The Hidden History Podcast
In 1777, the citizens of Philadelphia gathered under the night sky to celebrate America's very first Independence Day. They had cannons, church bells, and fireworks. And every single firework that exploded above them was orange. Just orange. No red. No blue. No green. The science to create those colors wouldn't exist for another sixty years. This week on Hidden History, we're tracing the 2,000-year journey that gave the world fireworks — from an unnamed Taoist alchemist in 9th-century China who was searching for a recipe to live forever, to the Song Dynasty engineers who turned his accident into a weapon, to the Mongol armies who carried that technology westward across the known world, to the Islamic scholars who refined it before Europe even knew it existed, to the forgotten Italian craftsmen known only as "green men," to the metallurgist who wrote the first scientific guide to pyrotechnics and died before seeing it published, to the 1830s experimenters who accidentally mapped the atomic structure of metal salts — and finally gave the night sky every color it has today. It's a story about how the most spectacular thing humans do together — standing shoulder to shoulder watching light explode overhead — has its roots in accident, military conquest, and the hundreds of unnamed people history never bothered to write down. In this episode: The accidental discovery that gave the world gunpowder — and the alchemist who never lived to understand what he'd created How the Mongol conquests became one of the greatest technology transfers of the medieval world The Islamic scholars who refined gunpowder decades before European armies had access to it The "green men" of Renaissance Italy: the workers who stood closest to the fire, wore leaves for protection, and were never recorded by name Vannoccio Biringuccio — the man who turned fireworks into a science, wrote the first comprehensive guide to pyrotechnics, and died before seeing it in print Why every firework at America's first Independence Day was orange — and what had to happen before that changed The 1830s chemical experiments that accidentally stumbled into atomic physics and gave us every color in the modern night sky It wasn't about the light. It was about the legacy. 🔔 New episodes drop every Thursday morning — follow the show so you never miss one. 💬 Leave a review and let us know which everyday object you'd like us to uncover next.
20 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Hidden History Podcast!