The Victorians created the unsettling art of death photography - posing their deceased love ones in family portraits as if they were alive. How did they manage to make corpses strike poses? Why did they want to?
Maddy and Anthony are joined by Brandy Schillace, author of Death’s Summer Coat - What Death and Dying Cal Tell Us about Life and Living to flick through the strangest, and most moving, of family photo albums.
Edited by Tom Delargy. Produced by Stuart Beckwith. Senior Producer is Charlotte Long.
Sign up to History Hit at historyhit.com/subscribe using code 'BLACKFRIDAYPOD' at checkout, for $1/£1 per month for 4 months and you’ll get nearly £30 off our normal monthly price over your first 4 months.
St Patrick: Pirates, Snakes and Goatees
Medieval Torture: The Dark History
'Black Widow': Serial Killer of Victorian England
Pirate Queens: Mary Read & Anne Bonny
The First Alien Abduction
The Paris Morgue's Dark Story
Do Mermaids Exist? Historical Sightings & Myths
The Earliest Evidence of Ghosts
The Real Hannibal Lecter
Murder in Henry VIII's England
The Mystery of the Medieval Green Children
Dragons: From the Ancient World to the Hobbit
The Fairy Hoax That Fooled the World
The American Ripper
Alaskan Stories: Sedna the Sea-Goddess & Myth of Last Frontier
The Mythical Origins of Britain
The Real Dick Turpin
The Many Murders of Alexander the Great
Ghost Ship: The Mary Celeste
Myths of King Arthur: Origins, Creepy Sex & Magic Swords
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Not Just the Tudors
The Ancients
Dan Snow’s History Hit
Irish Songs with Ken Murray
History Obscura