DiscoverWait! That Actually Happened?Podcast - The Bal des Ardents, or “Ball of the Burning Men”
Podcast - The Bal des Ardents, or “Ball of the Burning Men”

Podcast - The Bal des Ardents, or “Ball of the Burning Men”

Update: 2025-10-16
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This Party Was Fire!

On January 28, 1393, King Charles VI of France and five nobles dressed as “wild men” for a masquerade, covering themselves in pitch (tar) and flax to look hairy and savage, then chaining themselves together for a group dance. When the king’s brother arrived late with a torch and got too close to investigate the costumes, the highly flammable outfits instantly ignited, creating human torches chained together. Four nobles burned to death while the king only survived because his teenage aunt tackled him and smothered the flames with her dress. The disaster worsened the king’s existing mental illness, destabilized France, and contributed to French defeats in the Hundred Years’ War, proving that even in 1393, people should have known not to combine tar-covered costumes with open flames.

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Podcast - The Bal des Ardents, or “Ball of the Burning Men”

Podcast - The Bal des Ardents, or “Ball of the Burning Men”

Daniel P. Douglas