How ancient Pompeii was rediscovered

How ancient Pompeii was rediscovered

The buried Roman city of Pompeii was ‘discovered’ in the 16th century, but was it ever lost? In this penultimate episode of our four-part series, Kev Lochun speaks with historian Dr Jess Venner about the years between destruction and excavation. How did the beleaguered Roman emperor Titus react to the disaster and the refugee crisis that followed? Why was no attempt made to resettle and rebuild? And how did the city become the archeological marvel we know it as today? ––––– GO BEYOND THE PODCAST Want to know more about the story of Pompeii? HistoryExtra's Kev Lochun has curated a selection of essential reading from the HistoryExtra and BBC History Magazine archive to help you explore the story of the cataclysm, the Roman way of life and the nature of the Roman empire: https://bit.ly/4bjYKmE Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Jane Austen’s final chapter – and lasting legacy

Jane Austen’s final chapter – and lasting legacy

What does Austen’s later writing tell us about her changing ideas? And what factors contributed to her death? In this fourth and final episode of our series chronicling the novelist’s life and work, D...

4 Tammi 33min

Prophetesses & she-preachers of the 17th century

Prophetesses & she-preachers of the 17th century

A prophetess who warned Oliver Cromwell against killing the king. A Yorkshire maidservant who gained an audience with the Ottoman Sultan. The religious tumult of the 17th century gave ordinary women o...

2 Tammi 34min

New Year's Eve, newts and Nessie: a history of British folklore

New Year's Eve, newts and Nessie: a history of British folklore

Why should you be careful about who's first through your door on New Year's Day? What led people to believe that newts and earwigs were responsible for their ailments? And why do sticks play such a ke...

31 Joulu 202541min

Augustus: life of the week

Augustus: life of the week

‘Evil genius’ is a phrase that could have been invented to describe Augustus, the first emperor of Rome. Augustus butchered his way to power in the chaos that followed Julius Caesar's assassination, a...

30 Joulu 202544min

Inside the Viking battle of the genders

Inside the Viking battle of the genders

What do we know for certain about Old Norse ideas about masculinity and femininity, and can Viking Age mythology provide any answers? In conversation with James Osborne, Dr Jackson Crawford discusses ...

29 Joulu 202539min

A house of one’s own: Jane Austen’s ‘golden years’

A house of one’s own: Jane Austen’s ‘golden years’

It was at Chawton House, a cottage in rural Hampshire, that Jane Austen experienced one of the most fruitful episodes of her writing career. In this third instalment of our four-part series charting t...

28 Joulu 202533min

Æthelstan: the king who made England

Æthelstan: the king who made England

Æthelstan was crowned in Kingston upon Thames 1100 years ago, in AD 925. He went on to extend his authority far beyond his initial powerbase of Wessex and Mercia to become the first king of England. D...

26 Joulu 202532min

Did the WW1 Christmas truce really happen?

Did the WW1 Christmas truce really happen?

It’s one of the most romantic images of the First World War: British and German soldiers meeting in No Man’s Land on Christmas Day, 1914, for a spontaneous truce and a game of football. But did it act...

24 Joulu 202534min

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