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History Rage

Paul Bavill

Think history is boring? That’s because you’ve only ever heard the fake version. On History Rage, professional historians come in swinging — smashing the myths, clichés, and half-truths that keep getting recycled in classrooms, documentaries, and TikToks. Vikings with horned helmets? Nope. Britain standing alone in 1940? Wrong. Medieval people never bathed? Rubbish. Why listen? Because the truth is way more exciting. You’ll leave every episode with jaw-dropping stories, killer facts to shut down pub bores, and the smug satisfaction of knowing what really happened. 🎧 Episodes drop every Monday. 📲 Follow now and get the history they don’t teach you — raw, raging, and real. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  1. 4 DAYS AGO • SUBSCRIBERS ONLY

    Mary Queen of Scots WAS NOT a Bloody Stupid Woman with Linda Porter

    Mary Queen of Scots wasn’t stupid — history’s verdict is dangerously wrong. Was Mary, Queen of Scots really a reckless, lovestruck failure — or has history judged her by impossible standards? In this explosive History Rage counter-rage, acclaimed historian Linda Porter takes aim at one of the most persistent myths in British history and argues that Mary was anything but a “bloody stupid woman”. Drawing directly on political context, dynastic logic, gendered double standards, and Scotland’s uniquely volatile sixteenth-century landscape, Linda dismantles the lazy comparison between Mary and Elizabeth I. She reveals why Mary’s marriages made sense at the time, how Scottish politics stacked the odds against her, and why hindsight has been weaponised against a queen ruling in near-impossible circumstances. This episode dives deep into: • Why Mary’s upbringing in France is misunderstood — and misused against her • The unfair Elizabeth I vs Mary, Queen of Scots comparison • The dynastic logic behind the Darnley marriage • Why the Bothwell marriage looks far more like coercion than romance • How trauma, pregnancy, betrayal, and political violence shaped Mary’s decisions • Why calling Mary “stupid” says more about historians than history If you care about women in power, Tudor and Stuart history, Mary Queen of Scots, or how myths harden into “fact”, this episode is essential listening. About the guest: Linda Porter Linda Porter is one of Britain’s leading historians of the Tudor and Stuart period, known for her sharp analysis and willingness to challenge historical orthodoxies. She has written extensively on queenship, power, and dynastic politics. Buy the Book: • The Thistle and The Rose: https://uk.bookshop.org/a/10120/9781801105798 About History Rage History Rage is the no-nonsense history podcast where leading historians get angry about myths, bad history, and lazy storytelling. Hosted by Paul Bavill, the show strips away comforting narratives and replaces them with evidence, context, and expert fury. Follow & support History Rage: • 🎧 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favourite podcast app • 💥 Ad-free listening: £3/month on Apple Subscriptions or Patreon • 🔥 Full supporter perks (£5/month on Patreon): live streams, asking guest questions, and the coveted History Rage mug Support the podcast: 👉 Patreon: www.patreon.com/historyrage 👉 Apple Podcasts subscriptions available in-app If you enjoy this episode, tell someone. One recommendation keeps independent history alive. Related episodes you might enjoy • Episode 216 — Mary Queen of Scots: What a Bloody Stupid Woman (with Tracy Borman) https://pod.fo/e/2e60bd • Episode 186 — Katherine Parr (with Linda Porter): https://pod.fo/e/2b3cc9 • Episode 80 — Catherine of Braganza (with Linda Porter): https://pod.fo/e/1ef377 ________________________________________ Mary, Queen of Scots wasn’t stupid — and after this episode, neither will you be about her.

    57 min
  2. 4 DAYS AGO

    276. The Vampire Didn’t Rise in Transylvania – The True Origins of the Undead with Nick Jubber

    The vampire didn’t rise from Transylvania — it crawled out of the Balkans. Forget Count Dracula — before Stoker’s gothic horror came centuries of chilling folklore, blood-soaked superstition, and very real vampire panics. In this spine-tingling episode, travel writer and award-winning author Nick Jubber joins Paul Bavill to rage against the myth that vampires were born in Transylvania. From Serbian graveyards and Croatian legends to the age of Enlightenment and Hammer Horror, Nick traces how fear, politics, and imagination turned the undead into one of history’s most enduring monsters. Discover how the printing press helped spread vampire hysteria, how priests profited from graveyard rituals, and why monsters mirror humanity’s deepest desires and darkest fears. Whether you’re a folklore fan or just love a good supernatural tale, this episode will have you rethinking everything you thought you knew about the vampire myth. 🎙️ In This Episode The real Balkan origins of the vampire legendHow Enlightenment science and superstition collidedWhy Bram Stoker didn’t invent Dracula’s fangs — he borrowed themWhat connects Byron, Polidori, and the birth of gothic horrorWhy monsters never die — they just evolve with us 👤 Guest: Nick Jubber Nick Jubber is a writer, traveller and author of Monsterland, a journey through history, folklore, and our fascination with monsters. His work has taken him across continents exploring how stories shape societies. 📚 Buy his book: Monsterland: A Journey Around the World’s Dark Imagination https://uk.bookshop.org/a/10120/9781915590299 🌐 Website: www.nickjubber.com 📸 Instagram: @NickJubber 💥 Support History Rage If you’re loving History Rage — help keep the rage alive! Ad-free listening: from just £3/month on Apple Podcasts or Patreonhttps://www.patreon.com/historyrage All-access membership: £5/month gets you early releases, bonus episodes, and the coveted History Rage mug ☕Or simply tell a friend — the best way to support independent history podcasting. 🔗 Follow History Rage 📲 Twitter / X: @HistoryRage 📸 Instagram: @HistoryRage 🌍 Website: www.historyragepod.com 💬 Email: info@historyragepod.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    50 min
  3. 23 FEB • SUBSCRIBERS ONLY

    Stop Putting Historic Politicians on Pedestals with Debbie Kilroy

    Britain’s past politicians were no better—often far worse—than today’s MPs. Were Britain’s past politicians really more honourable than today’s? Or is nostalgia blinding us to just how corrupt, violent, and self-serving many of them actually were? In this episode of History Rage, host Paul Bavill is joined by historian, author, and Get History founder Debbie Kilroy to rage against one of Britain’s most persistent political myths: that historic MPs were somehow morally superior to the modern lot. Drawing on over 400 years of parliamentary history, Debbie dismantles the rose-tinted view of Britain’s political past, revealing a parade of bigamists, slave traders, duelists, bribe-takers, fraudsters, and outright psychopaths who once sat comfortably in Parliament. From Norman MacLeod kidnapping his own tenants into slavery, to Lord Cardigan’s cruelty, incompetence, and vanity, to the systemic corruption that brought down figures like Francis Bacon and David Lloyd George, this episode exposes how power, privilege, and political protection enabled shocking behaviour—often without consequences. Along the way, Debbie explains: • Why we keep romanticising historic politicians • How corruption adapted rather than disappeared over time • Why reforms like the 1832 Reform Act only scratched the surface • How crowds, riots, and popular protest once held MPs to account • Why the system itself—not just individuals—remains the problem This is not a defence of modern politics—but a warning against pretending the past was cleaner, fairer, or more honest. Politicians, Debbie argues, haven’t changed. What’s changed is what they can get away with. About the Guest: Debbie Kilroy Debbie Kilroy is a historian, writer, and the creator of the popular history platform Get History. She specialises in British political history, focusing on the human realities behind power, myth, and reputation. She is the author of: 📘 Members Behaving Badly: A History of Britain in 52 Parliamentary Rogues A deeply researched and often shocking exploration of Britain’s most notorious MPs, spanning four centuries of corruption, cruelty, and chaos. 🔗 Book available via https://uk.bookshop.org/a/10120/9781783969388 Connect with Debbie • Website: Get History: https://gethistory.co.uk/ • Social media: @debbiekilroyauthor (Instagram, Facebook and most platforms) • X (Twitter): @DebbieKilroy Recommended Listening • Episode 241 – Erica Canella on chaos and dissent in the early Quaker movement • Episode 181 – Shalina Patel dismantles the myths of the Pankhursts About History Rage History Rage is the podcast where professional historians confront popular myths head-on and angrily demand historical honesty. Follow & Contact • Website: www.historyrage.com • Social media: @HistoryRage on X, Instagram, Facebook • Patreon: www.patreon.com/historyrage Support the Podcast • Get ad-free episodes on Apple Podcasts or Patreon for £3/month • Join monthly live streams with historians via Patreon • Or simply help by telling one other person to listen If you think politicians were better “back then”, this episode may ruin that illusion forever. Stay angry.

    55 min
  4. 23 FEB

    275. Stop Pretending We Know Alexander the Great with Stephen Harrison

    A conqueror, a god, or just a man lost in myth? Alexander the Great: the name conjures images of conquest, charisma, and an empire that stretched from Greece to India. But how much of what we “know” is actually true? In this episode of History Rage, host Paul Bavill is joined by Dr Stephen Harrison, lecturer in Ancient History at Swansea University and author of Alexander: The Lives and Legacies, to rage against the myths that have defined Alexander for over two thousand years. Stephen dismantles the biggest misconceptions about the Macedonian conqueror — from his supposed divine ambitions and romantic legends to the illusion that historians can truly know what drove him. Together, they explore how unreliable ancient sources, political storytelling, and centuries of retelling have turned Alexander into a mythic figure rather than a historical one. This isn’t just another tale of military glory — it’s a journey through evidence, propaganda, and how history becomes legend. 🎧 Listen now to discover: Why we can’t possibly “know” what Alexander thought or feltHow ancient storytellers invented famous scenes like taming BucephalusWhy his marriage to Roxane wasn’t a love story at allThe truth about Alexander’s relationship with HephaestionWhat his empire reveals about ancient power, identity, and mythmaking About Dr Stephen Harrison Dr Stephen Harrison is a lecturer in Ancient History at Swansea University. His research explores the legacy of Alexander the Great and the politics of memory in the ancient world. 📘 Book: Alexander: The Lives and Legacies — available now from Bloomsbury. 👉 Order here: https://uk.bookshop.org/a/10120/9781789149975 📸 Follow Stephen on Instagram: @stephenharrisonhistory Support History Rage If you love what we do, help us keep raging against bad history! 🔥 Join our Patreon for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus episodes: patreon.com/historyrage 🍏 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts for ad-free listening (£3/month) 📣 Or simply tell a friend and spread the rage! Follow History Rage 📱 Twitter / X: @historyrage 📸 Instagram: @historyrage 📘 Facebook: facebook.com/historyrage 🌐 Website: historyrage.com 💥 History Rage – where historians demolish myths, one episode at a time. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    1 hr
  5. 22 FEB • SUBSCRIBERS ONLY

    The Victorians’ OTHER Serial Killer with Stephen Bates

    When a respectable Victorian doctor became Britain’s most feared poisoner Victorian England believed murder belonged to the gutters. Then Dr William Palmer shattered that illusion. In this gripping episode of History Rage, award-winning journalist and author Stephen Bates exposes the dark truth behind the case of William Palmer — the Midlands doctor hanged in 1856 for poisoning his friend John Parsons Cook. Known as the “Rugeley Poisoner”, Palmer was a churchgoing professional, a gambler drowning in debt, and a man suspected of killing far more than the one murder for which he was convicted. His weapon? Newly available strychnine — a terrifying poison that left victims writhing in agony and Victorian society gripped by fear. What You’ll Discover in This Episode • Why Victorian Britain refused to believe a middle-class doctor could be a killer • How strychnine changed the landscape of 19th-century murder • The explosive Old Bailey trial that required a special Act of Parliament • The role of celebrity pathologist Alfred Swaine Taylor • How press sensationalism helped create one of Britain’s first “serial killer” panics • The disturbing class bias in Victorian (and modern) murder trials Stephen also explores parallels with later cases, including Herbert Rouse Armstrong, the subject of his book The Poisonous Solicitor, and reflects on how professional status has long influenced public perceptions of guilt. This is Victorian true crime at its most unsettling: insurance fraud, gambling debts, missing betting slips, botched inquests, and a public execution witnessed by 30,000 people. About Our Guest – Stephen Bates Stephen Bates is an award-winning journalist and former political correspondent. He is the author of: • The Poisoner: The Life and Crimes of Victorian England’s Most Notorious Doctor o https://uk.bookshop.org/a/10120/9781837730285 • The Poisonous Solicitor o https://uk.bookshop.org/a/10120/9781785789601 The Poisoner was shortlisted for the prestigious Agatha Award for True Crime in the United States. 🔗 Website: https://stephenbateswriter.com Why This Case Still Matters Palmer’s trial raises urgent questions that still resonate: • Do we judge murder differently depending on class? • Are professionals given more benefit of the doubt? • How much does media coverage shape public opinion before a verdict is reached? From Victorian strychnine to modern medical murderers, the uncomfortable truth remains: monsters don’t always look like monsters. Follow & Support History Rage If you enjoy fearless myth-busting history and passionate debate: 🔥 Join the Rage on Patreon Ad-free listening and livestream access for just £3 per month: 👉 https://www.patreon.com/historyrage 🍎 Prefer Apple? Subscribe directly via Apple Podcasts for ad-free episodes. 📱 Follow History Rage: • Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/historyrage • Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/historyrage • Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/historyrage • Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/historyrage 📩 Contact: historyragepod@gmail.com The simplest way to support the show? Share the episode and bring someone else aboard the Rage Train. Victorian crime wasn’t just about back alleys and desperation. Sometimes it wore a respectable face, attended church — and carried a vial of poison. Listen now and stay angry.

    49 min
  6. 16 FEB • SUBSCRIBERS ONLY

    Drones Aren’t Modern: The Victorian Origins of Unmanned Warfare with Mark Piesing

    Drones didn’t start in Silicon Valley — they began with Victorians and war Drones feel like the defining weapon of the 21st century — cheap, disposable, and terrifyingly effective. But what if that belief is completely wrong? In this episode of History Rage, aviation historian and journalist Mark Piesing explodes the modern myth surrounding drones and reveals a truth that stretches back more than 120 years. Long before satellites, digital cameras, or GPS, Victorian engineers were already imagining — and building — pilotless weapons designed to change warfare forever. From Nikola Tesla’s radio-controlled boats in the 1890s, to British attack drones planned during the First World War, this episode traces how unmanned warfare evolved through failed experiments, secret Cold War programmes, and nuclear testing — long before the Predator ever flew. Mark explains why the “father of the drone” was a British engineer targeted by German assassins, how Marilyn Monroe began her career on a drone production line, and why US Navy admirals were signing orders for thousands of attack drones before the Battle of Midway. Along the way, Paul and Mark explore why these technologies repeatedly promised to change war — and why military bureaucracy so often held them back. This is not a story of sudden innovation. It’s a story of persistence, secrecy, and ideas far ahead of the technology needed to make them work. And it explains why today’s drone warfare in Ukraine looks eerily familiar to predictions made in 1898. If you think drones are a modern invention, prepare to be very, very angry. Guest: Mark Piesing Mark Piesing is an award-winning journalist and aviation historian specialising in unmanned systems, aerospace innovation, and Cold War technology. His work has appeared with the Smithsonian, Royal Aeronautical Society, and major international publications. Read more here: https://markpiesing.com/2025/07/03/i-was-asked-to-write-this-piece-by-history-com-how-drones-have-upended-warfare/ Follow & contact Mark • Twitter/X: @markpiesing • Instagram: @markpiesingwrites Further listening • History Rage Episode 196 – Mark rages against polar explorers: https://pod.fo/e/2c75bd • History Rage Episode 53 – Nikola Tesla with Iwun Morus: https://pod.fo/e/16c1d5 About History Rage History Rage is the podcast where historians unleash their fury on the myths, half-truths, and bad history we all think we know. Hosted by Paul Bavill, each episode gives an expert one burning misconception to destroy — loudly, passionately, and with evidence. Follow History Rage • Twitter/X: @HistoryRage • Instagram: @historyrage • Website: www.historyrage.com Support the Podcast If you enjoy independent, expert-led history without ads, you can support History Rage in several ways: • £3/month – Ad-free listening via Apple Podcasts or Patreon • £5/month – Ask questions to future guests and receive the coveted History Rage mug 👉 Support the show at patreon.com/historyrage Or simply tell someone else about the podcast — word of mouth keeps History Rage alive.

    53 min
  7. 16 FEB

    274. The Samurai Didn’t Hate Guns with Matt Okuhara

    Forget the katana myth — Japan’s samurai didn’t shun guns, they embraced them. 🔥 Were the samurai really noble warriors who turned their noses up at guns? This week on History Rage, host Paul Bavill sits down with historian, author, and YouTuber Matt Okuhara to demolish the myth of the “honourable warrior.” From matchlocks and martial arts to gun control laws in the 1600s, Matt reveals how Japan’s most famous warriors were some of the earliest adopters of firearms — and how Hollywood got it all wrong. Matt takes us through the real evolution of samurai warfare — from their rise as Japan’s ruling military elite to the fall of their class during the Meiji Restoration. Along the way, he explains why Tokugawa’s gun laws were among the world’s first, how firearms shaped the great battles of Nagashino and beyond, and why the “sword-only” image is pure cinematic fiction. If you’ve ever wondered what happened when the sword met the gun in feudal Japan, this is the history lesson you didn’t know you needed. 🎯 In this episode: Why the samurai did use guns (and loved them)How firearms arrived in Japan in 1543 and changed warfareThe truth about Bushido and “honourable combat”The real reason Japan’s navy lagged behindThe decline of the samurai — and how they became bureaucratsWomen warriors, ronin, and Japan’s early gun control laws 📚 Guest Info – Matt Okuhara Matt is a British historian, author, interpreter, and YouTuber based in Japan. He’s a member of the Matsumoto Castle Gun Corps, one of Japan’s largest historical shooting teams. His work explores Japanese military history, samurai culture, and the global myths surrounding them. 👉 Find Matt Online: 🌐 Website: gunsamurai.com 📺 YouTube: @Gun_Samurai 📸 Instagram: @gun.samurai 🎧 Listen to Related Episodes: Ep 154 – India in World War I with Adam PrimeEp 213 – Hiroshima with Ian McGregor 🔥 Support History Rage Love what we do? Keep the rage alive! 🎙️ Subscribe on Apple Podcasts for early access & ad-free episodes💥 Join our Patreon for just £5/month: patreon.com/historyrage Get exclusive perks including monthly livestreams, prize draws, and the coveted History Rage Mug 📲 Follow & Connect: Twitter / X: @historyrage Instagram: @historyrage Facebook: @historyrage Website: historyrage.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    47 min
  8. 9 FEB • SUBSCRIBERS ONLY

    Bletchley Park Was More Than Alan Turing with Dermot Turing

    Bletchley Park wasn’t built by one man—and history must stop pretending otherwise For most people, Bletchley Park means one thing: Alan Turing, Enigma, and a single heroic breakthrough. That story is neat, cinematic—and deeply misleading. In this episode of History Rage, Paul Bavill is joined by historian, author, and Bletchley Park trustee Sir Dermot Turing to dismantle one of Britain’s most comfortable Second World War myths. What follows is a forensic, passionate unpicking of how thousands of codebreakers—most of them women—have been written out of history. This is not an attack on Alan Turing. It’s a demand for accuracy. Sir Dermot explains why Enigma has become a historical obsession, how it eclipses dozens of other vital ciphers, and why reducing Bletchley Park to a single man does a disservice to everyone involved—including Turing himself. From Spanish and Italian diplomatic codes to Japanese military signals, this episode reveals just how broad, complex, and international the intelligence war really was. Crucially, the conversation exposes how women codebreakers were systematically downgraded by job titles, pay grades, and later historians. Clerical assistants, typists, and “support staff” were in reality performing some of the hardest cryptographic work of the war—often better than the men promoted over them. Figures such as Joan Clarke, Wendy White, Helen Hazelden, Marie Rose Egan, and many others emerge not as footnotes, but as central players. This episode also explores: • Why Enigma machines themselves were never the real secret • How civil service bureaucracy distorted the historical record • The hidden importance of German diplomatic intelligence • Why Bletchley Park was far messier, more political, and more human than popular culture admits If you think you know the story of Bletchley Park, this episode will make you angry—for all the right reasons. About the Guest: Sir Dermot Turing Sir Dermot Turing is a historian, author, and trustee of Bletchley Park, specialising in intelligence history and overlooked figures of the Second World War. He is the nephew of Alan Turing and a leading voice challenging simplistic narratives around wartime codebreaking. Recommended Reading 📘 Misread Signals: How History Overlooked Women Codebreakers An essential corrective to the Enigma-centric story, uncovering the vital contributions of women across British intelligence. Available here: https://uk.bookshop.org/a/10120/9781803997933 Explore More from History Rage 🎧 History Rage is the podcast where historians confront the myths that refuse to die. • Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and all major platforms • Follow History Rage on social media for episode clips, debates, and announcements Support the Podcast If you value independent, ad-free history: • £3/month – ad-free listening • £5/month – bonus content and the legendary History Rage mug 👉 Support the show at patreon.com/historyrage or directly through Apple Podcasts subscriptions. And if you loved this episode? Tell someone. History only changes when the story spreads.

    59 min

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Ratings & Reviews

4.8
out of 5
6 Ratings

About

Think history is boring? That’s because you’ve only ever heard the fake version. On History Rage, professional historians come in swinging — smashing the myths, clichés, and half-truths that keep getting recycled in classrooms, documentaries, and TikToks. Vikings with horned helmets? Nope. Britain standing alone in 1940? Wrong. Medieval people never bathed? Rubbish. Why listen? Because the truth is way more exciting. You’ll leave every episode with jaw-dropping stories, killer facts to shut down pub bores, and the smug satisfaction of knowing what really happened. 🎧 Episodes drop every Monday. 📲 Follow now and get the history they don’t teach you — raw, raging, and real. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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