
Mansa Musa: The African Emperor So Rich He Crashed the Gold Market Across Three Continents
Mansa Musa of Mali was the richest person who has ever lived. When he made his pilgrimage to Mecca in 1324, he brought so much gold that he crashed the economies of every city he passed through — depr...
15 Kesä 19min

Joseph Lister: The Surgeon Who Made the Operating Room Safe by Fighting Invisible Enemies
Before Joseph Lister, surgery was a death sentence as often as a cure — patients survived the knife only to die of infections nobody understood. Lister connected Pasteur's germ theory to surgical prac...
15 Kesä 25min

Cicero: How One Man's Words Outlasted the Roman Republic He Died Defending
Cicero was Rome's greatest orator, its most published philosopher, and the man who tried to save the Republic through the power of language alone. He failed — Mark Antony had him murdered and nailed h...
15 Kesä 18min

King Tutankhamun: How Being Forgotten Saved the Boy Pharaoh's Tomb for Eternity
Tutankhamun was a minor pharaoh who died at nineteen and was largely forgotten by ancient Egypt within a few generations. That obscurity saved him. While every other royal tomb in the Valley of the Ki...
15 Kesä 21min

Richard Dawkins: Genes, Memes, and the God Delusion That Made Him Science's Most Polarizing Voice
Richard Dawkins wrote The Selfish Gene and reframed evolution around the gene rather than the organism, coined the word "meme" before the internet existed, and then turned his scientific reputation in...
15 Kesä 19min

Francis Crick: From DNA's Double Helix to the Mystery of Human Consciousness
Francis Crick shared the Nobel Prize for discovering DNA's structure, then spent the second half of his career pursuing an even harder problem — consciousness itself. The man who helped decode the mol...
15 Kesä 22min

Winston Churchill: The Flawed, Brilliant, Contradictory Man Behind the Marble Statue
Winston Churchill saved Western civilization from Nazi Germany — and spent most of his career before and after that achievement being spectacularly wrong about nearly everything else. He championed th...
15 Kesä 21min

John Adams: Why America Needed Its Most Abrasive, Unlikable Founding Father
John Adams was vain, argumentative, jealous, tactless, and almost universally disliked by his colleagues. He was also indispensable. He pushed the Continental Congress toward independence when others ...
15 Kesä 23min



















