This week we are sweeping through Sicily and Southern Italy in the company of the original revolutionary hero, Giuseppe Maria Garibaldi.
In the mid nineteenth century, change was in the air as new political movements began questioning the status quo. Powerful ideas like socialism, republicanism, liberalism and nationalism were spreading through Europe, harnessed by charismatic leaders determined to bring about dramatic social change. None were more charismatic than Giuseppe Garibaldi.
Our guide on this epoch-making trip is Jamie Mackay, a writer who is based in the beautiful town of Fiesole just north of Florence. This episode relates to his book The Invention of Sicily which tells the story of this fascinating island, fought over and coveted by almost every civilisation in history, a romantic melting pot where cruelty and disaster were never far away.
As ever, maps, images and much more about this episode is to be found at our website tttpodcast.com.
Click here to order Jamie MacKay's book from John Sandoe’s who, we are delighted to say, are supplying books for the podcast.
Stuart Clark: The Space Age (1957)
Michèle Mendelssohn: Making Oscar Wilde (1882)
Catherine Fletcher: The Beauty and the Terror (1492)
Selma van de Perre: Liberation (1945)
Hugh Aldersey-Williams: Christiaan Huygens (1655)
Jonathan Schneer: The Lockhart Plot (1918)
Alan Mikhail: The Ottomans (1517)
Rebecca Wragg Sykes: Neanderthals (Eemian)
Simon Hall: Fidel Castro in Harlem (1960)
Thomas Levenson: The South Sea Bubble (1720)
Ken Follett: The Evening and the Morning (1002)
Prof. David Abulafia: Wolfson Prize Special (1415)
Justin Marozzi: Seizure of Constantinople (1453)
Prof. Greg Woolf: Rise of the Romans (146 BCE)
Craig Brown: Beatlemania (1963)
Luke Pepera: Mansa Musa (1325)
Prof. James Shapiro: Manifest Destiny (1845)
Season Three Trailer
Owen Matthews: Richard Sorge (1941)
Kelcey Wilson-Lee: Daughters of Chivalry (1297)
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