109: The Seleucid Empire - A Sinful Root

109: The Seleucid Empire - A Sinful Root

Up next

117: Antigonid Macedon - The Vergina Sun Never Sets...

Fifteen years after the last Antigonid ruler was deposed and the Macedonian kingdom abolished, a man by the name of Philip VI Andriscus claimed to be the lost heir of King Perseus. Though perceived as a charlatan, Andriscus gathered enough support to invade Macedonia in 150 and r ...  Show more

116: The Third Punic War - Dido's Lament

Though the Romans expected an easy fight, the Carthaginians put up a valiant defense of their city that dragged on for three years. With no progress being made, command is assigned to Scipio Aemilianus, the adopted grandson of the famed Scipio Africanus. Through his skilled gener ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

599. The First World War: Downfall of the Habsburgs (Part 6)
The Rest Is History

After endeavouring to wreak their revenge on Serbia, what would be the greatest hammer blow to the Austro-Hungarian Empire during the First World War? With Leviv having fallen apocalyptically to the Russian hordes, what had gone so wrong? How might the war have been brought to an ...  Show more

575. The Medici: The Bonfire of the Vanities (Part 4)
The Rest Is History

Following the death of Lorenzo the Magnificent, who was his Medici successor? Could he overcome the political turmoil and religious fervour in Florence, and rebuff the storm clouds of war gathering over his city with the approaching French army? How did this burgeoning catastroph ...  Show more

The Persian Wars: Darius, Athens and the Battle of Marathon
The Ancients

490 BC. On the plains of Marathon, Athens faced down a mighty army of the Persian Empire - the superpower of the time It was an underdog clash that would echo throughout history. But how did it all begin?


In this episode of The Ancients, Tristan Hughes kicks ...

  Show more

233. Blood and Betrayal: Oliver Cromwell's Irish Invasion (Ep 1)
Empire: World History

His statue may stand proudly outside the Houses of Parliament in London, but in Ireland, Oliver Cromwell is remembered as “the Devil from over the Sea” for the bloodshed he unleashed there from 1649 to 1653.  Rising to prominence as a Parliamentarian during the English Civil War ...  Show more