Tesch Talks European History

Printing Press

24 min · 29 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Printing Press

Descripción

Printing had been invented in the city of Mainz by the craftsman Johannes Gutenberg. In a few short decades, its invention nearly brought down the institutional Christian church, allowed for the foundations of modern science and medicine, and led to the discovery of about half of the planet. In this episode, we will look at the history of how Europeans recorded human knowledge, and how an inventor in Mainz accidentally altered the future of humanity forever.

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7 episodios

episode Rivals on the World Stage artwork

Rivals on the World Stage

When the news reached Venice that Vasco da Gama had made it all the way to India and back by ship, the Venetians knew that their monopoly on selling luxury goods from Asia was over. The task of breaking the news to the Doge of Venice fell to Piero Pasqualigo, the Venetian diplomat stationed in Lisbon. Throughout the 1400s, European states like Portugal, Castile, and Venice were locked in a battle for trade dominance. Venice guarded its Mediterranean strongholds (meaning), Castile and Portugal looked outward to the uncharted Atlantic. With every new island that Portugal claimed, its neighbor Castile looked for ways to increase its own regional and global influence. This decades-long competition for trade ignited an age of discovery that permanently shifted the global balance of power from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic. In this episode, we look at how these power struggles played out.

29 de may de 202628 min
episode Exploration artwork

Exploration

This was a century when European explorers were traveling farther than they had ever gone before from their own shores. Ferdinand and Isabella were competing with the Portuguese to find routes to travel to Southern Asia. These routes were incredibly valuable, as merchants could buy large quantities of luxury goods such as spices like pepper and cinnamon, porcelain, ivory, cotton, or even silk, then bring them back to Europe and sell them at a huge profit. But these voyages were also very risky. Signing on to a voyage of exploration was a bit like buying a lottery ticket, where you had just as good a chance of earning a fortune as you did of never returning. It is astonishing to imagine just how many sailors were willing to accept this risk and set sail for unknown shores, often without having any idea precisely where their destination was. Until 1434, European sailors would sail no further than Cape Bojador on the coast of Morocco. They were afraid that the currents and winds would never allow them to sail back northwards. But within less than a hundred years, an expedition sponsored by the Spanish crown would manage to sail all the way around the world.

15 de may de 202627 min