With the
interest in the 1815 Battle of Waterloo there has begun a review of many of the
matters of history relating to that time.
One is the story of Nathan Rothschild who was later alleged to have made
a fortune on insider knowledge about the result.
This article in the Independent today gives a summary of it, how it
came about and a brief discussion of what may have been or not. As it happens in the last few weeks I have
been trawling old newspapers, not on this subject but other matters relating to
individuals around at the time.
It was obvious
that there was going to be a battle, but it was much less clear who might win,
how great a victory might be and what might be the consequences. Wellington, a formidable general had a makeshift
force stiffened by cadres of good experienced troops.
Napoleon had
the remains of his once great Imperial Army to which had been added sundry
conscripts and volunteers with little experience or time for training. It would depend on who chose the ground and
made best use of it.
Had Napoleon
won, it has been assumed he would once again try to dominate Europe, but we do
not know that. He might have settled for
a treaty that allowed him to return and agreed to other issues that removed the
core of Allied unity.
He would have
known that if he did inflict defeat on the allied force there was a good chance
that it would have been very difficult to put together another joint force and
given Britain's problems if they let him have France he might let them have
control of the sea.
So what was
going on in London? Looking at the newspapers
and journals of this period on other matters they were only as good as the
information they could print or could know about. The financial market data is therefore
limited to comment, opinion and current pricing.
What actually
went on in the brokerages, banks and financial houses was a complex and highly
skilled activity that was kept secret to those who knew and who managed
it. Financial journalism as we came to
know it did not exist and nor were there academic or other regulatory bodies
with interests. The Bank of England was
more secret that any of them.
Historians of
the present and past attempting to fathom or come up with hard evidence cannot
find it. Even if there were records
available from the past interpreting them would be very difficult and even more
so penetrating the minds and expertise of the brokers, bankers and others of
that time.
My answer is
quite a simple one. The puzzle of who
did well and who did not in 1815 may not be clear at all because the money men
at the time had already priced in their dealings to allow for what was
certain. That was there would be a
battle and the winner could not be predicted.
If this seems
outlandish remember that in very many financial crashes and upheavals some
money men seem to come out of with a profit, maybe smaller, maybe larger,
depending on the pricing they allowed in their dealings. Market manipulation is a very old trade and
not a new one.
The reason why
the Rothschild's did well was because they were good at it and as a European
outfit were able to access other markets as part of the warp and weft of their
trade. They survived and those who did
became rich. One reason may have been
their relatively conservative financing allied to good information sources.
None of these
money men would have needed last gasp information that just beat the official
announcements with all the serious risks that such positions would have
entailed given the immediate uncertainties of what might follow. They did not work that way.
But if Nathan Rothschild
had a side bet on Field Marshal Blucher as a personal small money gamble it
would not surprise me at all.
You posted about ''Le chant de l'Oignon'' the other day, obliquely, but it stuck with me.
ReplyDeleteAnother Napoleonic article, and I have to post my favourite Napoleonic tune for you.
First a wee bit back story; Reading ''The Adventures of Brigadier Gerard'' as a teen, and Conan Doyle's evocative scenes of the Guarde Imperial drum corps—RATAPLAN—RATAPLAN—RATAPLAN...
So; dedicated to Nicola: La victoire est a nous.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7KHMXZBEZrg
It is a hell of a tune that one but the clip I saw also had "Brighton Camp" aka The Girl I Left Behind Me, see John Wayne cavalry films. Also for the French see the end of Act Two of "La Boheme". Personally, I had family at Waterloo including one from Ayr with the 71st. In my time my lot marched to "The Garryowen".
ReplyDeleteAye, that recording was from the film 'Waterloo', a Soviet-Italian production.
DeleteMind you I really do like this treatment of the British Grenadiers from 'Barry Lyndon'
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1zSowOS4Wyg