(Host: Lucy)
How much is it impossible to know about an icon? This episode investigates Tadeusz Kościuszko’s place in historical memory. From the early 19th century onwards, myths coalesced around him and his role in the Polish struggle for independence. Paradoxically, his contemporary fame can make it harder for historians to find facts. As a disabled war veteran who fought for racial and religious equality, moreover, Kościuszko is a figure more complex than the heroic narratives that have often formed around him.
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The Public Arch
The Newsies Strike of 1899
The Weeks Murder Trial
Margaret Eaton and the Petticoat Affair
1288: A Moment in Norwich
Footnoting History’s Favorite Historical Footnotes
Rebecca Gratz: Philanthropist, Educator… Romantic Heroine?
The Papal Fleet
History for the Holidays II
The Greatest Knight: William Marshal, Part II
The Greatest Knight: William Marshal, Part I
History for Halloween IX
Who Murdered Licoricia of Winchester?
The Milne Family Part II
The Milne Family Part I
The Oneida Community, Part II
The Oneida Community, Part I
Jeffrey Hudson: England’s Forgotten Swashbuckler
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