episodes

A wide range from Tudors to present day. Basically anywhere a story has got stuck in our collective memory but looks, to us, like it would benefit from a re-visit. But you’ll have to be patient with us. These fresh reinterpretations take time to research, argue and record.

If you want more, feel free to browse the photos and sources we’ve included below each episode’s playlist.

We broadcast this celebration of our 60th episode of well-researched reinterpretations of history using the latest academic research but brought to you in an accessible format.
We’ve broadcast over 80 episodes to date and are just starting a new series of 10 episodes called Trading with the Nazis, investigating how Hitler was able to afford his mechanised war after Germany lost WWI.


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Trading with the Nazis

How on earth did Hitler’s Nazi Third Reich ever find the resources to build a vast army and airforce and launch a war in 1939? Germany was supposed to be financially crippled after the First World War. And in the 1930s Europe was meant to be in the middle of the greatest depression in modern times. So how Hitler’s regime could afford to re-arm itself with the latest technology, and then hurl the world into war on an enormous scale, is a fundamental mystery. Or is it? [Ten episodes]

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Nazis: The Road to Power - Conversation with author Jonathan Myerson

The story of how in just 13 years, Hitler led a fringe sect with less than a hundred members and outlandish ideas to be the dominant force in German politics.

Jonathan Myerson talks to us at History Café about the challenges of bringing this extraordinary and shocking story to life through the eyes of the people closest to him. He tells us how every scene in a long series of 8 plays was based on a real event and that much of the dialogue including Hitler’s speeches comes from contemporary sources. [One episode]

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Sex, Hollywood and Fashion

Why did fashion become so much more conservative in the 1930s? We argue the reason wasn’t Schiaparelli or Chanel, but the puritanical Hays Motion Picture Production Code that banned indecent passions in Hollywood. MGM’s Adrian Greenberg was the most powerful Hollywood designer of his day, designing for the camera, experimenting with hats and calf-length dresses that flattered the lead actresses, but stuck to the code, and could be copied cheaply and quickly and sold to ‘Nancy’ in the plush picture-house seat. [One episode]

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‘1066 And All That’ - really serious nonsense

Published in 1930 and never out of print since, this isn’t (as everyone has always supposed) just an innocent laugh at kids’ mistakes. 1066 And All That is suffused with subtexts. Our original research reveals its origins back in the academic infighting and socialism Sellar and Yeatman experienced in 1919 Oxford. [One episode]

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Remembrance Day - Aren’t we forgetting something?

At least 50% of deaths from war in the last three centuries were civilians. In 2001 the International Red Cross calculated that in modern warfare ten civilians die for every member of the military killed in battle. In the two World Wars the vast majority of soldiers were “civilians in uniform” – conscripts or volunteers. But do we officially remember them? [One episode]

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Nightmare in the Trenches (1914-16)

There are those who say that the Battle of the Somme (July-November 1916) was one of the British Army’s greatest achievements. They claim that - after the first day, with 57 000 casualties, more than any other day in the Army’s history – the British inflicted such damage on the German forces that they never truly recovered. But we show that this had not been the British Army’s intention. That first day, Commander-in-Chief Douglas Haig explicitly planned for a dramatic breakthrough. The slaughter that followed was a direct result of the British Army’s long history of failure to understand modern warfare or to learn from its errors since the war started in 1914. It did not possess the heavy artillery it needed. It was also a result of the blind snobbery of its officers. We throw their ghastly blunders into relief by comparing the brilliant – but little known - success of the French that day and of the few British divisions that copied what the French did. [Seven episodes]

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The Secret History of the Suffragettes

INTERNATIONAL WOMAN’S DAY 8 MARCH 2024 - We explore the fascinating women and men who mobilised public opinion to get women the vote. And we peel away the Pankhurst monopoly to reveal something much uglier – a gender war, a class war and terrorism. And also an unexpected preoccupation with shopping. [Eight episodes]

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Murder. Mystery at the North Pole

In 1908 and 1909 two white Americans, one black American Mat Henson, and six Inughuit: Ittukusuk and Aapilaq, Egingwah, Ootah, Ooqueah and Seegloo claimed to have reached the North Pole – a patch of constantly moving sea ice. US Navy Commander Robert Peary who led the later expedition spent the rest of his life trying to cover his own dubious tracks and to prove that the earlier claim on the Pole by his old companion Dr Frederick Cook had been a fake. Since the technology of the day made it impossible for anyone to prove they’d reached the Pole we ask what mystery drew them to risk madness and death nearly 500 miles out onto dangerously thin sea ice. It turns out to be a heady cocktail of American money, ambition and self-doubt. The Wild West on ice!

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Coronation and the chilling ghost of Lord Esher

The coronation of King Charles III has prompted this humorous historical look at the British coronations. Since 1902, when Edward VII and his queen were crowned, the religious ceremony itself has drawn upon rites going back to the crowning of Anglo-Saxon kings. But reviving these old rites just belongs to an Edwardian fascination with a mythical Merrie England. And once you step outside all the solemnity of the Abbey, we are in a world that was entirely invented between the 1870s and the first world war. It was then that British royals turned into a strange mix of an oddly middle-class family that was given to stagey, mock-historical popular pageants, with an increasing display of military uniforms to boost Britain’s failing international image. Thespian imperialist Lord Esher, who headed the coronation planning committee in 1902, had very little time for the ordinary British people he called ‘millions of drudges’. He insisted that everyone in royal ceremonies – not just the military – had to wear a uniform. It was meant to distinguish them from the mere mortals who could watch from the sidelines. Ultimately these events were always about international politics. The coronation of Charles III occurs in the context of Brexit and deep economic crisis and carries as much international weight as anything that has gone before. [One episode]

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Was the Wild West wild?

If the wildness of the Wild West is a myth then it needs to be called out. Too many Americans (including a few presidents) have believed in an ‘atavistic relation’ between ‘a man and his gun’. We examine the history behind this justification of deadly violence. [Two episodes]

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Dr Livingstone, I presume?

Exploration changed in the middle of the nineteenth century, when Henry Morton Stanley met Dr David Livingstone.
We discover that Livingstone isn’t remembered for anything he achieved. A missionary and medical doctor from a poor Scottish background – and an indestructible traveller - he learned to make accurate geographical calculations and used them to map a small part of Africa. Amazingly he did most of his successful exploration with an African team and backed by African funds. The Africans, it turns out, had their own good reasons to back him. Once the British government was involved, he got spectacularly next to nothing done at all. [Five episodes]

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Santa Claus and the Knickerbockers

A whole lot of nonsense has been written about the invention of the modern Christmas. It was thought up by Washington Irving or Charles Dickens or Prince Albert. We just can’t resist attaching a famous name to things, especially if the name belongs to a writer or a royal. We deserve better than this. So here's our offering from the History Café Christmas Party! Have a good one. [One episode]

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The curious case of inventing Scottishness

In 1983 Professor Hugh Trevor Roper claimed that Scottishness had been invented. We enjoyably demolish Trevor Roper’s theory and reveal that the commercialisation of romantic Scottishness in the nineteenth century had far deeper and darker roots than the manufacture of tartan and romantic fiction. [One episode]

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Money not morality ended British enslavement

Everyone knows that slavery was abolished in 1833 (in British colonies anyway) because of the moral campaign of William Wilberforce. But this is just the story told by his sons in a five-volume biography published after his death. In reality Wilberforce had been a saintly but often ineffective campaigner and the lead had really been taken by others. Much more important, in 1944 Eric Williams, Trinidadian historian (who’d got the top history first in his year at Oxford) demonstrated in Capitalism and Slavery that it was economic changes, and not moral campaigns that ended slavery: it ended because it simply no longer turned a profit. It’s a brilliant, persuasive book and sparked a debate that’s still not resolved. We consider both sides. [Five episodes]

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Isaac Newton: the last of the magicians?

The economist John Maynard Keynes bought hundreds of Sir Isaac Newton’s manuscripts on spec at an auction and concluded that they were in fact detailed notes on the great 17th century mathematician and scientist’s reading and experiments in alchemy. He described Newton as ‘the last of the magicians.’ We look at the case for and against… [Two episodes]

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