This Week in History

This Week in History brings the past to life with riveting stories drawn from real events that happened this very week throughout the centuries. Each episode explores the fascinating historical moments, breakthroughs, and turning points that occurred on these exact calendar dates — from legendary firsts like Charles Lindbergh's transatlantic landing to cultural milestones like the birth of blue jeans, and earth-shaking natural events like the eruption of Mount St. Helens. If you've ever wondered what the world was doing on this day in 1492, 1865, or 1969, this is the show for you. Perfect for history enthusiasts, trivia lovers, students, and anyone who believes that understanding the past is the key to understanding the present, This Week in History delivers meticulously researched, vividly told stories that connect the calendar to the grand sweep of human experience. No dry lectures, no textbook recitations — just compelling narrative history that makes you feel like you were there.

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  1. 3日前

    Lindbergh's Landing, Blue Jeans & Mount St. Helens | May 18–24

    This week in history stretches across seventeen centuries and six continents, delivering eight landmark moments that shaped the world we live in today. From the theological debates of 325 AD to the volcanic fury of 1980, the week of May 18–24 is one of the most event-dense in the entire calendar. In 325, Emperor Constantine convened the Council of Nicaea, producing the Nicene Creed and defining Christian doctrine for millennia. In 1536, Anne Boleyn was beheaded at the Tower of London on charges most historians consider fabricated. In 1873, Levi Strauss and Jacob Davis patented copper-riveted work pants — the birth of blue jeans. In 1927, Andrew Kehoe committed the deadliest school massacre in American history in Bath, Michigan, while just two days later Charles Lindbergh landed in Paris after the first nonstop solo transatlantic flight, triggering worldwide celebration. Also this week: in 1904, seven nations founded FIFA in Paris, laying the groundwork for global football. In 1969, NASA's Apollo Ten skimmed within five miles of the lunar surface in the final dress rehearsal before the moon landing. And in 1980, Mount St. Helens erupted in Washington State with a force that flattened 150 square miles of forest and killed 57 people — the most destructive volcanic event in modern American history. This is history at its most varied: saints and sinners, inventors and aviators, disasters and triumphs, all sharing the same week on the calendar. This episode includes AI-generated content.

    8分
  2. 5月11日

    Constantinople, Deep Blue & the First Vaccine | May 11–14

    This week in history delivers one of its most remarkable weeks on the calendar — eight landmark events from May 11 to 14, drawn from ancient empires, modern computing, sport, literature, and geopolitics. On May 11, 330 AD, Emperor Constantine the Great dedicated Constantinople as the new capital of the Roman Empire — a decision that shifted the axis of Western civilization for over a thousand years. On the same date in 1997, IBM's Deep Blue became the first computer to defeat a reigning world chess champion, beating Garry Kasparov in a match that announced the arrival of machine intelligence. May 12, 1941 brought Konrad Zuse's Z3 — the world's first fully programmable computer — quietly unveiled in wartime Berlin. A day later, in 1862, Robert Smalls made one of the Civil War's most audacious escapes, commandeering a Confederate steamboat and delivering it to the Union Navy. Also on May 13, 1909, the inaugural Giro d'Italia rolled out of Milan, launching one of sport's great endurance traditions. May 14 is perhaps the week's most crowded date: English colonists founded Jamestown in 1607; Edward Jenner administered the world's first smallpox vaccination in 1796; Virginia Woolf published Mrs Dalloway in 1925; and in 1948, David Ben-Gurion proclaimed the State of Israel — triggering immediate recognition from the United States and the outbreak of the Arab-Israeli War within hours. Eight events. Four days. Centuries apart. All connected by the same week on the calendar. This episode includes AI-generated content.

    9分
  3. 5月4日

    Joan of Arc, Beethoven's Ninth & the Birth of Coca-Cola | May 5–10

    This week in history spans six centuries and six continents, delivering ten moments that changed the world. On 8 May 1429, a teenage Joan of Arc broke the English siege of Orléans and turned the tide of the Hundred Years' War. On 7 May 1824, a completely deaf Beethoven stood on stage in Vienna as his Ninth Symphony received its world premiere — and had to be turned around to witness the applause he could not hear. In sport, Cy Young threw baseball's first modern perfect game in Boston on 5 May 1904, retiring all twenty-seven batters he faced. Two days later in Oxford, Roger Bannister shattered the supposedly impossible four-minute mile barrier in 3:59.4 on 6 May 1954. On that same date in 1937, the Hindenburg airship exploded over New Jersey, killing thirty-six and ending the era of passenger airships in under sixty seconds. The week also marks the invention of the microchip concept: on 7 May 1952, British engineer Geoffrey Dummer first published the theoretical blueprint for the integrated circuit. Just eight years later, on 9 May 1960, the FDA approved the world's first oral contraceptive pill, reshaping women's lives across the globe. Two moments of immense political weight anchor the week. On 8 May 1945, the German Instrument of Surrender ended World War Two in Europe — V-E Day — silencing six years of war. And on 10 May 1994, Nelson Mandela was inaugurated as South Africa's first Black president after twenty-seven years in prison. Eight events. Six centuries. One extraordinary week. This episode includes AI-generated content.

    8分
  4. 4月24日

    Rome's Birthday, DNA's Secret & the Worst Soft Drink Decision Ever

    This week in history is one of the most event-packed stretches on the calendar. We open on the Palatine Hill in 753 BC, where Romulus draws a line in the dirt and calls it Rome — and we trace that act's consequences across centuries. Within the same week, Pedro Álvares Cabral stumbles upon Brazil while en route to India, William Shakespeare is baptised in Stratford-upon-Avon, and a French army officer composes La Marseillaise in a single sleepless night. We cover Napoleon's decisive victory at the Battle of Eckmühl, the very first game in Major League Baseball's National League, and the moment Pierre and Marie Curie isolated a purer form of radium in their Paris laboratory — work that quietly poisoned them while reshaping modern science. The episode moves into the twentieth century with two of the most consequential moments in scientific history: Francis Crick and James Watson publishing the double helix structure of DNA, and the inauguration of Brasília — a capital city built from scratch in the Brazilian interior in under four years. We close on two harrowing stories: Soviet cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov's fatal Soyuz 1 mission, and one of the most catastrophic marketing decisions in corporate history, courtesy of a certain soft drink giant. Whether you're a history buff, a curious generalist, or just someone who loves discovering how much happened in a single week across human civilisation, this episode is your brisk, wide-ranging tour. This episode includes AI-generated content. A YesOui.ai Production. This episode includes AI-generated content.

    9分

番組について

This Week in History brings the past to life with riveting stories drawn from real events that happened this very week throughout the centuries. Each episode explores the fascinating historical moments, breakthroughs, and turning points that occurred on these exact calendar dates — from legendary firsts like Charles Lindbergh's transatlantic landing to cultural milestones like the birth of blue jeans, and earth-shaking natural events like the eruption of Mount St. Helens. If you've ever wondered what the world was doing on this day in 1492, 1865, or 1969, this is the show for you. Perfect for history enthusiasts, trivia lovers, students, and anyone who believes that understanding the past is the key to understanding the present, This Week in History delivers meticulously researched, vividly told stories that connect the calendar to the grand sweep of human experience. No dry lectures, no textbook recitations — just compelling narrative history that makes you feel like you were there.

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