Archive of Dan Snow's History Hit π§
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π§ Margaret Beaufort: Tudor Matriarch
Nicola Tallis joins Dan to talk about Margaret Beaufort, the mother of Henry VII and matriarch of the Tudor dynasty.
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π§ Mary Queen of Scots with Kate Williams
Dan Snow and Kate Williams talk about the rise and fall of Mary Queen of Scots.
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π§ Mary Stuart: The Play with Anna Whitelock and Robert Icke
Dan talks to Robert Icke, whose new adaptation of Mary Stuart is at the Duke of York's Theatre. He also discusses the play and its historical context with Anna Whitelock.
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π§ What Could Labour Learn From Harold Wilson?
In the week of the Labour Party when polls indicate that the party is likely to form the next government, it seems an opportune moment to examine what lessons they might be able to draw from their own history. But why Harold Wilson?
Harold Wilson won four general elections. More than Clement Atl...
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π§ Mary Wollstonecraft with Bee Rowlatt
Dan talks to Bee Rowlatt about the life and death of the author of A Vindication of the Rights of Women, Mary Wollstonecraft.
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π§ Mata Hari: The Truth Behind The Legend
More than 70 years after her death, Mata Hari is still a household name throughout the Western world. So who was this daughter of a Dutch hat-maker, who was executed for espionage after a secret trial during the darkest days of World War One? Julie Wheelwright joined me on the pod to guide me thr...
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π§ Maud West, the Original Miss Marple with Susannah Stapleton
Maud West, operated her own detective agency during the Golden Age of crime in the period after World War One. She used all manner of disguises and tactics to gather information for her clients and to subvert the expected roles for women in this period. Producer: Peter Curry
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π§ Max Eisen: Surviving Auschwitz
Max Eisen was only 15 when he and his family were taken from their Hungarian home to the infamous Auschwitz Concentration Camp during the Second World War. All of his relatives were killed;only Max survived to see VE Day and eventual liberation. 75 years on from being liberated, he talks about th...
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π§ A Short History of the Bank of England
As the UK's bond market has suffered its biggest fall in decades and the pound has reached its lowest ever price against the US dollar, Dan talks to Dr Nuno Palma, a senior lecturer and associate professor in economics at the University of Manchester about the Bank of England. Dr Palma explains i...
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π§ Max Hastings on the Humanity Behind Warfare
Dan sits down with Max Hastings to talk about the humanity behind warfare, and other wide ranging topics.
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π§ King Cnut and the End of the Viking Age
Dr. Cat Jarman concludes her month-long series about her favourite, specialist subject - the Vikings.
Cnut the Great became King of England in 1016, King of Denmark in 1018 and King of Norway in 1028, creating the North Sea Empire. In todayβs episode Cat talks to Dr. Caitlin Ellis about Cnut, hi...
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π§ Mediaeval Bodies with Jack Hartnell
Dan talks to Jack Hartnell about how people in the Middle Ages saw their own (and other people's) bodies.
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π§ Melvyn Bragg on Heloise and Abelard
Melvyn Bragg talks to Dan about a philosopher and a scholar in the 12th century. Abelard was one of the best known theologians of the medieval era, and his love affair with HΓ©loΓ―se, characterised famously by the letters that they sent to each other are legendary. Producer: Natt Tapley Audio: Pete...
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π§ Meuse Argonne: America's Bloodiest Battle
Dan Snow visits the National World War One Museum in Kansas and discovers more about the Meuse Argonne Offensive in 1918.
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π§ MI9: The Secret Service for Escape and Evasion
Helen Fry joined me on the podcast to talk about the thrilling history of MI9. The WWII organisation engineered the escape of Allied forces from behind enemy lines.
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π§ Michael Palin on The Erebus
Dan Snow wrangles with a Python! He talks to comedy legend Michael Palin about his new book, Erebus The Story of a Ship. The book tells the devastating true story of the Franklin expeditions to find the Northwest Passage, and how their history only slowly came to light.
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π§ Migration in Medieval Europe
I was delighted to be joined by Miri Rubin of Queen Mary University, London. In a terrific new book, Miri has scooped up a seemingly modern topic - migration - and settled it into the bustling town centres of medieval Europe. We discussed how these cities accommodated a plethora of languages, rel...
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π§ Missing World War Two B-25 Bombers Found in the Pacific Ocean with Dr. Eric Terrill
Project Recover is a public-private partnership to enlist 21st century science and technology combined with in-depth archival and historical research in a quest to transform the approaches to underwater search to locate aircraft associated with American servicemen still unaccounted for during war...
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π§ Top Five Dinosaurs
Theyβre big. Theyβre fierce. And theyβre extinct. This is how todayβs guest - palaeontologist, evolutionary biologist and Senior Editor of the science journal Nature, Henry Gee, sums up why we have a continued fascination with dinosaurs.
Join Tristan and Henry as they take a deep dive into their ... -
π§ Monarchy
For hundreds of years, monarchy has reigned as the dominant political model in Europe. But how has this system - where political life was shaped by the births, marriages and deaths of the ruling family - maintained such a strong grip for so long? How did these dynasties cope with female rule, chi...
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π§ Moscow Metro
Dan explores the Moscow Metro in search of history.
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π§ Moscow's Communist Dorm
In 1931, an enormous apartment building was completed in Moscow. Challenging the Kremlin for architectural supremacy on the Moskva River, it was the largest residential building in Europe, combining 505 furnished apartments with every modern luxury - a cinema, library, tennis court and shooting r...
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π§ Mothering with Professor Sarah Knott
Professor Sarah Knott talks to Dan about the history of motherhood and childbirth. She hasn't taken a linear approach in her research, so her discussion of mothering adopts a broad approach, looking at a variety of cultures and time periods and how they approach one of the most fundamental human ...
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π§ Agatha Christie with Lucy Worsley
Agatha Christie is the best-selling fiction writer of all time and her many detective novels, short stories and plays have gripped and entertained millions around the world. Her real life was just as fascinating as any of her crime novels. It was full of love and loss, travel and adventure and an...