Keen On America

From the Muckers to the Mullahs: Christopher Clark on the Lessons of History

Mar 5, 2026
Christopher Clark, Regius Professor of History at Cambridge and author of The Sleepwalkers, explores the fake Mucker scandal in 19th-century Königsberg and what it reveals about social panic and elite overreach. He connects how rumor, religious divides, and failures of empathy shape politics. The conversation ends with reflections on present risks and the uncertain fallout of actions toward Iran.
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ANECDOTE

Scandal Without A Transgression

  • The Muckers scandal in Königsberg was a high-profile trial that ended with convictions reversed on appeal.
  • Christopher Clark recounts how two clergymen were accused of invented sexual crimes and later exonerated when a young lawyer exposed the fabrications.
INSIGHT

Steam Made Mysticism Look Scientific

  • The accused clergymen followed Schoenherr's cosmogony of two spheres, which seemed scientific in the steam age.
  • Clark highlights that steam technology made old mystical ideas look prophetic, increasing suspicion of heterodox beliefs.
INSIGHT

Listening Clergy Triggered Male Backlash

  • Johann Ebel drew many well-to-do women because he listened to them about intimate marriage problems.
  • Clark argues male jealousy and fear of losing patriarchal authority drove the smear campaign more than actual misconduct.
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