Category Archives: Podcasts 2024

I hear with my little ear: Podcasts 8-15 September 2024

Dan Snow’s History Hit The Warsaw Uprising. It’s the 80th anniversary of the Warsaw Uprising, which I have always had confused in my mind with the Warsaw Ghetto. This episode features Clare Mulley, the author of Agent Zo: The Untold Story of Fearless WW2 Resistance Fighter Elzbieta Zawacka. To be honest, I’d never heard of Agent Zo. She was born in German-occupied Poland, and was 11 years old at the end of WWI. Once WWII began, she was involved in active service with the Polish Home Army from the start, a resistance force of 400,000 to 500,000 people. The Polish government and army escaped and set up a government-in-exile, and never conceded defeat. From 1942 she used her German language skills and appearance to bring information into Berlin, and in 1943 was sent to Britain with microfilm. She brought parachutists back to Poland to join the uprising, which started on 1 August with an outbreak of brutal street fighting. Hitler was furious and ordered that every Pole be shot. Meanwhile, with Stalin advancing from the east (he had changed sides by now), the Russian government stepped back and let the battle continue, as it was in their interests for the Polish nationalists to be wiped out. The Warsaw Uprising continued for two months, and Warsaw was completely destroyed. Agent Zo was arrested and imprisoned in 1951, long after WW2 had finished. She died in 2009.

In the Shadows of Utopia Becoming Cambodia Pt 2: Cambodia after Angkor This episode deals with the increasing European influence in Cambodia, and the shift from a subsistence economy to a trade economy. Longvec (or Lovec) was the capital for 50 years until it was conquered by the Thai. A multitude of foreign traders moved into the area, including Portuguese and Spanish traders who were competing with each other. The first phase of trading involved the extraction of gold and silver (and the spreading of religion in return), but the second phase involved Dutch trading for goods, rather than mere extraction. In 1594 the Thais threatened again so the King looked to the Spanish in the Phillipines for support. By the time his envoy returned, the Siamese had invaded and the King fled. When the Thais were distracted by conflict with Burma, the King took Lovec back again. The Spanish envoys decided to support the King in exile, and were promised that they were free to spread Christianity. By the time the envoys arrived in Laos to liberate the King, he was already dead, so they brought his son back again, only for the son and the envoys to be killed. Meanwhile Pierre De Behaine, a French missionary stationed in Vietnam where there was north/south tribal conflict, went back to Spain and organized the Treaty of Versailles – no,not that one- this one was in 1787 between the French King Louis XVI and the Vietnamese lord Nguyễn Ánh, the future Emperor Gia Long. Not a good time to be ratifying treaties, and when the French government fell through with its promises of aid, Pierre brought mercenaries and modern warfare methods. In 1801 Nguyễn proclaimed himself emperor of North and South Vietnam. Meanwhile, the Vietnamese and Thai governments both kept fighting to-and-fro over Cambodia. There was 40 years of Vietnam influence, then the Thais installed a pro-Thai King who gave away land around Angkor to a warlord, which was strongly resented. In the 1820s there was a new Vietnamese emperor who very anti-Catholic.

Episode 6 The Dawn of French Indochina This episode deals with the years 1789 – 1887. He starts off this episode with an engaging story of two little village boys growing up under the French protectorate. It’s only after you’ve been listening for a while that you realize that he’s talking about the man who became Pol Pot, and suddenly the story doesn’t seem quite so engaging any more. In telling the story of how the French came to dominate French Indo-China, he draws on three longer themes. The first is the French Revolution, which embodied nationalism as a source of power. When Napoleon III wanted to regain the empire that had been lost after Waterloo, he seized on the persecution of French missionaries in the 1850s as a cause to justify colonialism. The second factor was the unification of Vietnam, which had previously been split between clans in north and south Vietnam. This strengthening of Vietnam meant that Cambodia was being tussled over between two stronger countries: Vietnam on one side and Thailand on the other. The Cambodian king, crowned under Thai influence, started to look for a third power that he could turn to. Finally, we had the French naturalist Henri Mouhot who toured Siam, Cambodia and Laos and saw the potential for growing cotton, to fill a possible market failure with the American Civil War, and a way of competing with Great Britain’s imperial power. He also uncovered Angkor Wat during his travels. France invaded Vietnam by the end of the 19th century, as an opportunity to access Chinese trade, under the excuse that they were protecting French Missionaries from mistreatment. But the French didn’t need to invade Cambodia; King Norodom welcomed its presence.

Background Briefing. Kidnapping the Gods Part 1. Over this week, I was in Phnom Penh and visited the Cambodian National Museum, where they had a display about looted artefacts that had recently been returned to Cambodia. This two-part Background Briefing program looks at the Australian collection of Khmer artefacts purchased, of all places, from David Jones department store in Sydney, which had a special section for fine arts. Although the director of the gallery, Robert Haines, seemed completely above-board, he sourced his artefacts through a Bangkok dealer called Peng Seng who also worked for Douglas Latchford, an infamous dealer in Khmer looted goods.

I hear with my little ear: Podcasts 1-7 September 2024

The Rest is History Custer v Crazy Horse: The Winning of the West (Part 2) After the Civil War drew to a close, Custer was sent to Texas, which had never actually been conquered by the North and where there was fear of the Mexican War. This wasn’t what Custer wanted. He wanted either to be in New York and be a tycoon, or failing that, to go to Mexico to fight Maximilian but his next deployment was to Kansas instead with the 7th Company. There he got involved with the political campaign of the new anti-Reconstruction American president, Andrew Johnson which put him offside with other Republicans. The troops in Kansas were largely untrained, rough and very multicultural. He made an enemy of Frederick Benteen, who I gather is going to pop up in this story again. There was a looming conflict with the Cheyenne (Plains Indians) who had come down from the south and feared the coming of the railway. Custer, William Tecumseh Sherman and Scott Hancock were sent to crack down on them. There were some familiar names among the soldiers including Henry Morton Stanley (who later met Livingstone), and Wild Bill Hickock. Much violence on both sides ensued, especially committed by the Dog Soldiers, a group associated with but not part of the Cheyenne. The Cheyenne agreed to go onto reservations, but the Dog Soldiers continued fighting. Winter had come, when hostilities generally ceased, but Custer led a raid on a village at night, crushing the men and taking the women and children as hostages. The 1869 campaign finished when the Dog Soldiers were defeated. President Grant, thinking that the wars were over handed the reservations over to the missionaries, in what looks like a similar Protection policy to that tried in Australia too.

The Shadows of Utopia Cambodia After Angkor (Part 1) This episode covers the time roughly 1431 to 1800 CE. The date 1431 is perhaps not an accurate starting point, as the Angkor kingdom transformed rather than collapsed. The royal family shifted to Phnom Penh, where the confluence of the Mekong and Ton Le Sap gave access to trade, and changed the emphasis from rice-growing to trade. In around 1371 there was the rise of the Thai kingdoms (Siam), originally from China. The Thai and Kymer kingdoms blended together culturally, with movement of people, ideas and rulers – although that didn’t stop the frequent wars between them. During the 16th century Cambodians had their first contact with the outside, with the visits of Portuguese traders. In the Siamese-Cambodian war in 1591-4 the Cambodians sought help from Spanish and Portuguese mercenaries, which led to the introduction of western military techniques and technology. Longvek, which had been the capital of the Kingdom of Cambodia from 1529 to 1594 was overrun and 90,000 Kymer soldiers were captured. Meanwhile, to the east Vietnam was becoming more powerful from the middle 1600s, after shaking off the power of China. The Vietnamese kingdom started moving south, defeating the Islamic Champa in 1471, a conflict that sputtered on for decades, leading to the eventual flight of the Cham to Cambodia in 1692. The Vietnamese expanded into Cambodia, taking over the Mekong Delta which cut off sea access. Cambodia was caught between two powerful competing powers: Siam and Vietnam. The status of the Royal Family had declined, the provinces remained barter economies, with subsistence farming and no road network. There was growing resentment towards Vietnam, encapsulated by the rather lurid and gory folk tale ‘The Master’s Tea’ where 3 Cambodian men are buried, with only their heads showing above the dirt, and the Vietnamese lights a kettle on the tripod of their heads and forbids them to move lest they spill the master’s tea. By 1810 both Siam and Vietnam were similar in size, and both saw Cambodia as a weak and dependent child.By 1840 Cambodia ceased to exist when it was administered by Vietnam.

Emperors of Rome Episode CCXXV – The Exile of Cicero (The Catiline Conspiracy VI) Now that Catiline was dead, Cicero promoted himself as being the ‘Warrior of the Senate’ and the saviour of the Empire. But he’d made lots of enemies, and they weren’t about to forget the execution of senators that he had ordered, and so the Senate refused to allow him to make a farewell speech when his consulship came to an end. Instead of going off to be a governor somewhere, which is what usually happened after being consul, he bought a big house on the Palantine Hill- it must have been big because it had previously belonged to Crassus. He tried to get historians to write up the story of his consulship as history, but they all refused; then he tried to get it written up as an epic by poets, but they refused. In the end, he had to do it himself. Catiline might be gone, but the populares continued, and now Clodius Pulcher took up their cause. Clodius was Tribune of the Plebs, and close to Julius Caesar. In 58 BCE Cicero was summoned to face trial in the Senate and, realizing that neither Caesar nor Pompey were about to come to his aid, he fled. He wasn’t actually exiled at this point- that came later. Clodius confiscated his house, demolished it, and gave the land for a temple. In the end, the exile only lasted 15 months when a new Tribune came to power, and Pompey finally supported him. In 57BCE Cicero returned to Italy, not ever really acknowledging that the Republic would need to change.

History Extra An Audacious Escape from Slavery. This episode features Ilyon Woo, the author of Master Slave Husband Wife: An Epic Journey from Slavery to Freedom which tells the story of Ellen and William Craft, a married couple who escaped enslavement in 1848. They both held rather anomalous positions as slaves, as William was an independent craftsman who could earn his own money, and Ellen had good seamstress skills. Ellen disguised herself as an ill male slaveholder and her husband acted as her (his?) manservant. Even once they reached the northern states, they could still be recaptured and sent back to enslavement. After a journey of over 1000 km, they became speakers in the abolition cause, and moved to the UK where they were feted in anti-slavery circles.

I hear with my little ear: Podcasts 24-31 August

The Rest is History Custer vs. Crazy Horse: Civil War (Part 1) I have never been into ‘Cowboys and Indians’. I never watched them on TV as a child, and do not remember them at the movies. And so, I didn’t know whether I really wanted to embark on this series, but I did anyway. The podcast starts in 1876 at the Battle of Little Big Horn, which was seen as the last moment of the old world of the American South. News of the battle reached the east coast on the very day of the centenary of Independence Day. Custer is often seen as a romantic figure, redolent of the Old South, but he actually fought for the Union. He was born in Ohio to a Methodist family and was politically aligned more with the Democrats than the new Republican party. He liked dressing flamboyantly, had a high sex drive, and was more into ‘japes’ than military strategy at the West Point academy where he accrued 726 demerits. When the Civil War was declared, most of his friends went off to fight in the south, but Custer stayed. He finally graduated as the most junior officer of the US army, was by 1863 was promoted to brigadier-general when he was still 23. Was he a good soldier? He certainly was willing to take a gamble, and he had the killer instinct. He married Libby Bacon, the daughter of a judge who initially refused his permission. He as appointed to serve under the modern and unheroic Ulysses Grant, Sherman and Sheridan. He was there at Appomattox, and in fact his wife had a walk-on role when she was given the surrender papers.

Guardian Long Reads My Family and Other Nazis This was actually written as an edited version of the Krzysztof Michalski Memorial Lecture, given by Martin Pollack at the Institute for Human Sciences in Vienna in June 2024. It is beautifully read by James Faulkner. Pollack was born in 1944 into a German Austrian family, which always saw themselves as more German than Australian. His whole family was strongly anti-Slav, seeing them as a demographic threat, and strongly anti-Semitic. The author was in his late 50’s when he began researching his family history, when he discovered that he had a different father than his sisters did. His mother had embarked on an extramarital affair with his father, who had freely joined the SS Gestapo (as, indeed, all of the author’s extended family had done). After a hunting accident his father was sent to Poland, where he was involved in putting down the Warsaw uprising, then on to Slovakia. His mother’s marriage had broken up, and so his parents married. Post war, his father escaped to Europe and he planned to take Martin and his mother to Paraguay, but he was shot by the guard taking him over the mountain pass in expectations of finding the Nazi gold that ex-Nazis were suspected of hiding. His mother then remarried her first husband for a second time. This is beautifully written, with the narrative shuttling back and forth- well worth listening to.

In the Shadows of Utopia Interview 1: Tom Chandler In this episode Lachlan interviews Australian graphic designer Tom Chandler, who has been involved in the Virtual Angkor project. This fantastic website has recreated Angkor at its peak – a city thought to be the size of Los Angeles although not as dense- moving away from the temple-centric approach to depict Angkor as a living city. They have relied heavily on the fragments of observation from the Chinese envoy, Zhou Daguan, who visited Angkor in 1296–97, supplementing it with sounds and movement in a type of “home movie” of the ancient city. The soundscape on the site is just so effective in bringing it to life. Tom Chandler is the son of Cambodia expert David Chandler, and he had no intention of following in his father’s footsteps, but after a career doing many other things, he has found himself contributing to this project. Go to the Virtual Angkor site- it’s fantastic.

The site is at https://www.virtualangkor.com/

Emperors of Rome Podcast Episode CCXXIII – The Championship of the Oppressed (The Catiline Conspiracy IV) Catiline arrived in Florence with the fasces, the symbol of authority, thus setting himself up as emperor (i.e. “I didn’t lose that election”. Sound familiar?) He was declared an enemy of the state, and Cicero was given emergency powers for a crisis and he made sure to use them. He tried to get the Gallic tribe the Allobroges to fight alongside him, but they doublecrossed him by going to Cicero and reporting Catiline’s approaches to them. Cicero gave another speech to the Senate and the people, then arrested the magistrates and co-conspirators who were still in Rome. A very rushed trial was held with the Senate, already convinced of their guilt, to decide between mercy or death. Caesar argued for life imprisonment and leniency, while Cato drew a hard line, arguing for old-fashioned Roman values. The conspirators were executed that same day. Meanwhile, Catiline up north with 3000 troops, fought with the Roman army but was slain fighting to the end. to be honest, both Cicero AND Catiline had abused their authority, and the underlying social problems were still unsolved. And to get to this point, Cicero had made enemies.

History Extra The Abbasid caliphate: everything you wanted to know The heyday of the Abbasid caliphate was between 750 and 950 AD, although they continued to play a political role until 1258 and the Mongol siege of Baghdad. (It just occurred to me that this was at the same time as the Angkor empire) At its peak their influence stretched from Tunisia, through the Khans and into Pakistan. Their capital was in Baghdad. They were not direct descendants of Muhammad, and they challenged the ruling Umayyad dynasty to take power and institute the ‘Golden Age of Islam’. The Abbasid court was very hierarchical, with palaces, uniforms and seclusion of women. The caliphate was divided into provinces with governors and troops, similar to the system used by the Roman Empire. The Byzantines, who took up the mantle of the Roman Empire were their most hostile and intellectual challenge, and after a period of consolidation in the 900s, the Abbasid caliphate began to fragment, with power flowing to Iran and Egypt. It was a multicultural society, happy to import textiles, knowledge (e.g. numbers) and science from other cultures. They were tolerant of Jews and Christians, as long as they accepted their secondary status. With the breakdown of the irrigation system, the government was unable to raise sufficient taxation, and so the 10th century elites moved to Egypt. With the Mongol capture of Baghdad in 1258, the last Abassid caliph was executed and the caliphate came to an end.

I hear with my little ear: Podcasts 16-23 August 2024

History Hour (BBC) History Hour is a compilation of segments from the shorter BBC program ‘Witness History’, featuring interviews with people who actually witnessed an event. This episode American Presidents sticks pretty much to this format, and it looks at several events, all related to American Presidents (given that this is all we can think about at the moment) . It starts with the first televised press encounter – it wasn’t actually a debate- between Eleanor Roosevelt (Democrat) and Margaret Chase Smith (Republican) on ‘Face the Nation’. It was a question and answer session until their final statements when Smith went the attack, much to Eleanor Roosevelt’s surprise and displeasure. Segment No. 2 was the Nixon/Kennedy debate which led to a long hiatus of sixteen years between debates, largely because Nixon was so pissed-off about the debate and how badly he came over in it, and it led to the creation of the Commission of Election Debates in 1987. As one of the contributors points out, social media has changed the nature of electoral debates because the political commentary now happens in real time, without waiting for the media pundits to review the debate later. Segment No. 3 was the rise of the Moral Majority led by Jerry Falwell which united Jews, Catholics and Evangelical Christians, who used direct mail to make their presence felt on American politics. Segment No. 4 was the Gore/Bush election, which took weeks to resolve with the ‘hanging chads’ and butterfly-voting systems. The seat of Florida was first called for Gore, but as time went on it became less clear and was eventually resolved by the Supreme Court suspending the vote recount (and with Trump’s stacking of the Supreme Court even further, how would that play out today?). The final segment was an interview with Pete Souza, the Chief Official White House Photographer during Barack Obama’s presidency, who was present during the briefing room meeting where politicians and generals sat around the table, watching the raid that led to the killing of Osama Bin Laden. I hadn’t realized that Barack Obama had attended the Press Dinner the night before, where he delivered his comedy routine. Apparently there was a gag in that about Bin Laden, and he asked to leave that one out, but no-one knew why at the time and the whole operation was a tightly held secret.

In the Shadows of Utopia Episode 2: The Early Khmer Empire Much though I am very much enjoying this podcast, I found myself rather frustrated at how long Lachlan took to get going with this story. Lots of definitions and goal-settings and objectives: just start, man! Anyway, one interesting distinction from all the defining terminology with which he starts is the observation that ‘Angkor’ can be used in much the same way as ‘Rome’ or ‘Washington’ can be used: i.e. as a geographical city location; as an empire; as an intellectual milieu. Kymer is a word for the dominant people in the space between India and China. He talks about the two periods which preceded Angkor and uses the analogy of Windows operating systems to describe the similarities and differences between these Kingdoms. The Funan period from about 100BCE to 600 CE was more a loose assembly of kingdoms. The Chenla Era operated between about 600 and 800 CE, and we don’t know much about that one either. Located between India and China, there were strong cultural influences from both sides, but with the emergence of hereditary Kings, there was a stronger leaning towards Hinduism (i.e. India). Temples became part of the economy and part of kingly power. In around 800CE we had the first God King Jayavarman who relied on the support of smaller kingdoms to gain political and cultural independence from Javanese domination. The rise of the ‘Devaraja cult’ saw him worshiped as a manifestation of Vishnu. He established the capital at Angkor and built temples and lakes, and mastered the water system of the East Baray river to establish canals and reservoirs. There’s an adage that it goes ‘water, land, rice and power’, and it played out here: mastery of waters through reservoirs and canals meant that they could double or triple the amount of rice grown (something that Pol Pot would later aspire to), which freed up labour for building and the army. This made Angkor the largest pre-industrial city in the world, with the West Baray still the largest hand-dug reservoir.

Episode 3: The Kymer Empire Part II brings us to King Suryavarman II in 1113, who constructed the temple at Angkor Wat in homage to Vishnu. The sandstone to construct the temple was floated from 40 kms away, in a quarry which was itself a sacred place. Present-day Angkor Wat consists of these stone structures, but the city that surrounded it has been lost until LIDAR technology has made it possible to trace its outlines. Over the next 100 years, they were attacked by the Champa from the Vietnam region, who even controlled Angkor for a while. It was Jayavarman VII who defeated the Champa and brought the Kymer empire to its zenith. He embarked on a thirty-year building program, and built more than the rest of the previous Kymer kings combined. A practising Buddhist, he saw himself as someone who deferred enlightenment in order to help others. He built hospitals and rest-stops, but it cannot be denied that the pace of the building he ordered was brutal. The decline of the empire is dated to the 13th century, but this is a rather slippery number. It was still impressive when it was described in writing by Chinese diplomat Zhou Daguan at a time when supposedly the decline had begun. Zhou’s remnant writings (about 1/3 of the original) are now published as ‘The Customs of Cambodia’. His work has made it possible for us to see some of the lives and culture of the time. Zhou mentions in his book the ongoing wars, and by 1431 it was considered that the golden era of the Kymer Empire was at an end. Why? First, the rise of stronger empires from Thailand; second, the spread of the more severe form of Theravada Buddhism which changed the relationship between the people and their king. Finally, there was environmental change when the monsoons stopped, then returned with a vengeance. However, although 1431 is seen as the end of the empire, people continued to live at Angkor.

History Hit The Real Moriarty Conan Doyle’s Moriarty character was inspired by German-born Adam Worth (1844-1902) who emigrated to America as a child and first popped up during the Civil War. He faked his own death at the Battle of Bull Run and drifted to the New York underworld. Small and intelligent, he soon graduated to bigger crime and moved from country to country. He set up a bar in Paris, with gambling upstairs, and in 1890 moved to London where he was known as “Henry J. Raymond”. In a situation reminiscent of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, he was accompanied by Piano Charlie (Charles Bullard) and Kitty Flynn, and both men seem to have been her lovers at times. In London, he was responsible for the theft of the Gainsborough painting of the Duchess of Devonshire, which he ended up returning. The Pinkerton Detective Agency was on his trail, and he had an odd relationship with them- they organized the return of the Gainsborough and his son ended up working for them. What an odd story.

History Extra The Far Right: History Behind the Headlines. This ‘History behind the Headlines’ feature in History Extra gets two historians to talk about current events. In this case, the discussion was held after the UK race riots following the stabbing of the young girls at a dance class. Rather oddly, they had medieval historian Hannah Skoda on the show, along with a historian of fascism Nigel Copsey. Skoda, of course, could only really draw on the Peasants Revolts from her expertise in medieval history, but she drew out examples where mobs forced people to say ‘bread and cheese’ to unveil whether they were Flemish through their accents (and then they bashed them), or when the Peasants described themselves as the ‘true commons’ as distinct from the ‘beasts’. Violence was seen as a political tool, and part of the political process during the Middle ages. As a historian of fascism, Copsey had more to draw on of course. He notes that the early 20th century people were happy to describe themselves as ‘fascists’, but now they use the term ‘nationalists’ instead. He notes that the term “far right” was stigmatized by its association with Nazism and skinheads, so now they distinguish themselves between the ‘radical right’ and the ‘extreme right’ in a mixture of ethnic and cultural nationalism. He points out that Oswald Moseley originally came from the Labor Party and embraced a form of radical Keynesianism. In a slightly hopeful ending, Skoda points out that the Peasants Riots provoked a backlash of mutual support for the groups that had been targetted- I wonder if that is true of today too. Will there be a wave of kindness and solidarity?

I hear with my little ear: Podcasts 1-7 August 2024

The Rest is History Byron: Dangerous Liaisons (Part 3) By now, Byron had developed his celebrity image- pale, sickly, bulimic and romantic- and given that women were falling over themselves to be with him, he had to suppress his homosexual tendencies. My God, what a mess. There was the androgynous Lady Caroline Lamb, the wife of the man who would later become Lord Melbourne, who became obsessed with him. On the suggestion of her mother-in-law Lady Melbourne aka The Spider, Byron had an on-and-off relationship with the mathematician Annabella Milbanke but, on the side, he was having an affair with his half-sister Augusta. This is all sick, and cruel and when he finally, resentfully, marries Annabella, he has not given up Augusta. Indeed, when Annabella falls pregnant, he names the girl Augusta, although Annabella herself always referred to her as Ada. (In fact, she became Ada Lovelace the mathematician). Eventually Annabella leaves him, but Caroline Lamb is on the rampage again, this time spreading rumours about incest and sodomy. Even though both were true to a certain extent, Byron agreed to flee England again to avoid the scandal.

Emperors of Rome Episode CCXXI – An Entire Farrago (The Catiline Conspiracy II) Some people call the Catiline Conspiracy the ‘second Catiline Conspiracy’. So what was the first conspiracy? Maybe it didn’t even happen and we’re not even sure if Catiline was involved in it anyway. The main source for the ‘first’ conspiracy is Sallust, who wrote it as a flashback when the real Catiline Conspiracy occurred. It seemed to have just fizzled out, as a form of proto-conspiracy. The REAL Catiline Conspiracy, which occured in 63 BC was when Catiline wanted another tilt at being consul, after being thwarted last time. Cicero got the backing of the Optimates compared with Catiline who was seen as a Populare, most of whom he had bribed. But was this really a conspiracy if it happened before the election was even held? Was it just part of Catiline’s pre-election schtick? In his speeches to the men he hoped would support him, he went on about lost liberties and Making Rome Great Again (all sounds very familiar). The whole thing might just be a Sallust invention.

The Documentary (BBC) Assignment: A Slogan and a Land. This is the two-part podcast that I vowed to listen to after hearing the presenter interviewed. He starts off on the banks of the River Jordan, heading for the Sea, which is only 80 km away crossing Israeli settlements and Palestinian villages. Although he intended walking, he soon found that he had to have drivers (one Jewish, one Palestinian) that he alternated between, depending on the nature of the village he was driving through. Quite apart from settlements, the use of animals (sheep, goats) etc and carving out land for nature reserves are all compromising Palestinian land. At the same time there is a demographic battle going on with settler and orthodox Jewish families having many children, as do many Palestinian families. Many of his interviewees are hard-line on both sides. I found myself becoming particularly incensed by the Israeli settler who jeered that the Palestinians didn’t even know how to farm, because the green parts are all Israeli, and the arid parts all Palestinian – with no acknowledgement of the settler water policies that are leading to desertification of Palestinian land. In the second episode, he is more than half-way, and he comes across less strident opinions, with more intermingling of Jewish and Palestinian people, although on the Jewish side October 7 has changed everything. There has been an economic impact on the Palestinian people as well, with wide-scale sacking of Palestinian employees in the wake of the attack. Very interesting and well worth listening to.

History Extra Kindness and Hostility: refugees in wartime Britain. There’s certainly plenty of hostility coming out of peacetime Britain at the moment. Hostility towards refugees in Britain was fairly low-key until the Russian pogroms in 1905 saw an influx of Jewish refugees. Prior to WW2 and Kindertransport notwithstanding, there was a general reluctance to take Jewish refugees from Austria and Germany, largely because there was a fear that huge numbers of Eastern European Jews would follow suit. The Evian Conference of 1938 was a form of refugee ‘green-washing’ with Palestine and the US not even included as options. There was Arab resistance to large-scale emigration, so the UK didn’t push the matter. Until a change in attitude in 1941, there was internment of Jewish refugees during WW2, (even though they were refugees because of Hitler), because of fears that many Jewish refugees working as domestic servants would be ‘spies in the kitchen’. After the war, the British government accepted Polish refugees, but refugees heading for Palestine were intercepted by the British navy and interned until Israel was created and large-scale Jewish emigration began.

I hear with my little ear: Podcasts 24-31 July 2024

I am so behind in posting about my listening! Not that anyone really cares, but I like to keep a record of what I’ve listened to so that I can go back and find things if I need them.

Sudan: All the news is full of Gaza and Ukraine, but I’ve been aware of Sudan bubbling away in the corner. I did listen to a few podcasts about Sudan last year, but I decided to catch up. Sudan’s Forgotten War (23 April 2024) takes up the most recent news. The long history of the Sudan conflict is that when Sudan achieved independence in 1956, the government was composed of northern and eastern elites and the military. This caused huge resentment elsewhere, and so the government turned to the Arab Janjaweed militia to suppress rebellion by amalgamating the army with Hemedti’s forces to become the Rapid Support Forces (RSF). But when Omar Al-Bashir was toppled as part of the washup from the Arab Spring, the military (SAF) would not cede power and the partnership between the armed forces and the RSF collapsed in 2023. Outside forces are involved: the RSF gets support from the United Arab Republic in troops and gold. The Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) gain support from Egypt, Saudi Arabia and perhaps Iran, as part of a long game. We are currently at a stalemate, with neither side able to defeat the other, and no wish for peace. There is no clear David and Goliath- instead it is a falling out between two powerful militarized bodies. There is no single front line, and neither side will allow humanitarian aid to get through.

I followed this with Nesrine Malik’s ‘All that we had is gone’: my lament for war-torn Khartoum’ which was nominated for a 2024 European Press Prize and you can read it here . It was actually from 2023, and it captures the grief that followed the conflict that came to Khartoum, which had previously been fairly immune from violence. It’s a beautiful piece of work.

The Global Story (BBC) The Most Contested Land in World? Admittedly, I did listen to this in the middle of the night, but it’s one of the best podcasts I’ve heard about ‘from the river to the sea’, and the multiple meanings that it holds for both Israelis and Palestinians. BBC Current Affairs journalist Tin Whewell talks about his journey from the River Jordan to the Meditteranean Sea- such a small piece of land and so much bloodshed. Actually, I think there’s a two-parter on BBC Assignment about the trip itself. I might listen to them as well.

Background Briefing. Notorious 8 My Friend the Cop Killer. I heard some of this while I was in the car, so I listened to the rest on podcast. It’s the background story of Nathaniel Train, one of the three Wieambilla conspiracy-theorists who killed two policemen and their neighbour. It’s presented by a journalist who was a schoolmate of Nathaniel, and it goes through the family rift between Gavin and Nathaniel and their parents, and the COVID vaccine mandate that seemed to have pushed them over the edge. But really, it’s pretty tabloid and sensationalist, and not really worth of Background Briefing.

History Hit Harris vs Trump: How We Got Here. As the name suggests, History Hit usually deals with things that have already happened, but in this case Dan Snow is inviting his guest, Ben Rhodes, (a Former Deputy National Security Advisor for Obama and host of Pod Save the World,) to take a first draft of history about the Harris vs. Trump election. Rhodes points out that the ‘strongman’ is a part of a global trend of backlash to globalization: someone who will tell you who you are and who to blame. He regrets that perhaps Barack Obama should have been a bit more of a strong-man. Presidents need to narrate what is happening, and Joe Biden didn’t do that. He suggests that the US looking for its identity, and that now the enemy is each other.

I hear with my little ear: Podcasts 16-23 July 2024

The Rest is History Lord Byron: Scandal, Sex and Celebrity Part 2 Byron’s first big hit was “Childe Harolde’s Pilgrimage” which is in effect an autobiographical account of his travels during the Napoleonic War in Europe. He had first proposed writing a research project called “Sodomy Simplified” but he was talked out of it- good advice, I reckon. He escaped into the gay underworld, and sailed to Greece which was then under Turkish occupation, then on to Albania where he was fascinated by Ali Pasha. He saw himself as a future saviour of Athens, where Elgin was busy collecting his marbles. At the time, Athens was in ruins, and only 10,000 people lived there. Elgin’s plan at first was to make casts of the sculptures in order to conserve them, but once he’d had the scaffolding built etc, he decided to take them. No one objected. It took Elgin 10 years to remove them, and Byron’s friend Hobhouse saw it as an act of rescue. Byron, however, was outraged and mocked Elgin – he’d be horrified to think that they were still in the British Museum today! He finally returned home to England at the age of 23. His mother and several friends had died in the meantime, and he was restless.

Emperors of Rome. I haven’t listened to this for ages. I’m never going to catch up on all the episodes I’ve missed, so I’ll just catch their most recent series of podcasts on the Catiline conspiracy. It seems an apposite time to think about conspiracies, because our world is full of them today. Episode CCXX: A Disordered Mind, the Catiline Conspiracy I starts by pointing out that our sources for the Catiline Conspiracy mainly spring from the pen of Cicero, his enemy and Sallust who wrote twenty years after the event. Catiline was from a very patrician and aristocratic family, but they weren’t particularly wealthy. He had grown up during the Social Wars and the Sulla/Marius civil war, and there are suggestions that he and his family benefitted from the property confiscations that took part as part of these. But that wasn’t the worst thing he was accused of: instead there were a string of putative murders of two brothers-in-law and his son, accusations of incest with the daughter of his mistress, marrying for looks instead of money and having sex with a vestal virgin. In the end, the only one he faced court for was on a charge of extortion, and he bribed his way out of it. It’s interesting though- in 65BC Cicero actually contemplated being on his defence team, so even though he ended up Catiline’s sworn enemy, it wasn’t black and white at the time.

Rear Vision (ABC) U.S. Presidential Elections: Are They Democratic? This was actually broadcast on 4 February 2024, but it seemed to be pretty relevant at the moment, too. The Electoral College, devised in 1787 was intended to replicate Congress in terms of state representation, as a way of getting all the states on board. ( I’ve never heard it mentioned, but ‘colleges’ were in use in British Guiana in the early 1800s as well, drawing on a Dutch model, even though British Guiana was by then a British colony.) The Electoral College in US was not democratic, because it could over-ride the elections of its representatives if they were deemed unsuitable. In the 1960s there were calls for more representation, so conventions and caucuses became more important. Caucuses are party-controlled events, but the Constitution did not foresee the involvement of parties at all. The primaries are run by the parties in conjunction with the state government, and delegates are only bound in the first round of voting. You can see where Trump was getting his wriggle-room last election- and scope for him to do the same thing again.

I hear with my little ear: Podcasts 8-15 July 2024

The Rest is History Lord Byron: Mad, Bad and Dangerous to Know (Part 1) I don’t think I’ve read any Byron at all but I know who he is. It’s the 200th anniversary of his death this year. He was the first international celebrity- when he died in Greece during the War of Independence, they rather facetiously liken him to the idea of Taylor Swift dying in Ukraine. He had an influence on later writers: the Brontes (Heathcliff, Rochester), vampires, Dorian Grey. Byron himself had a club foot (talipes). He was born to a mother who had married for the second time, and his step-father went through all the family money, and even though he inherited a castle at the age of 10, it was a ruin. He was brought up by his Calvinistic nursemaid, who sexually abused him (so much for the Calvinism). He was sent to Harrow where he was bullied, then he went to Cambridge. Then he lost weight and became handsome. He was attracted to boys rather than men, and is often the way, became aggressively heterosexual when he left Cambridge. As a lord, he was entitled to sit in the House of Lords. He had Whig sympathies but did not align himself with them, and so he delayed giving his maiden speech and was politically inactive. Impatient with such passivity, he decided to travel to the East.

99% Invisible Fact-Checking the Supreme Court An anti-gun group Moms Demand Action found that when the Supreme Court had knocked back a concealed-carry law because there was no pre-1900 precedent, there was in fact an 1892 precedent, in amongst the archives of a small Orange County courthouse. Their archival detective work didn’t change anything, but it does raise the question: who fact-checks the Supreme Court? This episode goes through the changes in legal thinking from Oliver Wendell Holmes who encouraged judges to draw on their experience; to Louis Brandeis who introduced the idea of facts, through to legal realism and the rise of the ‘amicus brief’. The current Supreme Court of America is wedded to the idea of “history and tradition” (which they seem to have thrown out the window when considering Presidential immunity) but what if the history and tradition is wrong? Really interesting.

I hear with my little ear: Podcasts 1-7 July 2024

Dan Snow’s History Hit In The Opium Wars Episode 2 Dr Jeremiah Jenne, a professor of Late Imperial and Modern China, and Dan follow up on the other opium wars that followed the Treaty of Nanking. In 1856 the Chinese seized ‘The Arrow’, a ship under a British flag (although this is disputed) which led on to the Second Opium War. This time the French joined in, and once again the British won, leading to the Treaty of Aigun which forced China to legalize opium and open up to missionaries and foreign traders. This was at an anxious time for Britain: the Indian mutiny was under way, America was heading towards Civil War and Russia was circling. The emperor refused to sign the treaty, so in 1860 the British and French returned, this time looting the Imperial Summer Palace and punishing the emperor. This was in effect the end of the 19th century opium trade, which was finally ended in 1907. The wars might have been over, but they formed the bedrock of Communist Party historical narrative right up to today, pointing to a century of humiliation which only now has been overcome.

The Rest is History Luther: The World Torn Apart (Part V) Luther had lit the fire, and now it was out of control. The Peasant Wars took on Luther’s strategy of appealing to the Bible, and more zealous preachers than Luther banned music, the mass, etc. The one man who could have quashed it all, Charles V, was distracted by political events elsewhere, as the culture wars turned into massacres. Luther, leaving behind his monk’s vows, married a former nun and tried to distance himself from the violence. He owed everything to the Elector of Saxony, and he could not be part of this bloodshed, even if he had wanted to. The Reformation that he had invoked spawned atheism, secularism and individualism. What if he had never lived: would there still have been a Reformation? Tom thinks that, in this case, Luther himself did make a difference.

You’re Dead to Me (BBC) Emma of Normanby. Never heard of her, but she was actually the wife of two kings (Aethelred and Cnut – better known as Aethelred the Unready and King Canute) and mother to two more, Harthacnut and Edward the Confessor. She was of Scandinavian origin, and on her second marriage to Cnut she had to negotiate a lot of jostling for the crown between half-brothers. In the end, she got two of her sons to share the throne, although she always claimed that she was ruling too. An encomium written to bolster her position likened her to Augustus, and drew on Roman and Greek history to legitimize her influence. In the end, her son Edward the Confessor turned against her, accused her of treason and stripped her of her land, although he later relented and gave it back again. But from here on, she was sidelined by her son. Features Professor Elizabeth Tyler and comedian Jen Brister (haven’t heard of either of them)

I hear with my little ear: Podcasts 24-30 June 2024

Dan Snow’s History Hit has a two-part series on the Opium Wars, which remain an important part of the narrative of China’s current history because they exemplify a “century of humiliation” that current policies and actions are designed to compensate for. In Part one The British Empire, China and Opium Dan and Dr Jeremiah Jenne, a professor of Late Imperial and Modern China, delve into the history of the Opium trade in the British Empire, how it brought crisis to China and started a war that still impacts China’s relationship with the west today. As a major trading country with products that Europe wanted, China had maintained an aloofness and power in the trading relationship. But the Industrial Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars had led to the development of technology that eclipsed that of China, and in Europe there had been a change in attitudes towards trade itself in the 1830s and 1840s, now seeing trade as a matter of opening markets, rather than just gaining access to goods. By 1800 10-12 million Chinese people were addicted to opium, even though it was illegal. Opium smugglers wanted silver, rather than tea. The emperor sought different opinions about how to deal with the opium problem, and heard opinions that very much echo the current debate over vapes:- should they legalize, tax, or punish the trade? Viceroy of Huguang Lin Zexu was charged with enforces penalties against traders, forcing them to hand over their opium which he then publicly burned. Eliot, the British agent, ordered limited retaliation but mission creep ensued, eventuating in the Treaty of Nanking which opened up treaty ports and put Hong Kong in British hands.

The Rest is History. Luther: Showdown with the Emperor (Part 4) Martin Luther was summoned to the imperial free city of Worms by the Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V, to defend his radical beliefs. He arrived with crowds of followers. Charles V issued an edict condemning him as a heretic, but part of the arrangement for him travelling to Worms was that he was guaranteed safe passage there and back. Luther’s protector Ferdinand was starting to distance himself a bit from Luther, but he nonetheless arranged for Luther to ‘disappear’ into a castle while things calmed down. Meanwhile, Luther himself realized that he could no longer impose himself on the Reformation, and that things were moving beyond him. He began to backtrack on some of his pronouncements.

History Extra British General Elections: Everything You Wanted to Know The British elections were under way when I listened to this. The 1920s saw the emergency of the two-party system, although one of them- the Liberal party- was gone by 1931. The secret ballot changed the nature of elections (and they didn’t even mention Australia here!) and the suffrage was gradually extended (again, yeah for Australia even though they ignored the Australian example). Gladstone was the first of the mass, personality-based prime ministers, followed by Lloyd George and Churchill, although you could really only saw that Wilson’s leadership was a decisive factor in the result. The 1950s and 1960s saw the growth of opinion polls and focus groups. Britain has first-past-the-post voting.