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How a Fake Country Broke British Banks


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Imagine a global economic meltdown triggered not by war or famine, but by an invented Central American country that literally isn't on the map. In this episode of pplpod, we conduct a structural archaeology of Ovington’s Bank, Stanley John Weyman’s 1922 literary masterpiece that chronicles the devastating Panic of 1825. We unpack the "Poyais Mirage," analyzing how the Scottish adventurer Gregor MacGregor fabricated a sovereign nation out of thin air to sell fraudulent bonds to a delusional public, ultimately causing 70 real-world banks to fail. We deconstruct the "Solvency Paradox," exploring why a financially sound institution can be destroyed by the "silly sheep" mentality of a terrified crowd during a bank run. By examining the 19th-century Class Warfare between the landed rural gentry and the striving urban banking class, we reveal the friction inherent in Reform Politics and human progress. Join us as we explore the modern "Economic PTSD" that triggered the 21st-century resurgence of this novel following the 2008 financial crisis, proving that while technology changes, Financial Panic remains a perpetual cycle of human nature.

Key Topics Covered:

  • The Poyais Masterclass: Analyzing the mechanics of the MacGregor fraud, from fake national anthems to the tragic reality of settlers dropped into an uninhabited Honduran jungle.
  • Old Money vs. New Capital: Deconstructing the existential threat felt by the traditional aristocracy as power shifted from generational estates to urban commercial centers.
  • The Psychology of the Bank Run: Exploring Weyman’s depiction of the leveling effect of panic, where class distinctions evaporate at the doors of a locked vault.
  • The BBC Resurrection: A look at the 1965 adaptation Heiress of Garth and how the swinging sixties reinterpreted 19th-century financial drama for a mass television audience.
  • Trauma in the Archives: Analyzing why modern publishers revived a 100-year-old novel in 2012 and 2015 to help a post-2008 audience navigate contemporary market anxiety.

Source credit: Research for this episode included Wikipedia articles accessed 3/13/2026. Wikipedia text is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0; content here is summarized/adapted in original wording for commentary and educational use.

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