2025 on History Hit

2025 on History Hit

2025 on History Hit
  • American Revolution: This is War! Bunker Hill and the Birth of the US Army

    A History Hit special marking the 250th anniversary of the Siege of Boston (1775-1776), the first chapter in the eight year war for American Independence. It saw the war’s first pitched battle, Bunker Hill - a bloody day and a hollow British victory, won at great cost.

    Dan Snow joins American e...

  • Germany's Wars: One Man's Life

    From the trenches of WW1 to rise of Hitler and the Nazis, never before seen diaries & photos reveal the life of German Soldier & Teacher Wilhelm Kurtz.

    Hidden away since his death in 1982, they are part of an extraordinary archive of documents and personal photographs from the frontline of histo...

  • Young Elizabeth: In Her Own Words - Part One

    History Hit launches the first of a 2-part series about the extraordinary young woman who would become Elizabeth I - one of the most remarkable people to sit on the throne of England, but whose life before her coronation was just as incredible.

    Historian Nicola Tallis, author of Young Elizabeth...

  • Young Elizabeth: In Her Own Words - Part Two

    The completion of this special series, presented by historian Nicola Tallis, about the extraordinary young woman who would become Elizabeth I, using her own letters to bring the story to life.

    In this second episode, Nicola Tallis explores the remarkable evidence of the most perilous time in Eli...

  • Prehistoric Ireland: Secrets of the Stone Age

    The Brú na Bóinne complex holds some of the most extraordinary structures of the prehistoric world. In this episode, History Hit’s Ancients expert Tristan Hughes travels to Ireland to delve into the mysteries of Newgrange and its surrounding tombs — exploring the secrets of Stone Age Ireland. Alo...

  • Prehistoric Ireland: A Metal Revolution

    4000 years ago change was sparking in Ireland, a revolution was on the horizon, the age of metal was coming! Join Tristan Hughes as he traverses Ireland, exploring a golden age of transformation, Ireland’s Bronze Age.

    Copper mining started in Ireland around 2400 BC, in the Chalcolithic, or copp...

  • The Road to Magna Carta

    Magna Carta - one of the most important documents from the medieval period. It’s still held up as a totem of democracy even in today’s turbulent world. But why did Magna Carta get written and sealed in the first place?

    In the first of two very special episodes, Prof. Michael Livingston is headin...

  • Magna Carta

    Magna Carta has inspired and motivated and radicalised countless people all over the world for centuries. It's a document about administration and process, but it has echoed down through the centuries.

    Visiting the places where history was made, examining the documents that tell the story, and s...

  • Dicking About

    Penises, they’re everywhere in ancient art and sculpture…But back in Ancient Greece they were artistically embodied a bit differently…why? Size spoke volumes.

    Dr Kate Lister and her handy tape measure are on a quest to get the measure of Ancient Greek statues in the Cambridge Museum of Classics...

  • Gladiators: History's Greatest Fighters

    Gladiators, from Spartacus to Ridley Scott’s Maximus Decimus Meridius, we’ve been fascinated by them for hundreds of years. Dan Snow is on the hunt to find out why we’re still so obsessed with the men who controlled the Roman arena from the ground up!

    Dan joins experts in Italy and England to in...

  • How Do I Look? The History of Body Modification with Eleanor Janega

    When you wake up every morning and get dressed, you probably don’t stop to think that you’re taking part in a millennia-old cultural tradition. How you choose to look is all part of the long history of humans altering their appearance to make a statement - from self-expression and individuality t...

  • The Cutting Edge: Testing the Stone Age

    History Hit visits Kent State University, Ohio to film a fascinating ‘cutting-edge’ experiment that takes us to the beginnings of the Stone Age, over 2.6 million years ago.

    Kent State is home to one of the world’s leading experimental archaeology laboratories, scientifically exploring the distan...

  • Fortress War - Liberation80: Jersey

    Eighty years ago, on May 9th, 1945, British forces arrived to liberate the Channel Island of Jersey, the only part of the British Isles under Nazi occupation. Now, on the 80th anniversary of that day, Dan Snow travels to the island to explore the five long, challenging years of German rule. He di...

  • Shipwreck! Northumberland and the Great Storm

    History Hit's Dan Snow has been given exclusive access to the incredibly well-preserved remains of the 18th-century warship Northumberland.

    Complete with cannons, muskets and coils of rope, it's a discovery that's rewriting our understanding of the evolution of the Royal Navy.

    The special fil...

  • The Great Crusader Siege: Kerak

    Dan Snow explores Kerak Castle, the massive 750 year-old fortress of the crusader era. Built as the eastern stronghold of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, this is the powerful reality of the “Kingdom of Heaven”, expanding the control of the Frankish crusader states across the River Jordan and even chal...

  • Medieval Cold Case: Stirling Castle Skeletons

    30 years ago, nine skeletons were discovered buried within the grounds of Stirling Castle, Scotland. Their identities remain a mystery, but injuries found on them suggest that they all suffered brutally violent deaths.

    Dr Jo Buckberry, a battle trauma expert at the University of Bradford, believ...

  • Power House: The Medieval Tower of London

    The Tower of London is one of the world’s greatest medieval castles, famous for massive fortifications and bloody executions, but the Tower was also a luxurious medieval palace, reaching its full glory in the 13th century under two famous builder kings: Henry III and Edward I.

    Its full name toda...

  • Industrial Revolution: Canal Mania

    Join Dan Snow on an adventure through beautiful scenery, industrial landscapes and epic engineering, to discover a story that shaped the modern world.

    Dan travels by narrowboat across the canals of England and Wales to explore a transformation in transport and time. Over just a few decades, jour...

  • The Melsonby Hoard

    Join Tristan Hughes on an exploration into the Iron Age, as he uncovers one of the most extraordinary archaeological discoveries in British history.

    With exclusive access to the Melsonby Hoard, quite possibly the largest Iron Age hoard ever found in Britain, Tristan explores a treasure trove of ...

  • Steam: 200 Years on the Tracks

    200 years ago, the sound and pace of the world changed forever...On September 27th, 1825, the Locomotion Number One made its first journey on the Stockton and Darlington railway line, marking the birth of the modern railway.

    Dan Snow climbs aboard a working replica, recreating that historic ori...

  • Rebels: William Wallace

    Who was the real William Wallace? And what kind of rebel was he? Was he like Mel Gibson's 'Braveheart', or a more nuanced rebel, battling amidst the complex Anglo-Scottish power politics of over 700 years ago?

    In this new series, conflict analyst Professor Michael Livingston travels the length a...

  • Scotland's Roman Hoard: The Traprain Treasure

    Follow Tristan Hughes as he is given exclusive access to the National Museum of Scotland for a look at one of Britain’s most spectacular archaeological discoveries: the Traprain Treasure, a dazzling collection of over 250 pieces of late Roman silver.

    Guided by curator Dr Fraser Hunter, we learn ...

  • Henry VIII on Film - Not Just the Tudors... Lates

    Few British monarchs loom as large in the public imagination as King Henry VIII. Straddling the line between man and myth, he is best known for his infamous six marriages and his penchant for beheadings. But where does fiction meet fact? In cinema and on television, he has been portrayed by a hos...

  • Rebels: Owain Glyndŵr

    In the second part of his new series, conflict analyst Professor Michael Livingston is continuing his journey across the length and breadth of the United Kingdom on the trail of some of Britain’s best known rebels.

    In this episode Michael is heading to Wales to discover the astonishing story of ...