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Secrets and lies have been part of us for as long as we've been around and are found as early as the Book of Genesis. And what of the Stasi and the archives recording how citizens informed on friends, family members and even spouses?
Andrew Gold joins to discuss his new book, The Psychology of Secrets, and he takes us on a journey that features the mad founder of a school, Scientology, Lie Detectors, the secret communities and much more.
Andrew has a hugely successful podcast and YouTube show, so do check him out.
Andrew Gold Links
The Psychology of Secrets: My Adventures with Murderers, Cults and Influencers
Heretics on YouTube
Andrew on X
Aspects of History Links
Ollie on X
Get in touch: [email protected]
Latest issue: Aspects of History Issue 21
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With the invasion of the Soviet Union by Nazi Germany, the political make up of the Second World War was turned on its head, and Churchill allied with Stalin. So began a short-lived relationship that was both tumultuous, but also warm - though fuelled by alcohol.
Giles Milton's new book looks at the US, British and Russian alliance that turned the tables for the Allies and led to the defeat of Hitler.
Giles Milton Links
The Stalin Affair
Aspects of History Links
Ollie on X
Get in touch: [email protected]
Latest issue: Aspects of History Issue 21
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On the 25th May 1951 Guy Burgess and Donald Maclean defected to Moscow, and so the opening shots were fired in the dismantling of the Cambridge Spy Ring. Alcoholism took care of them, but what about other traitors including William Weisband, George Blake, Anthony Blunt, John Cairncross and the master spy Kim Philby. And what about Edward Snowden - is he a traitor?
Espionage author Michael Smith joins to discuss traitors from his book, The Real Special Relationship which is our Non Fiction Book Club.
Michael Smith Links
The Real Special Relationship: The True Story of How the British and US Secret Services Work
AoH Book Club: Michael Smith on the Real Special Relationship - Aspects of History
Michael on X
Aspects of History Links
Ollie on X
Get in touch: [email protected]
Latest issue: Aspects of History Issue 21
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A bonus episode sees the historical consultant of the new Disney series Shardlake join to discuss disability and the Dissolution of the Monasteries, and the history behind the new show. Based on the novels written by C.J.Sansom who died on Saturday 27th April.
Shardlake Links
Shardlake on Disney
Dissolution by CJ Sansom
Antonia Senior tribute to CJ Sansom
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Iran & Britain are old friends, they've had ups and downs, and it's probably fair to say we're going through a difficult patch right now, but who better than Ali Ansari to talk about the historical relationship through much of the 20th century. Ali is a child of Iranians, but lives and was brought up here in Britain, where he is Professor of Modern History at St. Andrew's University in Scotland. We talk the Constitutional Revolution of 1906, the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, Mossadegh and the Coup of 1953, and the Shah of Iran who was overthrown in 1979.
Those of Iranian descent, and of course any others, please do get in touch: [email protected]
Ali Ansari Links
Ali's Book: Iran
Ali on X
Aspects of History Links
Ollie on X
Get in touch: [email protected]
Latest issue: Aspects of History Issue 21
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On the 19th April 1600, after nearly two years at sea, William Adams, one of only nine surviving crew members, made land at modern day Usuki, on the east coast of Japan. He was starving, scurvy ridden and close to death. So began an extraordinary story as Adams rose up the ranks to become a revered figure in Japan even today. So much so that a new Disney TV series, Shogun has been making waves starring Cosmo Jarvis as Adams and Giles Milton joins to tell his story.
Giles Milton Links
Samurai William
Shogun
Giles on X
Aspects of History Links
Episode on the Japan of Shogun
Ollie on X
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The release of The Passion of the Christ in 2004 caused outrage, fury and accusations of antisemitism and sadomasochism. With Easter recently celebrated, we thought it time to re-examine Mel Gibson's passion project (sorry), as director Tim Hewitt joins to talk Jim Caviezel, controversy and even a QAnon.
Links
The Passion of the Christ on Wikipedia
The Passion of the Christ on IMDB
Interview with Mel Gibson
Christopher Hitchens on Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ
Ollie on X
Tim on X
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The Berlin Wall stood for 28 years, but up until the very end, on the 9th November 1989, the whole world thought it was permanent. It's now 35 years since the Wall fell, but how did it get built, what was its impact, and how did it fall?
Iain MacGregor, author of Checkpoint Charlie, joins as we go back the dark days of the Cold War through to its end.
Iain MacGregor Links
Checkpoint Charlie: The Cold War, the Berlin Wall and the Most Dangerous Place on Earth
Iain on X
Aspects of History Links
Berlin Wall - OIlie at the Wall
Ollie on X
Get in touch: [email protected]
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On a dark night in April 1944 a German general was returning to his villa on the Nazi occupied island of Crete. Suddenly, two men, dressed as Wehrmacht soldiers, emerged from the darkness and stopped the car. The two men were British officers, and together with Cretan resistance fighters, they bundled the general into the back, and drove through Heraklion and 22 checkpoints. So began one of the most audacious operations of World War Two, orchestrated by Patrick Leigh Fermor, autodidact, writer and war hero.
Artemis Cooper, biographer of Paddy, joins to discuss his early life, the operation, his walk through Europe and his writing.
Artemis Cooper Links
Patrick Leigh Fermor: An Adventure
Cairo in the War: 1939-45
Patrick Leigh Fermor Links
3 Books Collection Set (A Time of Gifts, Between the Woods and the Water, The Broken Road)
Abducting a General: The Kreipe Operation and SOE in Crete
Mani: Travels in the Southern Peloponnese
Roumeli: Travels in Northern Greece
Aspects of History Links
Ollie on X
Get in touch: [email protected]
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On the 24th March 1603 at Richmond Palace Elizabeth I died. She had not named a successor, but James VI of Scotland was proclaimed king in London that same day, and he headed south to accede to the English throne. What sort of man was he, and how had his rule in Scotland shaped his character?
Steven Veerapen joins to discuss James, his rule, the union of the crowns of Scotland and England and the new show Mary & George which has been making waves in its depiction of the Stuart court.
Steven Veerapen Links
The Wisest Fool: The Lavish Life of James VI/I
Steven's episode on Elizabeth I
Steven on X
Aspects of History Links
Ollie on X
Get in touch: [email protected]
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The Mau Mau Uprising ran from 1952 to 1960 in a Kenya administered by Britain. The conflict was a brutal one, with atrocities committed by both sides and it remains controversial to this day.
Nicholas Rankin grew up in Kenya from the of 3 to 13, arriving in 1954 and he has written a moving and powerful book that addresses the questions of rebellion and colonialism.
Nicholas Rankin Links
Trapped in History: Kenya, Mau Mau and Me
Telegram from Guernica: The Extraordinary Life of George Steer, War Correspondent
Nicholas on X
Aspects of History Links
Clash of Empires: The Anglo-Ashanti Wars - Aspects of History
Ollie on X
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Sarah Gristwood returns to talk about the secret diary entries of women's diaries, from the 1st January all the way to the 31st December. There are many great names, and some less well-known, but we delve into some heart-breaking, funny, tragic and shocking accounts written with stunning honesty.
Sarah Gristwood Links
Secret Voices: A Year of Women’s Diaries
Sarah on X
Aspects of History Links
Subscribe to the magazine: only £/$9.99 per year
Ollie on X
Get in touch: [email protected]
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This week's guest is a man who has lived about what he writes. Louis Ferrante was a former member of the Gambino crime family, one of the Five Families of New York. He rose up the ranks until he was convicted of crimes and sent to prison where he became a changed man.
He has now written a fantastic first volume of three on the history of the mafia, Borgata, and he chatted with our editor on the rise of the mob from their humble beginnings in Sicily through to the 1930s prohibition in the US.
Louis Ferrante Links
Borgata: Rise of Empire: A History of the American Mafia
Mob Rules: What the Mafia Can Teach the Legitimate Businessman
Louis on X
Aspects of History Links
Subscribe to the magazine: only £/$9.99 per year
Ollie on X
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Steven Spielberg's 1993 masterpiece is hugely influential even today. His adaptation of the Thomas Keneally's Booker Prize winning Schindler's Ark, filmed in black and white, brought the Holocaust to a mass audience.
Joining Ollie to discuss the film are Roger Moorhouse and Tim Hewitt, and they look into the history, the filmmaking process and much more.
Links Discussed
The Forgers: The Forgotten Story of the Holocaust’s Most Audacious Rescue Operation, by Roger Moorhouse
Spielberg interview on the film and girl in the red coat
Ralph Fiennes interview on the bath scene
Ralph Fiennes interview on the SS uniform
Ollie on X
Get in Touch: [email protected]
Roger on X
Tim on X
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On the 2nd September 1942 in Loch Ewe, Scotland, a large convoy of ships carrying food, ammunition, tanks, artillery pieces and materiel set sail for Archangel, Russia. This convoy would be of vital importance to the Soviet troops fighting the Nazis at Stalingrad.
The Germans did all they could to disrupt and destroy the ships of the Royal Navy and Merchant Navy, and many of the green recruits, at sea for the first time, had the freezing weather conditions to deal with as well as the enemy.
John McKay joins to discuss the horrors experienced by the crew members of PQ18.
John McKay Links
Arctic Convoy PQ18: 25 Days That Changed the Course of the War
Ice on Deck
SS Mary Luckenbach explodes
John on X
Ollie Links
Ollie on X
Clash of Empires: The Anglo-Ashanti Wars - Aspects of History
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Gordon returns to discuss those WW1 Commanders that lost out to Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig. Plenty of talent here, and some less so, however we start off with Alanbrooke as he was barely discussed in the previous episode.
The list
Admiral Jellicoe
Admiral Beatty
General Wilson
General Plumer
General Chetwode
General Allenby
Major TE Lawrence
General Maude
Field Marshal Robertson (the Editor's favourite)
Gordon Corrigan Links
Mud, Blood and Poppycock: Britain and the Great War
Douglas Haig: Defeat Into Victory
Ollie Links - Get in Touch
Ollie on X/Twitter
[email protected]
Links Discussed
Spy Masters podcasts - Aspects of History
Are there foxes in South Africa? Get in touch: [email protected]
Great Hatred: The Assassination of Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson MP
Rules Restaurant
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You've read the story of Jesse JamesOf how he lived and died.If you're still in need;Of something to read,Here's the story of Bonnie and Clyde.So wrote Bonnie Parker, partner to Clyde Barrow and the famous couple that attracted fans, headlines, cops and in the end, bullets. Ollie and Tim discuss the iconic film and include the regular categories including Simon Baker Award for Best Performance, and the Argo Award for Most Inaccurate Scene.Links DiscussedBonnie & ClydeBonnie's PoetryThe book to readOllie on XTim on XLearn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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On the 22nd July 1934 John Dillinger left a movie theatre in Chicago having just enjoyed the Clark Gable film, Manhattan Melodrama. He didn't get far before FBI agents shot him four times - the era of the romantic bank robber was over - or was it? Johnny Depp's portrayal of Dillinger is iconic, even if we think the legacy rating of Public Enemies is low.
Also starring Christian Bale, Marion Cotillard, Jason Clarke, Billy Crudup, Stephen Lang, Branka Katic, Stephen Dorff, David Wenham and James Russo, Tim Hewitt and Ollie think it's a movie overlooked.
Links discussed
Public Enemies
The book on which PE is based
Ollie on X
Tim on X
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We've ignored the suitcase from Sepp Blatter bulging with cash and returned to football's roots to discuss the origins in England, the class system, the rise of the working class and the might Preston North End side of 1888/89 - thought Arsene Wenger did it first with the Invincibles and diet? Well you'd be wrong - it was PNE under William Sudell.
We also look at public (private) schools - click here for the rules of Harrow Football (still played today), transport, technology and the two world wars, plus a rant about VAR.
Gavin Mortimer Links
A History of Football in 100 Objects
Gavin's latest book, 2SAS
Gavin on X
Ollie Links
Growing Up with Delia Burgess
Ollie on X
Email us: [email protected]
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Early on the morning of 7th December 1941, Japanese fighters, dive bombers and torpedo planes descended on the port of Pearl Harbor, the headquarters of the American Pacific Fleet. Within minutes the balance of power had changed, and four days later Hitler declared war on the US.
Alan Bardos joins to discuss the attack, the intelligence failures leading up to it, Japanese and American antagonism beforehand and Taranto, the template the Japanese followed in their plans.
Alan Bardos Links
Rising Tide
Why did Japan attack Pearl Harbor? - Aspects of History
USS Arizona goes down
Alan on X
The Kappillan of Malta, by Nicholas Monsarrat
Ollie Links
Ollie on X
Email us: [email protected]
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