HistoryExtra podcast

Immediate
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Apr 4, 2026 • 39min

How the Vikings pushed Anglo-Saxon England to the brink

Dr Eleanor Barraclough, historian of the Viking Age, guides listeners through the Great Heathen Army and its impact on ninth-century England. She explores where the Vikings came from and how their tactics adapted from raiding to settlement. She describes army life, leadership structures, and why contemporary sources shape our view of these events.
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16 snips
Apr 2, 2026 • 36min

How to stay healthy in the Middle Ages

Catherine Harvey, historian and author of The Medieval Guide to Healthy Living, explores how people in the Middle Ages cared for body and mind. She explains humoral theory, hygiene practices, toilets and street-cleaning rules. She covers food classified by hot/cold qualities, peasant diets, purging and bloodletting, sex and moderation, mental health, and medical exchanges with Jewish and Muslim traditions.
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7 snips
Mar 31, 2026 • 42min

Europe's Muslim history

Tariq Hussein, award-winning author and historian of Muslim heritage, guides a continent-spanning tale of Islam in Europe. He recounts visits that reshaped his view, explains why Muslim contributions were hidden, and highlights cultural centers from Cordoba to Cyprus. Short vignettes explore burial sites, naval power and figures who should appear in textbooks.
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8 snips
Mar 30, 2026 • 36min

Attila the Hun: life of the week

Miles Russell, a Bournemouth University archaeologist and late antiquity historian, explores Attila the Hun. He unpacks Attila’s rise, Hunnic origins and tactics. He examines Rome’s weakness, the Battle of Châlons, Attila’s Italian campaign, and the collapse of Hunnic power. The conversation highlights reputation, leadership and the mixture of brutality and spectacle that shaped his legacy.
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Mar 29, 2026 • 33min

Captured by Barbary corsairs: an Englishwoman's extraordinary tale

Adam Nicholls, historian of Barbary corsairs and captives, tells Elizabeth Marsh’s extraordinary 1756 capture and captivity in Morocco. He unpacks the fog-bound seizure at sea, diplomatic games that made captives political pawns, a staged conversion and marriage, and how Marsh navigated power to secure release. The story spans corsair origins, European fear, and the end of the corsair era.
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7 snips
Mar 29, 2026 • 29min

Was Elizabeth I's reign really a 'golden age'?

Dr Nicola Tallis, historian and Tudor specialist, unpacks Elizabeth I’s later years, succession dilemmas and crafted legacy. She explores wartime strains, the queen’s theatrical masking of age through portraits and cosmetics, the contested deathbed narrative around James, and how poets and propaganda forged the Golden Age myth.
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11 snips
Mar 27, 2026 • 41min

Spy, hero, rebel, traitor: the story of Roger Casement

Rory Carroll, Guardian staff correspondent and author, offers a concise mini bio as an expert on Roger Casement and Irish history. He traces Casement’s shift from humanitarian diplomat to militant ally of Germany. Short, sharp scenes cover the failed POW brigade plan, secret arms runs, the infamous diaries, British intelligence efforts, and Casement’s contested legacy.
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10 snips
Mar 25, 2026 • 43min

The relentless rise of the mafia

Ryan Gingeras, professor and historian of modern geopolitics and author of Mafia, A Global History. He traces how mafias from Yakuza to Camorra spread worldwide via war, migration and globalization. He discusses The Godfather's cultural impact, the rise of cocaine cartels like Pablo Escobar, and how criminal networks sometimes rival states.
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Mar 24, 2026 • 40min

Harriet Martineau: life of the week

Stuart Hobday, historian and author of 19th-century lives, brings Harriet Martineau to life. He explores her rise from a sick, deaf childhood to bestseller status, her bold sociological and economic writing, her abolitionist America tour, campaigning journalism, sharp travel wit, controversial religious views, and lasting influence on reformers and later writers.
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Mar 23, 2026 • 39min

Sores, sweat and secretions: the pox in early modern London

Charlotte Vosper, academic and author who studies the history of medicine, gender and sexuality, explores the pox in early modern London. She traces how the disease was defined and blamed, reveals bizarre and secretive cures, and shows how stigma, space and gender shaped diagnosis, treatment and legal uses of venereal disease.

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