The Darkives: Serious history. Told not so seriously

Leo Eaton and Jamie Tavenner

The Darkives is a history podcast where Jamie and Leo dive headfirst into the strangest, creepiest, and most disturbing stories the past tried to bury (and somehow manage to laugh along the way). Each week, we unravel forgotten voyages, infamous historical figures, bizarre disasters, and centuries-old true crime, breaking it all down the way you would with friends - curious, slightly horrified, and occasionally cracking jokes when things get too dark. Nothing is treated like a lecture, and nothing is off the table. If you like weird history, eerie true stories, and conversations that balance “that’s awful” with “how is this real?”, you’ll feel right at home here. Serious history. Told not so seriously.

  1. Henry Every: The Pirate Who Pulled Off History’s Biggest Sea Heist

    4D AGO

    Henry Every: The Pirate Who Pulled Off History’s Biggest Sea Heist

    A stolen fortune. A global manhunt. And a pirate who may have gotten away with it all. This week, Jamie and Leo sail into the chaotic world of Henry Every, the man often called the pirate who pulled off the greatest sea heist in history. Before becoming one of the most wanted men on Earth, Every lived a murkier life serving in the navy, working aboard slave ships, and eventually turning to piracy in the late 1600s. But everything changed after a daring attack on a wealthy Mughal treasure fleet in the Indian Ocean. The raid made Every infamous almost overnight. The stolen riches were enormous. The political fallout was massive. And suddenly, governments across the world wanted him captured. What followed became one of history’s first global manhunts. Did he escape with his fortune? Did he die broke and forgotten? Or was one of the most successful pirates in history eventually caught without anyone realizing it? On this episode of The Darkives we tell the tale of a pirate who may have actually won. Serious history. Told not so seriously. Check out our website: darkivespodcast.com Email us: thedarkivescommunity@gmail.com Follow us on: instagram Enjoy the show? Consider leaving a rating and a comment or share us to a fellow history lover. Sources: https://www.history.com/articles/henry-everys-bloody-pirate-raid-320-years-agohttps://www.historic-uk.com/HistoryUK/HistoryofEngland/Henry-Avery-Every-King-Of-Pirates/Theme music: Ways of the Wizard-geoffharvey Used with permission, Thank you Geoff! licensed through: Pixabay Other music used: licensed through Pixabay-used under the Pixabay Content License Thank you to Ebunny for all the pirate music

    28 min
  2. The Bubonic Plague: From Before the Black Death to After Modern America

    MAY 15

    The Bubonic Plague: From Before the Black Death to After Modern America

    Rats. Fleas. And one bacterium that just would not take the hint. This week, Jamie and Leo trace the long and deadly history of the plague, from the ancient world to outbreaks in the modern United States. We start with the different forms of plague, bubonic, pneumonic, and septicemic (all caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis). From there, we follow the disease across centuries, beginning with the Plague of Justinian, moving through the Black Death, and ending with lesser-known outbreaks in Hawaii in 1899, San Francisco from 1900 to 1907, and Los Angeles in 1924. Along the way, we look at how the plague spread, why it was so deadly, and how communities responded when fear traveled faster than the disease itself. How many forms of plague are there? What caused the Black Death? And how did outbreaks continue well into the 20th century? From emperors, quarantines, and some very unlucky rats, this is the story of one of history’s most persistent killers. Serious history. Told not so seriously. Check out our website: darkivespodcast.com Email us: thedarkivescommunity@gmail.com Follow us on: instagram Enjoy the show? Consider leaving a rating and a comment or share us to a fellow history lover. Sources: https://www.britannica.com/event/plague-of-Justinianhttps://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/17782-plaguehttps://www.sciencehistory.org/stories/magazine/san-franciscos-plague-years/https://www.aai.org/About/History/History-Articles-Keep-for-Hierarchy/How-Honolulu%E2%80%99s-Chinatown-Went-Up-in-Smoke-The-Fihttps://www.history.com/articles/black-deathhttps://www.britannica.com/event/Black-Death/Effects-and-significancehttps://www.cdc.gov/plague/maps-statistics/index.htmlTheme music: Ways of the Wizard-geoffharvey Used with permission, Thank you Geoff! licensed through: Pixabay Other music used: licensed through Pixabay-used under the Pixabay Content License

    38 min
  3. The Essex: Shipwreck, Survival, and a Whale that Sank a Ship

    APR 17

    The Essex: Shipwreck, Survival, and a Whale that Sank a Ship

    This week on The Darkives, we have a whale of a tale. Let's sail out to sea in 1819 aboard the whaling ship Essex, a voyage that would turn into one of the most unbelievable survival stories in history. When a massive sperm whale attacked and sank the ship, the crew was left stranded in the open ocean with only three small boats and barely enough supplies to survive. What followed was a series of desperate decisions... Drinking seawater, choosing whether to stay on a remote island or risk the open ocean, and eventually, facing choices no one ever thinks they’ll have to make. We get into what really happened after the Essex went down, how the crew tried to survive against impossible odds, and how this story would go on to inspire Moby-Dick. This isn’t just a shipwreck story… it’s what happens when survival pushes people past their limits. So how did it all go so wrong? And what do you do when there are no good options left? Serious history. Told not so seriously. Enjoying the show? Leave us a rating/comment or share us to a fellow history lover. Email us: thedarkivescommunity@gmail.com Follow us on- instagram Sources: https://www.britannica.com/topic/Essex-whaling-shiphttps://www.americanheritage.com/essex-disasterhttps://www.gutenberg.org/files/61931/61931-h/61931-h.htmhttps://www.scienceandmediamuseum.org.uk/objects-and-stories/history-whalinghttps://essex.nha.org/the-whaleship-essex/https://essex.nha.org/the-aftermath/ Theme music: Ways of the Wizard-geoffharvey Used with permission, Thank you Geoff! licensed through: Pixabay Other music used: licensed through Pixabay-used under the Pixabay Content License

    56 min
  4. The Bone Wars: When Scientists Sabotaged Each Other Over Dinosaurs

    APR 10

    The Bone Wars: When Scientists Sabotaged Each Other Over Dinosaurs

    This week on The Darkives, we’re digging into one of the strangest rivalries in scientific history… and yeah, it gets way more chaotic than you’d expect. In the late 1800s, two paleontologists, Edward Drinker Cope and Othniel Charles Marsh, basically went to war over dinosaur bones. What started as competition quickly turned into full-on sabotage; stolen fossils, destroyed evidence, and some very public attempts to ruin each other’s careers. And the wild part? This wasn’t happening in secret. The feud played out in newspapers, in the field, and across the growing world of American science… dragging in other figures like Joseph Leidy, who at one point just wanted no part of the chaos. We get into how this rivalry started, how bad it actually got, and how two brilliant scientists managed to push dinosaur discovery forward while also actively making each other’s lives worse. Because somehow, in the middle of all this pettiness… they helped shape everything we know about dinosaurs today. Serious history. Told not so seriously Email us: thedarkivescommunity@gmail.com Follow us on- instagram Sources: ebsco.compbs.orgebsco.com 2coloradoencyclopedia.orgebsco.com 3paconservationheritage.orgarchives.upenn.eduTheme music: Ways of the Wizard-geoffharvey Used with permission, Thank you Geoff! licensed through: Pixabay Other music used: licensed through Pixabay-used under the Pixabay Content License

    47 min
  5. The Lost City of Z and El Dorado: The Explorers Who Never Stopped Searching

    APR 3

    The Lost City of Z and El Dorado: The Explorers Who Never Stopped Searching

    A city of gold. A ritual in a sacred lake. And a legend that refused to die. This week, Jamie and Leo head deep into South America to unravel the story of El Dorado. The myth of “the gilded one" and the enduring mystery of the Lost City of Z. The legend begins with indigenous rituals at Lake Guatavita, where stories of gold-covered rulers and offerings sparked centuries of obsession. What followed was a wave of expeditions into the jungle, each one chasing a fortune that may have never existed. Among them was Gonzalo Pizarro, whose spectacular journey through the jungle gave the Amazon it's name. Years later, Sir Walter Raleigh helped fuel the legend while chasing it himself. Then there was Percy Fawcett, whose final expedition into the jungle became one of history’s most famous unsolved disappearances. As the story unfolds, the line between myth and reality starts to blur. Was El Dorado ever a real place? What actually happened to Percy Fawcett when he vanished into the Amazon? Sit down with us as we pull another file from The Darkives. Serious history. Told not so seriously. Email us: thedarkivescommunity@gmail.com Follow us on- instagram Sources: forbes.comnewspapers.combritannica.comlivescience.comnationalgeographic.comnationalgeographic.com 2history.compenn.museumhistoryextra.comTheme music: Ways of the Wizard-geoffharvey Used with permission, Thank you Geoff! licensed through: Pixabay Other music used: licensed through Pixabay-used under the Pixabay Content License

    43 min
4.4
out of 5
7 Ratings

About

The Darkives is a history podcast where Jamie and Leo dive headfirst into the strangest, creepiest, and most disturbing stories the past tried to bury (and somehow manage to laugh along the way). Each week, we unravel forgotten voyages, infamous historical figures, bizarre disasters, and centuries-old true crime, breaking it all down the way you would with friends - curious, slightly horrified, and occasionally cracking jokes when things get too dark. Nothing is treated like a lecture, and nothing is off the table. If you like weird history, eerie true stories, and conversations that balance “that’s awful” with “how is this real?”, you’ll feel right at home here. Serious history. Told not so seriously.

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