Netflix's hit drama The Crown has come to a close after six seasons and 60 episodes, having dramatised the Windsor dynasty from the mid-20th century to the early years of the new millennium. While it has faced some controversy for its portrayals of living royals and storytelling choices, its mass appeal has seen it become one of the flagship historical dramas of the decade. Elinor Evans spoke to the show's head of research, Annie Sulzberger, to hear more about The Crown's approach to the real history it portrays on screen.
The HistoryExtra podcast is produced by the team behind BBC History Magazine.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
WW2's greatest battles | 3. Battle of the Atlantic
Smash hits: 17th-century style
Benjamin Franklin: life of the week
OJ Simpson: the trial that gripped the world
Greg Jenner and Campbell Price delve into the curious and fascinating world of ancient Egyptian mummification
The Magus: enlightened magician or Renaissance charlatan?
WW2's greatest battles | 2. Stalingrad
Aztec myths
David Lloyd George: life of the week
Graffiti's golden age: radicalism & romance in the 18th century
Highwaymen: everything you wanted to know
An African perspective on the history of Africa
WW2's greatest battles | 1. Battle of Britain
WW2's greatest battles | Trailer
How Kissinger transformed the Cold War
Lord Byron: life of the week
Horrible Histories: 15 years of death, poo and talking rats
Medieval medicine: everything you wanted to know
Death & hubris in west Africa: how two British expeditions met with disaster
Conspiracy Revisited: The JFK assassination – Oswald’s second murder
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Gone Medieval
Dan Snow’s History Hit
A History of Italy
The Ancients
The History Hour