Last week, as the national discourse became obsessed with the #Sengol, it made us think about the time when a fictional sceptre became a key element in a Tintin novel that was a satirical criticism of the fascist powers of Europe - a thread (1/18)
It was thus not surprising that events unfolding much closer to home would find their way in his creation. Ottokar’s Sceptre was set in the fictional Balkan nation of Syldavia - where a nefarious plot was unfolding to dethrone King Muskar XII (4/18)
The conspirators planned to steal the sceptre of medieval king Ottokar IV before the traditional St. Vladimir’s Day festival - thus forcing Muskar to abdicate. Tintin’s investigation reveals that the kingpin of the plot is Müsstler - leader of a Syldavian agitator group (5/18)
Tintin further finds that Müsstler is backed by Syldavia’s neighbor Borduria which intends to take advantage of Borduria’s political crisis and invade the nation (6/18)
Although the conspirators’ steal the sceptre, the intrepid reporter, helped by his faithful dog Snowy and the bumbling detective duo Thompson & Thomson, manages to retrieve the sceptre and return it to King Muskar just in time - thus foiling the nefarious plans (7/18)
It is not difficult to spot the similes in the story with events happening back then in Europe. Although situated in the Balkans, Borduria and Syldavia mirrored Germany and Austria (8/18)
But there were several other contemporary allusions. The agitators group that Müsstler ran was called the Iron Guard (11/18)
Hergé’s fears were to be proven true in May, 1940 when Germany invaded Belgium and also the Netherlands & Luxembourg. Belgium fell to the Germans after 18 days of fighting. Hergé & his wife were forced to flee to France (14/18)
The magazine Le Vingtième Siècle - whose children’s supplement Le Petit Vingtième carried the Tintin adventures - was forced to shut down. Hergé returned to Belgium after King Leopold’s appeal and joined Le Soir where he continued Tintin’s journey (15/18)
And in a chilling “real following fiction” development, Germany invaded Poland just weeks after Ottokar’s Sceptre completed release (16/18)
Dante had famously written, “the darkest corners of hell are reserved for those who maintain their neutrality in times of moral crises.” In the times that we live in, we would do well to remember these lines (18/18)
Source: Tintin - Hergé and his Creation, Harry Thompson
Images:
Tweet 2: en.wikipedia.org
Tweet 3 (Hitler enters Austria): By Unknown- Germany- WWII - An album in the private collection of H. Blair Howell, CC BY-SA 4.0, commons.wikimedia.org
Images:
Tweet 2: en.wikipedia.org
Tweet 3 (Hitler enters Austria): By Unknown- Germany- WWII - An album in the private collection of H. Blair Howell, CC BY-SA 4.0, commons.wikimedia.org
Tweet 9: By Unidentified photographer - img.audiovis.nac.gov.pl, Public Domain, commons.wikimedia.org
Tweet 10: Bordurian war plane - wargamingmiscellanybackup.wordpress.com
German Heinkel - By Unknown author - San Diego Air & Space Museum, Public Domain, commons.wikimedia.org
Tweet 10: Bordurian war plane - wargamingmiscellanybackup.wordpress.com
German Heinkel - By Unknown author - San Diego Air & Space Museum, Public Domain, commons.wikimedia.org
…rgamingmiscellanybackup.wordpress.com/2012/05/19/a-s…
A small paint conversion?
I have always been a fan of the Tintin books, and one of my favourites is KING OTTOKAR’S SCEPTRE. At...
commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?cu…
commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?cu…
img.audiovis.nac.gov.pl/PIC/PIC_2-1251…
Tweet 12 (Iron Guard logo): By SkyBon - Own work, Public Domain, commons.wikimedia.org
Tweet 13: King Muskar XII of novel - tintin.fandom.com
King Leopold III of Belgium - By Svenska Dagbladet - Svenska Dagbladets Årsbok 1926 [1], Public Domain, commons.wikimedia.org
Tweet 13: King Muskar XII of novel - tintin.fandom.com
King Leopold III of Belgium - By Svenska Dagbladet - Svenska Dagbladets Årsbok 1926 [1], Public Domain, commons.wikimedia.org
Tweet 17: By Unknown - Original publication: UnknownImmediate source:, Fair use, en.wikipedia.org
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