

Western Civ
Adam Walsh
A fast-moving history of the western world from the ancient world to the present day. Examine how the emergence of the western world as a global dominant power was not something that should ever have been taken for granted. This podcast traces the development of western civilization starting in the ancient Near East, through Greece and Rome, past the collapse of the Western Roman Empire into the Dark Ages, and then follows European and, ultimately, American history as the western world moved into a dominant world position.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Nov 21, 2025 • 39min
Episode 493: The Flight of the Royals
Louis XVI makes a break for it. France passes a new Constitution into law. And the storm clouds continue to grow around the French Revolution.Western Civ 2.0

Nov 14, 2025 • 28min
Episode 492: Bread and the Church
Riots in Paris provoke unrest, while in the countryside French peasants recoil at attacks upon the Catholic Church.Western Civ Podcast 2.0

Nov 11, 2025 • 37min
Diogenes: The Rebellious Life and Revolutionary Philosophy of the Original Cynic
Buy The BookIn his own day, the ancient philosopher Diogenes the Cynic had a reputation for eccentricity, heckling his fellow philosophers in the marketplace, living in a clay pot, and relieving himself in public. Since his death in 323 BCE, devoted followers made him and his ideas famous the world over. But what we think we know about Diogenes remains distorted and sanitized.In Diogenes, classicist Inger N.I. Kuin scours all existing evidence of Diogenes and his followers to offer an in-depth account of Diogenes’ life and thought, revealing a man whose innovative ideas about power, death, nature, and the body have much to teach the contemporary world. He pioneered a vision of simplicity and autonomy in his day-to-day life, stressing the importance of living in the here and now, and of always thinking for oneself. Diogenes stands apart as history’s first recorded critic of slavery and a proud exile from polite society whose challenging thought proved foundational for the Stoics and their successors.Diogenes rehabilitates Diogenes as a compelling thinker for the twenty-first century, one who demands that we look at our society with fresh eyes and be unafraid of change—starting with ourselves.

Nov 7, 2025 • 22min
Episode 491: The Women's March
Bread shortages force the Revolution's hand.Western Civ Podcast 2.0

Oct 31, 2025 • 21min
Episode 490: The Fall of the Bastille
The French Revolution gets serious as the people of Paris rise up and storm the Bastille. Western Civ Podcast 2.0

Oct 28, 2025 • 50min
War and Power: Who Wins Wars—and Why
In this bonus interview, I sit down with Phillips Payson O'Brien and we discuss his latest book: War and Power: Who Wins Wars—and Why. For nearly two centuries, international relations have been premised on the idea of the “Great Powers.” As the thinking went, these mighty states—the European empires of the nineteenth century, the United States and the USSR during the Cold War—were uniquely able to exert their influence on the world stage because of their overwhelming military capabilities. But as military historian Phillips Payson O’Brien argues in War and Power, this conception of power fails to capture the more complicated truth about how wars are fought and won.Our focus on the importance of large, well-equipped armies and conclusive battles has obscured the foundational forces that underlie military victories and the actual mechanics of successful warfare. O’Brien suggests a new framework of “full-spectrum powers,” taking into account all of the diverse factors that make a state strong—from economic and technological might, to political stability, to the complex logistics needed to maintain forces in the field.Drawing on examples ranging from Napoleon’s France to today’s ascendant China, War and Power offers a critical new understanding of what makes a power truly great. It is vital reading in today’s perilous world.Buy The Book HereSupport Western Civ

Oct 26, 2025 • 13min
Episode 489: The Estates-General
An oath on a tennis court, of all things, sparks the French Revolution.Western Civ Podcast 2.0

Oct 24, 2025 • 29min
Episode 488: The Flood
Efforts to reform France under Louis XV and Louis XVI fail, plunging the kingdom into the flood of revolution. Western Civ 2.0 Free Trial

Oct 21, 2025 • 40min
Bloody Crowns: A New History of the Hundred Years War
Join historian Michael Livingston, author of *Bloody Crowns*, as he reexamines the Hundred Years War, revealing it as a two-century saga of conflict across medieval Europe. He discusses the complexities of sovereignty and feudal allegiances that shaped national identities beyond England and France. Discover how Philip IV's death ignited a succession crisis, and why most battles occurred on French soil. With insights into military transformation and the legendary Battle of Crécy, Livingston uncovers the dramatic tales and mythmaking that influenced the course of history.

Oct 17, 2025 • 35min
Episode 487: The Old Regime
Also known as the Ancien Regimé, the system of France going into the revolution was maddeningly complex and, seemingly, designed to fail. Western Civ 2.0 Free Trial


