Open Access
The New Knight: The French Far Right’s View of the Middle Ages
Author(s) -
Stéphane François
Publication year - 2021
Language(s) - English
DOI - 10.53483/vcht2524
Subject(s) - middle ages , knight , far right , ideology , politics , romance , history , ancient history , old french , sociology , literature , political science , law , art , physics , astronomy
The far right has always taken an interest in the Middle Ages. For the French revolutionary far right, which shares an ideological matrix influenced by Julius Evola, fascination with the Middle Ages revolves around the image of the Holy Germanic Roman Empire as a political model for Europe opposed to the modern nation-state. The romantic image of the medieval knight also offers a watered-down way to celebrate and legitimize violence without having to allude to a taboo National Socialism. This obsession with the Middle Ages contrasts with the reality that these revolutionary far-right movements were rather pro-Arab during the Cold War decades. This shift reveals the transformation of their thinking and the new dominance of the Identitarian notion of ethnic withdrawal, with the knight as the symbol of a pure racial warrior defending his society against Muslim invasion.