20 episodes

History podcast on the rise of the modern world, 1206-1914. It's not a march of progress or a list of all that’s gone wrong. It’s the story of the people, large and small, that drove, participated in, and experienced the creation of this New World in which we live today.



This is an incredibly long and dramatic period of history and I’m not going to attempt to cover everything. My focus will be on telling stories less often explored or looking at them from a different perspective. The show will be broken into distinct seasons, each of which will focus on a particular story or topic.



The first season is covering Taiping Civil War, a war against the ruling Qing dynasty, led by a man who believed he was the younger brother of Jesus Christ. It’s probably history’s bloodiest civil war, with more dead than World War I, and nearly brought an end to the ruling Qing dynasty.

Tiny Insect Mark Chapman

    • History

History podcast on the rise of the modern world, 1206-1914. It's not a march of progress or a list of all that’s gone wrong. It’s the story of the people, large and small, that drove, participated in, and experienced the creation of this New World in which we live today.



This is an incredibly long and dramatic period of history and I’m not going to attempt to cover everything. My focus will be on telling stories less often explored or looking at them from a different perspective. The show will be broken into distinct seasons, each of which will focus on a particular story or topic.



The first season is covering Taiping Civil War, a war against the ruling Qing dynasty, led by a man who believed he was the younger brother of Jesus Christ. It’s probably history’s bloodiest civil war, with more dead than World War I, and nearly brought an end to the ruling Qing dynasty.

    Episode 1.19 – Radicalization

    Episode 1.19 – Radicalization

    (Painting of the missionary Robert Morrison, who was successful and popular enough to have his portrait painted. The same can not be said for Issachar Roberts).







    On the surface, Hong Xiuquan’s life in 1845 and 1846 was unremarkable. He was in his early thirties, married with young children. His job as a school teacher had been secured through a mix of qualifications & family connections.







    And then 1847 happened. By the beginning of 1848 Hong was a wanted man, actively leading a growing & radical religious community and writing about his intentions to assume imperial power over the largest empire on earth. So what the hell happened in 1847? That's the question this episode attempts to answer.

    • 36 min
    Episode 1.18 - The Taiping Testament

    Episode 1.18 - The Taiping Testament

    Taiping church service, around 1860.







    While Feng Yunshan was building up the God Worshipers in Guangxi Province in 1845 and 1846, Hong Xiuquan living was back in his hometown of Guanlubu, Guangdong province working as a school teacher. He also spent his time elaborating on the nature of God, his relationship to humankind, and how the Chinese people had been deceived by demons and spirits. These writings were later collected into the "Taiping Testament". In this episode we're going to explore the Testament and see how it laid the foundation for what will become the Taiping political project, which resulted in a full insurrection against the ruling Qing dynasty a few years later.

    • 31 min
    1.17 - The Society of God Worshipers

    1.17 - The Society of God Worshipers

    This is a statue of a deity in Fujian province, with offerings placed in front of it.







    Feng Yunshan preached and spread Shangdi's good word. For nearly 3 years, he worked tirelessly to grow the movement that worshiped God and recognized Hong Xiuquan as Jesus' younger brother. In this episode we're going to learn what worshipping Shangdi meant, how it related to other practices in the area, and see increasingly violent iconoclasm that will help lead to full scale insurrection and the establishment of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom.

    • 37 min
    Episode 1.16 - Thistle Mountain

    Episode 1.16 - Thistle Mountain

    Not exactly Thistle mountain, but an example of what the area north/north-west of Guiping, Guangxi looks like.







    In this episode, we look at the region where the Society of God Worshipers took root and grew, and what life was like there in the second half of the 1840’s. Pirates, bandits, secret societies, and everyday people trying to scratch out a living in a Qing "backwater". This "internal frontier" was the place where Hong's Christian beliefs took root & grew into the nucleus of what would become the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom.

    • 50 min
    1.15 - Smashing Idols

    1.15 - Smashing Idols

    Posthumous portrait of Liang Fa, author of "Good Words for Exhorting the Age"







    Hong Xiuquan finally lost his faith in ever becoming a Confucian scholar in the aftermath of the Opium War. After reading a set of Christian pamphlets composed by the Chinese writer Liang Fa, he discovered the meaning of his heavenly vision and his life's new mission: To save his brothers and sisters from the demonic influences of the old gods & spirits.

    • 40 min
    Hong's Opium War

    Hong's Opium War

    The story of the Opium War is usually told as part of a wider narrative of European colonial expansion, and the beginning of a “century of humiliation” from the perspective of the modern Chinese state. Last episode, we covered the main narrative of the war, a kind of “Great Man” history last episode. But it’s easy to forget that the fighting and loss of the Opium War had far-reaching consequences for tens of millions of everyday people living in the Qing Empire.







    Hong Xiuquan was one of those ordinary people affected by the war, but drew very different conclusions from the hostilities than many of his neighbors. Hong saw in the British a people who followed a powerful God, one that two millennia of imperial ideology had replaced with false idols and demon worship. Worship of Confucius & Buddhist Bodhisattva, the practice of dark Daoist magic - these had led the people of China away from the all-powerful Father of Heaven who the authors of the Classics had called Shangdi. In Shangdi and his Heavenly Kingdom Hong found truth and order in the chaos and turmoil that surrounded him in the aftermath of the Opium War.

    • 41 min

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