The British History Podcast show

The British History Podcast

Summary: The BHP is a chronological retelling of the history of Britain with a particular focus upon the lives of the people. You won’t find a dry recounting of dates and battles here, but instead you’ll learn about who these people were and how their desires, fears, and flaws shaped the scope of this island at the edge of the world. And some of those desires are downright scandalous. Click subscribe to view all the episodes.

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  • Artist: Jamie Jeffers
  • Copyright: Copyright © 2011 The British History Podcast, Inc. All rights reserved.

Podcasts:

 191 – Urban Fervor | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 25:42

You might not realize it, but we on the precipice of a major change in Britain. Alfred the Great is about to reach adulthood and enter the scene. The era of Danelaw is coming. Things are about to come to a head. But if I’m being honest, we’ve been seeing pretty big changes happening for a while now. Life has never been easy for the Anglo-Saxons, but over the last 50+ years it’s been getting even harder. This is especially true if you were an Anglo-Saxon living in a town. Support the Show

 191 – Urban Fervor | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 25:37
 BHP Pub Quiz #16 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 10:10
 190 – House (of Wessex): Everybody Lies | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 42:58

This episode is going to be a bit different from most, because I’m going to be addressing something which has been bugging me about the 800s, and Wessex in particular. I feel like I haven’t done a good job pointing something out. So I’m going to explain something crucial about the house of Wessex and Alfred the Great that most of you - unless you have a PhD in Anglo-Saxon history or obsessively read dense scholarly books on this era - will have never heard before. Support the Show

 190 – House (of Wessex): Everybody Lies | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 42:58

190 – House (of Wessex): Everybody Lies

 189 – What on earth is an English | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 27:04

This episode is going to be a little different from most episodes. We’re going to break from the main story briefly and talk in larger terms about what is going on in Eastern Britain, because I realized that my slavish attention to the main storyline has probably allowed you to miss something truly astounding. And really, it’s hard to see unless you are given an overview that highlights it. But it’s really important for understanding what is happening on the island, what will continue to happen, and why these people are doing what they’re doing. Support the Show

 189 – What on earth is an English | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 27:04

189 – What on earth is an English

 188 – Rebellion and Succession in the Kingdom of Wessex | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 27:42

Before we begin, I’d like to address something from our last episode. I told you about reports of Vikingr armies marching around the countryside near the Wrekin. I offered a variety of methods of reaching the Wrekin, all of which would have involved quite a bit of work. However, as some of you have noted on Facebook and Twitter, I left out the possibility that they may have gone up the River Severn. And I have no excuse for this one, I completely forgot the Severn. I don’t know why, but I did. I’m human, sometimes errors happen and all I can do is make a correction in the subsequent episode. So yeah, those Vikingrs patrolling the Wrekin may have sailed all the way around Wessex and Cornwall, or sailed through the Irish sea, past Wales, and then rowed up the Severn. That would certainly get them much closer to the Wrekin than, say, landing in East Anglia and marching. So fair point. We aren’t given details of how they got there, but that is definitely a possibility. Support the Show

 188 – Rebellion and Succession in the Kingdom of Wessex | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 27:42

188 – Rebellion and Succession in the Kingdom of Wessex

 187 – The Queen of Wessex: aka The Worst Midlife Crisis Ever | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 26:39

It’s Christmas day 854. King AEthelweard of East Anglia, a king who we know almost nothing about, is dead. The only evidence we really have that he was alive in the first place are his coins, and this is likely due to the fact that, throughout the Viking Age, succeeding bands of Scandinavian pyromaniacs destroyed the East Anglian written records. But coins don’t burn all that well, so at least we have that. Support the Show

 187 – The Queen of Wessex: aka The Worst Midlife Crisis Ever | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 26:39

187 – The Queen of Wessex: aka The Worst Midlife Crisis Ever

 186 – Wessex: A story of Myth building, Opportunism, and Annexation | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 19:54

This episode is getting a bit into the political weeds and it’s for a very important reason. We’re seeing the development of that dynastic juggernaut we all know and love, the House of Wessex, and I want you to see how and why it’s forming into what it will eventually become. Because the successes of Alfred and the later successes of King AEthelstan, the first King of England, flow from things that were set into motion during these early days of the Viking era. So please keep that in mind when we’re talking about what the various dynasties are doing, because it really does matter… even though most people don’t talk about it. Alright, lets get to it. Support the Show

 186 – Wessex: A story of Myth building, Opportunism, and Annexation | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 19:54

186 – Wessex: A story of Myth building, Opportunism, and Annexation

 185 – Building the House of Wessex | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 33:14

185 – Building the House of Wessex

 185 – Building the House of Wessex | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 33:14

When we left off last time, we were taking a look at the problem facing Europe that no one wanted to talk about. And this wasn’t like plague of people mistaking tights for pants. In that situation, the only solution is to ignore it until it retreats back to the darkest recesses of fashion. The viking raids worked differently, ignoring them only made them stronger… to make matters worse, the European nobility have been hiring bands of vikingrs as mercenaries in their own personal squabbles, bringing the vikingr bands deeper into European territory and leaving the peasantry completely defenseless. Support the Show

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