Latest Video Podcasts
Video podcasts for selected episodes and series are now available on the History Hit app.
Subtitles are currently not universally available for video podcasts.
-
Witches Of Essex: Spells, Betrayal, and Deadly Trials | After Dark
This is the story of a 16th century cunning woman, a folk healer, who was accused and found guilty of being a witch. The St Osyth witch trials became a landmark case, setting a dark precedent for the witch hunts that would explode across the country in the century that followed.
Our guest today ...
-
Who Was Joan of Arc? | Dan Snow's History Hit
Teenage peasant, visionary commander, convicted heretic, national saint - Joan of Arc's life reads like a legend. Today, Dan digs past that legend to understand who Joan really was, and why her story still provokes devotion, debate and reinvention 6 centuries later.
-
Who Was Xerxes the Great? | The Ancients
He is one of the most famous rulers of the ancient world, remembered for leading a vast Persian invasion of Greece. Yet Xerxes the Great was far more than just a battlefield king.
In this episode of The Ancients, Tristan Hughes is joined by friend of the show Professor Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones to e...
-
Life Trapped Inside A Medieval Leper Colony | After Dark
Medieval leprosy history, leper colonies, and the King of Jerusalem are explored in this deep dive into the Middle Ages' most feared disease.
What was life really like for patients inside the gates? What did it mean when the 'leper bell' rang? And what happened at a 'living funeral'?
Join Anth...
-
Battle Of Bosworth: End of the Wars of the Roses | Dan Snow's History Hit
In August 1485, the would-be king Henry Tudor went head-to-head with King Richard III - the final, decisive battle of the Wars of the Roses. Only one of these men would leave the battlefield alive, and this bloody clash between Houses York and Tudor would decide the future of Britain.
Joining us...
-
Ancient DNA Reveals New Truth About Our Ancestors | The Ancients
What can ancient DNA tell us about the first homo sapiens to arrive in Arabia over 50,000 years ago? Tristan Hughes is joined by Prof. Pierre Zalloua to delve into the groundbreaking advances in ancient DNA research that illuminate the complex journeys of these early human populations.
They dis...
-
Dan Snow Explains: World War Two's Dambusters | Dan Snow's History Hit
In May 1943, the RAF launched one of the Second World War’s most audacious missions: the Dambusters Raid. Today, we follow the raid as it unfolded, hearing about the remarkable people involved and examining its lasting impact.
-
The 91 Norwegian "Witches" Sentenced to Death | After Dark
It all started when a huge storm drowned 40 men on Christmas Eve, 1617. The people of Vardø, northern Norway, needed someone to blame.
What followed were devastating witch trials, which featured one of the highest execution rates in Europe, and implicated the town's women and the surrounding in...
-
Why Did Medea Kill Her Children? | The Ancients
She helped Jason win the Golden Fleece, betrayed her own family, and became one of the most feared figures in Greek myth. Medea’s name has echoed through the ancient world for over two millennia, a byword for passion and revenge but was she really a villain?
In this episode of The Ancients, Tri...
-
Assassination Attempts That Almost Killed Hitler | Dan Snow's History Hit
What does it take to kill a dictator? In this episode, we explore the most dramatic assassination attempts on Adolf Hitler. From Georg Elser, the lone-wolf carpenter who built a bomb by hand, to the Polish underground’s relentless plots under occupation, and finally Claus von Stauffenberg, the on...
-
The British Empire's Impact on Our World | Dan Snow's History Hit
Tobacco, sugar, rum, cotton, rubber, tea, coffee, spices, industry, borders, slavery, war - all things spread across the globe thanks to the British Empire. At its height in 1922, it was the largest empire the world had ever seen, covering around a quarter of Earth's land surface and ruling over ...
-
Eric Cline On The Sea Peoples Invasion of Ancient Egypt | The Ancients
Sea Peoples, Bronze Age Collapse, and Eric Cline are the focus of today's deep-dive podcast. Tristan Hughes is joined by world-renowned archaeologist and author Eric Cline to interrogate the enigmatic groups that allegedly brought the "G8 of the ancient world" to its knees. We explore the primary...
-
Investigating A Shocking 280-Year-Old Murder Case | After Dark
Eugene Aram was an 18th-century schoolmaster who got away with murder for fourteen years. Then a skeleton was unearthed, and a case that had been forgotten burst into life & created a legend.
-
Alice Roberts On Christianity in Ancient Rome | Dan Snow's History Hit
Around 50 CE, a small group of travellers began to preach that a Jewish man, crucified by the Romans, had risen from the dead. Teaching love, forgiveness and eternal life, this new faith quickly gained followers. By the early fourth century, it was thriving, and over the next hundred years, it ex...
-
Diocletian: The Peasant Who Saved Rome | The Ancients
Rome was coming apart at the seams. Civil wars, economic collapse, breakaway empires, invading armies - the Third Century Crisis pushed the ancient superpower to the edge of extinction. Then an obscure soldier from the Balkans stepped into the chaos.
In this episode, we interview Dr. David Gwynn...
-
Cooking Historically Accurate Christmas Food | Dan Snow's History Hit
Porpoises, beaver tails, boar's head and puffins are just some of the exquisite dishes on medieval tables during the festive season. In this episode, food historian Annie Gray joins Dan in his kitchen to cook up some delicious Christmas fare from ages past. They make wassail - an ancient alcoholi...
-
Why The Vikings Massacred Christians On England's 'Holy Island' | After Dark
The Viking attack on the monastery at Lindisfarne, a remote tidal island in North East England, sent psychological and cultural shockwaves through history. It's a story of blood and terror, but there's more subtlety to it as well, as Maddy and Anthony learn today with returning guest Dr Eleanor B...
-
Inside The Bizarre Biology Of The Stegosaurs | The Ancients
Few dinosaurs are as instantly recognisable as the plated titan Stegosaurus - it's the Jurassic giant with a brain the size of a walnut and a tail that could kill.
In this episode of The Ancients, Tristan Hughes is joined by Dr Susannah Maidment of London’s Natural History Museum to uncover the ...
-
My Family Supplied Poison To a Victorian Serial Killer | After Dark
Maddy and Anthony dig into their own family history in collaboration with Ancestry! They find stories from the darker side of the past in their own family trees. Huge thanks to Ancestry's genealogists and family historians Jenn Utley, Joe Buggy and Christina Copland.
-
How America Invaded (And Almost Won) Canada | Dan Snow's History Hit
Dan narrates the remarkable story of how George Washington's newly established Continental Army tried to conquer Canada in the brutal winter of 1775. The American Revolutionary forces believed their northern neighbour would surely welcome them as liberators, as they themselves fought off the yoke...
-
The Real Translation Of The 10 Commandments | The Ancients
Uncover the historical, archaeological, and religious context of the Ten Commandments (the Decalogue) with Dr. Dylan Johnson.
Historian and biblical scholar Dr. Dylan Johnson joins Tristan Hughes to delve into the complex history of one of the world’s most famous texts. We go beyond the biblical...
-
Why Vikings Were More Surprising Than You Think | After Dark
How dark really were the Vikings? How much of a part did human sacrifice play in their world? And what was their relationship with magic?
Joining Anthony and Maddy in today's episode is historian, author and all-round Viking expert Dr Eleanor Barraclough, to take us back to darkest corners of th...
-
How The Fall of Rome Built Angkor Wat | The Ancients
How did Indian culture shape the wonders of Southeast Asia?
Tristan Hughes is joined by William Dalrymple to explore the fascinating first millennium AD, from vibrant trade dynamics with the Roman Empire to the establishment of powerful Indian trading guilds and the spread of Hinduism and Buddhi...
-
Eleanor Janega on Eleanor of Aquitaine | Dan Snow's History Hit
Eleanor of Aquitaine: The most powerful medieval queen who shaped the Plantagenet dynasty and built the Angevin Empire. A force of nature, Eleanor was twice a queen, first of France and then England, through marriages to King Louis VII and King Henry II. She marched on the Second Crusade leading ...