When Rome Burns

How Britain Crushed China's 350 Million Army With 40 Warships

15 min · Gestern
Episode How Britain Crushed China's 350 Million Army With 40 Warships Cover

Beschreibung

How do 11 British warships capture a Chinese city of 50,000 people in a single day? Michael Stevens breaks down one of history's most lopsided military conflicts, where naval superiority met an empire crippled by the very drug Britain was forcing them to buy. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why Chinese forces had effectiveness rates below 30% (spoiler: widespread opium addiction among troops) • How Britain extracted 21 million silver dollars from China - about $2 billion in today's money • The moment Hong Kong became British property with just 7,450 fishing families as witnesses • Why this "minor" colonial war reshaped global trade for the next century 👤 Perfect for: history buffs who want to understand how economic warfare actually works and anyone curious about the real story behind Britain's rise to global dominance. 📍 Chapters: [00:00] Michael Stevens sets up the impossible math of the First Opium War [01:45] Shanghai falls to 11 ships: how naval technology changed everything [04:20] Inside China's opium crisis: when your army can't fight back [06:50] The Treaty of Nanking: Britain's masterclass in extracting wealth [09:10] Hong Kong's handover and what it meant for the future [11:00] Why this pattern keeps repeating in modern conflicts The Treaty of Nanking didn't just end a war. It created the blueprint for how stronger powers could force weaker ones into devastating agreements. Stevens shows how the tactics Britain used in 1842 echo in economic and military strategies we see today. 🔔 Never miss an episode: Follow When Rome Burns on Spotify or Apple Podcasts and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily, your next favorite insight is one tap away. 🔍 Topics: First Opium War, British Empire, Chinese history, naval warfare, Treaty of Nanking, Hong Kong, military strategy, economic warfare Stream the full show at When Rome Burns [https://whenromeburns.blackboxpods.com] ---- Keywords: ancient rome, strategic bombing, naval warfare, cultural disasters Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]

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Episode How Constantine's Religious Choice Almost Destroyed Christianity Forever Cover

How Constantine's Religious Choice Almost Destroyed Christianity Forever

Ever wonder how becoming the official religion almost killed Christianity? When Constantine legalized Christianity in 311 CE, two massive theological fights erupted that nearly shattered the early church forever. Michael Stevens breaks down how power, politics, and pride turned religious disagreements into empire-splitting disasters. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How the Donatist controversy in North Africa created a parallel Christian church that lasted over 100 years • Why Arius's simple statement "there was a time when the Son was not" triggered the biggest theological crisis in Christian history • What really happened at the Council of Nicaea in 325 CE and how 300 bishops tried to save Christianity from itself • The brutal tactics Constantine used to enforce religious unity (spoiler: it backfired spectacularly) 👤 Perfect for: history buffs who want to understand how early Christianity survived its own success and anyone curious about how religious movements handle internal conflict. 📍 Chapters: [00:00] Michael Stevens introduces Christianity's imperial growing pains [02:00] The Donatist split: when North African Christians said "not my bishop" [04:30] Arius drops a theological bombshell in Alexandria [06:45] Constantine calls an emergency council to fix Christianity [09:00] Why solving these disputes actually made everything worse [11:30] Lessons about power, religion, and human nature 🔔 Never miss an episode: Follow When Rome Burns on your podcast app and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily, covering history's most spectacular failures and what they teach us about today. Your next favorite historical disaster is one tap away. 🔍 Topics: Constantine Christianity, Council of Nicaea, Donatist controversy, Arian heresy, early Christian schisms Stream the full show at When Rome Burns [https://whenromeburns.blackboxpods.com] ------------- Keywords: military history, empire decline, gold standard, political meltdowns Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]

29. Juni 202613 min
Episode The 325 CE Meeting That Split Christianity Forever: What Really Happened at Nicaea Cover

The 325 CE Meeting That Split Christianity Forever: What Really Happened at Nicaea

What if the meeting that created modern Christianity was actually a political power play disguised as theology? In this episode, Michael Stevens breaks down the Council of Nicaea in 325 CE, where Emperor Constantine didn't just settle a religious debate: he engineered one of history's most successful rebranding campaigns. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why only 300 out of 1,800 bishops showed up to this "universal" council (and what that really tells us about early Christian unity) • How Constantine managed to host Christianity's biggest theological showdown while postponing his own baptism for 12 more years • The shocking reality that our modern Nicene Creed isn't actually from Nicaea at all (it was heavily revised 56 years later) 👤 Perfect for: anyone who wants to understand how religious institutions actually gain power and why the "official" story rarely matches what really happened. 📍 Chapters: [00:00] Michael Stevens sets up the ultimate religious power struggle [02:00] Why most Christian bishops refused to attend their own "universal" council [04:30] Constantine's brilliant political strategy: solve the problem by creating the solution [06:45] What actually happened when Arius presented his case (spoiler: it wasn't pretty) [08:30] The creed that wasn't: how 381 CE rewrote 325 CE's legacy [11:00] Why this 1,700-year-old meeting still shapes Christianity today This isn't just ancient history. Stevens connects the dots between Nicaea's political maneuvering and how institutions still manufacture consensus today. You'll never look at "unanimous" decisions the same way again. 🔔 Never miss an episode: Follow When Rome Burns on your favorite podcast platform and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily, and next week we're covering the one emperor who tried to undo everything Constantine built. 🔍 Topics: Council of Nicaea, Constantine, early Christianity, Arianism, religious politics Stream the full show at When Rome Burns [https://whenromeburns.blackboxpods.com] -------- Keywords: battleships, political meltdowns, ned kelly, world war 2, founding fathers Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]

Gestern17 min
Episode How One Bible Fight Almost Destroyed Christianity Forever Cover

How One Bible Fight Almost Destroyed Christianity Forever

How does a theological argument over Jesus's divine nature almost end Christianity before it really starts? In today's episode, Michael Stevens breaks down the brutal power struggles that nearly tore apart early Christianity forever. We're talking armed monks storming church councils, rival bishops holding competing meetings, and theological debates that got so heated they created permanent religious divisions that still exist 1,600 years later. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why the Council of Ephesus in 431 CE erupted into complete chaos with rival factions meeting separately • How the 'Robber Council' of 449 CE earned its nickname through actual physical violence between church leaders • The massive scale of Chalcedon in 451 CE where over 600 bishops gathered for Christianity's biggest showdown • Why today's Coptic, Armenian, and Ethiopian Orthodox churches trace back to these ancient theological fights 👤 Perfect for: history buffs who want to understand how religious disagreements shaped the world we live in today. 📍 Chapters: [00:00] Michael Stevens introduces Christianity's biggest internal crisis [01:45] The nature of Christ debate that split the church [03:30] Council of Ephesus descends into theological warfare [06:00] The 'Robber Council' and why monks brought weapons to church [08:15] Chalcedon's 600 bishops attempt to save Christianity [10:30] How these ancient splits still divide Christians today The question of whether Jesus had one nature or two seems pretty abstract until you realize it sparked conflicts that literally reshaped Christianity forever. These weren't just academic debates, they were power struggles that determined which version of the faith would survive. 🔔 Never miss an episode: Follow When Rome Burns on Spotify or Apple Podcasts and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily, your next favorite historical disaster is one tap away. 🔍 Topics: early Christianity, Council of Chalcedon, religious schisms, Byzantine Empire, theological disputes Stream the full show at When Rome Burns [https://whenromeburns.blackboxpods.com] ---------- Keywords: gold standard, historical failures, political meltdowns Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]

Gestern15 min
Episode How Christianity Conquered Rome: The Political Plot That Changed History Forever Cover

How Christianity Conquered Rome: The Political Plot That Changed History Forever

Ever wonder how a tiny Jewish sect convinced the world's most powerful empire to abandon its gods? In this episode, Michael Stevens reveals the shocking political chess game that transformed Christianity from persecuted minority to imperial powerhouse in just three centuries. What if everything you know about Christianity's rise was actually a story of brilliant political maneuvering, bitter theological feuds, and strategic compromises that had very little to do with faith? 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why Paul's radical decision around 50 CE to include non-Jews nearly destroyed early Christianity before it started • How 30 competing Christian sects turned Jesus's divinity into Rome's most explosive political debate • The real reason Constantine legalized Christianity (hint: it wasn't a religious conversion) • What actually happened when 300 bishops voted on whether Jesus was God at the Council of Nicaea 👤 Perfect for: history buffs who love discovering the hidden political machinations behind world-changing events. 📍 Chapters: [00:00] Michael Stevens introduces Christianity's political takeover [01:45] Paul's controversial Gentile strategy splits the movement [04:20] How competing sects turned theology into warfare [06:50] Constantine's calculated political gamble with the Edict of Milan [09:15] The Council of Nicaea: democracy decides divinity [11:30] Why these ancient power plays still matter today This isn't your Sunday school version of Christian history. Stevens breaks down the backroom deals, theological cage matches, and imperial politics that actually shaped Western civilization. You'll never think about religious history the same way again. 🔔 Never miss an episode: Follow When Rome Burns and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily, and next week Stevens is covering the Byzantine Empire's spectacular collapse. Don't miss it. 🔍 Topics: early Christianity, Roman Empire, Constantine, Council of Nicaea, religious history Stream the full show at When Rome Burns [https://whenromeburns.blackboxpods.com] ----- Keywords: hitler, historical failures, political meltdowns, paper money, cultural disasters, ned kelly, australian history Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]

Gestern13 min
Episode Why Ancient Accountants Invented Writing (Not Poets Like You Think) Cover

Why Ancient Accountants Invented Writing (Not Poets Like You Think)

Think poets invented writing to capture their deepest thoughts? Michael Stevens destroys that romantic myth in today's episode of When Rome Burns. The real story is way more practical and honestly more fascinating: ancient accountants created the first writing system 5,600 years ago because they had too much stuff to count. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why Sumerian temple accountants needed to track millions of grain sacks, sheep, and textiles (and how counting tokens weren't cutting it anymore) • The shocking truth: over 90% of the earliest writing samples are basically ancient receipts and inventory lists • How single-syllable Sumerian words accidentally made the jump from pictures to sounds much easier than anyone expected • Why scribes flipped their tablets 90 degrees and changed writing direction forever (spoiler: it wasn't artistic choice) 👤 Perfect for: anyone who's ever wondered how we went from grunting to texting, and curious minds who love discovering that history's "obvious" stories are usually completely wrong. 📍 Chapters: [00:00] Michael Stevens shatters the poet myth [01:45] Inside Sumerian temples where accounting got out of hand [03:30] From counting tokens to scratching clay: the breakthrough moment [05:15] Why 90% of ancient tablets are glorified receipts [07:00] The accidental genius of one-syllable words [08:30] How scribes accidentally invented efficient writing [10:00] What this reveals about human innovation 🔔 Never miss an episode: Follow When Rome Burns on your podcast app and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily, and next week Michael's covering why the Library of Alexandria's destruction is another historical myth that needs busting. 🔍 Topics: ancient writing systems, Sumerian civilization, history of accounting, cuneiform tablets, invention of writing Stream the full show at When Rome Burns [https://whenromeburns.blackboxpods.com] --------------- Keywords: fall of empires, operation citadel, world war 2, naval warfare, nazi germany, political meltdowns, economic collapse Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]

Gestern12 min