Episode 159: Plato, Syracuse and the Tyrant

Episode 159: Plato, Syracuse and the Tyrant

From History For Weirdos by Andrew & Stephanie

August 25, 2025 · 1h 27m

About this episode

The episode explores Plato's attempt to educate a tyrant in Syracuse and the political consequences that followed.

A philosopher walks into a palace—no, really. This week on History For Weirdos, we follow Plato from the Academy to the armored court of Syracuse, where his friend (and insider) Dion bets that good ideas can tame bad power. Meet the Elder-and-Younger Dionysius tag team, a fortress-city built for paranoia, and a very risky plan to educate a ruler into a philosopher-king—shadowed the whole time by the (contested) Seventh Letter and its “this is how it went down” vibe. When ideals hit palace politics, bodies hit the floor. We track Dion’s return with mercenaries, the siege of Ortygia, and the assassination that blew up the reform—then zoom out to how the fiasco re-wired Plato’s own politics, from the starry-eyed Republic to the more legalistic, “second-best” Laws. Come for the philosopher-king experiment; stay for the receipts, the betrayals, and the uncomfortable lesson about teaching power to think. - Get History For Weirdos merch ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠! - Thank you for listening Weirdos! Show the podcast some love by rating & subscribing on whichever platform you use to listen to podcasts. Your support means so much to us. Let's stay in touch 👇 Email: historyforweirdos@gmail.com…

People in this episode

Hosts: Andrew, Stephanie

Topics covered

  • Plato
  • Syracuse
  • philosopher-king
  • politics
  • betrayal
  • education

Keywords

  • Plato
  • Syracuse
  • Dion
  • philosopher-king
  • politics
  • betrayal
  • Seventh Letter

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: Plutarch, Diodorus Siculus

Books & works: Seventh Letter, Life of Dion, Life of Timoleon, Republic, Laws

More episodes of History For Weirdos

Explore listener stats, chart rankings, contacts and more on the History For Weirdos podcast page.