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1.6K to 9.9K🎙 Daily cadence·303 episodes·Last published 2d ago - Monthly Reach
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On the show
From 18 epsHost
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304. The Black Death was not just a European Problem with Tom Asbridge | Chalke Festival Special 4
Jun 10, 2026
Unknown duration
303. Berlin was not blockaded in 1948 with Joseph Pearson
Jun 7, 2026
Unknown duration
302. Stop Overglorifying Pericles with Paul Cartledge | Chalke Festival Special 3
Jun 4, 2026
Unknown duration
301. Operation Paperclip was a necessary evil with Guy Walters
Jun 3, 2026
Unknown duration
300. Crusades are not just the Middle East with Aleks Pluskowski
May 31, 2026
54m 14s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/10/26 | ![]() 304. The Black Death was not just a European Problem with Tom Asbridge | Chalke Festival Special 4 | Think the Black Death was just a medieval European tragedy? Think again.When you picture the Black Death, you probably imagine a third of Europe being wiped out while flagellants marched through British and French villages. But pandemics don’t stop at borders. What if our standard history lessons have completely ignored more than half of the story?In this special episode for the Chalke History Festival, host Paul Bavill sits down with Tom Asbridge, Reader in Medieval History at Queen Mary University of London and author of The Black Death, a Global History. Together, they shatter the Euro-centric myths to reveal a truly global disaster that stretched from Central Asia all the way across the medieval world.Discover how the plague reshaped the wealthy and sophisticated Mamluk Empire. Massive Middle Eastern cities like Cairo—which completely dwarfed London with a population of half a million people—faced unimaginable mass mortality. Tom explains the fascinating doctrinal differences that dictated survival; while Christian Europe viewed the disease as divine punishment that justified flight and abandonment, Islamic doctrine saw it as a merciful martyrdom. This completely altered how communities reacted, locked down, and ultimately collapsed under the weight of the pandemic.From the horrific eyewitness accounts of parents burying their own children to the long-term socioeconomic shifts that triggered peasant revolts and altered workers' rights, this episode zooms out to a global scale and zooms in on the raw human experience. If you want to understand the true scale of history's most terrifying disease, hit play now!About Our GuestTom Asbridge is a professional historian, author, and Reader in Medieval History at Queen Mary University of London.See Tom Live: Catch Tom speaking at the Chalke History Festival on Friday 26th June at 4:00 PM. Grab your tickets at: https://www.chalkefestival.com/Buy the Book: Get your copy of The Black Death, a Global History directly from the History Rage Bookshop to support the show: https://uk.bookshop.org/a/10120/9780241399408Recommended Episodes To Check Out NextEpisode 193: Luke Pepera rages that there is an African history long before any Europeans turned up.Episode 143: Eleanor Janega brings the rage to prove that medieval women absolutely worked.Support and Follow History RageIf you love truth being freed and myth getting a long, slow, brutal death, help us keep the anger alive!Support us on Patreon: Join the inner circle for £5 a month to get entry into our monthly book draws, pitch questions to future guests, access live streams, and grab the coveted History Rage mug: https://www.patreon.com/historyrageFollow us on Twitter/X: https://x.com/HistoryRageVisit our Website: Get the latest updates and episodes directly at https://www.historyrage.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. | — | ||||||
| 6/7/26 | ![]() 303. Berlin was not blockaded in 1948 with Joseph Pearson | Berlin wasn’t blockaded — and that changes everything you think.Was Berlin really “blockaded” in 1948? Or have we been repeating a Cold War myth for nearly eighty years?In this explosive episode of History Rage, cultural historian and author Joseph Pearson dismantles one of the most entrenched narratives of the early Cold War. We all know the story: Stalin sealed off West Berlin, starving its people, and the West heroically saved the city through the Berlin Airlift. But what if Berlin was never truly blockaded at all?Drawing on deep archival research and firsthand accounts from Berliners, Pearson argues that the term “blockade” is historically misleading. While ground and rail access from West Germany was restricted, movement between East and West Berlin continued. Civilians crossed borders. Food flowed in. Even Soviet authorities offered rations. The airlift was real — and extraordinary — but the idea of a city completely sealed off is far more myth than fact.We explore:What a “blockade” actually means — and why the word mattersHow ordinary Berliners experienced the airliftThe women who built Tegel Airport in just 90 daysThe terrifying near-misses that could have sparked World War IIIThe propaganda war that turned former enemies into alliesWhy the Berlin Airlift remains a masterclass in geopolitical brinkmanshipJoseph Pearson, originally from Canada and now based in Berlin, specialises in everyday history — the lived experience behind the headlines. His latest book examines the Berlin Airlift through the eyes of civilians and pilots, revealing a more complex, human and politically charged story.Guest Details:Joseph Pearson is a cultural historian and author based in Berlin.Book: The Airlift: Victories, Myths, and the Berlin BlockadeBuy here: https://uk.bookshop.org/a/10120/9781803998220Follow Joseph on Instagram @writing_josephIf you care about Cold War history, post-war Germany, the Berlin Blockade, the Berlin Airlift, or how propaganda shapes memory — this episode will challenge what you thought you knew.Episode recommendations:Episode 219 – Giles Milton on Post War Berlin - https://pod.fo/e/2f6bc6Episode 103 – Katja Hoyer on East Germany - https://pod.fo/e/21793e Follow & Support History Rage🎙 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and all major platforms 🌐 Website: www.historyrage.com 📱 Patreon & Apple Subscriptions for early access and exclusives 👉 www.patreon.com/historyrageJoin the conversation on social media and share your rage @historyrage Have a myth you want dismantled? Get in touch via the website.If you enjoyed this episode, please leave a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts — it genuinely helps more people discover the show.History is human. History is political. And sometimes… history is wrong.Welcome to History Rage. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. | — | ||||||
| 6/4/26 | ![]() 302. Stop Overglorifying Pericles with Paul Cartledge | Chalke Festival Special 3 | Why history’s greatest Athenian leader may be wildly misunderstood todayWas Pericles really the mastermind behind Athens’ Golden Age — or have historians spent centuries exaggerating his importance?In this explosive episode of History Rage, acclaimed classicist and Cambridge professor Paul Cartledge tears apart the modern obsession with “Periclean Athens” and argues that ancient democracy was far more complex than the story of one great man. From the origins of democracy and demagogues to the brutal realities of Athenian politics, this is a fascinating deep dive into Ancient Greece, the Peloponnesian War, Sparta, rhetoric, and political power.Paul explains why Pericles could never have ruled like a dictator, why Athens executed failed politicians, and why modern comparisons between Pericles and modern autocrats completely miss the point. He also explores the cultural mythmaking around the Parthenon, the famous Funeral Oration, and the role of Thucydides in shaping Pericles’ legendary reputation.The conversation also shines a spotlight on Aspasia of Miletus — often unfairly dismissed as Pericles’ “mistress.” Paul argues passionately that Aspasia was Pericles’ intellectual equal and one of the most misunderstood women in ancient history.If you love Ancient Greek history, classical civilisation, democracy, Sparta vs Athens, Greek philosophy, or the politics of historical memory, this episode is essential listening.In this episode:Was Pericles really responsible for Athens’ Golden Age?How Athenian democracy actually workedWhy the word “demagogue” changed meaningThe truth about Aspasia of MiletusPericles, Sparta and the outbreak of total warAncient rhetoric and political persuasionWhy historians still argue about Pericles todayPaul Cartledge’s book:Pericles: Statesman, Demagogue, EccentricBuy through the History Rage Bookshop:https://uk.bookshop.org/a/10120/9781836392002See Paul at Chalke History FestivalPaul is speaking at the on Wednesday 24th June.Tickets available here:https://www.chalkefestival.com/Follow Paul Cartledge:https://www.classics.cam.ac.uk/directory/paul-cartledgeSupport History Rage:If you enjoy the podcast, you can support History Rage on Patreon for bonus content, livestreams, book giveaways and more:https://www.patreon.com/historyrageFollow History Rage:https://historyrage.comhttps://x.com/historyragehttps://www.instagram.com/historyragepodcast/https://www.facebook.com/historyrage Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. | — | ||||||
| 6/3/26 | ![]() 301. Operation Paperclip was a necessary evil with Guy Walters | When history gets reduced to lazy moral takes, it misses the real Cold War truth.In this episode of History Rage, historian and broadcaster Guy Walters tears into the misunderstandings surrounding Nazi scientists, rocket technology, and one of the most consequential intelligence grabs of the 20th century: the post-war scramble for expertise that became Operation Paperclip.At the heart of the discussion is the extraordinary story of the V2 rocket programme and the Polish resistance operation that recovered an intact missile from occupied territory during the chaos of 1944. That single recovery effort fed directly into Allied intelligence assessments and helped shape how Britain and the United States understood Germany’s technological leap forward in rocketry.Guy argues that the real story isn’t about moral purity—it’s about survival in an emerging Cold War. As the Iron Curtain fell, the question wasn’t whether these scientists were compromised. It was who would get them first: the West or the Soviet Union.From covert recoveries in wartime Poland to the intelligence race over German aerospace expertise, this episode reveals how fragile the balance of power really was in 1945—and how close the Soviets came to dominating early rocket science.Guy also dismantles the idea that Operation Paperclip was uniquely scandalous. In reality, every major power—US, UK, USSR, and others—was racing to absorb German technical knowledge. The Cold War, he argues, was shaped as much by captured minds as by captured territory.The discussion explores:The Polish resistance recovery of a near-intact V2 rocket Why Allied intelligence needed it so urgently Whether Nazi rocket science could have changed WWII or only the Cold War The ethical grey zone of recruiting former Nazi scientists How figures like Wernher von Braun influenced the space race and beyond This is not just a story about rockets. It’s about power, pragmatism, and the uncomfortable truth that technological supremacy often comes with moral compromise.If you think the Cold War was won by ideals alone, this episode will challenge that assumption. If you already suspect history is messier than textbooks suggest, this is a deep dive into exactly how messy it gets.Buy the book featured in this episode📘 Stealing Hitler’s Rocket by Guy Walters 👉 https://uk.bookshop.org/a/10120/9781035910854Follow the guestInstagram: @guyebwalters X / other platforms: @GuyWalters Support History RageIf you enjoy the show and want to help it grow:Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/historyrage Or listen ad-free via Apple Subscriptions (£3/month) Tell someone else about the show and spread the Rage In this episode, history doesn’t behave. It collides with ethics, necessity, and Cold War fear—and leaves us with uncomfortable answers about who really shaped the modern world. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. | — | ||||||
| 5/31/26 | ![]() 300. Crusades are not just the Middle East with Aleks Pluskowski✨ | Crusadesmedieval history+5 | Aleks Pluskowski | Teutonic Order | BalticJerusalem+2 | CrusadesBaltic Crusades+5 | — | 54m 14s | |
| 5/27/26 | ![]() 299. The Historic Royal Family Was Way More Dysfunctional than Anything We Have Now with Charlie Higson | Chalke History Festival Special #2✨ | British monarchyroyal dysfunction+4 | Charlie Higson | Willy, Willy, Harry, Stee | Britain | royaltyscandal+7 | — | 1h 10m 01s | |
| 5/24/26 | ![]() 298. Mary Queen of Scots WAS NOT a Bloody Stupid Woman with Linda Porter✨ | Mary Queen of Scotshistorical myths+4 | Linda Porter | History RageBritish history | Scotland | Mary Queen of ScotsLinda Porter+7 | — | 57m 08s | |
| 5/21/26 | ![]() 297. Weimar is a place not a crazy republic with Katja Hoyer | Chalke History Festival Special 1✨ | Weimar RepublicGerman history+5 | Katja Hoyer | — | WeimarGermany+1 | WeimarWeimar Republic+8 | — | 56m 18s | |
| 5/20/26 | ![]() 296. Stop Saying Roman Slavery Wasn’t That Bad with Emma Southon✨ | Roman slaveryhistorical myths+4 | Emma Southon | History RageRoman slavery | Roman Empire | Roman slaveryhistorian+5 | — | 56m 58s | |
| 5/17/26 | ![]() 295. Stop Putting Historic Politicians on Pedestals with Debbie Kilroy✨ | historical politicianspolitical corruption+4 | Debbie Kilroy | Get History | — | historic politicianspolitical myths+4 | — | 54m 50s | |
Want analysis for the episodes below?Free for Pro Submit a request, we'll have your selected episodes analyzed within an hour. Free, at no cost to you, for Pro users. | |||||||||
| 5/13/26 | ![]() 294. Where Have All The Protest Songs Gone? with Fraser McCallum | IWM History Festival Special 2✨ | protest songsCold War music+4 | Fraser McCallum | Cold War BritainFortunate Son+4 | — | protest musicCold War+6 | — | 1h 09m 41s | |
| 5/10/26 | ![]() 293. Drones Aren’t Modern: The Victorian Origins of Unmanned Warfare with Mark Piesing✨ | history of dronesVictorian engineering+4 | Mark Piesing | US NavyBritish | Ukraine | dronesVictorians+6 | — | 52m 31s | |
| 5/6/26 | ![]() 292. Blitz Spirit is NOT Keep Calm and Carry On with Joshua Levine | IWM Festival Special✨ | BlitzBritish society+4 | Joshua Levine | IWM FestivalKeep Calm and Carry On | Britain | Blitz SpiritKeep Calm and Carry On+7 | — | 56m 49s | |
| 5/3/26 | ![]() 291. Bletchley Park Was More Than Alan Turing with Dermot Turing✨ | Bletchley ParkAlan Turing+4 | Sir Dermot Turing | Bletchley ParkEnigma | — | Bletchley ParkAlan Turing+5 | — | 59m 29s | |
| 4/26/26 | ![]() 290. Daniel Defoe was WAY more than just a novelist with Marc Mierowsky✨ | Daniel Defoepolitical history+5 | Marc Mierowsky | University of Melbourne | BritainScotland+1 | Daniel Defoepolitical fixer+6 | — | 50m 42s | |
| 4/19/26 | ![]() 289. Stop Thinking Women Matter Only When They Rule with Magdalena Sanchez✨ | Renaissance historywomen in history+4 | Magdalena Sánchez | Savoy | 16th-century Europe | Catalina MicaelaMagdalena Sánchez+6 | — | 45m 39s | |
| 4/15/26 | ![]() 288. Samuel Pepys Was Not “A Man of His Time” with Guy de la Bédoyère | Gloucester History Festival Special #4✨ | Samuel Pepyshistorical myth+4 | Guy de la Bédoyère | Gloucester History Festival | — | Samuel Pepysdiary+7 | — | 59m 27s | |
| 4/12/26 | ![]() 287. J. Bruce Ismay was NOT the ‘Coward of the Titanic’ with Clifford Ismay✨ | Titanic historyJ. Bruce Ismay+4 | Clifford Ismay | William Randolph HearstUnderstanding J. Bruce Ismay: The True Story of the Man They Call the Coward of the Titanic+2 | — | TitanicJ. Bruce Ismay+6 | — | 47m 33s | |
| 4/9/26 | ![]() 286. Offa is NOT just wars and ditches! With Rory Naismith | Gloucester History Festival Special #3✨ | Offa of Merciahistorical myths+4 | Rory Naismith | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle | MerciaEngland+1 | Offa of Merciahistorical narrative+5 | — | 56m 48s | |
| 4/8/26 | ![]() 285. The Cambridge Five are Shits – Stop Romanticising Them with Antonia Senior✨ | Cambridge Fiveespionage+4 | Antonia Senior | Stalin’s regimeBritish intelligence | — | Cambridge Fiveespionage+5 | — | 1h 01m 21s | |
| 4/5/26 | ![]() 284. There are other Restoration Women than the mistresses of Charles II with Breeze Barrington✨ | Restoration womencultural history+5 | Breeze Barrington | The Extraordinary Untold Lives of Women at the Restoration Court | — | Restorationwomen in history+7 | — | 58m 19s | |
| 4/1/26 | ![]() 283. Cleopatra was NOT a Sex Obsessed Femme Fatale with Lucy Hughes-Hallett | Gloucester History Festival Special #2✨ | CleopatraRoman propaganda+4 | Lucy Hughes-Hallett | — | Egypt | Cleopatrahistory+6 | — | 59m 15s | |
| 3/29/26 | ![]() 282. Trafalgar is just not that important with Zack White | Horatio Nelson. Glorious victory. Britain “ruling the waves.” We've all heard the legend — but what if the real story of Trafalgar is far more complicated… and far less heroic… than we’ve been led to believe?In this episode of History Rage, three-time returning rager Dr Zack White tears apart centuries of patriotic mythmaking to reveal the uncomfortable truths behind Britain’s most celebrated naval battle. From propaganda to psychology, from invasion fears to Victorian moralising, Zack makes the case that Trafalgar’s fame owes more to storytelling than strategy.Discover why Napoleon had already abandoned his invasion plan before the battle… why Nelson himself was disappointed… why the French and Spanish navies were nowhere near as formidable as we imagine… and how Victorian historians rewrote the whole saga to craft a national legend of heroic sacrifice and divine destiny.This episode is a masterclass in myth-busting — bold, funny, furious and absolutely packed with historical insight.What You’ll LearnWhy Trafalgar did NOT end the French invasion threatHow Nelson’s death became the backbone of a nation-building mythThe real state of the French and Spanish fleetsHow British naval supremacy was already secured before TrafalgarWhat actually changed the balance of power in the Napoleonic WarsWhy Victorian writers reshaped Nelson’s story — and erased the uncomfortable bitsHow propaganda shaped the way Britain remembers its “great men”Why battles like Copenhagen and the Nile mattered just as much — if not moreAbout Our Guest: Dr Zack WhiteDr Zack White is a historian, broadcaster and host of The Napoleonic Wars Podcast, exploring every corner of the era from major battles to the strangest personalities.Follow & Contact Zack: 👉 Social media: @zwhitehistory 👉 Listen to The Napoleonic Wars Podcast: available on all major podcast appsEnjoying History Rage?If this episode fired you up, here’s how to stay angry (in the best possible way):Follow & Contact History Rage📌 Twitter/X: @HistoryRage 📌 Instagram: @HistoryRage Support the Show🔥 Apple Podcasts: ad-free listening for £3/month 🔥 Patreon: £5/month for live streams, Q&A invitations, and the legendary History Rage Mug Become a supporter at: patreon.com/historyrageSpread the RageThe best way to help us grow is simple: Tell someone else who loves history — or loves arguing about it. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. | — | ||||||
| 3/26/26 | ![]() 281. The General Strike wasn’t revolutionary chaos with Geoff Andrews : Gloucester History Festival Special #1 | The General Strike wasn’t revolutionary chaos—it was disciplined working-class resistanceThe 1926 General Strike is often painted as Britain’s near-miss with revolution—but the reality is far more revealing, and far more powerful. In this episode of History Rage, Paul Bavill is joined by historian Geoff Andrews to dismantle the myths and uncover the true story of working-class politics, solidarity, and identity in modern Britain.Far from a Bolshevik uprising, the General Strike was a highly organised, largely peaceful protest rooted in fairness, dignity, and community. Geoff explains how millions of workers mobilised not to overthrow the state, but to defend mining communities facing wage cuts and harsh conditions. The strike wasn’t the beginning of revolution—it arguably marked the end of it.This conversation dives deep into the ethos of the British labour movement: a tradition shaped not just by ideology, but by education, self-improvement, and collective values. From the Workers’ Educational Association to the rise of autodidact culture, the working classes were not passive victims—they were active architects of modern Britain.We also explore:Why the myth of a “revolutionary working class” distorts historyThe real role of figures like Churchill in escalating tensionsHow the Labour Party evolved from Lib-Lab roots into a political forceThe enduring impact of adult education on political cultureWhy figures like Ramsay MacDonald remain so controversialWhat today’s political landscape has lost from its working-class rootsGeoff Andrews challenges the idea that the left was ever truly revolutionary in Britain—and instead reveals a more complex, ethical, and democratic tradition that has been largely forgotten.About the Guest Geoff Andrews is a Senior Lecturer in Politics at The Open University and a leading historian of the British labour movement. His work focuses on the Labour Party, radical traditions, and working-class political culture.📖 Book: Radicals: The Working Classes and the Making of Modern Britain 👉 Buy via the History Rage Bookshop: https://uk.bookshop.org/a/10120/9780300265897🎤 Catch Geoff live at the Gloucester History Festival https://gloucesterhistoryfestival.co.ukListen More from History RageEpisode 189: Maureen Wright on Victorian feministsEpisode 181: Shalina Patel on the Pankhursts and women’s suffrageFollow & Support History Rage 🔥 Patreon (bonus content, livestreams & book giveaways): https://www.patreon.com/historyrage🍏 Apple Subscriptions (ad-free listening): Available via Apple Podcasts📩 Newsletter: https://historyrage.substack.com/🐦 Socials: Follow History Rage @historyrage across social media for updates, guest announcements, and more historical rants.If you enjoy the show, share it, review it, and bring someone else aboard the rage train. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. | — | ||||||
| 3/23/26 | ![]() 280. Stop Calling Renaissance Doctors Stupid with Alanna Skuse | Renaissance medicine wasn’t ignorant—its cures were stranger and smarter than you think.Step back into a world of blood, bones, bile, and groundbreaking innovation as Dr Alanna Skuse dismantles the biggest myths about Renaissance medicine. From battlefield surgeries and prosthetics, to midwives, quacks, toads, and the four humours, this episode reveals a medical world far more logical, experimental, and effective than popular history suggests.Discover why Renaissance surgeons weren’t reckless, why quacks sometimes worked wonders, and why patients were far from naïve. Packed with bizarre cures, pioneering breakthroughs, and the surprising origins of modern treatments, this is the ultimate guide to the misunderstood world of 16th and 17th-century healing.Whether you're into medical history, social history, early modern England, quackery, midwifery, apothecaries, or surgical innovation, this episode of History Rage delivers deep insight, dark humour, and a fresh perspective.What You’ll Learn in This EpisodeWhy Renaissance medical practitioners were not ignorant or cruelHow surgeons made astonishing breakthroughs long before modern medicineWhy patients demanded treatments like bloodlettingThe strange power of quacks—and why some were surprisingly effectiveHow apothecaries, midwives, and women healers shaped everyday healthcareThe bizarre logic behind cures involving toads, spiders, and boiling puppiesThe truth about syphilis nose reconstruction, battlefield prosthetics, and chemical medicineWhy the four humours actually made intuitive senseWhat Renaissance medical thinking still influences todayWhat future historians will find horrifying about modern treatmentsAbout Our Guest: Dr Alanna SkuseDr Alanna Skuse is a literary scholar, medical historian, and author specialising in early modern disease, surgery, and the cultural history of the body. Her latest trade book uncovers the real experience of staying alive in Renaissance England.📚 Buy Her BookThe Surgeon, the Midwife, the Quack: How to Stay Alive in Renaissance England👉 https://uk.bookshop.org/a/10120/9781836430773📨 Contact / Follow Dr Alanna SkuseWebsite: https://www.dralannaskuse.co.uk/Twitter / X: @alanna_skuseInstagram: @historian_alannaExplore More Medical History EpisodesIf this episode left you hungry for more medical history:Ep 161 – Karen Bloom Gevirtz on 17th-century healer-womenEp 56 – Louise Wilkie on Robert Liston & Victorian surgeryFollow & Support History Rage🎙 Follow History Rage:Twitter/X: @HistoryRageInstagram: @historyragepod💥 Support the Show & Get Bonus Content£3/month – Ad-free listening on Apple & Patreon£5/month – Monthly livestreams + the coveted History Rage MugJoin Here: patreon.com/historyrage❤️ Best way to help?Tell a friend about the podcast and get them raging too. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. | — | ||||||
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Chart Positions
2 placements across 2 markets.
Chart Positions
2 placements across 2 markets.
