266 Folgen

  1. AskHistorians Podcast 085 - In Search of the Taino

    Vom: 3.5.2017
  2. AskHistorians Podcast 084 - The Salem Witch Trials and Social Network Analysis

    Vom: 15.4.2017
  3. AskHistorians Podcast 083 - The European Armoring Guilds and People 1300-1600

    Vom: 31.3.2017
  4. AskHistorians Podcast 082 - The European Armoring Industry and Techniques 1300-1600

    Vom: 17.3.2017
  5. AskHistorians Podcast 081 - Iphikrates and His Reforms

    Vom: 4.3.2017
  6. AskHistorians Podcast 080 - Death by erasure: Cultural Genocide against American Indians

    Vom: 22.2.2017
  7. AskHistorians Podcast 079 - Cuban and US Relations Before Castro

    Vom: 4.2.2017
  8. AskHistorians Podcast 078 - Society for the Reformation of Manners

    Vom: 20.1.2017
  9. AskHistorians Podcast 077 - The End of World War One in the Middle East, Part 2

    Vom: 17.12.2016
  10. AskHistorians Podcast 076 - The End of World War One in the Middle East, Part 1

    Vom: 3.12.2016
  11. AskHistorians Podcast 075 - Indian Policy and Indian Sovereignty

    Vom: 18.11.2016
  12. AskHistorians Podcast 074 - Sacrifice in the Ancient Near East

    Vom: 4.11.2016
  13. AskHistorians Podcast 073 - Politics and the Kansas-Nebraska Act, Part 2

    Vom: 21.10.2016
  14. AskHistorians Podcast 072 - Politics and the Kansas-Nebraska Act

    Vom: 7.10.2016
  15. AskHistorians Podcast 071 - Indigenous Writers in Early Colonial Mexico

    Vom: 25.9.2016
  16. AskHistorians Podcast 070 - Italian Fascism and Football

    Vom: 9.9.2016
  17. AskHistorians Podcast 069 - Milan in the Era of Communal Italy

    Vom: 26.8.2016
  18. AskHistorians Podcast 068 - Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and Restricted Data

    Vom: 12.8.2016
  19. AskHistorians Podcast 067 - 20th Century Popular Music and the Rise of Guitar Groups

    Vom: 29.7.2016
  20. AskHistorians Podcast 066 - Communism and the Black Radical Tradition

    Vom: 15.7.2016

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The AskHistorians Podcast showcases the knowledge and enthusiasm of the AskHistorians community, a forum of nearly 1.4 million history academics, professionals, amateurs, and curious onlookers. The aim is to be a resource accessible to a wide range of listeners for historical topics which so often go overlooked. Together, we have a broad array of people capable of speaking in-depth on topics that get half a page on Wikipedia, a paragraph in a high-school textbook, and not even a minute on the History channel. The podcast aims to give a voice (literally!) to those areas of history, while not neglecting the more commonly covered topics. Part of the drive behind the podcast is to be a counterpoint to other forms of popular media on history which only seem to cover the same couple of topics in the same couple of ways over and over again.

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