• John Dee: Queen Elizabeth’s Wizard

    Who was John Dee—the Tudor polymath who advised Elizabeth I, mapped the heavens, spoke (he believed) with angels, and penned a landmark preface to Euclid? Historian and writer Rachel Morris joins to unpack Dee’s strange, brilliant world at the fault line between Renaissance “natural magic” and the birth of modern science. We explore why astrology was respectable, what “as above, so below” meant to learned magi, how printing turned libraries into engines of ideas, the hazards of practicing magic in an age of heresy trials, and why Dee still feels uncannily modern. We also touch on his years in Prague,…

    Read more >

  • Unsung Victorians: Grace Darling, Josephine Butler & George Biddell Airy

    Author Mark Beatty joins to explore three Victorians who shaped their era in very different ways yet rarely get the spotlight. We trace Grace Darling’s 1838 sea rescue and the birth of tabloid celebrity; Josephine Butler’s fearless campaign against the Contagious Diseases Acts and for raising the age of consent; and George Biddell Airy’s half-century as Astronomer Royal, standardising Greenwich Mean Time for a world on the move. It’s a conversation about media, morality, science, empire—and how private grief and public purpose can collide. Mark’s trilogy on Darling, Butler and Airy is out now. If you can, please support independent…

    Read more >

  • Poverty, power and punishment in Georgian Britain

    What was life really like for the poor and powerless in the wake of the Napoleonic Wars? In this episode of the Explaining History podcast, we’re joined by Katharine Quarmby, author of the powerful new historical novel, The Low Road. Set in 1813, The Low Road is a story of hardship, struggle, and love found in the most brutal corners of English life. Based on a true story unearthed from her hometown in Norfolk, Catherine’s novel follows an orphaned girl, Hannah, as she navigates the cruel institutions of the time—from the philanthropic but oppressive Refuge for the Destitute in London to the harsh reality of…

    Read more >

  • Churchill’s Spaniards: how veterans of the Spanish Civil War fought for Britain

    Churchill’s Spaniards: The Spanish Republicans Who Fought for Britain in WWII — with Sean F. Scullion In this episode, I speak with historian Sean F. Scullion, author of Churchill’s Spaniards, about a remarkable and little-known story: the Spanish Republicans who escaped the fall of the Second Republic, endured internment under Vichy France, and later volunteered to fight in the British Army against fascism from 1940 to 1945. Drawing on multi-lingual archival work and over 110 family interviews, Scullion reconstructs the routes these veterans took—from the French Foreign Legion and North African labour camps to the Pioneer Corps, Commandos, SOE, and…

    Read more >

  • Live Aid, famine, debt and activism: A four decade struggle for justice

    In this episode of the Explaining History podcast, host Nick Shepley is joined by veteran journalist and author Paul Vallely to explore the definitive inside story of Live Aid and its far-reaching legacy. Vallely’s new book, Live Aid: The Definitive 40-Year Story from Pop and Poverty to Politics and Power, chronicles the journey from the 1984–85 Ethiopian famine and the iconic 1985 Live Aid concert through four decades of activism against global poverty. The conversation delves into how a charity rock concert galvanized a generation, evolving from a one-time musical fundraiser into a powerful catalyst for political change on issues…

    Read more >

  • America and China in 2025

    Explaining History Podcast: 2025 in Review – The Year the Tech War Was Lost As 2025 draws to a close, we reflect on a pivotal year that historians may one day see as the moment the world changed forever. This episode delves into the most significant geopolitical shift of our time: the American retreat from its tech and trade war with China, and the quiet acknowledgment that the battle has been lost. Join us as we analyze the key indicators of this tipping point, from tech oligarch Peter Thiel losing confidence in America’s top chip manufacturer to the startling revelation…

    Read more >

  • Explaining History: The End of the Western World Order?

    Is the era of Western global dominance coming to an end? This episode explores the profound decline of Western, and particularly American, “hard” and “soft” power on the world stage. We begin by contrasting two pivotal moments in history: Lord Palmerston’s 19th-century Britain, which could blockade a nation over the dubious claims of a single subject, and the modern United States, a superpower unable to prevent a small city-state like Singapore from punishing one of its citizens. This shift illustrates a fundamental redistribution of global power. Join us as we delve into the deep-seated causes of this decline, arguing that…

    Read more >

  • Code Breaking: From Bletchley Park to the Cold War

    In this episode of Explaining History, we sit down with author Maggie Ritchie to discuss her latest novel, White Raven. We explore the remarkable true story of Moira Beattie, a Glasgow art student recruited into the heart of Bletchley Park at just 18 years old. Maggie reveals how a chance encounter with the elderly artist unveiled a secret life of wartime codebreaking and a romance with a Russian intelligence officer. We also move beyond 1945 to shine a light on a forgotten chapter of British intelligence: the Joint Services School for Linguists (JSSL) at Crail, Scotland. Discover the “Bletchley of the Cold…

    Read more >

  • Your Party and the fragmented British Left in 2025

    In this episode of Explaining History, Nick takes a hard look at the state of the British Left in late 2025. With the Starmer government firmly entrenched in “continuity ThatcherismThatcherism Full Description The political and economic programme of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher (1979–1990), combining monetarist economics, privatisation of nationalised industries, trade union legislation designed to break union power, deregulation of financial markets, and a confrontational approach to the welfare state. Thatcher’s government defeated the miners’ strike of 1984–85, sold council houses to their tenants, privatised British Telecom, British Gas, British Airways, and the water utilities, and liberalised the City of London…

    Read more >

  • The Forgotten Revolution: Venezuela’s Democratic Spring of 1945

    In 2025, Venezuela is once again in the crosshairs of US foreign policy, facing the threat of military intervention and heightened sanctions from a new Trump administration. But to understand the resilience of the Venezuelan people today, we must look back to a pivotal moment in their history that is often overlooked: the “Trienio” of 1945-1948. In this episode, Nick explores the dramatic coup of October 1945, led by young officers like Carlos Delgado Chalbaud and the democratic party Acción Democrática. We delve into how a military uprising transformed into a radical experiment in social democracy—quadrupling budgets for health and…

    Read more >