Historiansplaining: A historian tells you why everything you know is wrong
Samuel Biagetti, PhD
So much of what we learn in a standard history class, and in the culture around us, are just cliff-note narratives, crafted to explain how things appear, rather than how things actually came to be. Peel back the layers of time and place with this thoroughly researched, college-level history podcast with over 200 episodes that uncover the forgotten forces that shaped – and that are still shaping – our world today.
There are no commercials in this long-form podcast. More information can be found at Historiansplaining.com, where you can hear Quick Samples of every episode, easily find related episodes based on topic, discover episodes by geographic location on a map of the world or on a timeline of world history, and much more.
There’s so much to explore with Samuel Biagetti, PhD, in these conversational lectures and interviews, each one presenting hidden landscapes from the past that put the moments and movements of today’s world in a tangible, thought-provoking light.
Press play for the joy of a great college-level course in history, without any of the homework!
Unlock the most content by becoming a supporter through Patreon. You choose the amount you want to contribute, and your support helps keep the podcast commercial free! Visit patreon.com/user?u=5530632
Support through Patreon from listeners like you is the only source of ongoing funding for this podcast.
There are no commercials in this long-form podcast. More information can be found at Historiansplaining.com, where you can hear Quick Samples of every episode, easily find related episodes based on topic, discover episodes by geographic location on a map of the world or on a timeline of world history, and much more.
There’s so much to explore with Samuel Biagetti, PhD, in these conversational lectures and interviews, each one presenting hidden landscapes from the past that put the moments and movements of today’s world in a tangible, thought-provoking light.
Press play for the joy of a great college-level course in history, without any of the homework!
Unlock the most content by becoming a supporter through Patreon. You choose the amount you want to contribute, and your support helps keep the podcast commercial free! Visit patreon.com/user?u=5530632
Support through Patreon from listeners like you is the only source of ongoing funding for this podcast.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jul 21, 2023 • 6min
Teaser: Origins of the 1st World War -- Bosnia & the Assassination
A special edition for patrons:
We examine the unique and complex history of Bosnia, at once a borderland and a world unto itself, and the only Slavic country in which Islam has ever been the majority faith. With the help of readings from the classic novel, "The Bridge on the Drina," we trace how Bosnians' confused search for a national identity and a national destiny led ultimately to the fateful assassination that triggered a world war.
Image: Travnik Mosque, Bosnia
Suggested further reading: Noel Malcolm, "Bosnia: A Short History"; Ivo Andric, "The Bridge on the Drina."
Please support this podcast to hear the whole lecture: https://www.patreon.com/posts/origins-of-first-86366245

Jun 27, 2023 • 1h 53min
Origins of the First World War, pt. 3 -- Austria-Hungary
At the height of their power in the Baroque Age, the Habsburgs aspired to rule the entire world; by the end of the ninetheenth century, they strove merely to maintain control over the volatile lands of the upper Danube valley. We trace how the Habsburgs' domains evolved from a messy collection of local duchies into an absolutist empire, and finally into a complex military-industrial state, the home of artistic modernism, which was nonetheless threatened with destruction by a welter of nationalist movements and by the rising power of Serbia and Russia.
Previous lecture on Central Europe & the Rise of the Habsburgs: https://soundcloud.com/historiansplaining/age-of-absolutism-1-central-europe-and-the-rise-of-the-hapsburgs
Image: Painting by Johann Nepomuk Geller of Emperor Franz-Josef walking in the gardens of the Schonbrunn in winter, 1908
Suggested further reading: Mason, "The Dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire"; Sked, "The Decline & Fall of the Habsburg Empire"; Kohn, "The Habsburg Empire"; Rady, "The Habsburgs: To Rule the World."
music: J.S. Bach, Sonata No. 4 in E Minor, played on pedal clavichord by Blaint Karosi.
Please support this podcast to hear patron-only lectures, including an upcoming examination of the history of Bosnia -- https://www.patreon.com/user?u=5530632

Jun 21, 2023 • 1h 59min
Survey of Western Architecture, pt. 2 -- audio track
We continue the epic history of Western architecture by tracing how medieval builders and their patrons revived the art of building in stone once more, and used it to craft monumental edifices into intimate, atmospheric spaces in the Romanesque age, before reaching for the heavens with soaring Gothic vaults and spires, and then returning once more to earth with the simple, balanced dignity of the Renaissance.
See the first part of the series here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QwCuQLuajn8
Image of the unrealized plan of Beauvais Cathedral courtesy of Myles Zhang, https://www.myleszhang.org/2021/12/25/beauvais-cathedral/
Please support this podcast to help keep these lectures coming! – https://www.patreon.com/user?u=5530632
See the video of this lecture here: https://youtube.com/live/qgzvVd6oNUM

May 28, 2023 • 1h 8min
Interpreting Solomon's Temple
The center of every sacred mystery, the Temple at Jerusalem is the most famous building on earth, even though it has not existed for almost 2000 years and no one knows precisely what it looked like. We join with Michael of “Xai, How Are You” to discuss Solomon’s Temple – both the real historical building as it can be reconstructed from ancient texts and archaeology, and the symbol that has been endlessly appropriated to represent humankind’s relationship to the cosmos, from Jewish mysticism, to Christian theology, to early Islam, to medieval magic, to Renaissance humanism, to the rituals of Freemasonry, to modern Jewish and evangelical fundamentalism.
Suggested further reading: Hamblin & Seely, “Solomon’s Temple: Myth and History”
Image: page of the "Perpignan Bible," France, 1299, depicting ritual objects in the Temple, including the Menorah
My previous lectures on Freemasonry:
https://soundcloud.com/historiansplaining/the-freemasonry-its-origins-its-myths-and-its-rituals
https://soundcloud.com/historiansplaining/freemasonry-its-growth-and-spread-before-1789
Correction: There is archaeological and textual evidence for two Israelite temples in Egypt -- one at Leontopolis in the Nile delta, and one at Elephantine in Upper Egypt.
Please support this podcast! – https://www.patreon.com/user?u=5530632

May 26, 2023 • 1h 30min
UNLOCKED: The Great Archaeological Discoveries, pt. 4 -- The Library of Ashurbanipal
Unlocked after one year for patrons only:
One moonlit night in 1853, an Iraqi excavator named Hormuzd Rassam and his team snuck into the hills outside of Mosul and began to uncover the massive palace of the last ancient Assyrian emperor, Ashurbanipal. Inside the palace was the largest trove of surviving documents from the ancient world that has ever been found. The massive library of over 30,000 tablets illuminated what had been the most mysterious empire of the Iron Age, brought to light the ancient masterpiece of the Epic of Gilgamesh, and provided the first window into the lost Near Eastern mythology that influenced the Biblical book of Genesis. While the discovery provided the greatest triumph of British imperial antiquarianism, in recent times Saddam Hussein and other Arab nationalists have attempted to reclaim its legacy by building a modern Library of Ashurbanipal.
Suggested further reading: Damrosch, "The Buried Book."
Image: relief sculpture showing Ashurbanipal slaying a lion with a writing stylus tucked into his belt
Please become a patron to support this podcast, and to hear all patron-only lectures as soon as they are posted, including the latest, "Myth of the Month 22: Culture" -- https://www.patreon.com/user?u=5530632

May 22, 2023 • 1h 30min
Origins of the First World War, pt. 2 -- Serbia
We consider the history and explosive politics of the often-forgotten Eastern European nation that set the events of the First World War in motion: Serbia. We examine the country’s emergence and brief flowering as an Eastern Orthodox kingdom in the high Middle Ages, its fall to the Ottoman advance, its many years of quiet resistance in religion and song, its re-emergence amidst the Napoleonic wars and the Ottoman breakdown, and finally, its long-frustrated quest to fulfill its purported destiny of reunifying the Southern Slavs, which led a militant and conspiratorial secret society to murder their own country’s king and to smuggle teenage assassins across the border to kill their rivals’ crown prince.
Image: Golubac Fortress, eastern Serbia, seen from across the Danube River
Intro & Outro music: Bach, Sonata no. 4 in E Minor, played on clavichord by Balint Karosi

May 11, 2023 • 9min
Teaser -- Myth of the Month 22: Culture
What is "culture"? And how did a metaphor from gardening invade social-science discourse in 19th-century Germany and America and then take the world by storm? Am I doing "podcast culture" right now?
However you define it, I make the case that it is the defining myth of our time, and that we should get rid of it.
Image: "Old New York" diorama, Museum of Natural History, New York
Suggested reading: Michael A. Elliott, "The Culture Concept: Writing and Difference in the Age of Realism"
Please sign up as a patron to hear the whole discussion! -- https://www.patreon.com/posts/82746773

Apr 30, 2023 • 1h 60min
Origins of the First World War, pt. 1 -- The Ottoman Empire
For over a century, scholars, politicians, and pundits have debated the supposed causes of the First World War, from German naval provocations to the rising global tide of nationalism. All of these explanations tend to ignore the simple fact that the war began in eastern Europe, triggered by regional feuding and violence in what had previously been the Ottoman provinces.
We begin our exploration of the roots of World War I by following the struggles of the declining Ottoman Empire to hold its ground and contain ethnic and religious strife as Western powers circle like vultures around the so-called "sick man of Europe."
Image: View over Topkapi Palace, Istanbul, to the Bosporus
Suggested further reading: Alan Palmer, "Decline and Fall of the Ottoman Empire."
music: "Fandango," by Scarlatti or Soler, midi file version by El Gran Mago Paco Quito.
Please become a patron to support the podcast and hear patron-only lectures, including upcoming Myth of the Month: Culture -- https://www.patreon.com/user?u=5530632

Apr 15, 2023 • 1h 53min
India, pt. 3 -- The Rise of the South & the Islamic Conquests
We follow the dramatic evolution of Indian civilization after the fall of the Gupta empire, tracing from the specctacular rise of trade, art, and new religious movements in the southern kingdoms, through the tumult and fragmentation of the northern statelets and the cataclysmic invasions of raiders from Central Asia, and finally to the creation of Islamic states in the subcontinent just in time for the arrival of the first European ships in Indian ports.
Suggested Further Reading: Thapar, "A History of India, vol. 1"
My previous two lectures on India:
https://www.patreon.com/posts/india-pt-1-in-56820942
https://www.patreon.com/posts/india-pt-2-of-57460725
Image: Brihadisvara Temple, Tanjore, Tamil Nadu, 1003-1010 AD.
Please become a patron to hear all patron-only lectures, including the next Myth of the Month! -- https://www.patreon.com/user?u=5530632

Mar 13, 2023 • 1h 24min
Video lecture: Survey of Western Architecture, pt. 1, audio track
In our first video lecture, we analyzee the methods that builders, from Egypt to Rome to medieval Europe, have used to create grand structures and to enclose beautiful spaces, whether by reaching outward across the landscape or upwards toward the sky, in order to enthrall the senses and to inspire emotions from terror to tranquility.
The video lecture on youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I9DGcPa_hdQ
Please sign on as a patron in order to help keep these lectures coming and in order to hear the patron-only lectures! ---- https://www.patreon.com/user?u=5530632


