The Victorians created the unsettling art of death photography - posing their deceased love ones in family portraits as if they were alive. How did they manage to make corpses strike poses? Why did they want to?
Maddy and Anthony are joined by Brandy Schillace, author of Death’s Summer Coat - What Death and Dying Cal Tell Us about Life and Living to flick through the strangest, and most moving, of family photo albums.
Edited by Tom Delargy. Produced by Stuart Beckwith. Senior Producer is Charlotte Long.
Sign up to History Hit at historyhit.com/subscribe using code 'BLACKFRIDAYPOD' at checkout, for $1/£1 per month for 4 months and you’ll get nearly £30 off our normal monthly price over your first 4 months.
Victorian Thames Torso Murders
Hidden History of Garden Gnomes
Great Irish Famine: Coffin Ships & the Dark Truth (Part 2)
Oliver Cromwell's Decapitated Head & Charles II's Revenge
The Great Famine: Ireland’s Darkest Chapter (Part 1)
Historical Origins of Harry Potter Monsters
True Story of the Mutiny on the Bounty
Execution of Charles I
1811 Ratcliffe Highway Murders: Birth of True Crime
Cannibalism in Scotland: Legend of Sawney Bean
What is the Yeti?
The Georgian Husband with Fourteen Wives
Bigfoot: the Origin Story
Deadly Dancing Plague of 1518
Bigfoot: Hunt for the Truth
Jack the Ripper
Medieval Mass Murdering Monk: Malmesbury Abbey
The Murdering Midwife of Covent Garden
Who is the Real Dracula? The Bloody History
England's Worst Witch Trial: Pendle Witches
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Betwixt The Sheets: The History of Sex, Scandal & Society
Not Just the Tudors
The Ancients
Gone Medieval
Dan Snow’s History Hit