Illustration from an 1894 edition of The Three Musketeers. Public domain, via Wikimedia CommonsFew phrases in literature have travelled as widely as “all for one, and one for all”. It has come to signify loyalty, courage and a form of friendship that appears to transcend circumstance.First published in 1844 in serial form, The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas (1802–1870) quickly established itself as one of the most compelling adventure narratives of the 19th century. Dumas was among the most prolific and widely read writers of his age, working across drama, journalism, travel writing and historical fiction on an extraordinary scale. His major novels, including The Count of Monte Cristo (1844–46) and the cycle of novels featuring the young adventurer Gascon d’Artagnan, incorporating The Three Musketeers, Twenty Years After (1845) and The Vicomte of Bragelonne (1847-50), were shaped by serial publication, which demanded pace, suspense and strong character differentiation.At the same time, as lesser-known works such as Isaac Laquedem (1852–1553) suggest, Dumas conceived of his writing not only as popular entertainment, but as ambitious historical narrative on an epic scale. This dual orientation, to mass readership and large-scale historical imagination, helps explain the structure of The Three Musketeers, where vivid character types, rapid plotting, and historical setting combine to produce a narrative that is at once accessible and enduring.History and narrativeRecent developments have returned attention to the historical figure behind the story. In March 2026, archaeologists in Maastricht uncovered remains believed to belong to Charles de Batz de Castelmore (c.1611–1673), also known as d’Artagnan, reportedly killed during the siege of the city during the Franco-Dutch War. Scientific confirmation remains pending. Yet the discovery matters less for what it proves than for what it reveals: the persistent overlap between history and narrative. Dumas’s novel has long occupied that space, drawing authority from the 17th century, while reshaping it for 19th-century readers.Set in France during the reign of Louis XIII (r.1610–1643) and shaped by the political reach of Cardinal Richelieu (in office 1624–1642), The Three Musketeers brings together court intrigue, ambition and honour in a tightly constructed narrative world. Portrait of Cardinal Richelieu – Philippe de Champaigne (1642). Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons From the outset, Dumas signals that he is not writing history in a strict sense. Drawing on supposed memoirs and anecdotal fragments, he constructs a world defined by rivalry, violence and performance. This is not a flaw but a method. The novel’s enduring appeal rests not on historical accuracy, but its capacity to distil and dramatise ideals: comradeship, honour and masculine identity. These are not stable conditions; they are values under pressure, shaped by the political culture of early modern France.The narrative begins with the arrival in Paris of the young d’Artagnan, a provincial outsider seeking advancement in the royal service. His ambition reflects the social mobility of the period, even within a hierarchical society. Through a chain of misunderstandings, he offends Athos, Porthos and Aramis, arranging to duel each in turn. Yet this ritualised violence, rooted in the honour culture of the 17th century, produces an unexpected outcome. When confronted by the guards of Richelieu, the four men fight together and emerge as allies. Conflict becomes the basis of solidarity.From this moment, the personal and the political become inseparable. The narrative draws in the court of Anne of Austria, queen consort of France from 1615, and her connection with the English courtier George Villiers (1592–1628), whose influence in Anglo-French relations shaped the politics of the 1620s. The result is a world structured by secrecy, surveillance and manipulation. Episodes such as the quarrel at Meung, when d'Artagnan is affronted by a man who mocks his shabby horse, or the Musketeers’ recovery of the queen’s diamonds are set against the backdrop of wider tensions, including the lead-up to the Siege of La Rochelle (1627–28). Chance and calculation operate together, but always within a defined political order. Louis XIII, Anne of Austria and their son Louis XIV, flanked by Cardinal Richelieu and the Duchesse de Chevreuse (17th century). Circle of Philippe de Champaigne, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons Models of masculinityAt the centre of the novel stand four figures whose differences are as important as their unity. Their bond, expressed in their famous motto, does not arise from likeness but from contrast. Each represents a distinct model of masculinity shaped by the social and political expectations of the early 17th century.Athos embodies restraint and authority. Marked by a concealed past, he reflects an older aristocratic code rooted in lineage and honour. His authority derives from self-control rather than display, recalling a model of noble identity already under strain in the 1620s.Porthos operates through display. His concern with wealth, clothing and reputation reflects a world in which status must be asserted as well as inherited. His performative masculinity reveals the instability of rank in a society where appearance and recognition are closely linked.Aramis is divided between religious vocation and worldly ambition. His career reflects the continuing entanglement of church and state in 17th-century France. His duplicity mirrors a political culture in which allegiance is rarely singular.D’Artagnan is the outsider navigating this system. As a provincial noble of limited means, he represents a form of social mobility tied to service and merit. His success depends on his ability to read and adapt to a changing political environment. These four men do not form a natural unity. Their friendship is constructed through duels, shared risks and mutual dependence. It is sustained by adherence to a code of honour rooted in the practices of their time. Their bond is contingent and historically grounded.The motto “all for one, and one for all” should be read in this light. It expresses an aspiration rather than a condition. The bond it describes must be enacted within a culture that constantly tests it.Duelling culture provides the mechanism for this enactment. Violence is not an anomaly, but a recognised part of aristocratic life in 17th-century France. Honour is defended publicly; identity is secured through action. The transformation of rivalry into solidarity is not accidental, but structural.This model of comradeship rests on three elements: loyalty, risk and shared violence. Each reinforces the others. Trust is established through danger, and collective identity overrides individual interest when required. Friendship becomes a practice rather than a feeling. Alexandre Dumas (1855). Public domain Such a model differs sharply from modern conceptions of friendship. Where contemporary ideals emphasise choice and emotional affinity, Dumas presents a form of association shaped by obligation and discipline. It reflects the conditions of its historical setting.Politics in the novel follows the same pattern. It is performative rather than transparent. Power operates through networks, intermediaries and controlled displays of loyalty. Richelieu’s authority rests as much on information and influence as on formal position.Within this system, allegiance is unstable. The Musketeers serve the king, yet act with a degree of autonomy that reflects the fluidity of early modern political structures. Intrigue becomes the normal mode of engagement.Loyalty, honour and friendshipWomen play a decisive role in this political world. Anne of Austria’s position is both central and precarious, shaped by dynastic politics and international alliances. D'Artagnan’s love interest Madame Bonacieux, though socially modest, becomes a conduit for political action. Their roles show that power extends beyond formal institutions. Through these figures, Dumas demonstrates how private relationships shape public outcomes. Emotional ties become political forces. The distinction between personal and political collapses, reflecting the realities of court society.The novel’s continued relevance lies in this clarity. Its themes remain legible because they are historically grounded, yet structurally recognisable. Loyalty is tested, honour is contested, and friendship becomes a form of identity.The cultural afterlife of The Three Musketeers reflects this. Across numerous adaptations, the figures of d’Artagnan and the Musketeers remain recognisable because they embody enduring patterns of association rather than fixed historical realities. Léon Bary, Eugene Pallette, Douglas Fairbanks and George Siegmann in the 1921 film adaptation of The Three Musketeers. Public domain. The appeal lies in precision rather than simplicity. The moral framework is clear, even when outcomes are uncertain. The narrative’s pace conceals a consistent structure grounded in historical context.“All for one, and one for all” endures because it articulates a solution to a persistent problem: how to sustain unity in a world defined by competition and mistrust. The novel does not resolve this tension. Instead, it stages it within the political and social conditions of 17th-century France. The Musketeers’ bond is fragile, shaped by ambition, pride and circumstance. But it holds because it is continually reinforced.In this sense, The Three Musketeers offers not a record of the past but a historically grounded model of association. It suggests solidarity is possible, but only under conditions of risk and mutual obligation. That is why the motto persists. It names an ideal that is difficult to realise, yet difficult to abandon. Amid strained alliances and shifting loyalties of our own time, it reads less as nostalgia than as a challenge: not what such unity once meant, but whether it can still be sustained.Darius von Guttner Sporzynski does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.