A History of Italy
En podcast av Mike Corradi - Tisdagar
305 Avsnitt
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F100: 01 What is Fascism?
Publicerades: 2021-05-15 -
Coming soon: Fascism 100
Publicerades: 2021-05-11 -
Special: The Aldo Moro assassination with Lorenzo Paluan
Publicerades: 2021-05-09 -
113 – The definitive death of communal Milan (1339 – 1354)
Publicerades: 2021-05-05 -
Update, conference and vote!
Publicerades: 2021-04-08 -
112 – Queen Joanna of Naples (1345 – 1382)
Publicerades: 2021-03-30 -
Crossover: Colombus and Genoa with the History of North America
Publicerades: 2021-03-23 -
Interview: Jennifer Anton, author of "Under the Light of the Italian Moon"
Publicerades: 2021-03-08 -
Intelligent Speech Conference 2021 – 24th April
Publicerades: 2021-03-07 -
111 – Joanna of Naples, teenage queen with a boring husband (1326 – 1345)
Publicerades: 2021-03-02 -
110 – Cola fizzes and goes flat (1347 – 1354)
Publicerades: 2021-02-17 -
109 – Popeless Rome and the rise of Cola (not the drink)
Publicerades: 2021-02-10 -
Fill-in episode – 2021 Italian government crisis
Publicerades: 2021-02-07 -
Vote for A History of Italy for the Premio Italia Medioevale
Publicerades: 2021-02-02 -
108 – Italians against stairs
Publicerades: 2021-01-19 -
107 – An unexpected king
Publicerades: 2021-01-12 -
106 – An imperial tour of Italy (1327-1329)
Publicerades: 2021-01-05 -
105 – The battle of the Bucket (1325)
Publicerades: 2020-12-23 -
104 – The last Sardinian Judicate (1323-1326)
Publicerades: 2020-12-15 -
103 – Catching up with Genoa (up to 1310's)
Publicerades: 2020-12-08
Join history buff, Mike Corradi on a journey through time as he unfolds the rich tapestry of the Italian peninsula's history. This chronological story starts with the collapse of the Western Roman Empire and leads you through the most iconic events, influential figures, and cultural milestones that have shaped Italy into what we see today. It’s all serious stuff, but we do take time to stop and laugh at battles over a bucket, rude names, naughty priests and popes, rabbits winning sieges, doves winning battles, bits of dead bodies as tokens of love, and whole series of real historical silly situations that no comedian could think of. Come along every other week for a compelling and insightful glimpse into A History of Italy.
