(Lucy) For much of the Middle Ages, King Arthur was Europe’s model king. His court could be a space for heroism, for romance, and also for the uncanny. Often drawing on oral tradition, written for elite audiences, the Arthurian romances of the 13th and 14th centuries can be surprisingly revealing about cultural values and cultural debates. This week we'll be looking at Christmas feasts, sun-god figures, and complex debates about the morality of flirting.
The Martyrs of Thana
The Forme of Cury
From Hwaet to the Ring Shout: Lorenzo Dow Turner
The Origins of American Eugenics
Hurrem Sultan: the Woman Who Changed Ottoman Queenship
Marie Louise, Napoleon's Second Empress
Milicent Patrick and the Creature
History for Halloween VII
Surviving the Plague in 1665
William Miller and the Great Disappointment
Beyond Sacrifice: Aztec Medicine and Healing
Jane Manning James
The Male Witch
Maya, Spain, and the Historical Record
Revolutionary Movies, Part II: Dr. Zhivago and The Last Emperor
Revolutionary Movies, Part I: The Patriot and Les Miserables
Slavery and the Colony of Georgia
The Parnell Affair
Passing Exams in Imperial China
The Other Anne Boleyn
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Southern Mysteries Podcast
Irish Songs with Ken Murray
History Obscura
The Rest Is History
American History Tellers