The History of the 7 Years War

Rob Hill

The real first world war, this often overlooked conflict saw action in Europe, North America, the Caribbean, Africa, India, and the Philippines. Its outcome also set the stage for many of the major events that would reshape the world in the coming decades.

  1. MAY 5

    The Noose Tightens: Europe Prepares to Break Prussia| 1757 (Episode 13)

    Send us Fan Mail Send us a message! sevenyearswarpodcast@gmail.com Before the armies march… before the battles are fought… before the first shots echo across Bohemia… The outcome of the war is already being imagined. In this episode, we step back from the battlefield to examine the forces gathering against Frederick II of Prussia—and the very real plans being formed to dismantle his kingdom piece by piece. Austria seeks revenge and the return of Silesia. France pivots toward a global struggle with Britain, with Hanover squarely in its sights. Russia prepares to push west, eyeing East Prussia and greater influence in Poland. Sweden looks for an opportunity to reclaim its Baltic foothold. And within the Holy Roman Empire, a broader political system begins to align against Prussia’s rise. This is not just a coalition. It is a partition in the making. Meanwhile, Britain faces a dilemma of its own—how to fight a global war while protecting Hanover. The solution? Gold. Subsidies begin to flow, an alliance with Prussia takes shape, and the Army of Observation assembles to hold the line in western Germany… or at least stand there and hope the French don’t push too hard. At the center of it all, Frederick sees the trap forming around him. Surrounded, outnumbered, and running out of time, he makes the only move he believes he can. He strikes first. With Saxony already occupied, the war has begun. But as we’ll see, that opening move has only bought him time—not victory. Because next… the war moves south. Map of Europe https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Years%27_War#/media/File:Europe_1748-1766_en.png Map of the HRE https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c3/1740_Homann_Map_of_the_Holy_Roman_Empire_%28_Germanic_Empire_%29_-_Geographicus_-_ImperiiRomanoGerman-homann-1740.jpg?utm_source=commons.wikimedia.org&utm_campaign=index&utm_content=original Map of Hanover https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6d/Electorate_of_Hanover_in_1789.png

    1h 36m
  2. APR 13

    The War at a Standstill: The State of the Conflict | 1756 (Episode 11)

    Send us Fan Mail Send us a message at -  sevenyearswarpodcast@gmail.com By the end of 1756, what had begun as a series of regional conflicts was rapidly becoming something far larger. In this episode, we pause the narrative to take a global snapshot of the war as it stood at the close of the year. From the diplomatic upheaval of Europe’s Diplomatic Revolution, to the frontier fighting in North America, to the rising tensions in Bengal, the conflict was already stretching across continents and oceans. We revisit each of the major theaters of the war: The shifting alliances of Europe, and the growing danger facing PrussiaThe French advantage in North America following the fall of Fort OswegoThe critical role of Native nations in shaping the frontier conflictThe transformation of trade into warfare in India, as tensions rise in BengalThe high-stakes economic rivalry of the Caribbean sugar islandsThe wider global networks linking West Africa and the PhilippinesBy the end of the episode, the picture becomes clear: The war is already global. And in Europe, the spark that will ignite full-scale continental war is about to be struck. Next Time: Frederick the Great makes his move. Prussian armies march into Saxony—and the Seven Years’ War enters a new and far more dangerous phase. Seven Years War Global Map https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Years%27_War#/media/File:SevenYearsWar.png Europe — Diplomatic Revolution https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diplomatic_Revolution#/media/File:Carte_Guerre_de_Sept_Ans_Europe.PNG North America — French & British Positions https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_colonization_of_the_Americas#/media/File:Nouvelle-France_map-en.svg India — Bengal & European Trading Posts https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:European_settlements_in_India_from_1498-1739.PNG Caribbean — Colonial Possessions https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territorial_evolution_of_the_Caribbean#/media/File:Political_Evolution_of_Central_America_and_the_Caribbean_1756_na.png West Africa — Trading Forts (note that it is a bit newer than. the time...) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Senegal#/media/File:Guillaume_Delisle_Senegambia_1707.jpg Philippines — Manila Galleon Trade https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Manila-Accapulco_galleon_trade_route,_showing_onward_route_to_Spain.png

    1h 3m
  3. MAR 17

    The Nawab and the Company: Bengal Ignites | 1756 (Episode 9)

    Send us Fan Mail Send us a message at -  sevenyearswarpodcast@gmail.com Before Europe fully understands what kind of war this will be, Bengal is already on fire. In 1756, one of the richest provinces in the world stands at the intersection of collapsing imperial authority and expanding corporate power. The Mughal Empire still exists in name, but its ability to enforce control has weakened, leaving regional rulers like Siraj ud-Daulah to assert sovereignty in an increasingly unstable political landscape. At the same time, the British East India Company—nominally a commercial enterprise—has grown into something far more powerful. It fortifies its settlements, maintains its own armies, and conducts diplomacy as if it were a state in its own right. The collision becomes inevitable. When Siraj moves against the Company’s position in Calcutta, the result is a rapid collapse of British control in Bengal. In its aftermath comes one of the most controversial and influential episodes of the eighteenth century: the Black Hole of Calcutta—a tragedy that would be remembered, reshaped, and used to justify what came next. And what comes next is the arrival of Robert Clive. Not yet the architect of British dominance in India, but already a figure shaped by ambition, instability, and opportunity—prepared to act in a world where the boundaries between trade, war, and empire are rapidly dissolving. This episode explores the crisis in Bengal as more than a local conflict. It is a case study in the changing nature of power in the eighteenth century: the erosion of imperial structures, the rise of corporate sovereignty, and the growing importance of narrative in shaping political outcomes. Because in Bengal, the Seven Years’ War stops being simply a European conflict— and becomes unmistakably global.

    1h 6m
  4. JAN 19

    Montcalm Seizes the Initiative | 1756 (Episode 8)

    Send us Fan Mail Send us a message at -  sevenyearswarpodcast@gmail.com In the aftermath of Braddock's defeat, the war in North America stalls. British authority fragments, colonial governments resist coordination, and Commander-in-Cheif John Campbell, Earl of Loudoun focuses on imposing order rather than taking the offensive. Along the frontier, raids multiply, forts stand isolated, and British power exists more on paper than inn practice. France, however, chooses a different path. In 1756, it sends a professional European general- Louis-Joseph de Montcalm to Canada, marking a decisive escalation of the conflict. Moncalm arrives notion manage the war, but to fight it.  Seeing clearly the weakness caused bu British delay, he identifies a vulnerable target on the shores of Lake Ontario and moves before his enemy can react.  The result is the siege and fall of Fort Oswego., a swift and methodical campaign that erases Britain's western position, confirms French domination of the Great Lakes, and shocked imperial confidence. Oswego is more than a lost fort- it is proof that momentum, not resources alone, will decide the war. As Britain absorbs yet another "unthinkable" defeat, the contrast between caution and decisiveness hardens into a defining pattern for 1756. And while Montcalm reshapes the war in North America, events elsewhere are already spiraling towards catastrophe.   Next time, the conflict explodes in the east, as imperial complacency and ambition ignite disaster in India.

    1h 12m
  5. JAN 8

    To Encourage the Others: Britain’s Strategy Unravels | 1756 (Episode 7)

    Send us Fan Mail Send us a message at -  sevenyearswarpodcast@gmail.com Britain thought it could glide through 1756 on sea power and habit. Minorca proved otherwise. We follow the doomed relief of Fort St. Philip from the Admiralty’s hedged orders to John Byng’s compromised squadron, then into a battle where geometry, hesitation, and a ten‑minute delay cost Britain the initiative. The French didn’t need a glorious victory; they needed a functioning plan. They had one. The result was a tactical draw that became a strategic collapse—and a fortress left to face arithmetic alone. Inside those walls, William Blakeney managed a shrinking perimeter as French engineers advanced with quiet precision. Beyond the guns, the louder story unfolded in London. The Articles of War demanded death for failure to do one’s utmost, and Byng’s court—officers who knew the truth of his situation—convicted and begged for mercy in the same breath. None came. Voltaire’s bitter line about killing an admiral to encourage the others lands here not as satire but diagnosis: punishment stood in for reform, spectacle for accountability. We dig into the system that made this outcome feel inevitable under the Duke of Newcastle: delayed decisions, ambiguous orders, and a Navy drilled to preserve formation at the expense of initiative. Then we track how William Pitt the Elder seized the narrative, arguing for coordinated, global action and the courage to spend for victory rather than manage decline. Minorca’s fall becomes more than a lost base; it’s the moment Britain learns that procedure is not strategy and that naval supremacy must be earned, not assumed. As the war’s tempo shifts to North America and Montcalm gathers momentum, the cost of hesitation becomes brutally clear. If this story challenged your view of “naval supremacy,” tap follow, share it with a friend who loves history, and leave a quick review—your words help others find the show and keep this series sailing.

    56 min
5
out of 5
12 Ratings

About

The real first world war, this often overlooked conflict saw action in Europe, North America, the Caribbean, Africa, India, and the Philippines. Its outcome also set the stage for many of the major events that would reshape the world in the coming decades.

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