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History Extra podcast - Podcast

History Extra podcast

The History Extra podcast brings you gripping stories from the past and fascinating historical conversations with the world's leading historical experts.


Produced by the team behind BBC History Magazine, History Extra is a free history podcast, with episodes released six times a week. Subscribe now for the real stories behind your favourite films, TV shows and period dramas, as well as compelling insights into lesser-known aspects of the past. 

 

We delve into global history stories spanning the ancient world right up to the modern day. You’ll hear deep dives into the lives of famous historical figures like Cleopatra, Anne Boleyn and Winston Churchill, and explorations of intriguing events from the past, such as the Salem witch trials, the battle of Waterloo and D-Day. 

 

Expect fresh takes on history, helping you get to grips with the latest research, as we explore everything from ancient Roman archaeology and Viking mythology to Renaissance royals and Tudor kings and queens. 

 

Our episodes touch on a wide range of historical eras – from the Normans and Saxons to the Stuarts, Victorians and the Regency period. We cover the most popular historical subjects, from the medieval world to the Second World War, but you’ll also hear conversations on lesser-known parts of our past, including black history and women’s history. 

 

Looking at the history behind today’s headlines, we consider the forces that have shaped today’s world, from the imposing empires that dominated continents, to the revolutions that brought them crashing down. We also examine the impact of conflict across the centuries, from the crusades of the Middle Ages and the battles of the ancient Egyptians to World War One, World War Two and the Cold War.  

 

Plus, we uncover the real history behind myths, legends and conspiracy theories, from the medieval murder mystery of the Princes in the Tower, to the assassination of JFK.  

 

Featuring interviews with notable historians including Mary Beard, Tracy Borman, James Holland and Dan Jones, we cover a range of social, political and military history, with the aim to start conversations about some of the most fascinating areas of the past. 

Unlock full access to HistoryExtra.com for 6 months for just 99p https://www.historyextra.com/join/

History
Update frequency
every day
Average duration
42 minutes
Episodes
2405
Years Active
2007 - 2025
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Are we celebrating the wrong Magna Carta?

Are we celebrating the wrong Magna Carta?

The history books tell us that Magna Carta was sealed on 15 June 1215. But, according to Professor David Carpenter, that's not actually the date we should commemorate. He explains to David Musgrove w…
00:39:41  |   Tue 11 Feb 2025
The forgotten JFK assassination plot

The forgotten JFK assassination plot

In December 1960, as president-elect John F Kennedy made his way to church in Florida, a would-be assassin waited nearby, preparing to detonate a bomb that would end the Democrat's presidency before …
00:40:39  |   Mon 10 Feb 2025
The Indian Rebellion of 1857: everything you wanted to know

The Indian Rebellion of 1857: everything you wanted to know

What ignited resentment at British rule in India into outright violence? How brutal was British troops' suppression of the uprising? And how did the events of 1857 poison relations between the Britis…
00:43:01  |   Sun 09 Feb 2025
From dinosaurs to Godzilla: a 15,000-year history of monsters

From dinosaurs to Godzilla: a 15,000-year history of monsters

What makes a monster, and why do they fascinate us? Dr Natalie Lawrence unravels 15,000 years of human storytelling through the tales of creatures like dragons, Medusa, and even Godzilla. Speaking to…
00:37:33  |   Fri 07 Feb 2025
How monasteries powered medieval Europe

How monasteries powered medieval Europe

Monasteries and convents were a common sight throughout medieval Europe and beyond. But who were they for? What did they do? And how did religious life there change over the centuries? Speaking to Em…
00:40:09  |   Wed 05 Feb 2025
Greenland, forest fires and presidential power: history behind the headlines

Greenland, forest fires and presidential power: history behind the headlines

Historians Hannah Skoda and Rana Mitter look at the shifting dynamics of presidential power and discuss the history behind President Trump's stated desire to acquire Greenland, in 2025's first instal…
00:40:15  |   Tue 04 Feb 2025
George Villiers: from royal favourite to enemy number one

George Villiers: from royal favourite to enemy number one

George Villiers, the Duke of Buckingham, had charm and political ambition by the bucketload – and his rise as a favourite of King James I and VI in the late 16th century was meteoric. Speaking to Eli…
00:43:49  |   Mon 03 Feb 2025
Extinct animals: everything you wanted to know

Extinct animals: everything you wanted to know

From the depths of the Ice Age to the 20th century, why – and how – have species gone extinct? And are humans always to blame? In conversation with James Osborne, Dr Ross Barnett unpacks how the caus…
00:34:45  |   Sun 02 Feb 2025
Agony and ecstasy: the lives of mystics

Agony and ecstasy: the lives of mystics

From medieval mystic Julian of Norwich to countercultural figures of the 1960s, various individuals down the centuries have felt they have access to spiritual forces beyond human understanding. But w…
00:32:05  |   Fri 31 Jan 2025
How medicine became a moneymaker

How medicine became a moneymaker

How did we go from sharing homegrown cures free of charge to buying medicine from strangers on the open market? This transition is more complex than you might think, and it's something that Karen Blo…
00:40:12  |   Thu 30 Jan 2025
Carolingians in crisis: the medieval civil war that shaped Europe

Carolingians in crisis: the medieval civil war that shaped Europe

History is full of dysfunctional families, but few more so than the Carolingian ruling clan. The empire was at the height of its power under renowned ruler Charlemagne. But just two generations later…
00:41:53  |   Wed 29 Jan 2025
Charles Dickens: life of the week

Charles Dickens: life of the week

Charles Dickens is one of the most famous figures in literary history. But, there's lots about the author that you might not know, from his obsessive workaholism and marital strife, to the fact he wa…
00:46:34  |   Tue 28 Jan 2025
Murder in WW2 London

Murder in WW2 London

In September 1940, the German Luftwaffe began raining bombs on British cities, causing death and destruction on a scale never before seen. But, in the capital, the Blitz wasn’t the only threat to peo…
00:33:47  |   Mon 27 Jan 2025
British TV history: everything you wanted to know

British TV history: everything you wanted to know

From early shows that looked as if they were filmed "in a heavy and persistent shower of rain" to today's multi-platform streaming world, the history of television has been marked by rapid innovation…
00:56:15  |   Sun 26 Jan 2025
The big questions of the Holocaust

The big questions of the Holocaust

How did the Nazis’ poisonous antisemitic rhetoric eventually culminate in the systematic mass-murder of millions? Speaking to Rachel Dinning back in 2023, historian Laurence Rees charts the course of…
00:44:23  |   Sat 25 Jan 2025
Happiness: history of an emotion

Happiness: history of an emotion

The word 'happiness' came into common usage in around the 17th century, but the concept has a much longer history. So how have people conceptualised happiness over time – and how have they sought to …
00:28:50  |   Fri 24 Jan 2025
The 1453 fall of Constantinople: capturing the Byzantine capital

The 1453 fall of Constantinople: capturing the Byzantine capital

In 1453, the once grand and formidable city of Constantinople fell to the hands of the Ottoman Turks – bringing over a millennium of Byzantine rule to a dramatic close, and heralding the rise of the …
00:46:21  |   Thu 23 Jan 2025
Inside the mind of the Third Reich

Inside the mind of the Third Reich

What drives people to commit atrocities? Few periods in history confront this question as starkly as the rise of the Nazis, whose crimes stand as a chilling testament to humanity’s capacity for darkn…
00:37:06  |   Wed 22 Jan 2025
Sacagawea: life of the week

Sacagawea: life of the week

Sacagawea is remembered in US history as the Shoshone Native American woman who acted as interpreter to the Lewis and Clark Expedition, the early 19th-century mission to chart territory in the Americ…
00:38:00  |   Tue 21 Jan 2025
Women's bodies: an unreliable history

Women's bodies: an unreliable history

The history of women's bodies is far from simple. Female anatomy and the ideas surrounding it – from breastfeeding to virginity – still cause contention today. From the surprising original Pandora my…
00:36:10  |   Mon 20 Jan 2025
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