When the World's Armies Came to Salisbury Plain

When the World's Armies Came to Salisbury Plain

During World War One, Britain and its empire mobilised soldiers on a hitherto unprecedented scale. That required a huge logistical effort to feed, equip, house and train them. No place reflects these efforts better than Salisbury Plains. Now mainly sleepy villages and farmland, these plains were once home to tens of thousands of men and women who descended on the camps to prepare for war. In this episode historian Margaret McKenzie, who spent the last 30 years studying the camps, takes Dan on a tour of the site helping understand the scale of what once stood there. Margaret sadly passed away a few weeks ago, so this episode is dedicated to her and all those who served at the camps with which she became so familiar through her research.

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Refugees, Sexual Violence and the Fall of the Third Reich

Refugees, Sexual Violence and the Fall of the Third Reich

In this episode, Dan speaks to award-winning political correspondent and commentator, Svenja O'Donnell, about her remarkable grandmother's personal story of migration, sexual violence and murder durin...

8 Aug 202037min

Pertinax. Son of a Slave to Emperor of Rome.

Pertinax. Son of a Slave to Emperor of Rome.

The son of a former slave, Pertinax was the Roman Emperor who proved that no matter how lowly your birth, you could rise to the very top through hard work, grit and determination.This previously untol...

7 Aug 202041min

How and Why History: America, Japan and the Atomic Bomb

How and Why History: America, Japan and the Atomic Bomb

On 6 August 1945, an American B29 bomber dropped the world's first deployed atomic bomb over Hiroshima. Three days later, Nagasaki was at the receiving end of a second American A-bomb. Why did America...

6 Aug 202033min

Rum, Sodomy and the Lash?

Rum, Sodomy and the Lash?

The common sailor was a crucial engine of British prosperity and expansion up until the Industrial Revolution. From exploring the South Seas with Cook to establishing the East India Company as a globa...

5 Aug 202030min

The Road to 1914: Myths of Nationalism

The Road to 1914: Myths of Nationalism

This week in 1914 saw the outbreak of the First World War. In this special episode from the archive, Margaret MacMillan talks to her nephew Dan about her seminal book 'The War That Ended Peace: The Ro...

4 Aug 202034min

Gallipoli: the Endgame

Gallipoli: the Endgame

In December 1915, some 135,000 allied troops, nearly 400 guns and 15,000 horses were collectively trapped in the bridgeheads at Anzac, Suvla and Helles. It was clear that the operation to seize contro...

3 Aug 202032min

Conan Doyle, Kipling and Kingsley in the Boer War

Conan Doyle, Kipling and Kingsley in the Boer War

In early 1900, Rudyard Kipling, Mary Kingsley and Arthur Conan Doyle crossed paths in South Africa during the Anglo-Boer War. Motivated in various ways by notions of duty, service, patriotism and jing...

2 Aug 202020min

Leading Germany's Resistance against The Nazis

Leading Germany's Resistance against The Nazis

Norman Ohler joined me on the pod to discuss two remarkable lovers who led Germany's resistance against the Nazis. Harro Schulze-Boysen and Libertas Haas-Heye led a complex network of antifascists, wh...

1 Aug 202027min

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