Episodes

  • The Vote To Save a City – The Deadly Mytilinean Debate with Paul Cartledge
    Jul 8 2025
    This week, Jimmy and Armand plunge into the tense world of ancient Athenian democracy, where the fate of an entire city hung on a single vote. The fierce Mytilene Debate showcased the incredible power of demagogues, the importance of the thin line between justice and vengeance and the undeniable power of ‘sleeping on it’…

    They also unpick the origins and intricacies of Ancient Athenian Democracy, ostracism by pottery shard, and how quoting Euripides might just save your life...

    Thank you to Professor Paul Cartledge for the suggestion for this week’s episode. The Main Text Explored was Thucydides’ History of the Peloponnesian War, Book III.

    Presented by Armand D’Angour and Jimmy Mulville
    Produced by Diggory Waite
    A Hat Trick Production

    For more on the charity Classics For All, who support state schools to introduce or develop the teaching of classical subjects sustainably on the curriculum or as an after school activity, visit www.classicsforall.org.uk
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    32 mins
  • “The Old Lie” – The Roman Ode that Haunted the Trenches
    Jul 1 2025
    “Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori” – “It is sweet and glorious to die for one’s country.”

    This week, Jimmy and Armand dive into the conflicted world of Horace, the Roman poet who famously threw away his own shield, switched sides in a civil war and then wrote stirring verses urging young men to die for Rome’s new leadership.

    We explore Horace’s transformation from the carefree party bard many imagine, into a potential imperial propagandist; how Augustus used poetry to shape public feeling; and how this short Latin phrase – once used to promote war – would echo across the centuries, only to be picked up and shattered by Wilfred Owen in his devastating First World War poem.

    Also in this episode: a Roman consul who walks willingly to torture, Horace’s surprisingly cheeky thoughts on adultery, and how Yorkshire accents might just be the secret to perfect Latin pronunciation.

    Main texts explored:
    Horace – Odes, Book 3, Ode 2 (Angustam amice pauperiem pati) Contains the famous line: “Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori.”
    Horace – Odes, Book 1, Ode 37 (Cleopatra Ode)
    Horace – Odes, Book 3, Odes 1–6 (The “Roman Odes”) Explored generally.
    Horace – Odes, Book 3, Ode 7 (Ode on Adultery)
    Wilfred Owen – “Dulce et Decorum Est”
    Cavafy – “Thermopylae” (modern poem)
    Horace – Odes, Book 3, Ode 5 (Regulus Ode)

    Presented by Armand D’Angour and Jimmy Mulville
    Produced by Diggory Waite
    A Hat Trick Production

    For more on the charity Classics For All, who support state schools to introduce or develop the teaching of classical subjects sustainably on the curriculum or as an after school activity, visit www.classicsforall.org.uk
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    25 mins
  • The Father of History or the Father of Lies? Herodotus' Histories with Han Parker
    Jun 24 2025
    Was Herodotus the Father of History — or the Father of Lies?

    Jimmy and Armand dive into the strange and spectacular world of Herodotus — a world filled with fox-sized, gold-digging ants, Pharaohs running brutal language experiments on babies and cultures who’d never dream of burning their dead… but would happily eat them.

    They explore how Herodotus crafted his Histories, why later Greek historians threw serious shade at his methods, and how someone with more in common with a travel vlogger or Victorian explorer than a modern academic came to shape our understanding of history itself.

    Main texts explored: Histories, Herodotus

    Presented by Armand D’Angour and Jimmy Mulville
    Produced by Diggory Waite
    A Hat Trick Production

    For more on the charity Classics For All, who support state schools to introduce or develop the teaching of classical subjects sustainably on the curriculum or as an after school activity, visit www.classicsforall.org.uk
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    25 mins
  • Gods, Frogs and The Ancient Greek Elvis – The Music of Ancient Greece
    Jun 17 2025
    He gyrated, he pouted, he played two pipes at once – and he may have been the Elvis of ancient Greece...

    This week, Jimmy and Armand plunge into the strange, stirring soundscape of the classical world, where music wasn’t background – it was everything.

    We meet professional pipers who whipped crowds into frenzies, women whose musical talent could buy them out of slavery, and frogs who sang in rhythmic unison to torment a god. From breath-defying performance techniques to the eerie beauty of melodies reconstructed from scraps of papyrus, this is a world where language and pitch were inseparable – and where the past can still sing.

    The music heard (in order) was:
    • ‘Improvisation on the Lourve Aulos’ performed by Callum Armstrong.
    • 'The Frog Chorus' from ‘The Frogs’ by Aristophanes performed by Callum Armstrong.
    • ‘Pindar's 12th Pythian Ode’ performed by Stef Conner and Barnaby Brown.
    • ‘Euripides Orestes’ performed by a mixed choir and Barnaby Brown on the Aulos.
    A big thank you to all the performers.

    Presented by Armand D’Angour and Jimmy Mulville
    Produced by Diggory Waite
    A Hat Trick Production

    For more on the charity Classics For All, who support state schools to introduce or develop the teaching of classical subjects sustainably on the curriculum or as an after school activity, visit www.classicsforall.org.uk
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    29 mins
  • “They Make a Desert and Call It Peace” – Tacitus' Agricola
    Jun 10 2025
    “They make a desert and call it peace.” It’s one of the most brutal lines in ancient history – but was it ever actually spoken?

    Jimmy and Armand unpack the sharp, unsettling world of Roman historian Tacitus, who often slipped his most biting critiques of Ancient Rome into the mouths of her enemies. We explore the fine line between history and drama, how Roman speeches were crafted rather than recorded, and what that says about truth, narrative, and power.

    Also in this episode: collapsing assassination boats, Roman mothers who just won’t die, the surprising origin of the phrase “parting shot” (which isn’t actually ‘parting shot’ at all!) and why Chelmsford was once (sort of) the heart of the Roman Empire.

    The main texts explored were:
    Agricola, Tacitus
    Annals, Tacitus
    Histories, Tacitus

    Presented by Armand D’Angour and Jimmy Mulville
    Produced by Diggory Waite
    A Hat Trick Production

    For more on the charity Classics For All, who support state schools to introduce or develop the teaching of classical subjects sustainably on the curriculum or as an after school activity, visit www.classicsforall.org.uk
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    23 mins
  • Dogs, Birds and… Eels? – Pets in the Ancient World
    May 27 2025
    Armand and Jimmy follow the pawprints of history to uncover the deeply emotional – and sometimes bizarre – relationships the ancients had with their animals. From the heartbreaking moment Odysseus returns home to find his loyal dog Argos dying, to a Roman epitaph that mourns a beloved pup named Patrikhi, they reveal a world where grief and love for pets were immortalized in verse. Along the way, they explore a Roman orator who dressed his pet eel in jewellery, Virgil’s possible tax-dodging fly funeral, and Julius Caesar’s short-lived affection for a giraffe…

    The main texts explored (in order) were: Homer’s Odyssey, Roman Epitaph for Patrikhi, Catullus Poems 2 & 3, Martial Epigrams 1.109, Pliny the Elder’s Natural History, Herodotus’ Histories and Euripides’ Orestes.

    Presented by Armand D’Angour and Jimmy Mulville
    Produced by Diggory Waite
    A Hat Trick Production

    For more on the charity Classics For All, who support state schools to introduce or develop the teaching of classical subjects sustainably on the curriculum or as an after school activity, visit www.classicsforall.org.uk
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    28 mins
  • Letters from the End of the World – Pliny in Pompeii with Ancient History Fangirl
    May 20 2025
    Armand and Jimmy plunge into the smoke and ash of one of Ancient Rome’s most haunting eyewitness accounts: Pliny the Younger’s letters describing the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 CE. With ash raining from the sky and the sea vanishing before their eyes, the Roman world seemed to collapse in real time. But beyond the drama lies a deeper story – of science, courage, superstition, and family. Why did Pliny the Elder sail toward the disaster? What made these letters survive two thousand years? And how did a volcano help shape both the mythology of Roman nature writing and our understanding of imperial control? Expect crumbling cities, singing dolphins, volcanic gods, and one of the most vivid ancient accounts of catastrophe ever written.

    Thank you to Genn and Jenny from the Ancient History Fangirl podcast for their suggestion of this week’s topic and the main text explored: Pliny the Younger’s Epistulae

    Presented by Armand D’Angour and Jimmy Mulville
    Produced by Diggory Waite
    A Hat Trick Production

    For more on the charity Classics For All, who support state schools to introduce or develop the teaching of classical subjects sustainably on the curriculum or as an after school activity, visit www.classicsforall.org.uk
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    25 mins
  • Is Love Worth the Risk? – The Songs of Sappho with Martha Kearney
    May 13 2025
    Armand and Jimmy dive into the passionate, mysterious world of Sappho – the iconic lyric poet of archaic Greece, whose fragments of song have echoed across millennia. From fiery expressions of desire to haunting lines of loneliness, they explore how Sappho’s poetry defined love, lyricism, and the female voice in a male-dominated world. Along the way, they unpack why she was called the “10th Muse,” how her songs were exactly that – songs rather than just poems, and how a single line could move an Athenian statesman to tears. Discover how Sappho’s legacy shaped Roman poets like Catullus, inspired modern writers like Anne Carson, and still resonates in today’s age of short-form storytelling and queer expression.

    Thank you to Martha Kearney for suggesting this week's topic and the main texts we explored (in order): Sappho’s Fragment 31, Catullus’ Poem 51, Sappho’s Fragment 58, Fragment 16.

    Presented by Armand D’Angour and Jimmy Mulville
    Produced by Diggory Waite
    A Hat Trick Production

    For more on the charity Classics For All, who support state schools to introduce or develop the teaching of classical subjects sustainably on the curriculum or as an after school activity, visit www.classicsforall.org.uk
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    26 mins