(Lucy) For much of the Middle Ages, King Arthur was Europe’s model king. His court could be a space for heroism, for romance, and also for the uncanny. Often drawing on oral tradition, written for elite audiences, the Arthurian romances of the 13th and 14th centuries can be surprisingly revealing about cultural values and cultural debates. This week we'll be looking at Christmas feasts, sun-god figures, and complex debates about the morality of flirting.
Napoleon Bonaparte's Near-Fatal Christmas
The Malleus Maleficarum
Distrust of Chinese-Americans in Early 20th-Century New York City
History for Halloween IV
Cemeteries: Washington Park Cemetery and Early 20th-Century Atlanta
Belle Gunness, Black Widow Serial Killer
John Dee: Astrologer, Courtier, Mystic...Spy?
The Invention of the Chocolate Chip Cookie
The Murderess in History
Cemeteries: Local History of Mid-20th Century Atlanta
Guy de Montfort and Dante’s Inferno
Secret Santa: The History of Santa Claus
The Husband-Killing She-Wolf: The Life of Joanna of Naples
The One-Legged Nazi-Fighting Jesuit: Rupert Mayer
Jumbo the Elephant
How to Punish a Witch in 16th-Century England
The Great Unpleasantness? World War One in Whodunits
Curious George Escapes Nazi Europe
Early American Newspapers and Freedom of the Press
A Royal Son: Henry the Young King
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Irish Songs with Ken Murray
History Obscura
Historycal: Words that Shaped the World
The Rest Is History
Lore