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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Victorian Death Photography: Postmortem Posers
Mother Shipton: Tudor Prophetess of England's Doom
The Real Witch Hunts: Persecution & Panic
The Man Who Hanged Nazis: Albert Pierrepoint
Ghost Fetishes: From Ancient World to Victorians
Origins of the Loch Ness Monster
Guy Fawkes & the 1605 Gunpowder Plot
Hammersmith Ghost: How to Murder a Poltergeist
Hauntings, Hangings & a Beast: Bodmin Jail
Last Witch of Scotland
Banshees: Ireland's Harbinger of Death
HMS Terror: Cursed Arctic Expedition
Burke & Hare: Scotland’s Most Notorious Serial Killers
The Origins of Halloween
The Murders That Shocked Georgian London
Welcome to After Dark: Myths, Misdeeds & the Paranormal
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