Archive of Dan Snow's History Hit π§
To get the latest episodes of Dan Snow's History Hit,
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π§ Greeks vs Romans: Empires at War
Greece and Rome, they are the heavyweights of ancient history. But what happened when they came face to face with one another? Tristan is once again joined by Simon Elliott to talk about some of the great clashes that occurred between the Greeks and the Romans. From Cynoscephalae, to Magnesia, to...
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π§ History of the Countryside
The English Countryside. An ever changing environment, or a static, preserved landscape in the service of humanity since the dawn of agriculture?
On the latest episode weβll find out about the historical challenges of conserving and preserving the natural environment.
This week Jimmy is joined ...
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π§ Our Obsession with Nostalgia
Longing to go back to the 'good old days' is nothing new. For hundreds of years, the British have mourned the loss of older national identities and called for a revival 'simple', 'better' ways of life - from Margaret Thatcher's call for a return to 'Victorian values' in the 1980s to William Blake...
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π§ Trade After the Roman Empire
Rivers, Silk roads and camels - how did international trade adapt and survive beyond the Roman Empire into the middle ages? In today's episode Cat is joined by author Hilary Green to talk about her debut non-fiction book, "International Trade in the Middle Ages". Together they examine products l...
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π§ How Stalin, Churchill and Roosevelt Divided Berlin
Berlinβs fate was sealed at the 1945 Yalta Conference: the city, along with the rest of Germany, was to be carved up between the victorious powers - American, British, French and Soviet. On paper, it seemed a pragmatic solution. In reality, once the four powers were no longer united by their comm...
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π§ The Wars of the Roses: Endings
All things must end. This final special episode on the Wars of the Roses deals with a series of endings and considers what finding a date for the end of the conflict means for how we think about this critical period. Lancaster will be revived, only to meet a final end. The House of York seems sec...
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π§ The Truth About Iron Age Wales
The residents of Britain during the Iron Age are often collectively called 'Celts'. However, both before and during the Roman occupation, this term is a huge generalisation. In this episode we explore the real characteristics and variations of the lifestyle and communities of present day Wales in...
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π§ Medieval Myths and Legends
Various legends, characters and myths are associated with the medieval period. The British Isles is filled with prehistoric monuments - from Stonehenge and Wayland's Smithy, the archipelago of Orkney to as far south as Cornwall, Snowdon and Loch Etive, and rivers including the Ness, the Soar and ...
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π§ Nature's Lessons in Happiness with Charlie Corbett
How can nature help us deal with grief? In today's day and age, it can feel like we're detactched from the natural world around us - but how do we find the way, and time, to reconnect with it?
This week Jimmy is joined by Charlie Corbett to talk about his book '12 Birds to Save Your Life'. After...
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π§ Homer
The Iliad and the Odyssey are two of the worldβs most famous poems. But who was their author, Homer, and how have his name and poems survived so long, preserved for almost 3 millennia?
In this episode of The Ancients, Tristan is joined once again by author, classicist, and cultural critic, Daisy...
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π§ Falklands40: The Loss of HMS Ardent
Please note that this episode contains frank discussions of conflict, mental health and suicide.
Admiral Lord West is the former First Sea Lord and Chief of the Naval Staff. In 1982, West commanded the frigate HMS Ardent which was deployed to the South Atlantic for the Falklands War. During the ...
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π§ The White Ship: The Wrecking of Henry Iβs Dynastic Dream
During the night of the 25 November in 1120, a routine crossing of the English Channel went catastrophically wrong. The White Ship disaster saw approximately 300 people perish, including King Henry Iβs only legitimate son and heir. Charles Spencer talks to Matt Lewis about the tragedy, which caus...
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π§ Anglo-Saxon Royals: Unexpected Veggies?
Early medieval royals ate mostly meat, right? Wrong! A new study thatβs made headlines around the world has shown that medieval kings were largely vegetarian! To help shed light on this exciting new discovery, today Cat is joined by Dr Sam Leggett of the University of Edinburgh, a bio-archaeologi...
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π§ The Origins of Homo Sapiens
What do we know about the earliest homonyms to exist? With a story spanning one million years and counting, we're discovering more about how we came to be every day. In this episode of The Ancients, we're on location in the Natural History Museum in London as Tristan covers a huge topic; the hist...
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π§ The Secret Plot to Kill the Government
On the night of February 23 1820, twenty-five impoverished craftsmen assembled in an obscure stable in Cato Street, London, with a plan to massacre the whole British cabinet at its monthly dinner. The Cato Street Conspiracy was the most sensational of all plots aimed at the British state since Gu...
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π§ HMS Black Joke
Please note that this episode contains mentions of racial trauma, slavery and violence.
The most feared ship in Britainβs West Africa Squadron, His Majestyβs Black Joke was one of a handful of ships tasked with patrolling the western coast of Africa in an effort to end hundreds of years of globa...
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π§ The Wars of the Roses: Dynastic War
Part one of this comprehensive trilogy covering the Wars of the Roses left the Yorkist lords attained and in exile.
From this point, the 15th century civil wars were transformed into a bitter procession of dynastic clashes between the rival houses of Lancaster and York - the result of which wou...
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π§ The Wars of the Roses: The Origins
The Wars of the Roses is a complex and fascinating period of English history that dominates the second half of the 15th century and leads to the rise of the Tudor dynasty. Itβs often characterised as a dynastic struggle between Lancaster and York, but it was much more than that.
In this first pa...
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π§ The Birth of Physiology
The treatment of mental health has been rapidly growing and improving over the past few decades, but it actually goes back thousands of years.
Whether it was the Ancient Greek physician Galenβs humoral theory - in which peopleβs mental health was determined by imbalances in the levels of four di...
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π§ Climate Optimism with Lily Cole
Environmental activist and model Lily Cole is On Jimmyβs Farm to discuss how we can protect the planet we love, and the healing power of nature.
Lily started her career as an international model when she was a teenager, but she found herself on a slightly different journey into climate change ac...
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π§ Codebreaking at Bletchley Park
Bletchley Park, Britain's key decryption centre during WWI, is known for the success of breaking the Nazi Enigma codes - experts have suggested that the Bletchley Park codebreakers may have shortened the war by as much as two years.
David Kenyon is the research historian at Bletchley Park. Recor...
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π§ Russian Revolution
Helen Rappaport joined me on the podcast for the third episode of our lockdown learning series to talk about the Russian Revolution. Join Dan Snow in conversation with historian and bestselling author of the internationally acclaimed, Stalingrad, Antony Beevor, as they tell the action-packed stor...
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π§ Mental Health in Victorian Britain
This week is Mental Health Awareness Week in the UK so weβve got a special episode exploring the surprising way Victorians approached mental health treatment in the 19th century. Oral historian Stella Man from the Glenside Hospital Museum in Bristol tells Dan how the Victorians get a bad rap but ...
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π§ Margery Kempe: Medieval Mysticism or Psychosis?
Margery Kempe: mystic, autobiographerβ¦schizophrenic?
In honour of Mental Health Awareness week, Dr Cat Jarman is joined by Dr Alison Torn from Leeds Trinity University to explore the complicated legacy of a woman who is credited as both the first English autobiographer, and case of schizophrenia...