13th October 54: The Roman Emperor Claudius dies, supposedly after being poisoned
HistoryPod13 Okt

13th October 54: The Roman Emperor Claudius dies, supposedly after being poisoned

Ancient sources state that the Emperor Claudius as poisoned, although who administered the poison - and on whose orders - continues to be fiercely debated by ...

Episoder(245)

11th March 1918: First confirmed case of Spanish Flu identified at Camp Funston in Kansas

11th March 1918: First confirmed case of Spanish Flu identified at Camp Funston in Kansas

Within 18 months the disease had become a pandemic that infected up to a third of the entire world’s ...

11 Mar 0s

10th March 1762: The execution of Jean Calas prompts debates on religious intolerance and judicial injustice in France

10th March 1762: The execution of Jean Calas prompts debates on religious intolerance and judicial injustice in France

Jean Calas was found guilty of murder and sentenced to death by breaking on the wheel, but the case had been marred by inconsistencies and a lack of conclusive evidence that prompted Voltaire to argue Calas had been a victim of religious prejudice and a flawed judicial ...

10 Mar 0s

9th March 1841: US Supreme court rules on the Amistad slavery case and sets the captured Africans free

9th March 1841: US Supreme court rules on the Amistad slavery case and sets the captured Africans free

The long case eventually went before the Supreme Court who ruled that they had been unlawfully held and thus rebelled in a natural right to self-defence. The court set them ...

9 Mar 0s

8th March 1736: Nader Shah formally crowned as the ruler of Iran, marking the start of the Afsharid dynasty

8th March 1736: Nader Shah formally crowned as the ruler of Iran, marking the start of the Afsharid dynasty

Nader's coronation ended Safavid rule and established the Afsharid dynasty that dramatically expanded Persia’s borders, but at the expense of heavy taxation that funded the military ...

8 Mar 0s

7th March 1936: The remilitarisation of the Rhineland by the German Army under Adolf Hitler

7th March 1936: The remilitarisation of the Rhineland by the German Army under Adolf Hitler

Hitler chose to send three battalions, or approximately 22,000 German troops, into the Rhineland in violation of the terms of the Treaty of ...

7 Mar 0s

6th March 1933: Eleanor Roosevelt holds her first press conference as First Lady of the United States

6th March 1933: Eleanor Roosevelt holds her first press conference as First Lady of the United States

Roosevelt's press conference was exclusively for women reporters. It was the first time a president’s wife had held a press briefing, marking a significant departure from previous ...

6 Mar 0s

5th March 1946: Winston Churchill describes the post-war division of Europe as an ‘Iron Curtain’ in his ‘Sinews of Peace’ address in Fulton, Missouri

5th March 1946: Winston Churchill describes the post-war division of Europe as an ‘Iron Curtain’ in his ‘Sinews of Peace’ address in Fulton, Missouri

Churchill’s Iron Curtain speech played a significant role in changing western perceptions of their former Soviet ...

5 Mar 0s

4th March 1890: The Forth Bridge in Scotland opened by the future King Edward VII

4th March 1890: The Forth Bridge in Scotland opened by the future King Edward VII

The Forth Railway Bridge stretches almost 2.5km across the Firth of Forth, a large estuary area to west of ...

4 Mar 0s

Populært innen Historie

med-egne-oyne
rss-katastrofe
aftenposten-historie
henrettelsespodden
rss-dette-ma-aldri-skje-igjen
historier-som-endret-norge
rss-benadet
historier-som-endret-verden
rss-nadelose-nordmenn-gestapo
sektledere
rss-frontkjemperne
rss-strid-de-norske-borgerkrigene
rss-gamle-greier
historiepodden-ww2
historiepodden
taakeprat
rss-historiepodden-ww2
virkelig-grusomt
rss-stavanger-i-900-ar
rss-diktatorpodden