Episodes

  • Tariq's Landing to the Jet Age: History's Greatest April–May Week
    Apr 27 2026
    What if a single week contained the birth of modern Europe, the origins of the English Bible, the spark of the global labour movement, and the dawn of the jet age? It does — and this episode covers all of it.

    We begin on April 27, 711, when Tariq ibn Ziyad landed at Gibraltar and launched the Islamic conquest of Hispania — a transformation that would reshape European civilisation for centuries. We move to 1667 London, where a blind John Milton sold Paradise Lost for ten pounds, and then out to the Pacific, where the crew of HMS Bounty mutinied against Lieutenant William Bligh in 1789. James Cook lands at Botany Bay in 1770, opening the eastern coast of Australia to European maps for the first time.

    J. J. Thomson announces the discovery of the electron at London's Royal Institution in 1897. England and Scotland unite under the Act of Union in 1707. Queen Victoria opens the Great Exhibition at the Crystal Palace in 1851. Chicago's Haymarket Square erupts in 1886, giving the world Workers' Day. The King James Bible rolls off the press in 1611. And in 1952, a De Havilland Comet lifts off from Heathrow on the first scheduled commercial jet service in history.

    Ten events. Thirteen centuries. One week on the calendar. This is where history lives.

    This episode includes AI-generated content. A YesOui.ai Production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    8 mins
  • Rome's Birthday, DNA's Secret & the Worst Soft Drink Decision Ever
    Apr 24 2026
    This week in history is one of the most event-packed stretches on the calendar. We open on the Palatine Hill in 753 BC, where Romulus draws a line in the dirt and calls it Rome — and we trace that act's consequences across centuries. Within the same week, Pedro Álvares Cabral stumbles upon Brazil while en route to India, William Shakespeare is baptised in Stratford-upon-Avon, and a French army officer composes La Marseillaise in a single sleepless night.

    We cover Napoleon's decisive victory at the Battle of Eckmühl, the very first game in Major League Baseball's National League, and the moment Pierre and Marie Curie isolated a purer form of radium in their Paris laboratory — work that quietly poisoned them while reshaping modern science.

    The episode moves into the twentieth century with two of the most consequential moments in scientific history: Francis Crick and James Watson publishing the double helix structure of DNA, and the inauguration of Brasília — a capital city built from scratch in the Brazilian interior in under four years. We close on two harrowing stories: Soviet cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov's fatal Soyuz 1 mission, and one of the most catastrophic marketing decisions in corporate history, courtesy of a certain soft drink giant.

    Whether you're a history buff, a curious generalist, or just someone who loves discovering how much happened in a single week across human civilisation, this episode is your brisk, wide-ranging tour.

    This episode includes AI-generated content. A YesOui.ai Production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    9 mins