Sunday, May 12, 2013

Dictators And Their Mothers

Photo: Stalin's mother Ketevan Geladze. Wikipedia

Dictators With Mommy Issues -- Foreign Policy

Some of the world's most ruthless leaders have had surprisingly close -- if deeply troubled -- relationships with their mothers.

The Austrian neurologist Sigmund Freud, who was very close with his mother, once remarked that "people who know that they are preferred or favored by their mother give evidence in their lives of a peculiar self-reliance and an unshakeable optimism which often seem like heroic attributes and bring actual success to their possessors."

Whether you subscribe to Freud's theories or not, it's certainly true that some of the world's most powerful rulers have had fascinating relationships with their mothers -- some surprisingly loving, others ambivalent or just plain bitter. Alexander the Great's power-hungry mother, Olympias, is thought to have been a driving force behind her son's ascension to the throne of Macedonia. Napoleon Bonaparte's mother, Letizia, taught her son discipline ("she sometimes made me go to bed without supper," he once recalled) and followed him to exile in Elba and then back to Paris before the Battle of Waterloo.

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My Comment
: An interesting story for Mothers Day.

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