This article was featured on the blog of 'It's History Podcasts' in August 2013: http://itshistorypodcasts.com/blog/2013/8/22/remembering-the-past-has-mankind-learnt-anything-from-history#.UhkVaDnU6FI
History is the study of mankind and its development through the ages. An awareness of the past is essential in order to provide a perspective on the problems of the present, and to understand people and societies which have been built on the foundations of our history. However, man does not always apply this knowledge to situations, condemning himself to repeat the mistakes of previous generations. George Bernard Shaw said ‘We learn from history that we learn nothing from history’: there is much truth to be found in this statement. History is saturated with bloody wars and struggles for power, many of which could have been avoided had the instigators considered the past.
History is the study of mankind and its development through the ages. An awareness of the past is essential in order to provide a perspective on the problems of the present, and to understand people and societies which have been built on the foundations of our history. However, man does not always apply this knowledge to situations, condemning himself to repeat the mistakes of previous generations. George Bernard Shaw said ‘We learn from history that we learn nothing from history’: there is much truth to be found in this statement. History is saturated with bloody wars and struggles for power, many of which could have been avoided had the instigators considered the past.
In
contrast, Lord Macaulay declared that ‘The history of England is emphatically
the history of progress’: our country has evolved and grown, advancing in all
areas of civilisation, and such developments could not have been made without
considering mistakes made along the way.
There are countless instances where people have reflected on past errors
and resolved that they will not recur. For example, shipbuilders will never
again assume that a boat is unsinkable after the infamous disaster of Titanic
in 1912, where 1514 people died due to a lack of lifeboats.
Perhaps
the most frequently-repeated occurrence throughout history is war. Despite the
devastating consequences, man’s greed for power and inability to live
harmoniously with his fellows has led to countless conflicts. Ironically, World
War I was known as ‘the war to end all wars’, as it was one of the most
shattering conflicts ever recorded, triggering the collapse of three major
empires. However, World War II broke out just twenty one years later. This was
the deadliest and most widespread conflict in history, with around 60 million
fatalities and the only use of nuclear weapons in a war. Nuclear warfare was
threatened in the Cold War between America and Russia, and there are many
lessons to be gained from these periods, which should be studied carefully to
prevent future generations from making the same errors. One hopes that the implications of deploying
nuclear weapons, and the devastation wreaked by the two atomic bombs dropped on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, will leave a long-lasting legacy, deterring countries
from considering nuclear warfare as an acceptable weapon. North Korea and Iran
in particular should pay heed to this.
Religious
genocides have occurred since antiquity, and are a common theme throughout
history. Overall, more than 6 million Jews were believed to have died in the
Holocaust, of which approximately 1.5 million were children. Despite the
atrocities committed against the Jews during this time, after they had endured
centuries of persecution from races such as the Assyrians, Egyptians, Romans
and French, it did not end mass killings under the pretext of religion. For
example, there is the ongoing violence in Sudan and Tibet, and the ethnic
cleansing in the Balkans in the late 20th century. It could be said that being
human is the potential to do good and evil, and therefore, although most look
back and vow never to repeat the brutalities of the past, there will always be
those who disregard this with a warped viewpoint on the moral way in which to
treat others.
Following the US invasion of Iraq in 2003,
religious violence escalated between the Shi’a and Sunni branches of Islam to
the point of a civil war that still continues today. Iraq comprises 65% Shi’as,
although dispute first arose when the Sunnis disagreed over their status as a
minority. The Shi’as have suffered direct persecution at the hands of a Sunni
government since 1932, especially under the reign of Saddam Hussein. The two
sects have now fallen into a cycle of revenge killings, with the Sunni’s
preferred methods being car bombs and suicide bombers in contrast to the
Shi’as’ death squads. There is a colourful historical backdrop to the relations
between Sunni and Shi’as: since Mohammed’s death there have been many clashes
between the two, often influenced by the political landscape of the time.
Instead of accepting that such conflict between branches of religions ends only
in bloodshed, these dissidents create renewed terror and violence, and do not
embrace their theological differences, but inflict terrorism on the rest of the
population. They are so blind to the error of their prejudices that they do not
see the mistakes of past generations and try to make amends: instead they
pursue their desire for superiority.
The
French were beaten in the first Indochina conflict, ending in 1954, but this
did not prevent the US Army from being defeated by North Vietnamese troops and
their Communist allies in the following years. America did not recognise that
attempting to beat the enemy on its home soil was futile, and again, this
crucial factor has been overlooked in the current conflicts in Afghanistan and
Iraq.
In
his latest book, ‘Playing the Great Game: Britain, War and Politics in
Afghanistan since 1839’, Dr. Edmund Yorke explores the tension between the
political and military forces. Yorke argues that unnecessary political
interference or negligence of military operations has consistently contributed
to serious failures in Britain’s policy towards Afghanistan over the past 170
years. He highlights the same political and military errors that have occurred throughout
the four major Anglo-Afghan wars of 1839-‘42, 1878-‘80, 1919 and the continuing
conflict today. Brigadier Ed Butler, Commander of the British Forces wrote, ‘If
only his book had been available in 2001 and was required reading for all
government ministers, officials and senior officers’. This is a reflection of
how invading armies are often doomed to repeat the same mistakes, due to the
incompetence and ignorance of their leaders. There are many parallels to be
found in today’s conflict in Afghanistan and previous wars, and it may be time
to find a political solution to avoid any more fatalities.
Proposing that all men should share the
same opinions and live peacefully together is an unrealistic demand. Wars have
shaped the world in which we live, and will continue to do so: by nature, man
is a belligerent species. Seeing bloodshed may teach people that fighting each
other is wrong, but it will not stop them from going to war to fight for their
beliefs. It is therefore unrealistic to
expect mankind always to learn from its mistakes, as conflict between people is
inevitable. It is the evolution of warfare that demonstrates whether man has
actually learned from his past.
Conflict
between the Church and monarchy is also a recurrent theme. In 1170, Archbishop
Thomas Becket was brutally murdered by the knights of his former friend, King
Henry II, in a culmination to a bitter quarrel that had been raging for several
years. To pay penance for Becket’s murder, Henry dropped his plans for greater
control over the Church and in 1174 walked barefoot through Canterbury and was
whipped for his sins. Unfortunately, Henry’s son John did not learn from his
father’s experience, and argued with the Pope, causing him to be
excommunicated. It is not surprising that the Magna Carta of 1215 contained a
clause stating that the Church should be free to obey the Pope above the
monarch.
The
Church was certainly one of the most powerful and influential forces in
Medieval England. When the Pope forbade Henry VIII from divorcing his first
wife Catherine of Aragon, Henry reacted by declaring that the Pope no longer
held divine authority in England, and founded his own church, the Church of
England. This led to the dissolution of the monasteries, which had significant
social impacts. Although the consequences are not as severe, the Church and the
state still clash, most recently with the Anglican and Roman Christian Churches
in Britain rejecting the coalition government’s plans to legalise same sex
marriage.
King
John was a notoriously bad king: one monk wrote of him, ‘Hell is defiled by the
fouler presence of John’. He plotted the downfall of his own brother, Richard
I, betrayed his father, and quarrelled so bitterly with the Pope over the next
Archbishop of Canterbury that he was excommunicated, and an Interdict was
passed over England and Wales. During his 17-year reign he lost most of the
land held in France. Determined to regain this, he taxed and fined his subjects
heavily, imprisoning them when they could not pay their debts. When he invaded
France in 1214, his army was crushed by Phillip II at the Battle of Bouvines,
meaning that all his taxes had been wasted in an unsuccessful war effort. This
angered his barons so greatly that they forced him to agree to a set of rules,
the Magna Carta, decreeing how the country should be governed. This was a
cornerstone of democracy, and the start of a monarch’s power being limited. His
subjects had seen the consequences of power corrupting a king, and to this day,
there are checks and balances in place to ensure no power becomes too great in
Britain.
Democracy
has evolved from the Ancient Greeks, coming from two Greek words: ‘demos’,
meaning people, and ‘kratia’, meaning rule. Many modern democracies have come
into being after the population of a country rose up against its leaders with a
common aim of altering the way in which its country is governed. After the
English Revolution, Parliament became gradually more important, although this
power still changed over the years, allowing middle-class, then working-class
men to vote, and eventually permitting women to vote on equal terms with men in
1928. After the American Revolution, when thirteen American colonies declared
themselves independent of Britain, a constitution ensured that no part of their
new federal and state system could become too powerful. Although in the short
term the French Revolution did not work, the French managed to establish a
democratic republic in 1871. These revolutions demonstrate to mankind that
ultimately the population of a country must be content, as they are the
foundations of the nation. The Arab Spring is a recent series of uprisings in
the Arab world. These have led to the deposing of the leaders of Egypt,
Tunisia, Libya and Yemen, with civil uprisings in Syria and Bahrain. The
subsequent violence these rebellions and protests have triggered could have
been avoided if a more tolerable regime had been used in the countries.
Countries
could learn from Britain’s mistakes in the 20th Century: many democratic
systems were set up in ex-colonies, with Parliaments responsible to the Queen.
These systems have not fared so well, and many Commonwealth countries have
become dictatorships. The governing of a country is a precarious task, as
people will always have conflicting views. By taking into account the successes
and failings of past methods, disquiet can be limited to minimum. For example,
Margaret Thatcher would have done well to pay heed to the Peasants’ Revolt of
1381. There was excessive taxation to pay for the Hundred Years’ War, which was
not of common concern, and a poll tax was introduced. This was one of the main
factors that contributed to the rebelling of up to 100,000 people who marched
on London and demanded audiences with Richard II. Although the revolt was a
failure in the short term, in the long term, many of its aims were achieved.
This included the abolition of poll taxes. If Mrs Thatcher had paid more
attention to this period in history, she might not have faced riots after
introducing the controversial Community Charge in 1990.
The
hypothesis of eternal recurrence, developed by Friedrich Nietzche, theorises
history as being beyond our control. It
states that since the probability of our existence occurring is finite, and
time and space are infinite, then our existence will repeat an endless amount
of times. If this is the case, it suggests that all patterns and similar events
through history will recur repeatedly, despite attempts to prevent this. If this theory were true, then even if
mankind were to learn from every error that has happened, any improvements
would be in vain as all events will inevitably happen again.
I believe that the statement ‘Mankind has
learned nothing from history’ is too indistinct a generalisation of mankind to
represent the billions of individual opinions and wills of people: there will
be those who strive to extract all the lessons they can from history and there
will also be those who follow their own beliefs, irrespective of those before
them. People’s perspective on life is
also constantly changing, moulded by their environment, and it is therefore
unrealistic to apply the standards of the present to events in the past. History cannot predict what will happen in
the future. Historians can try to find patterns that correspond with historical
evidence, but, unlike the certainty and precision of scientific laws, these can
be used only as guidelines.
Isaiah Berlin’s August Compte Lecture,
later published under the title ‘Historical Inevitability’, argues that human
beings’ capacity to make moral decisions makes them unique. However, the
historian, E.H. Carr, believed that impersonal forces such as greed defined
human behaviour. To assert the
inevitability of past events, as Carr did, was to forsake moral obligation for
our own present actions. However, the two were united in the fact that
historians always look for meaning and pattern in the past: they investigate
causes in order to explain what happened. Carr argued that ‘what distinguishes
the historian is the proposition that one thing led to another. Secondly, while
historical events were of course set in motion by the individual wills, whether
of ‘great men’ or ordinary people, the historian must go behind the individual
wills and inquire into the reasons which made the individuals will and act as
they did, and study the ‘factors’ or ‘forces’ which explain individual
behaviour.’ This compelling case suggests that if we perhaps paid more
attention to the work of historians, devastating historic recurrence could be
avoided. As as the German scholar and
philosopher, Friedrich von Schlegel observed, ‘The historian is a prophet
looking backwards.’