The Hidden Life of Things

How a Medieval Street Riot Built the FIFA World Cup: The History of Football - Episode 8

20 min · 9. juni 2026
episode How a Medieval Street Riot Built the FIFA World Cup: The History of Football - Episode 8 cover

Description

What is the single most-watched event in human history? It’s not a space landing or a royal wedding - it is a football match, drawing up to a billion people to their screens at the exact same moment. But long before billionaire owners, satellite TV, and state-backed clubs, the world’s most popular sport started as a literal medieval riot. I trace the journey of how a simple ball game conquered the planet, from military training fields in Han Dynasty China 2,000 years ago where soldiers kicked feather-stuffed leather balls into bamboo nets, to the brutal ball courts of Mesoamerica where civilisations played for religious stakes using solid rubber. I also dive into the beautiful, muddy stories of communities right across history - from railway workers in 1870s industrial Britain building the clubs that billionaires buy today, to Brazilian street corners where marginalised players took a rigid European export and completely reinvented it into an improvisational art form. Whether you call it football or soccer, you will never look at the pitch the same way again. In this episode, I explore: • The Archery Threat: How English kings spent five centuries passing laws to outlaw football because young men were spending more time kicking pigs' bladders through town squares than practicing their military longbows. • The Pub Divorce of 1863: The dramatic story of a stormy meeting at London’s Freemasons Tavern where an argument over running with the ball permanently broke football and rugby apart, physically leaving us with two completely different shaped balls. • The Ultimate Saturday Escape: How the punishing grind of the Industrial Revolution accidentally built modern fan culture, giving factory workers a fierce sense of community, belonging, and tribal pride on their only free afternoon of the week. • The Propaganda Weapon: The dark 20th-century history of how dictators like Benito Mussolini recognized the psychological power of the pitch, turning the 1934 World Cup into a manufactured geopolitical stage for national image and state legitimacy. • The Sovereign Wealth Era: The massive financial paradigm shift of the late 20th century that transformed local identities into global corporate brands, leading directly to the modern era of state-backed clubs and multi-billion-dollar broadcast rights. Music Credits: Track: "Algoma" by Ross Bugden Listen here: https://youtu.be/oHK9oF2Z7Q?si=4g5VvOleYon70rW [https://youtu.be/_oHK9oF2Z7Q?si=_4g5VvOleYon70rW]

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the The Hidden Life of Things community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

10 episodes

episode The Book That Made Rooms: The History of Bespoke Furniture and Thomas Chippendale - Episode 10 artwork

The Book That Made Rooms: The History of Bespoke Furniture and Thomas Chippendale - Episode 10

Look around the room you’re sitting in right now. The way the light hits your bookshelf, the height of the table you work on, or the precise way a heavy wooden drawer slides shut. These things seem completely ordinary today, but the idea that furniture shouldn't just be a functional box and that it should fit the specific character, light, and mathematical proportion of a room was actually invented by a single man from Yorkshire who changed the way humans live. In this episode of The Hidden Life of Things, I dive into the secret history of the cabinet and the physical intelligence of making. We will explore how furniture evolved from purely crude, clunky utility into a cohesive aesthetic vision, tracking the meteoric rise of a country joiner who conquered the "Silicon Valley" of 18th-century design. We will look inside the pages of The Gentleman and Cabinet-Maker's Director - the book that made rooms. This ground-breaking design catalogue was so revolutionary that it was sought after by global empires, landing directly on the bookshelves of Catherine the Great and King Louis XVI. We'll also examine the material science of wood itself, exploring how master craftsmen made brilliant, multi-generational predictions about humidity and wood movement to ensure their work would outlast their own grandchildren. Finally, we tour the stunning, multi-million-pound rescue of Dumfries House and trace a direct line from Chippendale's classical Roman geometry to the mid-century modern masterpieces of Scandinavia. Look at the spaces you inhabit with entirely different eyes. The history of design is hiding right there in your living room. In this episode, I will cover: • The World Before Chippendale: How furniture existed for most of human history as purely functional objects before the concept of a "designer" even existed. • The Silicon Valley of the 1700s: Inside the chaotic, hyper-competitive workshop world of St Martin's Lane, London. • The Book That Made Rooms: How a Yorkshire joiner's book of adaptable design possibilities captured the minds of European monarchs. • The Material Science of Wood: Why wood moves, and the ingenious, centuries-old joinery techniques used to accommodate it. • The Geometry of Beauty: How Chippendale used the classical Orders of ancient Rome to evoke a feeling of rightness that registers below conscious thought. • The Dumfries House Rescue: The £45 million campaign led by King Charles III to keep a masterwork from being torn apart. • The Three Vocabularies: How one workshop seamlessly synthesized Gothic, Chinese (Chinoiserie), and fluid Rococo styles into a unified spatial vision. • The Long Line: How 18th-century craftsmanship threads directly into the Shakers, William Morris, and modern Scandinavian design. The Hidden Life of Things is an independent history podcast hosted by Aleksandra. If you enjoyed this journey through the quiet care of the workshop, please follow, rate, and share this episode with a fellow history buff, design nerd, or a father who loves building things with his hands! Music Credits: Track: "Algoma" by Ross Bugden Listen here: https://youtu.be/_oHK9oF2Z7Q?si=_4g5VvOleYon70rW [https://youtu.be/_oHK9oF2Z7Q?si=_4g5VvOleYon70rW]

Yesterday25 min
episode The Spice That Traded Manhattan: The History of the Silk Road and Spices - Episode 9 artwork

The Spice That Traded Manhattan: The History of the Silk Road and Spices - Episode 9

Look inside your kitchen cabinet. The unremarkable jars of black pepper, cinnamon, and nutmeg sitting on your shelves seem completely ordinary today, but they once drove the greatest voyages of exploration, built global monopolies, and sparked centuries of brutal colonial violence. In this episode of The Hidden Life of Things, I pull back the curtain on the cutthroat reality of the global spice trade. I will debunk the popular myth that medieval Europeans used spices to cover up the taste of rotting meat, exploring how these exotic goods were actually prized as high-status luxury symbols and vital medical treatments. I will also trace the incredible historical parallels to Frank Herbert’s Dune. From the volcanic Banda Islands like the real-world Arrakis where nutmeg grew wild and empires committed atrocities for control, to the high-stakes geopolitical poker game of the Treaty of Breda, where the Dutch willingly swapped Manhattan for a tiny nutmeg-producing island. Finally, we meet the forgotten master-merchants of the Silk Road and the rogue French botanist with a perfectly fitting name who smuggled seedlings in his coat to break a corporate empire's monopoly forever. Turn to your spice rack with entirely different eyes. The history of the world is hiding right there in your kitchen. In this episode, I will cover: • The real medical and social reasons medieval elites obsessed over spices. • The difference between mass-market cassia and true Ceylon cinnamon. • How the Dutch East India Company (VOC) acted as the world's first corporate government. • The brutal history of the Banda Islands massacre. • Why the Dutch traded Manhattan to the British for a tiny island named Run. • The true structure of the Silk Road and the forgotten Sogdian merchants. • How Pierre Poivre (literal translation: Peter Pepper) broke the global nutmeg monopoly. The Hidden Life of Things is an independent history podcast hosted by Alexandra Ganeva. If you enjoyed this journey through your kitchen cabinet, please follow, rate, and share this episode with a fellow history buff or Dune fanatic! Music Credits: Track: "Algoma" by Ross Bugden Listen here: https://youtu.be/_oHK9oF2Z7Q?si=_4g5VvOleYon70rW [https://youtu.be/_oHK9oF2Z7Q?si=_4g5VvOleYon70rW]

16. juni 202629 min
episode How a Medieval Street Riot Built the FIFA World Cup: The History of Football - Episode 8 artwork

How a Medieval Street Riot Built the FIFA World Cup: The History of Football - Episode 8

What is the single most-watched event in human history? It’s not a space landing or a royal wedding - it is a football match, drawing up to a billion people to their screens at the exact same moment. But long before billionaire owners, satellite TV, and state-backed clubs, the world’s most popular sport started as a literal medieval riot. I trace the journey of how a simple ball game conquered the planet, from military training fields in Han Dynasty China 2,000 years ago where soldiers kicked feather-stuffed leather balls into bamboo nets, to the brutal ball courts of Mesoamerica where civilisations played for religious stakes using solid rubber. I also dive into the beautiful, muddy stories of communities right across history - from railway workers in 1870s industrial Britain building the clubs that billionaires buy today, to Brazilian street corners where marginalised players took a rigid European export and completely reinvented it into an improvisational art form. Whether you call it football or soccer, you will never look at the pitch the same way again. In this episode, I explore: • The Archery Threat: How English kings spent five centuries passing laws to outlaw football because young men were spending more time kicking pigs' bladders through town squares than practicing their military longbows. • The Pub Divorce of 1863: The dramatic story of a stormy meeting at London’s Freemasons Tavern where an argument over running with the ball permanently broke football and rugby apart, physically leaving us with two completely different shaped balls. • The Ultimate Saturday Escape: How the punishing grind of the Industrial Revolution accidentally built modern fan culture, giving factory workers a fierce sense of community, belonging, and tribal pride on their only free afternoon of the week. • The Propaganda Weapon: The dark 20th-century history of how dictators like Benito Mussolini recognized the psychological power of the pitch, turning the 1934 World Cup into a manufactured geopolitical stage for national image and state legitimacy. • The Sovereign Wealth Era: The massive financial paradigm shift of the late 20th century that transformed local identities into global corporate brands, leading directly to the modern era of state-backed clubs and multi-billion-dollar broadcast rights. Music Credits: Track: "Algoma" by Ross Bugden Listen here: https://youtu.be/oHK9oF2Z7Q?si=4g5VvOleYon70rW [https://youtu.be/_oHK9oF2Z7Q?si=_4g5VvOleYon70rW]

9. juni 202620 min
episode The Face in the Box: The History of the Video Call - Episode 7 artwork

The Face in the Box: The History of the Video Call - Episode 7

Did you know that within just hours of being born, before they can do basically anything else, human babies will consistently turn their eyes toward a face-shaped pattern over any other design? In this episode, I uncover the hidden history of the video call; a modern corporate necessity that we often treat as a simple triumph of 21st-century software, but which turns out to be the climax of a 1,000-year obsession to conquer human absence. I trace the journey of how we learned to transmit a human face across space, from an 11th-century polymath sitting in a darkened room in Cairo proving how light enters the eye, to a freezing Christmas morning in 1926 Japan where a 27-year-old engineer broadcasted history's first electronic screen image. I also dive into the tragic story of an brilliant Filipino physicist who patented working video telephony in the 1950s, only to watch his invention sit completely useless because the rest of the world’s infrastructure wasn't ready yet. In this episode, I explore: The 150-Millisecond Drain: The surprising biological data from Austrian researchers showing why video calls leave your brain completely exhausted after just fifteen minutes, completely driven by invisible timing lags and the stress of watching your own face. The Christmas Morning Pixel: How Kenjiro Takayanagi bypassed Western television pioneers in 1926 by using a cathode ray tube to project a single flickering Japanese character, changing the nature of visual time forever. The 50-Year Oversight: The extraordinary life of Gregorio Zara, a highly decorated Filipino engineer who built a functioning video phone in 1955, only to be entirely forgotten because the internet didn't exist to back him up. The Fear of Fading: The beautiful, bittersweet history of 16th-century miniature pocket portraits, and how our modern screens are still trying to solve the oldest, quietest human anxiety: forgetting the face of someone we love. Music Credits: Track: "Algoma" by Ross Bugden Listen here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gT8dG898eE0 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gT8dG898eE0]

2. juni 202618 min
episode The Infected Petal: The History of Tulip Mania - Episode 6 artwork

The Infected Petal: The History of Tulip Mania - Episode 6

Did you know that in the winter of 1636, a single flower bulb in the Dutch Republic could change hands for the equivalent of a skilled craftsman’s yearly salary? In this episode, I uncover the hidden history of Tulip Mania; a legendary financial collapse that we often treat as a cautionary tale of national madness, but which turns out to be one of the most successful pieces of historical mythmaking ever recorded. I trace the journey of this beautiful, scentless flower from its sacred origins in the mountain ridges of Central Asia and the courts of the Ottoman Empire, right into the sophisticated futures markets of Amsterdam. I also dive into the biological mystery behind the highly coveted "broken" tulips and how a virus unknowingly created the most expensive, fleeting luxury in the world. In this episode, I explore: • The Sickness of Beauty: The biological truth behind the Semper Augustus and why the stunning, streaked petals that drove people mad were actually the symptoms of a destructive plant virus. • Sermons in Disguise: How satirical Calvinist pamphlets and a 19th-century journalist turned a localised market crash into a legendary myth about bakers, cobblers, and national ruin. • The Self-Referential Trap: The dangerous mechanics of the world's first major futures market, and why the crash came not because traders were stupid, but because they were all behaving rationally. • The Ghost of a Flower: The haunting legacy of a market bubble, and why the most valuable asset in human history vanished completely from the face of the earth after the crash. Music Credits: Track: "Algoma" by Ross Bugden Listen here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gT8dG898eE0 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gT8dG898eE0]

26. maj 202615 min