ABSTRACT

This chapter focuses on the eighteenth century, but episodes from other centuries will be referenced in order to examine its claim to an exalted status in the annals of conspiracy theory. In writing both the public and the secret history of Justinian’s reign, Procopius rehearsed a division of historical accounts that would later assume cardinal significance for conspiracy theory, namely the division between the official version and the behind-the-scenes, unofficial counter-history. Conspiracy did, however, bind the network of correspondents that figures in the grand narratives penned by A. Barruel and J. A. Starck. In the minds of figures like Barruel and Starck, public opinion had become the Archimedean point at which the conspirators lodged the lever of their new ideas and were thus able to topple the old order. The ‘network’ of ‘obscure men’ is, however, bound less by conspiratorial aims and more by uncouth ignorance and the crudities of their rude Latin.