![History Today Podcast show](https://d3dthqtvwic6y7.cloudfront.net/podcast-covers/000/034/638/medium/history-today-podcast.png)
History Today Podcast
Summary: A conversation about the world of history, featuring interviews with key historians and authors and discussions about historical themes and ideas.
- Visit Website
- RSS
- Artist: History Today
Podcasts:
In this edition: - Former editor Gordon Marsden talks about the Second World War origins of History Today and the adverts that helped to fund its publication in the 1950s and 1960s; - Greg Carleton explains how the US and the Soviet Union transformed their disastrous military defeats at Pearl Harbour and Brest Fortress in 1941 into positive national narratives. - Martin Evans discusses his latest book Algeria: An Undeclared War. We welcome your comments and suggestions about any topic discussed in this episode; go to http://historytoday.com/podcast for more.
In this edition: - Former editor Gordon Marsden talks about the Second World War origins of History Today and the adverts that helped to fund its publication in the 1950s and 1960s; - Greg Carleton explains how the US and the Soviet Union transformed their disastrous military defeats at Pearl Harbour and Brest Fortress in 1941 into positive national narratives. - Martin Evans discusses his latest book Algeria: An Undeclared War. We welcome your comments and suggestions about any topic discussed in this episode; go to http://historytoday.com/podcast for more.
In this month's edition: - Colin Jones on previously unpublished caricatures of Madame de Pompadour, Louis XV's favourite mistress; - David Wilson on the photographs taken during Captain Scott's expedition to the Antarctic; - and Tim Grady on the Jewish soldiers who fought for Germany during the First World War. We welcome your comments and suggestions about any topic discussed in this episode; go to http://historytoday.com/podcast for more.
In this month's edition: - Colin Jones on previously unpublished caricatures of Madame de Pompadour, Louis XV's favourite mistress; - David Wilson on the photographs taken during Captain Scott's expedition to the Antarctic; - and Tim Grady on the Jewish soldiers who fought for Germany during the First World War. We welcome your comments and suggestions about any topic discussed in this episode; go to http://historytoday.com/podcast for more.
In this month's edition: - Jonathan Fenby on China's 1911 revolution; - Nigel Jones on the Tower of London; - Helen and William Bynum on their new book about the history of medicine We've re-launched the podcast in a new, longer format, with more interviews and features on each episode. We welcome your comments and suggestions about any topic discussed in this episode; go to http://historytoday.com/podcast for more.
In this month's edition: - Jonathan Fenby on China's 1911 revolution; - Nigel Jones on the Tower of London; - Helen and William Bynum on their new book about the history of medicine We've re-launched the podcast in a new, longer format, with more interviews and features on each episode. We welcome your comments and suggestions about any topic discussed in this episode; go to http://historytoday.com/podcast for more.
David Boyle discusses his book Voyages of Discovery, which charts key voyages of discovery from the 1490s to James Cook in the 1770s and focuses, for the first time, on the views of those who were 'discovered'. But to what extent was this possible given that the vast majority of historic sources are written by the European explorers?
David Boyle discusses his book Voyages of Discovery, which charts key voyages of discovery from the 1490s to James Cook in the 1770s and focuses, for the first time, on the views of those who were 'discovered'. But to what extent was this possible given that the vast majority of historic sources are written by the European explorers?
Caroline Moorehead talks about her latest book, A Train in Winter, which tells the story, for the first time, of 230 French women resisters who were deported to Auschwitz from Gestapo detention camps in France. Why has their story been forgotten? Why were they sent to Auschwitz? How do the few survivors who are still alive remember the horror of their experiences?
Caroline Moorehead talks about her latest book, A Train in Winter, which tells the story, for the first time, of 230 French women resisters who were deported to Auschwitz from Gestapo detention camps in France. Why has their story been forgotten? Why were they sent to Auschwitz? How do the few survivors who are still alive remember the horror of their experiences?
History Today editor Paul Lay interviews Roger Moorhouse, author of Berlin At War: Life and Death in Hitler's Capital.
History Today editor Paul Lay interviews Roger Moorhouse, author of Berlin At War: Life and Death in Hitler's Capital.
Angie Butler talks to Kathryn Hadley about her seven year long journey to research the last years of Frank Wild's life in South Africa, her breakthrough discovery of his ashes in Johannesburg, and her expedition to South Georgia to rebury the ashes alongside those of Wild's 'Boss' Sir Ernest Shackleton.
Angie Butler talks to Kathryn Hadley about her seven year long journey to research the last years of Frank Wild's life in South Africa, her breakthrough discovery of his ashes in Johannesburg, and her expedition to South Georgia to rebury the ashes alongside those of Wild's 'Boss' Sir Ernest Shackleton.
Helen Castor talks about the challenges of writing narrative history based on inevitably fragmented medieval sources.