
Ep. 189: The Count Palatine on the Rhine
This week it is back to the political landscape of the empire. We will travel upriver from Mainz via Worms and the not yet existent cities of Mannheim and Ludwigshafen to Heidelberg, my old hometown.A...
10 Apr 202536min

Ep. 188: What Has Printing Ever Done For Us?
“We should note the force, effect, and consequences of inventions which are nowhere more conspicuous than in those three which were unknown to the ancients, namely printing, gunpowder and the compass....
3 Apr 202537min

Ep. 187: Johannes Gutenberg’s Pressing Matters
This podcast is now well into its fourth year and I have established my process for research, script writing and recording. As for research, that usually means going to the London Library and bend dow...
27 Mar 202544min

Ep. 186: Mainz and Hessen - An Origin Story
This week we are setting off on our tour of the empire for real. And where better to start than with the most senior, most august of the seven prince Electors, the archbishop of Mainz, archchancellor ...
20 Mar 202541min

Ep. 185: A Time Between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance -Season Opener
Many German histories skip over this period in order to get to the Reformation, which is a shame. Because the 15th century did not just shape the physical appearance of the country, but much of its ge...
13 Mar 202512min

Ep. 184: A German Messallina? - Empress Barbara of Celje (1392-1451)
Barbara ist geil und ruchlos is the title of a 17th century description of emperor Sigismund’s second wife, Barbara of Celje and it goes on as follows:“Barbara, was a German Messalina, a woman of insa...
6 Mar 202532min

Ep. 182: Hussite Revolt (1419-1434) - Sigismund Returns to Bohemia
We have a tendency to overlook the history of the smaller European nations even though they do quite often provide the laboratory where one could have seen the sign of things to come or calamities tha...
20 Feb 202536min






















