Afleveringen
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This week, Alexandra invites Debby Sneed onto the pod to chat about a topic far too often overlooked in documentaries and paperback histories - the lives of disabled people in the Greek world.
We cover some common misconceptions, archaeological evidence, and ancient attitudes. Can the ancient Greek world give our modern societies some pointers on how to make our world more disability friendly? The answer may surprise you...
Transcript
Make sure to click ‘subscribe’ so that you never miss an episode; we have a new topic every Wednesday!
Find Ancient History 101 on social media and our website, where you can learn more about our expert guests.
We have merch available at our RedBubble shop, or you can help support the podcast by buying history books and translations we’ve hand-chosen for you at our online bookshop in the USA or UK.
Or you can buy us a ko-fi! However you choose to support the show, we appreciate it!
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Ancient History 101 is a proud member of the Mnemosyne Memory Collective
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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For this biography episode, Alexandra is joined by author L.J Trafford to piece together the life of Roman emperor Domitian - was he truly one of the worse emperors of Rome?
This episode has it's own page on our website, so if you want relevant images, a transcript, to read the poems mentioned in the episode or to find L.J's excellent books, head straight there!
Make sure to click ‘subscribe’ so that you never miss an episode; we have a new topic every Wednesday!
Find Ancient History 101 on social media and our website, where you can learn more about our expert guests.
We have merch available at our RedBubble shop, or you can help support the podcast by buying history books and translations we’ve hand-chosen for you at our online bookshop in the USA or UK.
Or you can buy us a ko-fi! However you choose to support the show, we appreciate it!
Sick of being interrupted by adverts? We have an ad-free subscription here.
Ancient History 101 is a proud member of the Mnemosyne Memory Collective
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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Ben Paites, curator extraordinaire, is here to tell us exactly what happens behind the scenes to make museums work. How do museums acquire exhibits, who decides what gets displayed, and are museums always benignly ethical? Ben gives Alexandra answers to all these questions and more.
For Ben's book 50 LGBTQ+ Finds, click here to go to our UK bookshop, and here for the United States.
Make sure to click ‘subscribe’ so that you never miss an episode; we have a new topic every Wednesday!
Find Ancient History 101 on social media and our website, where you can learn more about our expert guests.
We have merch available at our RedBubble shop, or you can help support the podcast by buying history books and translations we’ve hand-chosen for you at our online bookshop in the USA or UK.
Or you can buy us a ko-fi! However you choose to support the show, we appreciate it!
Ancient History 101 is a proud member of the Mnemosyne Memory Collective
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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This week we have battles, oracles, and a towering pile of ostraka - it can only be a life of Themistocles - the man who owed democracy his career, but was convicted of treason and condemned to die by the very democrats he'd saved in battle.
Michael Scott, author of the sterling new biography of Themistocles, steps aboard to tell us about the man credited with making Athens the greatest Greek naval power.
Buy Michael's book, find supplementary materials and a transcript, all in this one handy link.
Make sure to click ‘subscribe’ so that you never miss an episode; we have a new topic every Wednesday!
Find Ancient History 101 on social media and our website, where you can learn more about our expert guests.
We have merch available at our RedBubble shop, or you can help support the podcast by buying history books and translations we’ve hand-chosen for you at our online bookshop in the USA or UK.
Or you can buy us a ko-fi! However you choose to support the show, we appreciate it!
Ancient History 101 is a proud member of the Mnemosyne Memory Collective
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Owen Rees of Xenophon fame returns to the show to explain why everything we think we know about ancient Sparta is an illusion.
So what is the Spartan Mirage, and how in earth are we supposed to reveal the real picture of Spartan life hiding behind it?
For recommended reading, images, maps, and more information about Owen and his work, click here to go to the episode webpage.
Make sure to click ‘subscribe’ so that you never miss an episode; we have a new topic every Wednesday!
Find Ancient History 101 on social media and our website, where you can learn more about our expert guests.
We have merch available at our RedBubble shop, or you can help support the podcast by buying history books and translations we’ve hand-chosen for you at our online bookshop in the USA or UK.
Or you can buy us a ko-fi! However you choose to support the show, we appreciate it!
Ancient History 101 is a proud member of the Mnemosyne Memory Collective
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Alexandra strikes out on her on for a bonus episode this week, to celebrate 10,000 downloads! So as an extra treat, Alexandra chats about her favourite Greek tragedy, Euripides' Trojan Women.
Often misunderstood, this play remains painfully relevant to our modern world, even as the author's intentions have become difficult to see clearly through the mists of time. Alexandra puts her case forward, and invites you to make your own conclusions.
For a transcript of this episode as well as recommended further reading, click here.
Make sure to click ‘subscribe’ so that you never miss an episode; we have a new topic every Wednesday!
Find Ancient History 101 on social media and our website, where you can learn more about our expert guests.
We have merch available at our RedBubble shop, or you can help support the podcast by buying history books and translations we’ve hand-chosen for you at our online bookshop in the USA or UK.
Or you can buy us a ko-fi! However you choose to support the show, we appreciate it!
Ancient History 101 is a proud member of the Mnemosyne Memory Collective
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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This week we have one of the messiest, bloodiest years of the early Roman empire, in which becoming emperor was pretty much a death sentence...
Our special guest of the week is Nathaniel Katz, here to find the meaning in the mess and help us understand how this one year changed the Roman empire forever.
Find recommended reading, images, and other supplementary materials here.
Make sure to click ‘subscribe’ so that you never miss an episode; we have a new topic every Wednesday!
Find Ancient History 101 on social media and our website, where you can learn more about our expert guests.
We have merch available at our RedBubble shop, or you can help support the podcast by buying history books and translations we’ve hand-chosen for you at our online bookshop in the USA or UK.
Or you can buy us a ko-fi! However you choose to support the show, we appreciate it!
Ancient History 101 is a proud member of the Mnemosyne Memory Collective
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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This week we're tackling a heavy subject - slavery in the Roman world. Thank goodness we have such a lovely expert to guide us through it; Chance Bonar explains why the realities of Roman slavery are a little different to what we might expect, and why we certainly can't say it wasn't so bad, after all.
Make sure to click ‘subscribe’ so that you never miss an episode; we have a new topic every Wednesday!
Find Ancient History 101 on social media and our website, where you can learn more about our expert guests.
We have merch available at our RedBubble shop, or you can help support the podcast by buying history books and translations we’ve hand-chosen for you at our online bookshop in the USA or UK.
Or you can buy us a ko-fi! However you choose to support the show, we appreciate it!
Ancient History 101 is a proud member of the Mnemosyne Memory Collective
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Get your oars ready, we're going sailing this week with Bret Devereaux, as he guides us through the First Punic War.
To find Bret's amazing blog, head over to A Collection of Unmitigated Pedantry.
For the texts and resources mentioned in this episode, recommended further reading, maps, images and more, click to go to the episode's dedicated webpage.
Make sure to click ‘subscribe’ so that you never miss an episode; we have a new topic every Wednesday!
Find Ancient History 101 on social media and our website, where you can learn more about our expert guests.
We have merch available at our RedBubble shop, or you can help support the podcast by buying history books and translations we’ve hand-chosen for you at our online bookshop in the USA or UK.
Or you can buy us a ko-fi! However you choose to support the show, we appreciate it!
Ancient History 101 is a proud member of the Mnemosyne Memory Collective
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The Aeneid - often mocked as a cheap Latin knock-off of Homer - is revealed in this episode to be a cleverly composed homage with its own purpose which, for a time, eclipsed Homer in popularity. Aven McMaster joins Alexandra to talk about the creation of the Aeneid, its content, and the crucial context of Virgil's understanding of Augustan Rome, which colours every line he wrote. If you've been hesitant to dive into the Aeneid, this is the perfect introduction you need before cracking open that book!
Aven recommends the following translations:
Scott McGill and Susannah Wright - available here in the UK and here in the US
Sarah Ruden - available here in the UK and here in the US
Shadi Bartsch - available here in the UK
Robert Fagles - available here in the UK and here in the US
Allen Mandelbaum - available here in the US
(the podcast receives a commission from every purchase made via these links, as well as supporting independent bookshops.)
Find out more about Aven's own podcast here.
Make sure to click ‘subscribe’ so that you never miss an episode of Ancient History 101; we have a new topic every Wednesday!
Find Ancient History 101 on social media and our website, where you can learn more about our expert guests.
We have merch available at our RedBubble shop, or you can help support the podcast by buying history books and translations we’ve hand-chosen for you at our online bookshop in the USA or UK.
Or you can buy us a ko-fi! However you choose to support the show, we appreciate it!
Ancient History 101 is a proud member of the Mnemosyne Memory Collective
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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In today's episode, Alexandra is distracted by modern politics as Roel Konijnendijk talks us through the brutal regime of oligarchs installed in Athens by Sparta, known as the Thirty Tyrants, who murdered citizens in cold blood and looted their wealth. Stick around for the happy ending, as Roel explains how the world's first democracy was successfully reinstated because of the brave men who fought to restore it. Democracy is fragile, but it can be defended, as the Athenians proved.
For links to all of the texts Roel mentions in this episode, head to the episode page on our website where you can read every one for free!
Make sure to click ‘subscribe’ so that you never miss an episode; we have a new topic every Wednesday!
Find Ancient History 101 on social media and our website, where you can learn more about our expert guests.
We have merch available at our RedBubble shop, or you can help support the podcast by buying history books and translations we’ve hand-chosen for you at our online bookshop in the USA or UK.
Or you can buy us a ko-fi! However you choose to support the show, we appreciate it!
Ancient History 101 is a proud member of the Mnemosyne Memory Collective
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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In this episode of Ancient History 101, we're joined by Laura Jenkinson-Brown, the award-winning educator, illustrator and author, to talk about just how central the gods were in the narratives of epic poetry. Would the Trojan War even have happened were it not for the actions of the gods? And how did they drive and mould the narrative of the lives of countless mortals?
For a transcript of this episode, plus recommendations for translations and further reading, head to the episode webpage.
To learn more about Laura's excellent infographics about the Iliad, Odyssey and more, head to GreekMythComix.
To buy a copy of Laura's innovative, interactive book "You Are Odysseus", click here to buy in the UK, click here to buy in the United States, or here to buy elsewhere.
To listen to "You Are Odysseus" as the fabulous ebook/podcast, subscribe now here, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Make sure to click ‘subscribe’ so that you never miss an episode; we have a new topic every Wednesday!
Find Ancient History 101 on social media and our website, where you can learn more about our expert guests.
We have merch available at our RedBubble shop, or you can help support the podcast by buying history books and translations we’ve hand-chosen for you at our online bookshop in the USA or UK.
Or you can buy us a ko-fi! However you choose to support the show, we appreciate it!
Ancient History 101 is a proud member of the Mnemosyne Memory Collective
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Dr Mike Beer returns to carry on his conversation with Alexandra about all things Augustus. In this second half of the discussion, we tackle Augustus' private life, his creation of his own image, his later career as First Citizen, and his enduring impact on history.
You can find a list of suggested further reading, images, a family tree and a transcript on the episode's official webpage.
Make sure to click ‘subscribe’ so that you never miss an episode; we have a new topic every Wednesday!
Find Ancient History 101 on social media and our website, where you can learn more about our expert guests.
We have merch available at our RedBubble shop, or you can help support the podcast by buying history books and translations we’ve hand-chosen for you at our online bookshop in the USA or UK.
Or you can buy us a ko-fi! However you choose to support the show, we appreciate it!
Ancient History 101 is a proud member of the Mnemosyne Memory Collective
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Before we tackle the emperors of Rome who were mad, bad, and dangerous to know, we need to first get to grips with the man who created the concept of Rome even having emperors: Augustus. The first in a two part discussion, this episode talks about Augustus when he was a young man known as Octavian, his steep climb to power, and his fatal rivalry with Antony and Cleopatra.
Our special guest expert this week is Dr Mike Beer, who will explain why Octavian wasn't always the obvious choice for Rome's First Emperor...
You can find a list of suggested further reading, images, a family tree and a transcript on the episode's official webpage.
Make sure to click ‘subscribe’ so that you never miss an episode; we have a new topic every Wednesday!
Find Ancient History 101 on social media and our website, where you can learn more about our expert guests.
We have merch available at our RedBubble shop, or you can help support the podcast by buying history books and translations we’ve hand-chosen for you at our online bookshop in the USA or UK.
Or you can buy us a ko-fi! However you choose to support the show, we appreciate it!
Ancient History 101 is a proud member of the Mnemosyne Memory Collective
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Forget Herodotus, forget Thucydides - Xenophon is a historian worth getting to know, and he did so much more than simply write histories... Join Owen Rees and I as we chat about a Greek man who turned his hand at just about anything, and whose biography reads like an adventure novel.
Owen Rees is the author of 'The Far Edges of the Known World: A New History of the Ancient Past' and is the founder of www.BadAncient.com, where ancient historians tackle some of the biggest myths and misconceptions about ancient history. You can find him on Bluesky or read his work on Substack.
For further reading and supplementary learning materials, click here.
Make sure to click ‘subscribe’ so that you never miss an episode; we have a new topic every Wednesday!
Find Ancient History 101 on social media and our website, where you can learn more about our expert guests.
We have merch available at our RedBubble shop, or you can help support the podcast by buying history books and translations we’ve hand-chosen for you at our online bookshop in the USA or UK.
Or you can buy us a ko-fi! However you choose to support the show, we appreciate it!
Ancient History 101 is a proud member of the Mnemosyne Memory Collective
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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What does Classics mean to you? Cadillacs? Mozart? Dickens novels? or Ancient Greece and Rome? And why does the word CLASSIC seem to be used as a synonym for 'best', 'valuable' or 'timeless'?
In this, our first interview episode, your host wrestles with her love-hate relationship with her favourite topic and the way it is taught, and invites Dr Dan Stewart of the University of Leicester to explain why 'Classics' got its name in the first place.
What is 'Classics', anyway?
Make sure to click ‘subscribe’ so that you never miss an episode; we have a new topic every Wednesday!
Find Ancient History 101 on social media and our website, where you can learn more about our expert guests.
We have merch available at our RedBubble shop, or you can help support the podcast by buying history books and translations we’ve hand-chosen for you at our online bookshop in the USA or UK.
Or you can buy us a ko-fi! However you choose to support the show, we appreciate it!
Ancient History 101 is a proud member of the Mnemosyne Memory Collective
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The inaugural episode of Ancient History 101!
Why not visit our website to learn more about our episodes, meet our contributors, and read about our ethos? You can also find all the links to our socials here, so make sure to give us a follow on your preferred platform.
Learn more about the show's creator and host Alexandra Sills here, and read about the wonderful work of the Mnemosyne Memory Collective on the official website.
If you think Ancient History 101 is the kind of show for you, make sure to click subscribe wherever you listen to your podcasts.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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If you want to learn about the Ancient Mediterranean but don't know where to start, Ancient History 101 is the podcast for you. Expert guests guide us through a new topic every week with a back-to-basics approach that covers all the essentials. We invite you to join your host Alexandra Sills and her very clever friends as they discuss everything that is entertaining, compelling and even grotesque about the worlds of ancient Greece, Rome and their neighbours.
We have military history, biographies of famous figures, events that changed the ancient world, deep dives into religion, culture and politics and much much more. A comprehensive college curriculum, just without the campus!
Find us online at www.ancienthistory101.org
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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If you want to learn about the Ancient Mediterranean but don't know where to start, Ancient History 101 is the podcast for you. Expert guests guide us through a new topic every week with a back-to-basics approach that covers all the essentials. We invite you to join your host Alexandra Sills and her very clever friends as they discuss everything that is entertaining, compelling and even grotesque about the worlds of ancient Greece, Rome and their neighbours.
We have military history, biographies of famous figures, events that changed the ancient world, deep dives into religion, culture and politics and much much more. A comprehensive college curriculum, just without the campus!
Find us online at www.ancienthistory101.org
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.