The Aberfan disaster and women who made history

The Aberfan disaster and women who made histo...

Up next

How to find a billion-dollar shipwreck

In 1708, the Spanish galleon San José was sunk by a British warship off the coast of Colombia, vanishing beneath the waves with a treasure trove of unimaginable riches. The wreck's exact location remained a mystery for centuries – until a maritime archaeologist named Roger Dooley ...  Show more

A fantastical history of fairies

When picturing a fairy, you might imagine a childlike creature with wings. But this is a far more modern image than we might think. In this episode, Matthias Egeler tells Lauren Good about the ways in which our perceptions of elves and fairies have changed throughout history – an ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

Formidable Heroines of History
Dan Snow's History Hit

From the notorious thief Mary Frith in the seventeenth century to industrialist and LGBT trailblazer Anne Lister in the nineteenth, these heroines redefined what a woman could be and what she could do in pre-twentieth-century Britain.


Holly Kyte, author and literary ...

  Show more

The New York Times Has ALWAYS Been Woke: A Conversation With Ashley Rindsberg
The Andrew Klavan Show

Ashley Rindsberg, author of The Gray Lady Winked, joins us to discuss how the "Paper of Record" has often prioritized ideology over news throughout its storied history, and how this has consequently shaped history in profound ways. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastc ...  Show more

Banned History
Betwixt The Sheets: The History of Sex, Scandal & Society

How much did Britain and its allies know about the Holocaust? Could the Bengal Famine of 1943 have been helped? And was Elizabeth I really the Virgin Queen? 

 

Lynsey Calver is a history teacher, and in this episode, she helps us to fill in some of the ga ...

  Show more

Greg Jenner talks to Lucy Worsley about Lady Killers
You're Dead to Me

Greg Jenner and fellow historian Lucy Worsley discuss Lucy’s Radio 4 podcast, Lady Killers, which is about Victorian murderesses. Lucy explains why she wanted to examine these historical cases and what these women's stories tell us about life and society in 19th-century Britain. ...  Show more