Speeches That Changed History

Speeches That Changed History

The purpose of this channel is to reanimate historic speeches by reading and performing them aloud, giving a voice once again to the words that changed our world. To truly appreciate these speeches, we must understand the world they were spoken in. That is why we dive deep into the high stakes and complex backgrounds of each moment, ensuring that when the speech begins, you aren’t just listening to a text, you are experiencing it as if you were there. Together, we investigate the history behind them, the arguments within them, and the consequences that followed. For contact and feedback: speechesthatchangedhistory@gmail.com

Episodes

  1. 5. Pericles' Funeral Oration - Did He Describe Athens or Invent It?

    6d ago

    5. Pericles' Funeral Oration - Did He Describe Athens or Invent It?

    Episode 5 in the Speeches of the Peloponnesian War series. The war had begun. Sparta had burned the Attic countryside. Thousands of Athenians had abandoned their farms and crowded inside the city walls at Pericles' instruction. The anger toward him was real, raw, and barely contained. That winter, Athens buried its dead. And by tradition, a man chosen by the city stepped forward to speak over the open graves. Athens chose Pericles. What followed was not a conventional eulogy. It was one of the most extraordinary pieces of political oratory ever delivered, and 2,500 years later, it still is. Pericles did not dwell on grief. He did not catalogue victories. Instead he described Athens — not as a set of laws or institutions, but as a philosophy made into a state. A democracy where merit, not birth, determined a man's standing. Where private life was genuinely private and public life was genuinely open. A city, he said, that was a school to all of Greece. In this episode we hear the full funeral oration, analyse the extraordinary craft behind it, and ask the question that scholars have been arguing about ever since — was Pericles describing Athens, or constructing it? Sources: Kagan, D. (2003). The Peloponnesian War. Viking Penguin. Thucydides. (1874). History of the Peloponnesian War (R. Crawley, Trans.). Longmans, Green and Co. (Original work written ca. 431–404 BC) Music: "Heavy Heart" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License "Strings Impromptu Number 1" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License "Lost Time" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License "Final Count" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License "Trio for Violin and Viola" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License

    42 min
  2. 4. No Concessions - Did Pericles Make the Right Call?

    Jun 2

    4. No Concessions - Did Pericles Make the Right Call?

    Episode 4 in the Speeches of the Peloponnesian War series. Sparta had sent three messengers to Athens. Each carried demands. Each was sent home with a refusal. The first invoked an ancient religious curse, a veiled attempt to expel Pericles himself from Athens through sacred procedure rather than military force. Athens saw through it immediately. The second carried a list of concrete grievances — lift the Megarian Decree, abandon the siege of Potidaea, respect the autonomy of Aegina. Even within Athens, some argued these were reasonable demands. But Pericles reframed the question entirely: It was about who governed Athens. Was it Athens or Sparta? The third messenger carried no list at all. Just one sentence. Leave the Greeks free. It was not an offer. It was a position that had hardened past the point of negotiation. Athens called an assembly. Many speakers rose. Then Pericles spoke. His answer was no. On every count, no. Not because the specific demands were worth a war, but because yielding to any of them would tell every ally in the Delian League that Athenian resolve had a pressure point — and once that was known, the empire would begin to quietly dissolve. He then outlined a strategy that must have been genuinely hard for many Athenians to accept. No great battles. No decisive engagements. Just endurance and the quiet hope that Athens could outlast Sparta's will to fight. Was he right? And could Athens hold together long enough to find out?

    31 min

About

The purpose of this channel is to reanimate historic speeches by reading and performing them aloud, giving a voice once again to the words that changed our world. To truly appreciate these speeches, we must understand the world they were spoken in. That is why we dive deep into the high stakes and complex backgrounds of each moment, ensuring that when the speech begins, you aren’t just listening to a text, you are experiencing it as if you were there. Together, we investigate the history behind them, the arguments within them, and the consequences that followed. For contact and feedback: speechesthatchangedhistory@gmail.com