Episodes

  • Simon Winder
    Mar 14 2022

    Lotharingia: A Personal History of Europe's Lost Country


    In 843 AD the territory of Emperor Charlemagne was divided between his three surviving grandsons. One inherited the area now known as France, another Germany and the third received the piece in between: Lotharingia, a huge swath of land that stretched from the mouth of the Rhine to the Alps. Simon Winder explains how the dynamic between these three great zones has dictated much of our subsequent fate.


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  • Jim Storr
    Mar 4 2022

    The Anglo-Saxon Conquest of England, Wessex and the Chalke Valley


    We speak English today; not Celtic, Latin, nor Norman French. England is England because of the Anglo-Saxon conquest. Yet we know very little about how it happened. This talk describes astonishing new evidence, hidden in plain sight, spread across the whole length and breadth of England. Some of it in the Chalke Valley near Salisbury.


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  • William Sieghart
    Feb 23 2022

    The Poetry Pharmacy: Tried-and-True Prescriptions for the Mind, Heart and Soul


    In the years since he first had the idea of prescribing short, powerful poems for all manner of spiritual ailments, William Sieghart, founder of National Poetry Day, has taken his Poetry Pharmacy around the length and breadth of Britain. Here he speaks about the most essential poems in his dispensary: those which have repeatedly shown themselves to work.


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  • A.N. Wilson
    Feb 21 2022

    The Queen


    Renowned biographer A. N. Wilson celebrates the life of the Queen in this vibrant examination of Britain’s most iconic figure. He paints a vivid portrait of “Lilibet” the woman, and of her unfaltering reign during the tumultuous twentieth century, while asking candidly whether Britain can remain a constitutional monarchy after her reign ends.


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  • 170. George Osborne and Tim Bouverie (2017)
    Jan 3 2022

    George Osborne: Politics and History


    The former Chancellor looks at politics historically and divulges the historical antecedents which inspired him and his close friend David Cameron during their six years in government together. In conversation with Tim Bouverie, this is a rare insight into politics at the very highest level from the man Andrew Marr once called the smartest politician he had ever met. 


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  • 146. Douglas Hurd & Edward Young (2014)
    Nov 8 2021

    Disraeli


    Benjamin Disraeli was the most gifted parliamentarian of the nineteenth century. He twice rose to become Prime Minister, dazzling many with his famous epigrams along the way. Politician Douglas Hurd and political speechwriter Edward Young strip away the myths which surround his career, explore the paradoxes at the centre of his “two lives” and bring alive the true genius of Disraeli.


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  • 141. Ian Hislop (2014)
    Oct 25 2021

    The Wipers Times


    The Wipers Times was a newspaper for the troops that was written, edited and printed under extraordinary circumstances by a small group of British soldiers during the First World War. Wry, irreverent and topical, it was, in many ways, a precursor to Private Eye, of which Ian has been editor for many years. Here he discusses this brilliant life-enhancing wartime publication and the men who created it. 


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  • 121. Chris Culpin (2017)
    Sep 8 2021

    Was Hitler a Popular Dictator?


    In this talk for junior schools, Chris Culpin shows how Hitler disdained democracy and thereby defeated his political opponents leaving “One people, one nation, one leader”. Was he popular? He was certainly successful as there was no opposition, nor opposition newspapers. This was partly through fear but also as a result of brilliant propaganda with the extensive distribution of radios, cheap holidays, and the promise of cars for ordinary people.


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