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.


Broadcasting now Penelope Middelboe Broadcasting now Penelope Middelboe

Blowing up the Gunpowder Plot

On the evening of 4 November 1605 Guy Fawkes was found ready to blow Monarch and Parliament to Kingdom Come. But what reliable evidence is there, once we exclude the confessions extracted under torture? Was he a victim of the common practice of framing political enemies? [Seven episodes]

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Broadcasting now Penelope Middelboe Broadcasting now Penelope Middelboe

Bloody Mary Tudor?

313 people were killed for their beliefs in England and Wales between 1555 and 1558, during the reign of the Roman Catholic Queen Mary Tudor. Most of them were burned at the stake.
But like almost all episodes in England’s Catholic history, modern scholarship shows that this one’s been badly misunderstood. We’ve been investigating it, not in any way in order to excuse what happened, but to try to understand it. We feel we owe it to the victims to get the story straight. [Five episodes]

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Broadcasting now Penelope Middelboe Broadcasting now Penelope Middelboe

What Wars? What Roses?

The Wars of the Roses never happened – or certainly not in the way Henry VII’s propaganda told it. Even the roses are an invention. Which is why we ask What wars? What roses? But the real question is, what on earth was going on in fifteenth century England? Or, more seriously, could this really have been the end of medieval England and the start of the modern? Well, the intriguing thing is, that when you peep over the edge of the fifteenth century, you discover that something very profound did in fact change. [Five episodes]

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