Kansikuva näyttelystä Bygone Worlds: The Fascinating History of How We Used to Live

Bygone Worlds: The Fascinating History of How We Used to Live

Podcast by Bygone Productions

englanti

Historia & uskonnot

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Lisää Bygone Worlds: The Fascinating History of How We Used to Live

Bygone Worlds is history that pulls you completely out of your modern life and immerses you in another time and place. Through rich and meditative storytelling that vividly appeals to all your senses, you’ll travel from the kitchens of Elizabethan England where Turnspit Dogs helped cook meals to the Silk Road where two monks broke China’s centuries long monopoly on silk to the shores of America where the US Life Saving Service rescued over 170,000 people before the Coast Guard was even invented. While other history podcasts focus on wars and famous figures, we illuminate the captivating corners of daily life you've probably never heard about. Whether you listen at bedtime or during your day, kids and adults can step back in time to learn about lives you never knew existed and feel like you lived them.

Kaikki jaksot

13 jaksot

jakson How Beaver Drove Men Mad As Hatters kansikuva

How Beaver Drove Men Mad As Hatters

In 17th-century New France, the most valuable thing in the wilderness was a beaver. Not for its meat. Not for its lodge-building engineering. For its underfur — microscopic barbed fibers that, when compressed with heat and moisture, interlock permanently into a felt so waterproof and shape-retaining that no other material on earth could match it. Europe's aristocracy wanted hats made of nothing else. The demand was insatiable. And the men supplying it were criminals. The coureur des bois — literally, "runner of the woods" — went into the Canadian wilderness without government permission, traded directly with Indigenous peoples without a license, and faced arrest if they came back to Montreal. Some didn't come back at all. Those who did spent months entirely alone, wading waist-deep into freezing streams at dawn to check steel traps, skinning beaver in temperatures that froze the blood on their hands, eating what the forest offered and sleeping where night found them. The wilderness they moved through was so dense with life — beaver, elk, wolf, passenger pigeon darkening the sky — that it is almost impossible to picture from where we stand now. The hat their beaver became, by the time it reached a Paris street, had passed through the hands of a hatter slowly going mad — mercury nitrate, used in the felting process, caused tremors, hallucinations, and neurological collapse so common in the trade that it gave the English language a phrase it still uses today. This is the story of where that hat started.

Eilen - 27 min
jakson Nantucket: While the Men Were Gone, the Women Ran Everything kansikuva

Nantucket: While the Men Were Gone, the Women Ran Everything

In the 1840s, a third of all adult men on the island of Nantucket were at sea at any given moment — gone for three years, sometimes four, hunting sperm whales in the Pacific Ocean. Eight decades before American women got the right to vote, the women of Nantucket ran the island: The dry goods stores, the real estate, the family finances, the children. Nantucket women had property rights, business dealings, and legal independence that women in most of America wouldn't see for another century — not because anyone planned it that way, but because there was nobody else to do it. The men, meanwhile, were burning whale fat to boil down more whale fat on a ship that smelled like hell and paid, if you were new and unlucky, approximately $25 for four years of your life. The ocean they were hunting had once been so full of sperm whales that ships in the 1820s found pods of a hundred. Now, they had to sail halfway around the world and would go days between sightings and only then would they be able to risk life and limb on a “Nantucket Sleigh Ride.”  This is the story of one voyage — and the island it left behind.

19. kesä 2026 - 1 h 5 min
jakson Traveling The Silk Road: Bandits, Buried Caravans, and Financial Innovation kansikuva

Traveling The Silk Road: Bandits, Buried Caravans, and Financial Innovation

Four thousand miles of mountain passes, shifting desert dunes, and territory where the difference between a legitimate toll and an armed robbery depended entirely on who was holding the pass that season. Caravans were raided. Caravans were swallowed by dunes that moved overnight and are still being excavated today. Men died of altitude in the Pamirs, of thirst in the Taklamakan, of bad luck at the wrong mountain pass at the wrong time of year. The merchants who ran this road knew all of this before they left. Loss wasn't a risk. It was a certainty. The only question was which caravan, and when. So the men who ran the Silk Road did something remarkable: they invented some of the world's first complex financial instruments — systems for spreading risk, honoring debt across thousands of miles, and surviving the losses that were always coming. This is how the road actually worked and what it was like to take that journey.

12. kesä 2026 - 37 min
jakson The Monks Who Broke China's Silk Monopoly kansikuva

The Monks Who Broke China's Silk Monopoly

For nearly three thousand years, China held the world's most valuable trade secret. The penalty for revealing it, for smuggling out a single silkworm egg or mulberry seed, was death. The entire Byzantine Empire, the most powerful state in the western world, was hemorrhaging its treasury paying Persian middlemen just to keep its court and army in silk, a fabric so prized that a single bolt could buy a small farm. Then, sometime around 552 AD, two monks walked out of Central Asia carrying hollow bamboo canes sealed with beeswax. Inside: silkworm eggs. To get home they would have to cross the Pamir Mountains, some of the most brutal terrain on earth, with elevations pushing nearly 15,000 feet and a mountain climate notorious for its punishment, then skirt the edge of the Persian Empire, traverse the Caucasus, and follow the Black Sea coast to Constantinople. The journey would take the better part of two years. The eggs had to survive all of it. If the seals cracked, if the temperature shifted at the wrong moment, if anyone looked too closely, it was over.  This is the story of history's most consequential act of industrial espionage.

21. touko 2026 - 33 min
jakson Nobody Cooked At Home In Rome kansikuva

Nobody Cooked At Home In Rome

Most Romans never cooked a meal in their lives. Not once. The city had a million people and almost none of them had a kitchen. Most Romans lived in cramped, wooden-framed apartment buildings where open flame meant the whole block burns down — so cooking was effectively banned. If you wanted a hot meal, you went outside. And outside, the city had an answer for that. On nearly every block: a thermopolium, a masonry counter with ceramic jars of hot food sunk into it, menus painted on the walls, customers eating standing up in the street. Rome invented fast food two thousand years before the drive-through. Despite dining out for each meal, there was almost zero variety in flavor because everything they ate — rich and poor alike — was covered in a fermented fish sauce so pungent it had to be made outside the city walls. The Romans called it garum. Seneca called it something less polite. We might call it umami.

6. touko 2026 - 36 min
Loistava design ja vihdoin on helppo löytää podcasteja, joista oikeasti tykkää
Loistava design ja vihdoin on helppo löytää podcasteja, joista oikeasti tykkää
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Todella kiva äppi, helppo käyttää ja paljon podcasteja, joita en tiennyt ennestään.

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