(Elizabeth) Between 1794 and 1804, the newly emancipated people of the colony of Saint-Domingue created a government under the leadership of Toussaint Louverture and defeated Napoleonic forces to become their own independent country. In this episode, Elizabeth explains the role of Louverture but also the international ramifications of the creation of Haiti.
Hugh O'Neill and the Tudors
Dog Stars, Part II
Dog Stars, Part I
Seeking to Punish in 17th-Century England
King Childeric of the Franks: Barbarian?
Space Exploration and History ft. Asif Siddiqi
Alan Turing
Warrior, Wife, and Mother: The Story of Sichelgaita of Salerno
The Scientific Passions of Mary Buckland
Laura Bridgman, Charles Dickens, and Helen Keller
Rosamund: 6th-Century Regicide and Politics
Lawrence O'Brien: Fenians and the American Civil War
The Rise of the Studios: The Origins of the Film Industry, Part II
Love, Parachutes, and Käthchen Paulus
Alcibiades: The Bad Boy of Athens
Before Napoleon: Josephine Bonaparte's First Marriage
The King James Bible: One Version of the Greatest Story Ever Told
Nursery Rhymes, History, and Memory
A Tale of Three Breeds
The Birth of a Blockbuster
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Irish Songs with Ken Murray
History Obscura
Historycal: Words that Shaped the World
The Rest Is History
Everything Everywhere Daily