Using a modern framework to examine #ViscountCastlereagh's exposure to #MentalHealth risks raises historiographical questions. The way we experience chronic stress may not be the same way that those in the 18th/19thC experienced it. 1/
We have to consider broader historical understandings of #stress. The idea of mental exhaustion has a long history. A writer in Aristotle’s circle in c. 350 B.C.E identified ‘melancholia’ as an affliction that was particularly tied to learned men, including statesmen. 2/
Analysis of stress in the #19thC has identified drivers that are, in fact, quite similar to those of our own era, namely: working hours that were growing longer and more intense; the growth of information and new technologies; and anxiousness about an uncertain environment. 3/
The focus on industrialisation that dominated most writing on workplace health in the 19thC neglected what we would now term ‘knowledge work’ (i.e. work focused on solving non-routine problems, requiring expertise, and highly interdependent), which includes policymaking. 4/
It's not until later in the century that writers on workplace health begin to differentiate between physical and mental labour. Arlidge (1892) identifies the ‘governing classes’ as a distinct category of workers. 5/
He wrote: "it is a well-known fact that the duties and responsibilities of the higher offices of Government sorely tax both mental and bodily strength, and that their occupants not a few break down under the strain, if not permanently, at least for a season.” 6/
Charles Mills (1884) made perhaps the most relevant analysis of stress: He included a high proportion of men engaged in government; he specifically looked at mental stress; and he focused on ‘brain work' (recognition of knowledge work as a distinct realm). 7/
Mills identified long hours/complex work as drivers of mental stress but he also highlighted aspects that were less tangible. Mills stated that a political career is “too often one of uncertainty, disappointment, and vain longing,”--all factors that point to emotional demand. 8/
Mills alluded to the competitive nature of the political space, which can result in conflicts based on personalities, values, and ethics. For a politician, “Others aspire to his place, which can only be held by hard work, and too often also by low arts.” 9/
More directly, Mills identified the public nature of politics as a direct cause of mental strain. In this, we can see the genesis of several points of exposure to chronic stress (e.g. tensions with the public, feelings of lack of reward, and low autonomy) 10/
“The faults and foibles of a public man are laid bare, his mistakes are magnified, and his best efforts are sometimes mis-interpreted by a thoughtless or merciless press.” 11/
While these observations come from the late 19thC, it's worth noting that the shifts in information, technology, and society that are usually associated with the Victorian period often had their genesis in the late Georgian/Regency periods. 12/
For instance, the significant growth in the complexity of government through the 19thC began with the need for the British state to respond to the global nature and economic implications of the #NapoleonicWars. 13/
And, as Langford states, the model of ideal statesman ("cold, correct, unpretentious") that is associated with the Victorian period has its origins "in the generation which was born around 1760, entered public life around 1790, and summed up the lessons of a life around 1820."14/
In this respect, we can understand Castlereagh not just as a statesman of the Regency period but also as a prototype of the Victorian statesman--and susceptible to all the mental stresses and strains that Mills identified 60yrs later, and that mirror our modern framework. 15/15
Image: Richard Dighton, @britishmuseum (BM), 1852,1116.559
Between roughly 1818-1828, Richard Dighton did a series of profile portraits of men in Regency London's high society. Most were etchings, and the BM has digitized many prints held in its collection--they are worth your time if you're interested in Regency society, style, and art.
The earlier prints of this particular portrait, published individually by Dighton himself, are clearly dated to July 1821. Copies show up in the collections of the @britishmuseum, @NPGLondon, and @RCT.
(details shown here are from prints in the BM and RCT collections)
The late-Renaissance building with an inner courtyard surrounded by arcades was multi-functional: it housed the royal stables, guest apartments, the royal art collection, and an armoury. In fact, the ground floor is still used as the stables for the vaunted Lipizzaner Stallions.
Around 1711 the Stallburg also became the home of the Ziffernkanzlei--the 'Number Office.'
A name both suggestive and vague (and one of many used throughout the organization's existence), it was really the secret office for mail interception and decryption.
Castlereagh Creeping the House of Lords, or the Story of a Misidentified Portrait.
A 🧵
2 artists captured the proceedings against Queen Caroline in the #HouseofLords in 1820, and both include #ViscountCastlereagh. Let's start with James Stephanoff.
Stephanoff shows Castlereagh perched on a staircase, watching from a small window. The 1823 key for Stephanoff's work identifies this figure as "The Marquis of Londonderry [Castlereagh], who usually took his station on the stairs leading to the gallery during the investigation."
The other portrayal of the trial is, of course, George Hayter's monumental painting. Hayter, however, shows Castlereagh positioned in the box of the Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod, on the bottom right corner.
I was at a loss for how to mark the day after spending the last 2 years writing the research article on which all these tweets are based.
Maybe something more reflective is fitting.
I had always been interested in Castlereagh from a diplomatic and political standpoint...
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...and became increasingly interested in exploring the mental health aspect of his story because it was a challenging area that would combine history, politics, psychology, medicine, and other disciplines.
In the last few months of #Castlereagh200 threads we've covered a lot of ground, looking at many stressors that put Castlereagh's #MentalHealth at risk.
Now that we're only days from the bicentenary of his death, let's look at some conclusions.
First, the stress on Castlereagh was cumulative and pervasive. The downward spiral that he experienced in the weeks preceding his suicide was only the final chapter in a story that had been developing for yrs. The overlap between the professional and the social made it worse.
2/
Castlereagh was arguably a successful policymaker. But what did that require? He had to be a strategist, a tactician, a courtier, a whip, an orator, a master of protocol, an ambassador, a traveller, a negotiator, a socialite, and a political campaigner.
3/
As we turn the corner into the week of August 12, I want to focus this #Castlereagh200 🧵 on a final area of #MentalHealth risk connected to the workplace: job insecurity.
If you've been following these #Castlereagh200 threads, you may call that I'm drawing from a risk framework that forms the basis for my upcoming article on Castlereagh and mental health. See the attached table, adapted from Boini, 2020 and Gollac et al, 2011.
2/14
Job insecurity has long been recognized as a mental health risk. But was Castlereagh's job insecure? No.
Electorally he was in safe seats, only losing his home seat briefly in 1805. His position in Cabinet after 1812 was arguably more secure than Liverpool's.