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Time & Tales Podcast

Time & Tales Podcast

By: LM Riviere + CJ Prime
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Time & Tales Podcast — Dark History. Strange Lore. One Tale at a Time.

Welcome to Time & Tales Podcast — Dark History. Strange Lore. One Tale at a Time. Each week we bring you the spookiest tidbits from history and folklore. If macabre facts, eerie fables, and 4am rabbit holes are your natural habitat, you’re in the right place. New episodes every week, wherever you listen.

Prepared and presented by LaNae and CJ. One an author of dark fairy tales, fantasy, and folk horror; the other a skeptical engineer who keeps the evidence front and center. Expect the occasional. lighthearted clash!

If you’re ready for your next late-night obsession, this belongs in your queue.

As always, sources and links can be found in the show notes.

PODCAST THEME by RANDY LEE RIVIERE (randyleeriviere.com)

#history #folklore #darkhistory #fables

LM Riviere
True Crime World
Episodes
  • Boudicca & The Ash Road
    Dec 19 2025

    A Celtic ruler nearly broke the Roman Empire in Britain. In 60–61 C.E., Boudicca of the Iceni went from Roman citizen to avenger after Roman officials seized her lands and assaulted her daughters—triggering a massive uprising that burned Camulodunum, Londinium, and Verulamium to the ground.

    In this Time & Tales episode, we dive into Boudicca’s life, the politics of Roman Britain, the assault that lit the fuse, Rome’s brutal response, and the archaeological burn layer that still carries the scars of her revolt beneath modern London and Colchester.

    Sources & Further Reading

    • Tacitus, Annals 14.29–39; Agricola Wikipedia
    • Cassius Dio, Roman History 62 Wikipedia
    • Richard Hingley & Christina Unwin, Boudica: Iron Age Warrior Queen Bloomsbury
    • Miranda Aldhouse-Green, Boudica Britannia: Rebel, War-leader and Queen Routledge+1
    • Martin Millett, Roman Britain (English Heritage) Amazon+1
    • C. M. Bulst, “The Revolt of Queen Boudicca in A.D. 60,” Archaeological Journal JSTOR
    • E. M. Vannan, “The Queen of Propaganda: Boudica’s Representation in Roman and Later Sources,” Arbutus UVic Journals
    • [Article] “To Rule a Ferocious Province: Roman Policy and the Aftermath of the Boudican Revolt” ResearchGate
    Show More Show Less
    41 mins
  • La Bête du Gévaudan
    Dec 12 2025

    Between 1764 and 1767, the remote French province of Gévaudan was terrorized by a mysterious predator that parish records called La Bête—“The Beast.” More than 100 people were killed in daylight attacks that witnesses insisted were “like a wolf, yet not a wolf.” Royal hunters claimed victory, yet the killings continued until a local farmer brought down a creature whose proportions defied easy explanation.

    This episode explores the attacks, the hunt, and the leading theories—from wolves to hybrids to possible human involvement—and why the legend endures as one of Europe’s strangest historical mysteries.

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    Links to socials and sites:

    *LaNae's Linktree

    *LaNae's TikTok

    *IG

    **Time and Tales Youtube

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    Sources:

    • Smithsonian Magazine — Lorraine Boissoneault, When the Beast of Gévaudan Terrorized France (June 26, 2017). Overview; attack range; “nearly 100 dead”; context of royal intervention and Chastel. Smithsonian Magazine
    • Wikipedia (EN)Beast of Gévaudan (last updated recently). Consolidated chronology with citations; Boulet entry; Chastel/Marin details; Bishop’s mandement; competing identity theories. Wikipedia
    • Wikipedia (FR)Bête du Gévaudan and Marie-Jeanne Vallet. Vallet’s 11 Aug 1765 counter-attack with bayonet on a staff; Antoine’s follow-up and blood on the blade (≈3 pouces); dated timeline; Chazes and Chastel entries. Wikipedia
    • Wikimedia Commons (French National Archives image)Procès-verbal d’examen du corps de la “bête du Gévaudan”, AE/II/2927, 20 June 1767 (notary Roch-Étienne Marin; post-mortem by Dr. Boulanger). Wikimedia Commons
    • Wikipedia (FR)François Antoine. Royal gun-bearer; the Chazes kill (21 Sept 1765); Versailles presentation; contested finality as attacks resumed. Wikipedia
    • Margeride en Gévaudan (official tourism/history) — concise parish-based geography of early attacks (Les Hubacs, Mercoire, Langogne). Margeride en Gevaudan
    Show More Show Less
    42 mins
  • The 'Curse' of the White City
    Nov 26 2025

    In 2015, LiDAR scans of the Honduran Mosquitia revealed plazas, earthworks, and ruins long linked to the “White City” or Ciudad Blanca. A joint team of scientists, archaeologists, and filmmakers went in—and came back with a parasitic disease that tabloids called a curse. This episode traces Indigenous origins of the legend, the expeditions and tech that finally pierced the canopy, and how archaeology, ecology, and sensational headlines now collide in one fragile corner of the Honduran jungle.

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    Sources:

    • Fisher, C. T., et al. “Identifying ancient settlement patterns through LIDAR in the Mosquitia region of Honduras.” PLOS ONE (2016). (peer-reviewed LIDAR + settlement analysis)
    • National Geographic Adventure coverage of the 2015/2016 field confirmations and finds. (ground verification; object cache; valley scale)
    • National Geographic: “Pernicious Parasite Strikes Explorers…” (2015). (post-expedition leishmaniasis cases)
    • CDC Clinical Care of Leishmaniasis (updated 2024). (current U.S. clinical guidance)
    • DNDi/PAHO 2022 recommendations. (Americas—liposomal amphotericin B adoption; access improvements)
    • The New Yorker (Douglas Preston), “An Ancient City Emerges in a Remote Rain Forest” (2017). (popular overview; expedition narrative)
    • The Guardian (2015), “Archaeologists condemn National Geographic over claims…” (open letter; “lost city” critique and clarifications)
    • Archaeology Southwest (2015), “Reporting Archaeology: Lost and Found” (round-up of scholarly objections; citation of Rosemary Joyce’s critiques on sensational framing and Indigenous erasure).

    Show More Show Less
    51 mins
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