Seven Continents, One Story

OC019 - Kokoda Track Campaign - The Fight That Saved Australia

37 min · Eilen
jakson OC019 - Kokoda Track Campaign - The Fight That Saved Australia kansikuva

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In 1942, Japan stood within sight of Port Moresby — within bombing range of Australia itself. The only thing standing between them was a 96-kilometre jungle track through the Owen Stanley Range, and a battalion of Australian militia whose average age was eighteen and a half. They were called "Chocos" — chocolate soldiers who would melt under fire. They did not melt. Welcome to Seven Continents, One Story. Nils, Céline, and Ethan take you inside the Kokoda Track campaign of 1942 — one of the most brutal, most important, and least-known battles of the Second World War. A campaign fought in mud and rain and jungle, by teenagers, sustained by Papua New Guinean carriers whose contribution saved hundreds of lives and whose names are mostly unrecorded. 🔍 ARTEFACT DETECTIVE — The Australian WWII Identity Disc Nils holds a small piece of aluminium, stamped with a name, a number, a religion, a blood type. An identity disc — worn in pairs around the neck by every Australian soldier on the Kokoda Track. In the event of death, one disc stayed with the body. The other went to the next of kin. Or, if the body could not be recovered, it was the only record that the man had ever been there. Hundreds of Australians on the Kokoda Track have no known grave. The Bomana War Cemetery outside Port Moresby holds over 3,800 graves — many of them boys who should have been at home in Sydney or Melbourne. The Papua New Guinean carriers who died have no equivalent disc. They were not issued identity equipment. In many cases they have no official records at all. That gap in the historical record is itself a form of injustice. 🦸 UNSUNG HERO — Raphael Oimbari Christmas Day, 1942. Near Buna on the north coast of Papua. New Zealand photographer George Silk is walking toward the front when he sees a column of wounded men. He steps to the side. He raises his camera. He takes one photograph. A tall, young Papuan man is walking through the kunai grass, his right hand extended behind him. In that hand, he holds the hand of a bandaged Australian soldier — Private George Whittington, 22, shot above the eye by a sniper, partially blinded, his head wrapped in white. The Papuan man is leading him forward. Gently. Carefully. Through the grass toward safety. His name was Raphael Oimbari. A carrier. A villager. A man from Papua New Guinea whose land this war was fought on — who had chosen, on Christmas Day, in the middle of a battle, to take the hand of a stranger and lead him home. Private George Whittington died of scrub typhus six weeks later. Raphael Oimbari outlived the war by decades. Remember Raphael Oimbari. Remember that hand. 🤔 CHOOSE YOUR OWN HISTORY — Isurava, August 1942 It is late August 1942. The Australian position at Isurava is on the verge of collapse. The Japanese are attacking in waves — over 2,000 men against approximately 530 Australians. Your men are outnumbered, exhausted, sick with malaria. The Japanese have broken through on one flank. Option A: Hold at Isurava. Risk complete encirclement — possibly the destruction of the entire force — but refuse to give ground. Option B: Fighting withdrawal south. Preserve the force, buy time for reinforcements, give ground but keep men alive. Brigadier Arnold Potts chose Option B. MacArthur condemned it as cowardice. Every historian since has concluded it was the only decision that could have saved Port Moresby. If the 39th Battalion and the 21st Brigade had stood and died at Isurava, there would have been nothing left between Japan and Australia. The fighting withdrawal — painful, costly, agonising — was the strategy that saved the country. 📖 WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER: - Why the fall of Singapore sent shockwaves through Australia — and why Port Moresby was the key to everything - The 39th Battalion: shop assistants, farmers, factory workers. Average age 18.5. The "Chocos" who didn't melt - The Battle of Isurava — the largest engagement of the campaign, and the charge of Private Bruce Kingsbury VC - Milne Bay: the first defeat of Japanese ground forces in the entire Second World War - The Papua New Guinean carriers — how they sustained the entire Australian effort, and why their contribution was never adequately recognised - General MacArthur's comfortable hotel in Brisbane, and what he said about the men dying in the mud - The Japanese collapse: starvation, disease, and Major General Horii drowning in the Kumusi River - "Track" vs "Trail" — the most passionate argument in Australian military history about a single word - 625 Australians killed in action. Thousands more casualties. Papua New Guinean dead: not fully counted 📚 SOURCES: Ham, P. (2012). Kokoda. HarperCollins Australia. Brune, P. (2004). A Bastard of a Place. Allen & Unwin. Horner, D. (1993). Crisis of Command: Australian Generalship and the Japanese Threat 1941–43. ANU Press. Souter, G. (1963). New Guinea: The Last Unknown. Angus & Robertson. Australian War Memorial: awm.gov.au/kokoda 🎧 SUBSCRIBE: Spotify | Apple Podcasts | YouTube Join Nils, Céline, and Ethan as we explore history across seven continents. Where Expert Knowledge Meets Curious Minds. #Kokoda #WWII #PacificWar #AustralianHistory #PapuaNewGuinea #RaphaelOimbari #HistoryPodcast #SecondWorldWar #SevenContinents #MilitaryHistory

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jakson OC019 - Kokoda Track Campaign - The Fight That Saved Australia kansikuva

OC019 - Kokoda Track Campaign - The Fight That Saved Australia

In 1942, Japan stood within sight of Port Moresby — within bombing range of Australia itself. The only thing standing between them was a 96-kilometre jungle track through the Owen Stanley Range, and a battalion of Australian militia whose average age was eighteen and a half. They were called "Chocos" — chocolate soldiers who would melt under fire. They did not melt. Welcome to Seven Continents, One Story. Nils, Céline, and Ethan take you inside the Kokoda Track campaign of 1942 — one of the most brutal, most important, and least-known battles of the Second World War. A campaign fought in mud and rain and jungle, by teenagers, sustained by Papua New Guinean carriers whose contribution saved hundreds of lives and whose names are mostly unrecorded. 🔍 ARTEFACT DETECTIVE — The Australian WWII Identity Disc Nils holds a small piece of aluminium, stamped with a name, a number, a religion, a blood type. An identity disc — worn in pairs around the neck by every Australian soldier on the Kokoda Track. In the event of death, one disc stayed with the body. The other went to the next of kin. Or, if the body could not be recovered, it was the only record that the man had ever been there. Hundreds of Australians on the Kokoda Track have no known grave. The Bomana War Cemetery outside Port Moresby holds over 3,800 graves — many of them boys who should have been at home in Sydney or Melbourne. The Papua New Guinean carriers who died have no equivalent disc. They were not issued identity equipment. In many cases they have no official records at all. That gap in the historical record is itself a form of injustice. 🦸 UNSUNG HERO — Raphael Oimbari Christmas Day, 1942. Near Buna on the north coast of Papua. New Zealand photographer George Silk is walking toward the front when he sees a column of wounded men. He steps to the side. He raises his camera. He takes one photograph. A tall, young Papuan man is walking through the kunai grass, his right hand extended behind him. In that hand, he holds the hand of a bandaged Australian soldier — Private George Whittington, 22, shot above the eye by a sniper, partially blinded, his head wrapped in white. The Papuan man is leading him forward. Gently. Carefully. Through the grass toward safety. His name was Raphael Oimbari. A carrier. A villager. A man from Papua New Guinea whose land this war was fought on — who had chosen, on Christmas Day, in the middle of a battle, to take the hand of a stranger and lead him home. Private George Whittington died of scrub typhus six weeks later. Raphael Oimbari outlived the war by decades. Remember Raphael Oimbari. Remember that hand. 🤔 CHOOSE YOUR OWN HISTORY — Isurava, August 1942 It is late August 1942. The Australian position at Isurava is on the verge of collapse. The Japanese are attacking in waves — over 2,000 men against approximately 530 Australians. Your men are outnumbered, exhausted, sick with malaria. The Japanese have broken through on one flank. Option A: Hold at Isurava. Risk complete encirclement — possibly the destruction of the entire force — but refuse to give ground. Option B: Fighting withdrawal south. Preserve the force, buy time for reinforcements, give ground but keep men alive. Brigadier Arnold Potts chose Option B. MacArthur condemned it as cowardice. Every historian since has concluded it was the only decision that could have saved Port Moresby. If the 39th Battalion and the 21st Brigade had stood and died at Isurava, there would have been nothing left between Japan and Australia. The fighting withdrawal — painful, costly, agonising — was the strategy that saved the country. 📖 WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER: - Why the fall of Singapore sent shockwaves through Australia — and why Port Moresby was the key to everything - The 39th Battalion: shop assistants, farmers, factory workers. Average age 18.5. The "Chocos" who didn't melt - The Battle of Isurava — the largest engagement of the campaign, and the charge of Private Bruce Kingsbury VC - Milne Bay: the first defeat of Japanese ground forces in the entire Second World War - The Papua New Guinean carriers — how they sustained the entire Australian effort, and why their contribution was never adequately recognised - General MacArthur's comfortable hotel in Brisbane, and what he said about the men dying in the mud - The Japanese collapse: starvation, disease, and Major General Horii drowning in the Kumusi River - "Track" vs "Trail" — the most passionate argument in Australian military history about a single word - 625 Australians killed in action. Thousands more casualties. Papua New Guinean dead: not fully counted 📚 SOURCES: Ham, P. (2012). Kokoda. HarperCollins Australia. Brune, P. (2004). A Bastard of a Place. Allen & Unwin. Horner, D. (1993). Crisis of Command: Australian Generalship and the Japanese Threat 1941–43. ANU Press. Souter, G. (1963). New Guinea: The Last Unknown. Angus & Robertson. Australian War Memorial: awm.gov.au/kokoda 🎧 SUBSCRIBE: Spotify | Apple Podcasts | YouTube Join Nils, Céline, and Ethan as we explore history across seven continents. Where Expert Knowledge Meets Curious Minds. #Kokoda #WWII #PacificWar #AustralianHistory #PapuaNewGuinea #RaphaelOimbari #HistoryPodcast #SecondWorldWar #SevenContinents #MilitaryHistory

Eilen37 min
jakson EU017 - Black Death - The Plague That Broke Medieval Europe kansikuva

EU017 - Black Death - The Plague That Broke Medieval Europe

In October 1347, twelve Genoese trading ships arrived at Messina, Sicily. Most of the sailors were already dead. Those still alive were covered in black swellings, oozing blood and pus. The harbourmaster ordered the ships expelled from port immediately. It was already too late. Welcome to Seven Continents, One Story. Nils, Céline, and Ethan take you inside the Black Death — not as a textbook entry, but as a human catastrophe. Inside the ships, the streets, the apothecary shelves, the mass graves. Inside the minds of the people who tried to understand what was happening — and the one man who actually figured it out, five hundred years ahead of his time. 🔍 ARTEFACT DETECTIVE — The Albarello Nils brings a ceramic jar into the studio: tin-glazed earthenware, cylindrical, painted in deep blue and orange with a Latin inscription. This is an albarello — a medieval apothecary drug jar. Inside it: theriac, the great medieval antidote, compounded from dozens of ingredients and prescribed against plague itself. It did not work. But what it represents is the refusal to give up. The apothecaries stood at their shelves, labelled their jars, walked into houses where everyone else feared to go — and kept trying with what they had. Real albarelli survive in museums across Europe, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and the Hunt Museum in Ireland. 🦸 UNSUNG HERO — Ibn al-Khatib Born in Granada in 1313, Ibn al-Khatib was a Moorish physician, poet, historian, and polymath. When the plague reached Granada in 1348–49, he did something no other scholar of his time did: he observed. He noticed that communities with no contact with infected persons survived. That people who handled victims' clothing got sick. That strict distance worked. From these observations alone, he concluded the plague spread through contagion — person to person, object to object. Five hundred years before Louis Pasteur. Five hundred years before germ theory. He was virtually alone among scholars of any tradition in arguing this. The prevailing religious interpretation held that fleeing plague was faithlessness. Ibn al-Khatib argued anyway. He was accused of heresy. He died in prison around 1374. Remember Ibn al-Khatib. 🤔 CHOOSE YOUR OWN HISTORY — The Harbourmaster of Messina, October 1347 You are the harbourmaster of Messina. Twelve Genoese ships have arrived from the Black Sea. Most of the sailors are dead. Those alive are barely conscious, covered in black swellings. Messina's economy depends on this trade. What do you do? Option A: Quarantine the ships. No one disembarks. No cargo unloaded. Economic consequences be damned. Option B: Let the ships dock. Report the sick sailors to the doctors. Hope for containment. The harbourmaster chose Option A — he expelled the ships. It was the right decision. And it was already too late. The plague was in Messina before the ships were turned away. The window in which decisive action can prevent disaster is often much shorter than it feels. 📖 WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER: - How the Black Death originated in the Tian Shan mountains in 1338 — and what a 2022 archaeological discovery proved - The Caffa catapult story: history's most dramatic (and possibly apocryphal) act of biological warfare - The three forms of plague: bubonic, pneumonic, septicaemic — and why each killed differently - The Strasbourg massacre: 2,000 Jewish people burned before the plague even arrived - John Clyn of Kilkenny: the Franciscan friar who left blank pages in case anyone survived - Norway's 300-year demographic shadow - How the Black Death ended feudalism, seeded the Renaissance, and gave birth to the Danse Macabre - The DNA evidence that settled the debate: "Finally, plague is plague" ⏱️ TIMESTAMPS: 00:00 - Introduction & Artefact Detective — Clue One 03:00 - Medieval Europe before the plague: famine, feudalism, fragility 06:00 - Origins: Tian Shan mountains and Yersinia pestis 10:00 - The Silk Road carries plague west — and the Caffa catapult story 14:00 - The Messina ships: October 1347 18:00 - Biology of the plague: bubonic, pneumonic, septicaemic 23:00 - Artefact Clue Two — the apothecary's shelf 27:00 - Spread: Venice, Florence, France, England, Scotland, Scandinavia 32:00 - John Clyn and the blank pages 36:00 - Unsung Hero: Ibn al-Khatib — the man who was right 40:00 - Antisemitism and the pogroms: Strasbourg, Basel, Worms 44:00 - The flagellants 47:00 - Artefact Revealed: the Albarello and what theriac represents 51:00 - Legacy: feudalism collapses, wages rise, Peasants' Revolt 1381 55:00 - The Church loses authority — seeds of the Reformation 58:00 - The Danse Macabre 61:00 - Choose Your Own History: the Harbourmaster of Messina 66:00 - DNA evidence — "Finally, plague is plague" 70:00 - Recovery: 150 years for Europe, 300 years for Norway 74:00 - Conclusion 📚 SOURCES: Kelly, J. (2005). The Great Mortality. Harper Perennial. Benedictow, O.J. (2004). The Black Death 1346–1353: The Complete History. Boydell Press. Horrox, R. (ed.) (1994). The Black Death. Manchester Medieval Sources. Spyrou, M.A. et al. (2022). The source of the Black Death in fourteenth-century central Eurasia. Nature 606, 718–724. Bos, K.I. et al. (2011). A draft genome of Yersinia pestis from victims of the Black Death. Nature 478, 506–510. 🎧 SUBSCRIBE: Spotify | Apple Podcasts | YouTube | Website: sevencontinentsonestory.com Join Nils, Céline, and Ethan as we explore history across seven continents. Where Expert Knowledge Meets Curious Minds. #BlackDeath #MedievalHistory #HistoryPodcast #YersiniaPestis #IbnAlKhatib #EuropeanHistory #Plague #DanseMacabre #SevenContinents

22. kesä 202643 min
jakson AF004 - The City Built on an Oxhide - The Founding of Carthage kansikuva

AF004 - The City Built on an Oxhide - The Founding of Carthage

AF004 — The City Built on an Oxhide: The Founding of Carthage It begins with a single ox hide. A Phoenician princess on the run. A contemptuous king. And one of the cleverest tricks in all of ancient history. This week, Nils, Selene, and Ethan travel to the coast of North Africa — modern Tunisia — and the year 814 BCE to uncover the founding of Carthage: from a leather riddle to a 600-year maritime empire. IN THIS EPISODE * The Artefact: The Sign of Tanit — a limestone stele carved with a triangle, bar, and circle. Older than Rome. The fingerprint of an entire civilisation. * The Unsung Hero: Elissa (also called Dido) — Tyrian princess, exile, founder of Carthage. The Romans made her die of love. History owes her more. * Choose Your Own History: A Berber king offers you as much land as one ox hide can cover. What do you do? KEY FACTS FROM THIS EPISODE * Traditional founding date of Carthage: 814 BCE. Oldest pottery found: ~760 BCE. University of Ghent DNA testing pushed earliest layers back to ~865 BCE. * Carthage's citadel was called the Byrsa — Greek for "hide," Phoenician for "trick." * The Sign of Tanit appears on thousands of votive stelae in the sacred precinct known as the Tophet. * A 2025 Nature study (Ringbauer et al., Max Planck Institute) found most Carthaginian ancestry traced to ancient Sicily and Greece — not Phoenicia. * Aristotle praised Carthage's system of government, which featured two elected sofites — centuries before Rome formalised its own republic. * A re-analysis of the Tophet by Geoffrey Schwartz found at least 20% of remains were not yet born — suggesting it was primarily a burial ground for infants and foetuses, not a sacrifice site. SOURCES & FURTHER READING * Ringbauer et al. (2025). Ancient DNA from Carthage. Nature. * Schwartz, G. et al. — Tophet re-analysis, University of Pittsburgh. * Excavations at Carthage, ongoing since 1921 (UNESCO World Heritage Site). * Virgil, Aeneid — Books I and IV (Dido/Elissa narrative). * Justin, Epitome of the Philippic History of Pompeius Trogus — primary source for the Elissa legend. ABOUT SEVEN CONTINENTS, ONE STORY Each episode, three hosts travel through time and across all seven continents to uncover a story that shaped the world — through artefacts, unsung heroes, and historical dilemmas. Where expert knowledge meets curious minds. Subscribe: Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Amazon Music | iHeartRadio

15. kesä 202619 min
jakson SA021 – Rubber Boom – Opera Houses & Jungle Slavery kansikuva

SA021 – Rubber Boom – Opera Houses & Jungle Slavery

🎙️ An opera house in the middle of the Amazon rainforest. Crystal chandeliers. Marble floors. The finest singers in the world. And just beyond the treeline: debt slavery, torture, and genocide. The year is 1896. Manaus, deep in the Brazilian Amazon, has just inaugurated the Teatro Amazonas – a monument to extraordinary wealth. But that wealth was built on a system so brutal that scholars now call it a genocide. Between 1879 and 1912, the Amazon rubber boom transformed an entire continent. Today, Nils, Celine, and Ethan take you into the jungle to uncover both sides of this extraordinary, terrible story. 🔍 THE ARTEFACT DETECTIVE It flows white from a tree wound. It smells of smoke and forest. Once treated with sulphur and heat, it becomes durable, flexible, waterproof – and it briefly became one of the most valuable substances on Earth. In the late 19th century, this material enabled the bicycle revolution, made the automobile possible, and turned the Amazon rainforest into the most important industrial zone on the planet. What is it? The answer is closer than you think – and its story is far darker than its ordinary modern use suggests. 🦸 THE UNSUNG HERO Meet Roger Casement. An Irish-born British diplomat who travelled to the most remote corners of the world not to conquer, but to witness. While rubber barons lit cigars with banknotes, Casement walked into the Putumayo jungle in 1910 and documented what he found: systematic enslavement, torture, mass killing, and the near-total destruction of entire indigenous peoples. His 1911 report shocked the world. He was later executed by the very government that commissioned his investigation – for his role in the Irish independence struggle. History almost erased him. We are bringing him back. 🤔 CHOOSE YOUR OWN HISTORY The year is 1890. You are a rubber tapper deep in the Amazon. You owe your patron a debt that grows faster than you can repay it. The company store marks up every item you need to survive. Your rubber quota is set impossibly high. Do you: (A) attempt to flee into the jungle, knowing you may never find your way out, or (B) keep working, hoping that one day the debt clears? The decision you make determines the rest of your life – and the lives of your children. What would YOU do? 📚 IN THIS EPISODE: • How vulcanised rubber transformed 19th-century industry and why the Amazon held a global monopoly • The aviamento debt-peonage system that turned free workers into slaves without legal slavery • The Putumayo atrocities and how Roger Casement exposed crimes that shocked the British parliament • How Henry Wickham's 1876 seed theft from Brazil ended the Amazon's rubber dominance forever • Why cities like Manaus built opera houses but could not sustain them after the boom collapsed • The dual legacy: extraordinary cultural monuments and devastating demographic destruction 🤝 THIS EPISODE IS BROUGHT TO YOU BY CYPRUSREALRETURNS The rubber barons of the Amazon built extraordinary wealth on a volatile commodity – and when the boom collapsed, many lost everything. History teaches us that lasting wealth requires security, not speculation. CyprusRealReturns offers a different approach: guaranteed 6–12% returns on Cyprus real estate, 100% secured through the Cyprus Land Registry, with professional management handling everything. With Cyprus property values growing 7.8% annually and tourism booming at 4M+ visitors, this is stable, strategic investment. Visit cyprusrealreturns.com to learn more. #HistoryPodcast #SouthAmericanHistory #RubberBoom #Amazon #ColonialHistory #HumanRights #EducationalPodcast #LearnHistory

8. kesä 202616 min
jakson AS012 - Destruction of Jerusalem - The Day Everything Changed kansikuva

AS012 - Destruction of Jerusalem - The Day Everything Changed

🎙️ It is the 9th day of Av, 70 CE. Smoke rises from the Temple Mount. Not the gentle smoke of incense — the smoke of destruction. Four Roman legions, 48,000 soldiers, are moving through the streets of Jerusalem like a tide that cannot be stopped. And in the holiest space in all of Judaism, something is being taken that will never return. This is the Destruction of Jerusalem. And nothing — absolutely nothing — will ever be the same again. 🔍 THE ARTEFACT DETECTIVE It's massive. It's stone. It's been standing in Rome for nearly 2,000 years. Carved with incredible detail, it shows Roman soldiers in a triumphal procession, carrying a very specific object — the most sacred Menorah in the ancient world. Jewish tradition holds that the faithful should never walk beneath it, even today. What is this object that Rome built a monument to celebrate? The answer reveals one of history's most defining moments. 🦸 THE UNSUNG HERO History remembers Titus, the Roman commander. It remembers Vespasian, the emperor. But history largely forgot John of Gischala. A Galilean military commander who spoke multiple languages, thought faster than anyone on the walls, and held the Romans at bay longer than any reasonable person thought possible. He was captured. He should have been executed. But even Titus recognised something extraordinary in him — and spared his life. John survived, settled in Rome, and became the voice that kept the story of Jerusalem alive. Remember his name. Remember John of Gischala. 🤔 CHOOSE YOUR OWN HISTORY It's early September 70 CE. You are defending Jerusalem. The Romans control all three walls. The Temple is surrounded. You haven't eaten in days. Bodies fill the streets. The Zealot leaders say fight — God will intervene. Others say surrender. If you fight, you almost certainly die. If you surrender, the Temple is destroyed anyway, and you face slavery. Two choices. Both devastating. What would YOU do? 📚 IN THIS EPISODE: - Why a corrupt Roman official's single act of greed ignited a full-scale rebellion - How a city of 70,000 swelled to nearly half a million — all trapped inside the walls - The tragic reality of three Jewish factions fighting each other while Rome closed in - Why the destruction of the Temple permanently split Judaism and Christianity into two separate religions - How one man's courage earned him mercy from the most powerful military force on earth

1. kesä 202636 min