The Roman emperors: everything you wanted to know

The Roman emperors: everything you wanted to ...

Up next

The long shadow of the Black Death

When the first wave of the Black Death finally subsided, what sort of world did it leave behind? How did societies adapt in the decades that followed? And what lessons did this medieval catastrophe hold for future generations? In this final episode of our Sunday Series on the dea ...  Show more

The secret plot to end Scottish independence

How did the union of England and Scotland come to fruition? From failed Scottish colonies to anti-independence espionage, Marc Mierowsky's book A Spy Amongst Us reveals how union wasn't inevitable, and how many Scottish people tried to choose their own future. In this episode of ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

Roman Emperors with Mary Beard
Dan Snow's History Hit

What did it take to become a Roman emperor? Pliny the Elder wrote that a ruler should be generous, victorious in battle and a father to his people. But how many emperors were able to live up to these expectations? And were these really traits that the typical Roman cared about ...

  Show more

Episode 263 - Questions X
The History of Byzantium

I answer more questions about the Fourth Crusade and the sack of Constantinople. We talk about why the Roman response was so feeble and if anything else could have been done? Along with questions about the tombs of the Emperors, statues, coins and ships. Hosted on Acast. See acas ...  Show more

Emperors & Scandals in Ancient Rome with Mary Beard
Betwixt The Sheets: The History of Sex, Scandal & Society

What happens at a Roman emperor's dinner party? Why would you be lucky to get out alive? And how are emperors even chosen?


Joining Kate today is the one, the only Mary Beard, to take us back to Ancient Rome and help separate the facts from the myths.


Mary's ...

  Show more

The Birth of the Roman Empire
The Ancients

16 January 27 BC is a date sometimes associated with the beginning of the Roman Empire. It was on that day that Octavian received the name Augustus, effectively becoming the first emperor of Rome. Augustus ordered the gates of Janus to be closed, marking an end to the period o ...

  Show more