This episode is a bloody delight: from flesh-eating fish and humiliating deaths inside sacks, to a deadly re-enactment of the Icarus myth. For a culture that is seen as an emblem of civilisation (whatever that means), the Romans expended a lot of creative energy on inventing new ways to kill people. And our guest today knows them all!
Anthony Delaney and Maddy Pelling are joined by the one and only Emma Southon author of A Fatal Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. Her new book is A History of Rome in 21 Women.
Mixed by Tom Delargy. Producer is Freddy Chick. Senior Producer is Charlotte Long.
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The American Ripper
Alaskan Stories: Sedna the Sea-Goddess & Myth of Last Frontier
The Mythical Origins of Britain
The Real Dick Turpin
The Many Murders of Alexander the Great
Ghost Ship: The Mary Celeste
Myths of King Arthur: Origins, Creepy Sex & Magic Swords
Ireland's Bloodiest Murders: Maamtrasna Murders
Medieval Werewolves, Ghosts & Zombies
Exploding Kings & Red Hot Pokers: Gruesome Deaths of Monarchs
Blood Countess of Hungary: Sixteenth Century Serial Killer
Christmas Day Strangler: the murder of Gwen Ellen Jones
Charles Dickens' Christmas Ghosts
Palmer the Poisoner: Victorian England's Doctor of Death
Why Do People Kill at Christmas?
Ghost That Solved Its Own Murder: Red Barn Murder
The Ghost of Anne Boleyn
Hellfire Club: Sex, Scandal & Satanism in Georgian England
Amelia Dyer: Victorian Baby Farm Killer
The Real Origins of Witches
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