• Historical Background: From The Cold War To The Suez Crisis

    The timeline of The Crown gradually follows the life of Elizabeth, from her marriage in 1947 to her reign over the United Kingdom onwards. At this moment, the series has released two seasons, depicting the Queen’s life until the year 1963. However, if Elizabeth II is the main character of the show, the historical background happens to be a regular part of the series as well. Indeed, the timeline covering the two seasons depicts a slow transition from the post-second-world war civilization to a modern society. Yet, this progression has not been made without any confrontation and the beginning of Queen Elizabeth II’s reign witnesses two major international conflicts: The Cold War and The Suez Crisis.

    This article thus aims to review what led to such tensions and how the series approached it.

     

    The Cold War (1947 – 1991)

    After the Second World War, although the world was presumed to be at peace, two countries that were allies during the war turned out to be enemies afterwards. On one side, the United States appeared to be perceived as the “heroes” of the Second World War –by, for example, helping to liberate France from the Nazi occupation- and advanced in terms of military equipments –possessing the atomic bomb and using it against Japan-, while on the other side, the Soviet Union disagreed with the policies of their former allies. Those discords led to the demarcation of two camps: the Western Block which included the United States and its allies and the Eastern Block which referred to the Soviet Union.

    The Cold War did not, in any case, resemble to the First or the Second World War. While the two latter were frontal military confrontations with a consequent amount of civil fatalities, the Cold War was all about technological and cultural contests. The most major example could be the conquest of space. On one side, the Soviets were the first one to conquer space by sending the satellite Sputnik 1 in 1957 but were unable to send men in the space yet. Meanwhile, the United States achieve to send men on the moon with the mission Appollo 11, in 1969.

    As a result, the Cold War was an endless fight of improvement and propaganda that the rest of the world witnessed while choosing its camp. It eventually ended with Soviet Dissolution but the economic opposition between the United States and Russia still remains present today.

    Surprisingly enough, although the series opens with the marriage of Elizabeth and Philip, which took place in 1947, that is to say, the same year the Cold War begun, the conflict is only mentioned in the seventh episode of the first season, "Scientia Potentia Est", in 1953. Indeed, in 1953, the Soviet Union had tested their first nuclear bomb, leading the Prime Minister Winston Churchill to call for an international meeting with Eisenhower, president of the United States. Nevertheless, the Cold War is mainly approached as a subplot while the health of Winston Churchill is spotlighted.

     

    The Suez Crisis (1956-1957)

    In order to fully understand the controversy, it is necessary to look back further in the past. The Suez Canal is a waterway located between the African and the Asian continent and which link the Mediterranean Sea to the Red Sea. The Canal can be considered as a strategic crossing point since it prevented from bypassing Africa to reach the Mediterranean Sea. In 1956, the Suez Canal was controlled by the British and the French, while an international access to the canal with the Convention of Constantinople. Nevertheless, because of the Cold War climate, tensions were built within Soviet and Western allies.

    The whole crisis relied on an unkept promise from the American and the British to finance an embankment for the Egyptians because of their proximity to the Soviet Union. As a result, Nasser, president of Egypt, took control of the canal as a sign of rebellion. Strong military confrontations ensued between France, Britain and Israeli against Egypt. The United Nation asked for a cease-fire in 1957, letting Egypt victorious in its rebellion. Meanwhile, Israel was allowed to use the Canal but France and Britain lost their influence over the strategic location in the Middle East.

    As for the Cold War in the first season, the Suez Crisis is more approached as a subplot raising conflict within the British political landscapes than anything else. Little context is explained through the series but the Britain’s hesitation to engage in a military response. The Suez Canal is overall perceived as a catalyst which pushed Anthony Eden to resign from his status of Prime Minister.  

     

    Sources :

    • Cold War. (2018). In Encyclopædia Britannica
    • Wikipedia - Cold War
    • Suez Crisis. (2018). In Encyclopædia Britannica
    • Suez Canal. (2018). In Encyclopædia Britannica

     

    « Coronation: The Crown’s Weight Has Not Only A Figurative SenseOne Time The Monarchy Had Been Influential, One Time It Had Been Influenced »

  • Commentaires

    1
    Laurence Cros
    Jeudi 24 Mai 2018 à 12:43

    About the Cold War: you fail to say the main problem was the different economic and social systems of the two camps: democracy and capitalism in the West, dictatorship and communism in the East. Even though it was a “cold” war, there were a number of open military confrontations between the two sides, particularly in Asia with the Korean War and the Vietnam War. And of course the Suez crisis is part of the Cold War, even though open war was avoided thanks to the UN’s peacekeeping mission. The Suez crisis is also part of the decolonization process of the time; it was unbearable for a nationalist leader like Nasser to continue to accept control of a canal located on Egyptian soil by former colonial powers such as France and Britain. Since the series focused on the crown, it is logical that it should focus on the domestic impact of the Suez crisis. The role of the Queen as leader of the Commonwealth and thus her contribution in keeping the prestige of Britain alive in this difficult time is underlined (for example, the passage when she decides to sail through Gibraltar despite the tensions in the region).

    2
    Herbert
    Samedi 24 Février à 18:48

    course the Suez crisis is part of the Cold War,

    3
    Herb
    Lundi 26 Février à 10:42

    La fiducia è importante. O meglio, è tutto. Dal https://casacinema.pics cinema, imparerete a vedere tutto. 

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