Ember & Atlas

Ember & Atlas

Ember & Atlas tells original stories set in real times and places. Each episode follows fictional characters living their daily, ordinary lives inside the extraordinary moments of the past and the natural world. The focus is on the people, their quiet struggles, and what they noticed that nobody else wrote down. They're character-driven narratives grounded in careful research and told with the kind of warmth and sensory detail that makes a distant world feel close enough to step into. See more at: emberandatlas.com

Episodes

  1. The Last Summer of Ugarit | Bronze Age Syria, 1187 BCE | Story for Sleep

    5D AGO

    The Last Summer of Ugarit | Bronze Age Syria, 1187 BCE | Story for Sleep

    The last quiet season before the fires came. The Bronze Age port city of Ugarit, on the coast of what is now northern Syria, in the warm summer of 1187 BCE. The streets rise in narrow ashlar lanes toward the temple of Baal. Beneath every house, the family dead sleep in chamber tombs. On the roofs, figs are drying. In the harbour of Minet el‑Beidha, ships still come in from Cyprus and Egypt, and the middens of crushed murex shells gleam white along the shore. Spend an unhurried evening inside the walls of this small, literate, many‑tongued city, where a weigher of metals carries eight systems of measurement in a cedar box, a young woman kneels at her quern before the first grey light, an old diviner reads the future in clay models of a sheep's liver, and a dyer's household works purple into the creases of their hands. The people of Ugarit wrote in seven scripts, prayed to Baal and to their own remembered dead, and knew nothing of what was coming over the sea. This is their ordinary day. The rasp of stone on stone, the smell of burning olive wood, a fig tree in a courtyard older than the house around it. Over 80 minutes of immersive storytelling featuring the Bronze Age, Ugarit, ancient Syria, the Bronze Age Collapse, Minet el‑Beidha, murex purple dye, cuneiform, Baal worship, Late Bronze Age trade, and the daily life of a city on the edge of a world that was about to end. emberandatlas.com

    1h 27m
  2. The Carver Who Learned to See | Angkor Wat, 13th Century | Story for Sleep

    APR 27

    The Carver Who Learned to See | Angkor Wat, 13th Century | Story for Sleep

    The largest city on earth, and almost none of it was made of stone. The temples that survive today were only the skeleton. The living city was an ocean of thatched rooftops and cooking smoke stretching to the horizon, threaded with canals and fish ponds, anchored by the daily rhythm of fermented fish paste and rice and incense offered at ancestor stones beneath silk‑cotton trees. This is a story about the city that vanished around the monuments that remained. Spend a single dry‑season morning inside the great enclosure, where an elderly grandmother descends her twelve‑rung ladder to tend the family spirit stone, her daughter balances a basket of prahok jars on her head and walks to the open‑air market where all commerce is conducted by women on mats on the bare ground, and a seventeen‑year‑old folds palm leaves into watertight bowls that will be used once and thrown away before evening. Nearby, a stone carver has been given an assignment he does not yet understand, to look at the ordinary life unfolding around him and make it permanent in sandstone. Over two unhurried hours of immersive storytelling, the story moves through the texture of daily existence in a civilization that left behind its temples but not its people: the smell of prahok rising from clay jars, the sound of rice being pounded before dawn, the sumptuary laws that dictated the pattern on every woman's cloth, and the quiet question of what deserves to be remembered. Featuring Angkor Wat, the Khmer Empire, ancient Cambodia, daily life in medieval Southeast Asia, Khmer stone carving, prahok, the baray water system, and a city that once held nearly a million lives in its grid of mounds and waterways. emberandatlas.com

    2h 21m
  3. The City Beneath the Moon | Ur, Sumer, 2065 BCE | Story for Sleep

    APR 27

    The City Beneath the Moon | Ur, Sumer, 2065 BCE | Story for Sleep

    A city built entirely from the earth beneath it. Mudbrick walls, reed‑mat floors, bitumen‑sealed boats, clay tablets pressed with the oldest writing in the world. The great ziggurat of Nanna rises above every rooftop, its upper tier glazed a deep blue that catches the sun like something not quite real. In the streets below, donkeys pull carts of barley through narrow lanes, canal workers stand waist‑deep in slow water clearing silt with their hands, and brewers stir date syrup into mash that will become the drink half the city runs on. Follow the lives of ordinary people across one full lunar cycle, from new moon to new moon, as they work, rest, worry, and wonder in the shadow of one of the oldest cities on earth. A boatman who reads the river the way a scribe reads clay. A brewer who learned stillness from her father and now tends his legacy in a courtyard that smells of grain and warm earth. A seventeen‑year‑old student copying proverbs he does not yet understand onto tablets he hopes will outlast him. A temple accountant whose ledgers are flawless but whose prayers have gone quiet. And a woman in the marshes who can feel the history sleeping inside a stone. Their lives move to the rhythm of water and moonlight, of tides pulled by a god they can feel but never see. Over ninety minutes of immersive storytelling featuring ancient Ur, Sumer, Mesopotamia, the Euphrates River, the ziggurat of Nanna, King Shulgi, cuneiform, Sumerian brewing, canal workers, the marshes of southern Iraq, mudbrick architecture, the edubba tablet house, and daily life in one of the oldest civilizations on earth. See more at: emberandatlas.com

    1h 39m
  4. The Village That Painted the Tombs of Kings | Deir el-Medina, Egypt, 1250 BCE | Story for Sleep

    APR 27

    The Village That Painted the Tombs of Kings | Deir el-Medina, Egypt, 1250 BCE | Story for Sleep

    Every morning before dawn, a man loaded clay jars of water onto rented donkeys and walked an hour through the desert hills to a village that could not exist without him. And every morning, behind those whitewashed walls, the finest artists in Egypt woke, ate bread their wives had baked in domed ovens, and climbed the ridge to paint the corridors where pharaohs would sleep forever. The workers' village of Deir el‑Medina, tucked into a dry valley in the hills west of ancient Thebes during the reign of Ramesses the Great. The Place of Truth, a walled settlement of seventy houses where the painters, draughtsmen, and stonecutters who built the royal tombs lived with their families in a world apart, supplied by water carriers and servants, governed by their own foremen, and bound together by secrecy, craft, and the rhythms of a life lived between the desert and the dark corridors of the Valley of the Kings. Follow the turn of a season in this extraordinary community. Walk the switchback path over the ridge at dawn with the crew as they descend toward the mountain camp. Sit with an aging draughtsman as he begins to paint his own family's chapel, choosing for the first time in thirty years what to draw, and for whom. Watch a seventeen‑year‑old apprentice carry his tools into the torchlit tomb for the first time. Share a rest‑day meal of bread, beer, onions, and dried fish in a four‑room mudbrick house where a woman manages the household economy with the same precision her husband brings to the outline of a god's face. Listen as the chantresses of Hathor raise their voices at the village chapel, and as the oldest woman in the community remembers things the younger ones have not yet learned to notice. Nearly three hours of immersive storytelling featuring Deir el‑Medina, ancient Egyptian tomb painters, the Valley of the Kings, Ramesses the Great, the Theban Necropolis, daily life in ancient Egypt, New Kingdom artisans, Hathor, Meretseger, tomb decoration, and one of the most remarkable communities the ancient world ever produced. emberandatlas.com

    2h 51m

About

Ember & Atlas tells original stories set in real times and places. Each episode follows fictional characters living their daily, ordinary lives inside the extraordinary moments of the past and the natural world. The focus is on the people, their quiet struggles, and what they noticed that nobody else wrote down. They're character-driven narratives grounded in careful research and told with the kind of warmth and sensory detail that makes a distant world feel close enough to step into. See more at: emberandatlas.com