary and anti-Jacobin rhetoric.

Members of the conspiracy

Barruel identified a number of individuals who he believed played direct roles in the Enlightenment and the conspiracy against Christianity and the state. He identified Voltaire as the "chief", d’Alembert as the "most subtle agent", Frederick II as the "protector and adviser", and Diderot as its "forlorn hope".[40] Voltaire was at the head of the conspiracy because he spent his time with the highest levels of European society. His attention and efforts were directed at kings and high ranking ministers. D'Alembert worked behind the scenes and inside the more common areas of French society. He employed his skill in the cafes and academies and attempted to bring more followers to the conspiracy. Barruel takes a close look at the correspondence between Voltaire and d'Alembert and uses this as evidence of their plot to overthrow society. He is deeply concerned with the fact that those he identifies as the leaders of the plot had secret names for one another in their private correspondence. Voltaire was "Raton", d'Alembert was "Protagoras", Frederick was "Luc", and Diderot was known as "Plato".[41] Barruel also argued that the conspiracy extended far beyond this small group of philosophes. He believed that the court of Louis XV was a "Voltairean ministry"[42] of powerful men. This group involved Marquis d'Argenson who "formed the plan for the destruction of all religious orders in France", the Duc de Choiseul who was "the most impious and most despotic of ministers", the "friend and confidant of d'Alembert", Archbishop de Briennes, and Malesherbes, "protector of the conspiracy".[43]

According to Barruel, this group of influential leaders worked together with a number of adepts who supported the conspiracy. The most important adept that Barruel identifies is Condorcet. Barruel claimed that Condorcet was a Freemason and leading member of the Society of 1789 who was elected to the Legislative Assembly and was "the most resolute atheist".[44] Condorcet was important because he embodied everything that Barruel claimed the conspiracy was. He was a Freemason that associated with the philospohes and who would become an influential member of the revolution process. Barruel also lists the Baron d'Holbach, Buffon, La Mettrie, Raynal, Abbé Yvon, Abbé de Prades, Abbé Morrelet, La Harpe, Marmontel, Bergier and Duclos among the members of the "synagogue of impiety".[45]

Barruel's techniques of argumentation

As the champion of Christianity and the political status quo, Barruel downplayed his own Catholicism and presented himself as a neutral party within the radicalized debate surrounding the Revolution. His tactic was to cite document after document with a commentary that effectively showed it was the truth. The reader of the Memoirs could have been any individual who doubted some of Barruel's inferences, but who would eventually be overwhelmed by the sheer weight of evidence against the Enlightenment. His fanatical hatred for revolutionary and enlightenment ideas is hidden behind a seemingly neutral and objective manner. By isolating single passages and quoting them out of context, Barruel presented what seemed to be a convincing case.[46] He made up for quality with quantity and persuaded a number of contemporaries to adopt his view. The Memoirs is constructed according to reason and Barruel attempts to use the Enlightenment's own tool to bring about its demise.

Reception

Barruel's work was influential and impossible to ignore. The Freemasons of France, Germany, and England angrily contested his assertions and a voluminous literature was the consequence. Even his critics were forced to take him serious in their attempt to refute his arguments.[47] The Memoirs were written about and discussed at length by leading literary and philosophical figures.

Edmund Burke, an English political thinker, was impressed by the work of Barruel in uncovering a connection between the Enlightenment and the French Revolution. Burke wrote a letter to Barruel and expressed his admiration. He wrote, "I cannot easily express to you how much I am instructed and delighted by the first volume of your History of Jacobinism." He praised "the whole of the wonderful narrative" for being supported by documents and proofs with "the most judicial regularity and exactness." At the end of the letter Burke added: "I forgot to say, that I have known myself, personally, five of your principal conspirators; and I can undertake to say from my own certain knowledge, that as far back as the year 1773, they were busy in the plot you have so well described, and in the manner, and on the principle you have so truly represented. To this I can speak as a witness."[48] Burke's own works were also filled with references to the philosophe sect and a dislike for their fanaticism, atheism and perversion of public morals.

Others soon took up the arguments of Burke and Barruel. In England, the Scottish scientist John Robison, published Proofs of a Conspiracy against All the Religions and Governments of Europe, carried on in the Secret Meetings of the Free Masons, Illuminati, and Reading Societies.[49] The work, published in 1798, detailed a conspiracy that involved philosophes, Masons, and the Illuminati and their desire to "root out all the religious establishments an overturn all the existing governments of Europe".[50] Robinson's text has been characterized as being less detailed but more refined that Barruel's Memoirs. Even with these differences, Robinson's work supported the conspiracy that Barruel purported to have discovered. Barruel himself commented on the similarities, stating "Without knowing it, we have fought for the same cause with the same arms, and pursued the same course".[51] The two writers had many similarities in their arguments and conclusions and their books spawned an anti-Enlightenment and anti-revolution discussion that was constructed on the same theses.

Despite the initial popularity of the book, Barruel's contemporaries soon rejected his book. Jean Joseph Mounier, a member of the National Assembly during the beginning of the French Revolution, insisted the Revolution broke out because of the failure of the established authorities to handle a number of crises that occurred.[52] He blamed the parlements of France for attempting to become rivals of the monarch and the spirit of intolerance in France. Mounier believed the Revolution was a result of social and political tensions and he did not believe there was a planned conspiracy. Joseph de Maistre, a well known counter-revolution theorists, also did not accept Barruel's conspiracy theory. He wrote a short rejection of the Memoirs in which he termed Barruel's accusations "foolish and "false".[53] Maistre rejected the idea of the Freemasons being partly responsible, perhaps because he was a member himself, and did not believe that the Illuminati were as powerful as Barruel made them out to be.

Contribution and legacy

Barruel's version of the revolution, which blamed specific men and pointed out a single cause, has been rejected by the majority of scholars, as the concept of a "master conspiracy" lies on the fringes of historical analysis. Still, his Memoirs do retain historical significance. Amos Hofman has argued that Barruel's work "appears to be the first systematic attempt to discuss the role of conspiracy in a revolution".[54] The theory of conspiracy is a tool for Barruel that is used in an attempt to discredit "public politics" or politics based on the support of public opinion. Hofman shows how Barruel sought to prove that public politics, demanded by both the philospophes and the revolutionaries, could not in fact exist as it was an illusion designed to create support for their private desire to control France.[55] Barruel's theory of conspiracy is important as a "reaction to a problem that was at the focus of the ideological struggle during the second half of the eighteenth century – the problem of the rise of public opinion as a political factor that had to be taken into account by the leaders of society".[56] According to this view, Memoirs Illustrating the History of Jacobinism can be read as an attempt to understand the public appeal of the ideas of the Enlightenment and mass politics. Barruel's text is also important for its entrenchment of an understanding of conspiracy within modern politics. Conspiracy was seen as a motivating cause of revolution because it suggested conflict within the society. It viewed politics as a clash between opposing ideas which could not be solved by a compromise because of substantial division.[57] The society that Barruel creates was not divided by legitimate beliefs and divergent interests. Instead, it was a binary divide between the united and wholly patriotic group that included Barruel and the unholy alliance of traitors and criminals.[58] Barruel's theory of a master conspiracy and his understanding of the causes of political change still influences society.

Memoirs Illustrating the History of Jacobinism has also been seen as a primary source that can be used to examine freemasonry in Europe. Even though Freemasonry became a target in the paranoid literature that blamed the revolution partly on the activities of Masons, the work still had some historical value in regards to the group. Margaret Jacob argues that Barruel's writings "offer a point of departure for understanding the relationship between the Continental Enlightenment, as it was lived in the clubs, societies, and lodges of the eighteenth century, and the outbreak of the democratic revolutions in the late 1780s in Amsterdam, Brussels, and most important, Paris."[59] She believes that if readers can look past the paranoia within the text, it can provide information about how Freemasons were treated during the revolution. Jacob also sees value in the text because Barruel argued for a distinction between English Freemasonry and its Continental counterpart.[60] Barruel believed that his allegations against the Continental Freemasons did not apply to the respectable English Freemasons. The activities of the English Freemasons were not the things that needed to be worried about. He distinguishes between the circumstances of the French and the English and shows that the language used in each situation was important. He believes that the Masonic language about equality, liberty, and fraternity bears relation to the radical and democratic phase of the French Revolution and to Jacobin language.[61] From the book, Margaret Jacob salvages the realization that language is important and that it can have a social force all of its own.

Barruel's polemic is an important source for the understanding of the mentality of the opponents of the French Revolution and their understanding of the ideological origins of the Revolution. Furthermore, Barruel is also seen as the father of a modern conspiracy theory. The Memoirs contain all of the elements that continue to characterize conspiracy narratives today including the argument that a hidden group is orchestrating world events behind the scenes and an attempt to construct a direct lineage from the past to the present.[62] Barruel presents a thorough application of conspiracy theory methodology. As a result, he has had a lasting influence on following generations.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Amos Hofman, “Opinion, Illusion, and the Illusion of Opinion: Barruel’s Theory of Conspiracy,” Eighteenth Century Studies Vol. 27 No. 1 (1993), 28.
  2. ^ Hofman, 28.
  3. ^ Darrin M. McMahon, Enemies of the Enlightenment, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001), 192.
  4. ^ Peter Knight, Conspiracy Theories in American History, (Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 2003), 115.
  5. ^ Graeme Garrard, Counter Enlightenments: From the Eighteenth Century to the Present, (London and New York: Routledge, 2006), 37.
  6. ^ Jasper Ridley, The Freemasons, (London: Constable and Company Limited, 2003), 142.
  7. ^ Will Kaufman, Britain and the Americas, (Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 2005), 488.
  8. ^ McMahon, 113.
  9. ^ Abbé Augustin Barruel, Memoirs Illustrating the History of Jacobinism, (Hartford: Hudson & Goodwin, 1799), Vol. 1, vii.
  10. ^ Barruel, Vol. 1, 363.
  11. ^ Barruel, Vol. 1, Preliminary Discourse, xiii.
  12. ^ Barruel, Vol. 1, chap. 3, 48.
  13. ^ McMahon, 101.
  14. ^ Barruel, Vol. 4, chap. 12, 399.
  15. ^ Barruel, Vol. 5, chap. 14, 561.
  16. ^ Barruel, Vol.4, Conclusion, 561.
  17. ^ Garrard, 45.
  18. ^ Barruel, Vol. 2, chap. 4, 138.
  19. ^ Barruel, Vol. 2, chap. 4, 136–137.
  20. ^ Barruel, Vol. 1, chap. 2. 36.
  21. ^ Barruel, Vol. 4, Conclusion, 584.
  22. ^ Barruel, Vol. 2, chap. 14, 461-462.
  23. ^ David Chandler, “Abbé Barruel, SJ, William Taylor, and the Pelican Business,” The Allen Review Issue No. 19, (1998), 1.
  24. ^ Ridley, 143.
  25. ^ Hofman, 38.
  26. ^ Hofman, 34.
  27. ^ Garrard, 48.
  28. ^ Garrard, 48
  29. ^ Garrard, 36.
  30. ^ Garrard, 36.
  31. ^ Garrard, 45.
  32. ^ Barruel, Vol. 4, conclusion, 562.
  33. ^ Hofman, 40.
  34. ^ Barruel, Vol. 2, chap. 5, 159.
  35. ^ Barruel, Vol. 1, chap. 4, 57.
  36. ^ Barruel, Vol. 4, chap. 13, 547-548.
  37. ^ James Schmidt, “Inventing the Enlightenment Anti-Jacobins, British Hegelians and the Oxford English Dictionary,” Journal of the History of Ideas Vol. 64 No. 3, July 2003, 431.
  38. ^ Barruel, Vol. 1, chap. 1, 4.
  39. ^ Schmidt, 432.
  40. ^ Barruel, Vol. 1, chap. 1, 2.
  41. ^ Garrard, 44.
  42. ^ Barruel, Vol. 1, chap. 5, 79.
  43. ^ Garrard, 45.
  44. ^ Barruel, Vol. 2, chap. 4, 132.
  45. ^ Garrard, 45.
  46. ^ McMahon, 101.
  47. ^ Knight, 116.
  48. ^ Edmund Burke to Abbé Barruel, May 1, 1797, in Thomas W. Copeland, ed., The Correspondence of Edmund Burke, 10 Vols. (Chicago and Cambridge, 1958–1978), 9: 319–320.
  49. ^ McMahon, 113.
  50. ^ McMahon, 113–114.
  51. ^ McMahon, 114.
  52. ^ Hofman, 31.
  53. ^ Hofman, 31.
  54. ^ Garrard, 32.
  55. ^ Garrard, 32.
  56. ^ Garrard, 32.
  57. ^ Hofman, 60.
  58. ^ Robert Tombs, France 1814–1914, (New York: Addison Wesley Longman Limited, 1996), 80.
  59. ^ Margaret C. Jacob, Living the Enlightenment, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1991), 11.
  60. ^ Jacob, 11.
  61. ^ Jacob, 11.
  62. ^ Knight, 115.

Bibliography

  • Barruel, Abbé Augustin. Memoirs Illustrating the History of Jacobinism. Hartford: Hudson & Goodwin, 1799.
  • Chandler, David. "Abbé Barruel, SJ, William Taylor, and the Pelican Business." The Allen Review Issue No. 19, 1998.
  • Edmund Burke to Abbé Barruel, May 1, 1797. In Thomas W. Copeland, ed.. The Correspondence of Edmund Burke, 10 Vols.. Chicago and Cambridge, 1958–1978.
  • Garrard, Graeme. Counter Enlightenments: From the Eighteenth Century to the Present. London and New York: Routledge, 2006.
  • Hofman, Amos. "Opinion, Illusion, and the Illusion of Opinion: Barruel's Theory of Conspiracy." Eighteenth Century Studies Vol. 27 No. 1 (1993). 27–60.
  • Jacob, Margaret C.. Living the Enlightenment. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1991.
  • Kaufman, Will. Britain and the Americas. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 2005.
  • Knight, Peter. Conspiracy Theories in American History. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 2003.
  • McMahon, Darrin M.. Enemies of the Enlightenment. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001.
  • Ridley, Jasper. The Freemasons. London: Constable and Company Limited, 2003.
  • Schmidt, James. "Inventing the Enlightenment Anti-Jacobins, British Hegelians and the Oxford English Dictionary." Journal of the History of Ideas Vol. 64 No. 3, July 2003. 421–443.
  • Tombs, Robert. France 1814–1914. New York: Addison Wesley Longman Limited, 1996.

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