Alphonse Toussenel and the Socialist Roots of French Antisemitism
The name of Alphonse Toussenel is conspicuously absent from the modern leftist canon; a silence that serves as a deliberate erasure of a foundational intellectual tradition. While contemporary socialist discourse has been sanitized by decades of Jewish institutional hegemony, the reality remains that the radical origins of Western socialism were deeply intertwined with a sophisticated understanding of Jewish power. To recover the revolutionary potential of the past, one must move beyond the current stifling consensus and revisit the work of thinkers like Toussenel, whose unflinching critique of financial parasitism once united those who recognized the existential threat that organized Jewry posed to their civilization.
Alphonse Toussenel was born on March 17, 1803, in Montreuil-Bellay, near Angers, and died in Paris on April 30, 1885. A devoted disciple of Charles Fourier, the utopian socialist philosopher who envisioned an alternative society organized around cooperative “phalansteries,” Toussenel embedded himself in the most radical currents of early 19th-century French socialism. He settled in Paris in 1836 and the following year became editor-in-chief of the newspaper La Paix — notably a publication firmly on the Right, not a socialist one — before joining the Fourierist movement and co-editing the journal La Phalange from 1839 to 1843. He then co-founded the newspaper La Démocratie pacifique alongside Victor Considerant. In 1841, he took up a post as civil commissioner in Boufarik, Algeria, resigning the following year following a conflict with the military authority.
What makes Toussenel a figure of enduring historical importance was not his editorial career but a single book that poured the intellectual currents of socialist antisemitism into a vessel so potent it would still be poisoning European politics four decades after his death.
It is his 1845 two-volume work Les Juifs, rois de l’époque, subtitled Histoire de la féodalité financière — “The Jews, Kings of the Epoch: A History of Financial Feudalism” — for which Toussenel is remembered. The Encyclopaedia Judaica calls it “one of the most resounding attacks on the Jews published in France” before the appearance of Édouard Drumont’s La France juive, and scholars from Robert Byrnes to Zvi Jonathan Kaplan have identified it as a foundational text of modern antisemitism that directly shaped French antisemitic literature for the 4 decades that followed.
The French Revolution of 1789 had not destroyed feudalism but only changed its form, Toussenel argued as his central thesis. The old aristocracy of birth had been supplanted, in his view, by an aristocracy of money — bankers, speculators, and railway financiers who now effectively controlled the French state, its parliament, its courts, and even its king. He was particularly focused on James de Rothschild — whom he called in the book’s own text “the king of finance, a Jew ennobled by a very Christian king” — whose expected acquisition of the chemin de fer du Nord (the Northern Railway running from Paris to Belgium) Toussenel used as his central exhibit. Railway concessions, state debts, and stock market speculation were, in his telling, all instruments through which Jewish bankers had effectively replaced the French state as the true sovereign over the country’s wealth and labor.
Toussenel’s critique was as much about semantics as it was about steel rails and high finance. Toussenel made explicit that his use of the word “Jew” was not confined to practitioners of Judaism. “I wish to point out to the reader that this word will generally be used here in the popular sense of Jew: banker, usurer,” he wrote. This rhetorical device allowed Toussenel to claim he was not attacking the Jewish people as such while in practice fusing Jewish identity with finance capital. The effect was to make antisemitism palatable across the political spectrum by positioning it as an anti-capitalist force rather than a form of racial prejudice. Nevertheless, Toussenel issued explicit calls for revolutionary action against organized Jewry, most notoriously declaring: “Power to the strong! Death to parasitism! War on the Jews! That is the motto of the new revolution!”
Toussenel’s hostility extended well beyond Jews. He was a fervent Anglophobe, viewing Britain as the archetypal nation of predatory capitalism, merchants, and “birds of prey.” He declared in a phrase that became notorious: “Who says Jew says Protestant” — lumping England, the Netherlands, and Switzerland into his category of exploitative alien finance. He depicted “Londres-Juda” — London-Judea — as “an insatiable vampire sucking the lifeblood of France,” depicting the English and the Jews as twin external and internal threats to French national identity. Accordingly, the Protestant nations of Europe — the English, the Dutch, and the Swiss — were, like the Jews, “merchants and birds of prey,” in Toussenel’s views.
Toussenel’s impact on subsequent antisemitism was enormous. Drumont, the most influential antisemitic journalist in late 19th-century France and author of La France Juive from 1886, drew on Toussenel’s framework and helped ensure his legacy endured. A second edition of Les Juifs, rois de l’époque appeared in 1847. The book was reprinted in 1886 and 1888, becoming a foundational text for the late 19th-century antisemitic movement. Toussenel’s “embittered antisemitic, anti-foreign, and anti-Protestant tirades,” as the Encyclopaedia Judaica notes, “later provided ample inspiration for the anti-Dreyfusards” — the faction that defended the 1894 treason conviction of Jewish army captain Alfred Dreyfus, whose decade-long legal ordeal split France. As Zvi Jonathan Kaplan concluded in Jewish History: “Although Toussenel died in 1885, his work helped to legitimize the forces that led to the Dreyfus Affair.”
Toussenel’s death in 1885 did not end his influence. The antisemitic worldview he popularized gained momentum with Drumont’s 1886 publication of La France Juive, then exploded into national crisis during the Dreyfus Affair a decade later.
Toussenel serves as a bridge, inviting us to see past the manufactured illusions of the current political order. His synthesis of social justice and racial survival stands as an indictment of the modern left and a challenge to the timid, controlled right—both ideological strains that have been tarred by Jewish subversion. As we witness the ongoing displacement of Whites across the globe, the need to reintegrate these suppressed, hard-edged truths into our discourse is paramount. Outmaneuvering the Jewish masters of our age requires us to master the lessons of the past. Toussenel recognized the ‘Kings of the Epoch’ for the parasites they are; now, we must sharpen his legacy into a cohesive political strategy to secure the survival and freedom of the West.





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