sipping mulled wine with author Siobhan Clarke to talk feasting, revelry and merrymaking in Tudor times in this festive episode.
Read MoreAlexandra Villing and Victoria Donnellan, curators of the upcoming major exhibition on Troy to discuss the origins of this epic tale.
Read MoreHistory is full of criminals, and some are not human. Here is a tale of animals of the past, some guilty, some innocent all judged by the LAW.
Read Mores Julia Tugwell and Olivia Threlkeld, curators of Inspired by the east how the Islamic world influenced western art to discuss the Islamic world's influence on Western art.
Read MoreA biography of Rembrandt - what made him special and how did he achieve his prints, not just his paintings. A curious episode of the British Museum Membercast to show how Rembrandt excelled in the world of printmaking.
Read MoreIszi takes a walk to the house of the most prolific serial killer in the the UK. How one woman murdered over 400 by hand.
Read MoreWhat did you eat yesterday? Manga isn’t just Astro Boy, and so much more than comic books you find outside Japan. It is a history of the workers taking over the means of production and making something brand new. Nicole Rousmaniere, curator of the Citi exhibition Manga to discuss the fascinating origins of the Japanese art form and its cultural influence across the globe.
Read MoreHow Rome was saved by geese - a (drunken) interview with author of Barbarians: Dr Stephen Kershaw
Read MoreDid Amazon warriors really cut off one boob so they could fight better? Was Achilles a hero or a sulky narcissist? Natalie Haynes and Iszi chat about Gods, Castration, Amazons and REVENGE.
Read MoreSmashing statues… were ancient statues really full of gold? No? What about rats?
Read MoreA narcissist populist politician whose only motivation was winning... no, not that one.
Read MoreA podcast 4 years in the making!
Read MoreDoes this mean every emoji is wrong?
Read MoreHow can you tell what disease someone died of over 1000 years ago?
Read MoreWhat would you sacrifice for your career? Many people lose relationships, invest fortunes, time with their families… but few people lose their entire identity. The question I grapple with is whether James Barry was a symptom of the strict victorian society or possibly the most accomplished transman in History.
Read MoreHow do you know how old something is?
Read MoreWas Otto Overbeck an abject failure? A brilliant polymath? A Quack? An Abuser? Iszi and James Stark explore the curious career of a bizarre creature with an electric personality.
Read MoreWhen did we first put pen to paper? Or Stylus to Tablet? Or scraper to shoulder blade?
Read MoreImagine having the middle name “Orange”… This isn't an episode about eating more fruit and fibre, it is about fibre optics’ predecessor. The telegraph and how it is bloody difficult sending messages across the planet. Shouting might not work, but it is easier.
Big Cat Killers
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