Episodi

  • Hatshepsut
    Jan 24 2026

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    History tells us that Ancient Egypt was a man’s world. Kings, warriors, gods with beards, power passed from father to son like a sacred inheritance. And then there’s Hatshepsut.

    A woman who did not simply rule Egypt, she redefined what rule looked like.

    She did not seize power in a bloody coup. She did not lead armies into battle. Instead, she did something far more dangerous. She rewrote the rules quietly, methodically, stone by stone. She wore the regalia of kingship. She spoke with a man’s titles. She even carved herself into history with a false beard, daring the future to challenge her legitimacy.

    For over twenty years, Egypt prospered under her rule. Trade flourished. Monuments rose from the desert. The gods were appeased. And yet, after her death, someone tried very hard to erase her, hacking her name from temple walls as if she had never existed at all.

    So tonight, we’re asking a simple question with an unsettling answer. How does one of the most successful rulers in Egyptian history almost vanish from memory? And what does that tell us about power, gender, and who gets to decide what history remembers?

    This is the story of Hatshepsut. The woman who became king.

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    48 min
  • To the Edge of the World, Agricola, Scotland, and Rome’s Final Victory (Part Four)
    Jan 14 2026

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    Rome’s legions have crushed rebellion, broken queens, and burned their way across Britain, but the conquest is not yet complete. In this final episode, we march north with Gnaeus Julius Agricola, the most brilliant general Britain would ever face. From relentless campaigns in the wilds of Caledonia to the shadowed slopes of Mons Graupius, this is war at the edge of the known world.

    Agricola wins glory, secures Britain for Rome, and returns to the capital a hero, only to discover that victory itself can be dangerous. Britain is conquered, but Rome is uneasy. This is how the invasion ends, not with peace, but with power, jealousy, and unfinished conquest.

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    1 ora e 5 min
  • The Rise of Boudicca (Part Three)
    Jan 5 2026

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    Rome thought Britain was broken.

    In this third episode of the Roman invasion of Britain, we ride straight into fire, blood, and fury with Boudicca, the warrior queen who very nearly destroyed Roman rule on the island.

    This is not the neat legend of school textbooks. This is the raw story of humiliation, revenge, and absolute rage. A widowed queen flogged in public. Her daughters violated. A people pushed beyond endurance. What follows is one of the most terrifying rebellions the Roman Empire ever faced.

    We move from the burning of Camulodunum (Colchester) to the annihilation of a Roman legion, through Londinium (London) abandoned to the flames, and on to the final, brutal reckoning where tens of thousands die in a single afternoon.

    This episode charts Boudicca’s astonishing rise, her command of mass rebellion, and the moment everything turns. Triumph gives way to catastrophe, and a woman who shook Rome to its foundations is erased from the battlefield, but never from history.

    This is the fall of Boudicca, and the moment Britain’s fate is sealed under Roman steel. Dark, dramatic, and utterly gripping, this is Rome at its most ruthless, and Britain at its most defiant.

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    58 min
  • The Empire Strikes Back, with Elephants (Part Two)
    Dec 21 2025

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    This episode opens with the bizarre and unsettling prelude under the mad emperor Caligula, when invasion looms like a dark cloud, only to dissolve into mockery and chaos. But the threat doesn't vanish—it festers. Then comes Claudius, an unlikely emperor desperate for legitimacy, who does what Caligula could not: he unleashes his legions across the Channel in a gamble for glory and power.

    We plunge into the clash of worlds—Rome's iron discipline crashing against the wild, fractured tribes of Britain. Local rulers face an impossible choice: bend the knee and survive, or resist and be annihilated. Forts rise like scars across the landscape. Land is seized. Veterans are planted like seeds of empire. Roman law, cold and unyielding, begins to suffocate the old ways of life.

    But conquest is never clean. Beneath the surface, rage simmers. Resentment festers. And then it explodes.

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    1 ora e 2 min
  • Julius Caesar Lands At Deal (Part One)
    Dec 17 2025

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    In this episode of Rearview Mirror Chronicles, we return to the moment Julius Caesar steps onto the shores of Britain in 55 BC, a bold gamble at the very edge of the Roman world. Britain is not yet a conquest but a rumour, a place of shifting tribes, chariots on the beaches, and uneasy diplomacy. Caesar’s landings are about prestige and intelligence as much as warfare, and they bind Britain, loosely but permanently, to Rome’s ambitions.

    From there, we trace how Britain becomes entangled in the long collapse of the Roman Republic. Alliances are made, hostages taken, and client kings cultivated, while Rome turns inward through civil war, assassination, and the rise of emperors. Augustus hesitates, Caligula blusters, and Britain remains an unresolved question, known now, but not yet claimed.

    We end on the threshold of change. By AD 43, Britain is no longer beyond Rome’s reach, merely awaiting the moment when Claudius will finally act. Episode two begins there, when Rome returns, not to visit, but to conquer.

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    53 min
  • The Numerburg Trials and Beyond - Part Two
    Dec 9 2025

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    In Part One we watched Hermann Goring face the judges at Nuremberg, but Part Two is where the story really hits home. Because Nuremberg did not end in 1946, it launched a revolution, one that still shapes global justice today. It gave us the Genocide Convention, the tribunals for Rwanda and Yugoslavia, and ultimately the International Criminal Court, a court designed to hold even presidents and generals to account.

    But here is the twist. The same world that created these rules often breaks them. The same nations that championed Nuremberg now dodge the ICC, ignore arrest warrants, and even blow up suspected drug boats in the Caribbean without credible intelligence or due process. If Nuremberg taught us that killing suspects is a crime, then what exactly are we watching unfold today?

    This episode asks a simple, uncomfortable question: does international law still mean anything, or have we slipped back into a world where the powerful decide what justice looks like?

    Short, sharp, and impossible to ignore. This is Part Two, and you will not want to miss it.

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    40 min
  • Christopher Marlowe, A Murder in Deptford
    Dec 4 2025

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    Christopher Marlowe was a genius, a heretic, and almost certainly a spy.
    In the shadowy world of Elizabethan London, where faith was treason and a careless word could mean death, Marlowe moved easily among informers, torturers, and men who vanished without trace. He wrote blazing poetry by candlelight and carried state secrets by day. He drank with killers. He argued with atheists. He lived on the edge of the gallows.

    In this episode of Rearview Mirror Chronicles, we follow the brief, incendiary life of Christopher Marlowe, Shakespeare’s dangerous contemporary and perhaps his darkest mirror. From taverns thick with smoke and lies to the final violent afternoon in Deptford, this is a story of espionage, betrayal, forbidden ideas, and a death that still refuses to explain itself.

    This is not the tale of a quiet scholar.
    This is the story of a man who walked too close to fire, and paid the price.

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    46 min
  • They Died for Applause, Inside the Life of a Gladiator
    Dec 1 2025

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    Step inside the blood soaked heart of ancient Rome, where fame was forged in steel and death was sold as entertainment. From slaves and prisoners to superstars of the ancient world, gladiators lived brutally short lives beneath the roaring crowds of the Colosseum. In this episode of Rearview Mirror Chronicles, we uncover who these men really were, how many truly died, how the games were staged, and why an empire became addicted to watching humans kill for spectacle. This is not the romantic myth of Hollywood. This is the hard, violent truth of the arena, where survival was rare, mercy was political, and death came with thunderous applause.

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    48 min