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| |Format=Series | | |Format=Series |
| |Seasons=21 | | |Seasons=21 |
| |Release=29 September – 5 October 2020<br>24 March 2022<br>29 June – 29 August 2022<br>12 March – 30 April 2023<br>21 August – 18 December 2023<br>15 May 2024 – 27 July 2025<br>31 August – 26 October 2025<br>16 November – present | | |Release=29 September – 5 October 2020<br>24 March 2022<br>29 June – 29 August 2022<br>12 March – 30 April 2023<br>21 August – 18 December 2023<br>15 May 2024 – 27 July 2025<br>31 August – 26 October 2025<br>16 November 2025 – present |
| |Schedule=Weekly | | |Schedule=Weekly (until March 2025)<br>Biweekly |
| |Language=English (primarily)<br>French<br>Spanish<br>German<br>Chinese | | |Language=English (primarily)<br>French<br>Spanish<br>German<br>Chinese |
| |Website=https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history | | |Website=https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history |
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| At the same time, Ubisoft announced a partnership with Dan Snow's TV network ''History Hit'', in which the podcast would restructure itself from seasons of pre-set lengths to "a weekly, 'always-on' show that [would] extend to long-form monthly videos". ''History Hit''{{'}}s Head of Podcasts Steve Lanham welcomed the partnership, saying that it would give the team "the opportunity to add our unique expertise and network strength to a show that has already proven popular with both ''History Hit'' and ''Assassin's Creed'' fans." Fabre also praised the decision, believing that podcasting would "expand [''Assassin's Creed''{{'}}s] audience [to] new history enthusiasts". Contrary to initial reporting suggesting that new episodes would also be cross-posted on ''History Hit''{{'}}s YouTube channel,<ref name="Deadline">{{Cite web|url=https://deadline.com/2024/05/assassins-creed-studio-ubisoft-relaunching-podcast-echoes-history-hit-1235915243|title='Assassin's Creed' Studio Ubisoft Relaunching Podcast 'Echoes of History' On History Hit|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20240515164203/https://deadline.com/2024/05/assassins-creed-studio-ubisoft-relaunching-podcast-echoes-history-hit-1235915243|archivedate=15 May 2024|author=Whittock, Jesse|date=15 May 2024|publisher=''{{Wiki|Deadline Hollywood}}''|accessdate=20 November 2024}}</ref> they remained strictly on audio platforms until June 2025, when the team made a separate channel that hosted only excerpts from assorted episodes, uploaded in no particular order. | | At the same time, Ubisoft announced a partnership with Dan Snow's TV network ''History Hit'', in which the podcast would restructure itself from seasons of pre-set lengths to "a weekly, 'always-on' show that [would] extend to long-form monthly videos". ''History Hit''{{'}}s Head of Podcasts Steve Lanham welcomed the partnership, saying that it would give the team "the opportunity to add our unique expertise and network strength to a show that has already proven popular with both ''History Hit'' and ''Assassin's Creed'' fans." Fabre also praised the decision, believing that podcasting would "expand [''Assassin's Creed''{{'}}s] audience [to] new history enthusiasts". Contrary to initial reporting suggesting that new episodes would also be cross-posted on ''History Hit''{{'}}s YouTube channel,<ref name="Deadline">{{Cite web|url=https://deadline.com/2024/05/assassins-creed-studio-ubisoft-relaunching-podcast-echoes-history-hit-1235915243|title='Assassin's Creed' Studio Ubisoft Relaunching Podcast 'Echoes of History' On History Hit|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20240515164203/https://deadline.com/2024/05/assassins-creed-studio-ubisoft-relaunching-podcast-echoes-history-hit-1235915243|archivedate=15 May 2024|author=Whittock, Jesse|date=15 May 2024|publisher=''{{Wiki|Deadline Hollywood}}''|accessdate=20 November 2024}}</ref> they remained strictly on audio platforms until June 2025, when the team made a separate channel that hosted only excerpts from assorted episodes, uploaded in no particular order. |
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| ''Shadows'' was the last full season to get a summary, as shortly after it concluded in late June, the ''History Hit'' team began releasing many miniseries on 1 July about figures, events, and monuments throughout ''Assassin's Creed''. Unlike ''Behind the Legends'', these miniseries have inconsistent release chronologies, with episodes regularly jumping from new seasons to previous ones to discuss whatever topics from the games that are the seasons' respective focal points. Despite its impressive coverage of subjects across ''Assassin's Creed'', it still has entirely skipped over anything related to ''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]'' (2013) and the [[Golden Age of Piracy]] in the [[Caribbean]]. The series' collaboration with ''History Hit'' continued for the next year until the ends of July and October 2025, when it twice pivoted to focus on Ubisoft's then-upcoming game ''Anno 117: Pax Romana'' before resuming its past schedule. | | ''Shadows'' was the last full season to get a summary, as shortly after it concluded in late June, the ''History Hit'' team began releasing many miniseries on 1 July about figures, events, and monuments throughout ''Assassin's Creed''. Unlike ''Behind the Legends'', these miniseries have inconsistent release chronologies, with episodes regularly jumping from new seasons to previous ones to discuss whatever topics from the games that are the seasons' respective focal points. Despite its impressive coverage of subjects across ''Assassin's Creed'', with the exception of the 2022 ''Behind the Legends'' episode on Blackbeard, the series entirely skipped over anything related to ''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]'' (2013) until a May 2026 episode on the wider [[Golden Age of Piracy]] in the [[Caribbean]] as part of promotions for the then-recently announced ''[[Assassin's Creed: Black Flag Resynced]]'', which remade the original game for modern engines and graphics. |
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| | The series' collaboration with ''History Hit'' continued for the next year until the ends of July and October 2025, when it twice briefly pivoted to focus on Ubisoft's then-upcoming game ''Anno 117: Pax Romana'' before resuming its weekly previous schedule. The pause in October also coincided with developers' decision to stop sorting new episodes into pre-existing arcs and likewise cease designing title cards for new miniseries, instead entirely redesigning the series' title card again and making it as the preview icon for all subsequent episodes which remain uncategorized. The sole exception to these rules was the miniseries ''Valley of Memory'', named after the [[Valley of Memory|eponymous]], {{Wiki|Saudi Arabia}}n-funded [[Assassin's Creed: Mirage downloadable content|downloadable]] expansion for ''Mirage''. The series continued its regular programming until the end of March 2026, when it began slowing down to biweekly releases. |
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| ==Season summaries== | | ==Season summaries== |
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| [[File:AC Echoes of History Legends EP4 Title Card.jpg|thumb|300px|''Marquis de Sade'' title card]] | | [[File:AC Echoes of History Legends EP4 Title Card.jpg|thumb|300px|''Marquis de Sade'' title card]] |
| ''Writer and philosopher, the [[Donatien Alphonse François, Marquis de Sade|Marquis de Sade]] is a very controversial figure because of his texts, where erotism and pornography had an important place along with cruelty, rape, and murders, to such an extent that his name gave the root of the word "sadistic". Because of his work and his deviant behavior, he spent more than a third of his life in prison. But how did the heir of an ancient French noble family become this despicable yet legendary character?'' | | ''Writer and philosopher, the [[Donatien Alphonse François, Marquis de Sade|Marquis de Sade]] is a very controversial figure because of his texts, where erotism and pornography had an important place along with cruelty, rape, and murders, to such an extent that his name gave the root of the word "sadistic". Because of his work and his deviant behavior, he spent more than a third of his life in prison. But how did the heir of an ancient French noble family become this despicable yet legendary character?'' |
| *'''Danny Wallace:''' ''12th of September 1772. The Place des Prêcheurs square in {{Wiki|Aix-en-Provence}} in the south of France was thick with people, the crowds clamoring to catch a glimpse of the famous aristocratic {{Wiki|libertine}} about to be executed. He had been sentenced to death for acts of sexual depravity in [[Marseille]] just a few weeks earlier. Everybody knew his name: the scandalous, 32-year-old Marquis de Sade had something of a reputation, and the rumor mill had been working overtime. What had started as a session with four young prostitutes, two of whom were intoxicated with {{Wiki|Cantharidin|stimulants}}, had been reimagined as a fiendish orgy, the aphrodisiac reinvented as a fatal poison—and French law did not tolerate sodomites and poisoners. But the convicted man had fled, and the figure bursting into flames in the town square in Aix-en-Provence was nothing more than an effigy. From a very young age, the Marquis de Sade sparked moral outrage, scandalizing society at the time and becoming a legend well before his death. He is still famous to this day, having inspired a new word that made its way into everyday speech in 1841: "sadism", or, the act of deriving pleasure from another's suffering, a perversion said to have been invented by the cruel Sade himself. Up until the early 20th century, the Marquis was considered the embodiment of evil, but his honor has since been restored on several occasions. Research was carried out to measure the originality of {{Wiki|Marquis de Sade bibliography|his writings}} and the realities of his political work.<ref>Ryland, Hobart (October 1951). "[http://www.jstor.org/stable/382965 Recent Developments in Research on the Marquis de Sade]". ''The French Review''. '''25''' (1): 10–15. {{Wiki|JSTOR}}. Retrieved on 15 January 2024.</ref><ref>{{Amazon|domain=com|url=dp/B000OBI4TE|text=Must We Burn de Sade? by Simone de Beauvoir|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160827092123/https://www.amazon.com/Must-Burn-Sade-Simone-Beauvoir/dp/B000OBI4TE}}</ref><ref>{{WP|The Sadeian Woman and the Ideology of Pornography|''The Sadeian Woman and the Ideology of Pornography''}}</ref> An unhinged torturer to some, a misunderstood and persecuted writer to others, Sade is a divisive character, and the path to understanding who he truly was is a difficult and winding one that veers between gilded hero and shadow lord.<br><br>You're listening to ''Echoes of History: Behind the Legends'', the podcast that tells you the true stories of some of history's most legendary heroes. As the ''Assassin's Creed'' franchise turns 15, travel back through 2,500 years of history to meet the men and women whose destiny lead them to greatness. Uncover their stories and bring their legends back to life. Episode four, the Marquis de Sade.<br><br>Donatien Alphonse François, Marquis de Sade was a nobleman born in [[Paris]] in 1740. {{Wiki|Lycée Louis-le-Grand|Educated}} in a fashion befitting his rank, he became a {{Wiki|Cornet (rank)|cavalry captain}} in the [[French Army|army]] and showed great valor during the [[Seven Years' War]]. In 1763, he bowed to [[commons:File:Jean-Baptiste François Joseph de Sade.jpg|his father]]'s wishes, marrying {{Wiki|es:Renée-Pélagie de Sade|Renée-Pélagie de Montreuil}}, the daughter of a magistrate who was close to the [[Louis XV of France|King]]. But Sade soon turned his back on ambition, devoting himself to libertinism instead. He was an unabashed atheist and a proponent of romantic infidelity who embarked on an ''insatiable'' quest for earthly pleasures, openly flouting taboos and conventions—reminds me a little of myself! It didn't take long for him to become the talk of the town. At the age of 23, he was arrested following the accusations of Jeanne Testard, a young worker and occasional prostitute. According to her account, the Marquis threatened her with a sword and forced her to take the Lord's name in vain, among other abuses. The accused was arrested and [[Château de Vincennes|imprisoned]] for "outrageous and blasphemous debauchery". He was released soon after, thanks to his father's intervention, but five years later, he was back to his old ways. In his bachelor pad in {{Wiki|Arcueil}}, a suburb of Paris, Sade forced a beggar, Rose Keller, to undress, before tying her up and whipping her until he drew blood, lacerating her back with a pocketknife, and covering her wounds with molten wax. The victim fled and reported her attacker, and the story made the headlines. The attack had taken place on Easter—sacrilege! The Marquis was {{Wiki|Château de Saumur|imprisoned}} for a short period, before being granted royal pardon thanks to his mother-in-law, Madame de Montreuil.<br><br>What happened in Marseille in 1772 was to have much greater legal consequences. On the run for almost five years, the Marquis was finally arrested on the 13th of February 1777, and incarcerated in {{Wiki|Vincennes}}, near Paris, where he served a 13-year sentence, this time triggered by Madame de Montreuil herself. She had been given a sealed ''{{Wiki|Lettres de cachet|lettre de cachet}}'' from the [[Louis XVI of France|King]] to get rid of the son-in-law who had brought shame on her family and daughter. When he fled Marseille, Sade took his wife's sister with him, making her his mistress. Under French law at the time, this was incest, a criminal offence that further sullied the the infamous Marquis' reputation. The Marseille scandal was the event that cemented the Marquis de Sade's legacy as a prince of darkness. The three cases—Jeanne Testard, Arcueil, and Marseille—converged into one in the newspapers and high society chatter, with sordid new details added for an extra helping of scandal. Just like a fairy tale ogre, Sade was painted as a poisoner and torturer, a bloodthirsty aristocrat who used and abused his privilege to inflict suffering on the poor with zero repercussions. This is a...somewhat ''excessive'' portrait, but conversely, Sade's proponents tended to play down the severity of his actions. {{Wiki|Guillaume Apollinaire|Apollinaire}} and the {{Wiki|Surrealism|surrealists}} after him attempted to turn the Marquis into a shining embodiment of a free mind with no master but its own desires. A gilded myth started to take shape, starring a Marquis-turned-martyr, a misunderstood artist, a target of pitiless repression. By his victims' accounts, however, it's ''difficult'' to imagine Sade as ''anything'' other than a torturer. Jeanne Testard, Rose Keller, and the women of Marseille were clearly raped, and sexual acts and corporal punishment they did not consent to were inflicted on them under threat. Whatever his admirers may say, Sade was a repeat sexual offender.<br><br>One other aspect of this dark legend is closer to fact than fiction: the impunity the Marquis enjoyed. He bought his victims' silence with gold—with Rose Keller, for example, receiving 2,400 ''[[livre]]s'' to stay quiet. His father and mother-in-law's political influence meant Sade was able to elude the justice system again and again, making the idea that he had been persecuted by the courts for petty moral matters or atheism not credible. By way of contrast, his contemporary {{Wiki|François-Jean de la Barre|François-Jean Lefebvre de la Barre}} was beheaded for blasphemy, even though the Marquis' crimes were much more serious. Yet Sade didn't enjoy complete impunity, either. His first long stint in prison was the result of an arbitrary royal decision. A ''lettre de cachet'', signed by Louis XV and confirmed by Louis XVI upon Madame de Montreuil's request, put him behind bars for a full 13 years. The Marquis was denied both trial a lawyer, but he nevertheless survived prison. Despite being locked away, denied walks, living among the rats, he wrote the books that would go on to make him famous.<br><br>In 1785, he wrote his best-known book in his cell at the [[Bastille]], ''{{Wiki|The 120 Days of Sodom}}'', drawing up a ''comprehensive'' catalogue of the most deviant sexual perversions on little sheets of paper he could hide from the prison guards, sticking them together in a scroll 12 meters long by 11 centimeters wide, and tucking it away in a small hole in the wall in his cell—he probably got a kick out of that. In fact, the Bastille is where the Marquis de Sade makes an appearance in the video game ''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]''. Protagonist [[Arno Dorian|Arno Victor Dorian]] is [[Imprisoned|incarcerated]] in Paris' famous prison in early July 1789. On the day he arrives, he meets Sade without realizing. Naked in his cell, the Marquis is clutching the bars of his tiny window, doing his best to get the people of Paris to [[Storming of the Bastille|storm the prison]]. ''"They're slitting our throats! They're murdering the prisoners of the Bastille!"'' The writer did actually say these words, causing him to he transferred to the {{Wiki|Charenton (asylum)|Charenton asylum}}, leaving his manuscript of ''The 120 Days of Sodom'' behind in the process. For the rest of his days, Sade remained convinced that the manuscript was destroyed along with the Bastille on the 14th of July 1789. In reality, the scroll was discovered by a worker who was helping demolish the fortress and who ''immediately'' decided to sell it.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/who-was-marquis-de-sade-180953980|title=Who Was the Marquis de Sade?| archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150122225642/https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/who-was-marquis-de-sade-180953980/|archivedate=22 January 2015|author=Perrottet, Tony|date=21 February 2015|publisher=''{{Wiki|Smithsonian Magazine}}''|accessdate=15 January 2024}}</ref> The manuscript changed hands several times until it was published in the 20th century.<br><br>In surrealist painter {{Wiki|Man Ray}}'s 1938 drawing,<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.johncoulthart.com/feuilleton/2020/09/25/man-ray-and-the-marquis/|title=Man Ray and the Marquis|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20201004223925/http://www.johncoulthart.com/feuilleton/2020/09/25/man-ray-and-the-marquis/|archivedate=4 October 2020|author=Coulthart, John|date=25 September 2020|publisher=''feuilleton – A journal by artist and designer John Coulthart''|accessdate=15 January 2024}}</ref> Sade's stone face appears against a backdrop of the Bastille in flames. The [[French Revolution]] is pivotal in the legend of the Marquis, and his biographers remain divided as to just how genuine his commitment to the cause was. In any event, the Revolution was what set him free, as on the 2nd of April 1790, all prisoners incarcerated on the King's orders were released. As an ex-nobleman, Sade was forced to prove his patriotic credentials, and further fueled the myths surrounding him in doing so. He claimed that he threw the king a searing letter just as the monarch was returning to Paris in his carriage following the [[flight to Varennes]]. The letter, Sade said, lambasted the king as a despot and traitor. This would have been impossible: anyone who came close to Louis XVI's carriage risked heading to the gallows. It's true Sade did write a letter criticizing the king, entitled "[[wikisource:fr:Adresse d’un citoyen de Paris au roi des Français|A Citizen Addressing the King of France]]", but it was merely plastered on a handful of walls across Paris and may have been read out in pubic—Louis XVI, most probably, never came to hear of it. Still, nice to be talked about.<br><br>What must be said, however, is that during France's [[Reign of Terror]], Sade displayed undeniable courage in publicly opposing the death penalty, a belief punishable...by the death penalty. Suspected of being {{Wiki|Modérantisme|a false patriot}}, he was arrested on the 8th of September 1793. Health issues meant he was spared the [[guillotine]]...''just''. The Reign of Terror and its bloody violence sickened him to the core, but according to darker version of the myth surrounding the man, [[Maximilien de Robespierre|Robespierre]] and [[Jean-Paul Marat|Marat]] took inspiration from the Marquis' writing in dishing out death penalties. The idea that Sade had inspired the Reign of Terror was a popular one. In his famous 1975 adaptation ''{{Wiki|Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom}}'', [[Italy|Italian]] director {{Wiki|Pier Paolo Pasolini}} takes the notion even further, positing that Sade had inspired totalitarianism.<br><br>Under [[Napoleon Bonaparte|Bonaparte]]'s {{Wiki|French Consulate}} regime and [[French Empire|Napoleon's Empire]], Sade was {{Wiki|Sainte-Pélagie Prison|imprisoned}} {{Wiki|Bicêtre Hospital|one last time}}. Having made a small fortune with his erotic and pornographic writings, the Marquis was arrested on the 6th of March 1801 and denied a trial, sentenced to spend the last twelve years of his life locked away. His crime? Being the ''suspected'' author of ''Zoloé'', an anonymous, erotic pamphlet published in 1800, a violent attack on [[Joséphine de Beauharnais]], wife of First Consul Bonaparte. In truth, he was sentenced for his ''entire'' scandalous body of work, and all of Sade's writings were seized. Deemed to be a maniac, in 1804, he was transferred to the Charenton lunatic asylum, where he died ten years later. The Marquis spent over ''a third'' of his life behind bars.<br><br>After his death, Sade went to Hell. Literally. In 19th century French libraries, that was the name given to the forbidden book section were the immoral writings were kept. While his work continued doing the rounds on the quiet, it wasn't until 1947 that his first book was officially published by {{Wiki|Jean-Jacques Pauvert}}, sparking ''years'' of legal proceedings as a result. But in 1958, the {{Wiki|fr:Ministère public (France)|French courts}} acknowledged the Marquis de Sade as a writer worthy of the name.<ref>{{WP|fr:Jean-Jacques Pauvert|Jean-Jacques Pauvert}}</ref> And, since then, he's been added to the prestigious {{Wiki|Bibliothèque de la Pléiade|Pléiade}} collection, with some of his work even included in secondary school textbooks—I bet ''that'' makes a few schoolboys giggle. In 2021, the French state bought the manuscript<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/jorf/id/JORFTEXT000043149579|title=Avis d'appel au mécénat d'entreprise pour l'acquisition par l'Etat d'un trésor national dans le cadre de l'article 238 bis-0 A du code général des impôts|archiveurl=https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/download/file/dwCgVwUMeUdxkkmObXeh3QXLnvcMvxCi57urzifqcpw=/JOE_TEXTE|archivedate=18 February 2021|author={{Wiki|Légifrance}}|date=18 February 2021| publisher=''Légifrance''|accessdate=15 January 2024|language=French}}</ref> for ''The 120 Days of Sodom'' from {{Wiki|Gérard Lhéritie|a private collector}} for over {{Wiki|Euro|€}}4 million.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2021/jul/13/marquis-de-sade-manuscript-acquired-for-french-nation-120-days-of-sodom|title=€4.55m Marquis de Sade manuscript acquired for French nation|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20210713152732/https://www.theguardian.com/books/2021/jul/13/marquis-de-sade-manuscript-acquired-for-french-nation-120-days-of-sodom|archivedate=13 July 2021|author=Flood, Alison|date=13 July 2021|publisher=''{{Wiki|The Guardian}}''|accessdate=15 January 2024}}</ref> To France's {{Wiki|Ministry of Culture (France)|Ministry of Culture}}, the famous scroll, and by extension the Marquis de Sade himself, are {{Wiki|national treasure}}s.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.france24.com/en/20171218-france-dubs-120-days-sodom-national-treasure-stop-sale|title=France dubs '120 Days of Sodom' a national treasure to stop sale|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20171222081726/https://www.france24.com/en/20171218-france-dubs-120-days-sodom-national-treasure-stop-sale|archivedate=22 December 2017|author={{Wiki|Agence France-Presse}}|date=18 December 2017|publisher=''{{Wiki|France 24}}''|accessdate=15 January 2024}}</ref> Controversial? Maybe, but treasures all the same. Thanks for listening to ''Echoes of History: Behind the Legends'', a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media.'' | | *'''Danny Wallace:''' ''12th of September 1772. The Place des Prêcheurs square in {{Wiki|Aix-en-Provence}} in the south of France was thick with people, the crowds clamoring to catch a glimpse of the famous aristocratic {{Wiki|libertine}} about to be executed. He had been sentenced to death for acts of sexual depravity in [[Marseille]] just a few weeks earlier. Everybody knew his name: the scandalous, 32-year-old Marquis de Sade had something of a reputation, and the rumor mill had been working overtime. What had started as a session with four young prostitutes, two of whom were intoxicated with {{Wiki|Cantharidin|stimulants}}, had been reimagined as a fiendish orgy, the aphrodisiac reinvented as a fatal poison—and French law did not tolerate sodomites and poisoners. But the convicted man had fled, and the figure bursting into flames in the town square in Aix-en-Provence was nothing more than an effigy. From a very young age, the Marquis de Sade sparked moral outrage, scandalizing society at the time and becoming a legend well before his death. He is still famous to this day, having inspired a new word that made its way into everyday speech in 1841: "sadism", or, the act of deriving pleasure from another's suffering, a perversion said to have been invented by the cruel Sade himself. Up until the early 20th century, the Marquis was considered the embodiment of evil, but his honor has since been restored on several occasions. Research was carried out to measure the originality of {{Wiki|Marquis de Sade bibliography|his writings}} and the realities of his political work.<ref>Ryland, Hobart (October 1951). "[http://www.jstor.org/stable/382965 Recent Developments in Research on the Marquis de Sade]". ''The French Review''. '''25''' (1): 10–15. {{Wiki|JSTOR}}. Retrieved on 15 January 2024.</ref><ref>{{Amazon|domain=com|url=dp/B000OBI4TE|text=Must We Burn de Sade? by Simone de Beauvoir|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160827092123/https://www.amazon.com/Must-Burn-Sade-Simone-Beauvoir/dp/B000OBI4TE}}</ref><ref>{{WP|The Sadeian Woman and the Ideology of Pornography|''The Sadeian Woman and the Ideology of Pornography''}}</ref> An unhinged torturer to some, a misunderstood and persecuted writer to others, Sade is a divisive character, and the path to understanding who he truly was is a difficult and winding one that veers between gilded hero and shadow lord.<br><br>You're listening to ''Echoes of History: Behind the Legends'', the podcast that tells you the true stories of some of history's most legendary heroes. As the ''Assassin's Creed'' franchise turns 15, travel back through 2,500 years of history to meet the men and women whose destiny lead them to greatness. Uncover their stories and bring their legends back to life. Episode four, the Marquis de Sade.<br><br>Donatien Alphonse François, Marquis de Sade was a nobleman born in [[Paris]] in 1740. {{Wiki|Lycée Louis-le-Grand|Educated}} in a fashion befitting his rank, he became a {{Wiki|Cornet (rank)|cavalry captain}} in the [[French Army|army]] and showed great valor during the [[Seven Years' War]]. In 1763, he bowed to [[commons:File:Jean-Baptiste François Joseph de Sade.jpg|his father]]'s wishes, marrying {{Wiki|es:Renée-Pélagie de Sade|Renée-Pélagie de Montreuil}}, the daughter of a magistrate who was close to the [[Louis XV of France|King]]. But Sade soon turned his back on ambition, devoting himself to libertinism instead. He was an unabashed atheist and a proponent of romantic infidelity who embarked on an ''insatiable'' quest for earthly pleasures, openly flouting taboos and conventions—reminds me a little of myself! It didn't take long for him to become the talk of the town. At the age of 23, he was arrested following the accusations of Jeanne Testard, a young worker and occasional prostitute. According to her account, the Marquis threatened her with a sword and forced her to take the Lord's name in vain, among other abuses. The accused was arrested and [[Château de Vincennes|imprisoned]] for "outrageous and blasphemous debauchery". He was released soon after, thanks to his father's intervention, but five years later, he was back to his old ways. In his bachelor pad in {{Wiki|Arcueil}}, a suburb of Paris, Sade forced a beggar, Rose Keller, to undress, before tying her up and whipping her until he drew blood, lacerating her back with a pocketknife, and covering her wounds with molten wax. The victim fled and reported her attacker, and the story made the headlines. The attack had taken place on Easter—sacrilege! The Marquis was {{Wiki|Château de Saumur|imprisoned}} for a short period, before being granted royal pardon thanks to his mother-in-law, Madame de Montreuil.<br><br>What happened in Marseille in 1772 was to have much greater legal consequences. On the run for almost five years, the Marquis was finally arrested on the 13th of February 1777, and incarcerated in {{Wiki|Vincennes}}, near Paris, where he served a 13-year sentence, this time triggered by Madame de Montreuil herself. She had been given a sealed ''{{Wiki|Lettres de cachet|lettre de cachet}}'' from the [[Louis XVI of France|King]] to get rid of the son-in-law who had brought shame on her family and daughter. When he fled Marseille, Sade took his wife's sister with him, making her his mistress. Under French law at the time, this was incest, a criminal offence that further sullied the the infamous Marquis' reputation. The Marseille scandal was the event that cemented the Marquis de Sade's legacy as a prince of darkness. The three cases—Jeanne Testard, Arcueil, and Marseille—converged into one in the newspapers and high society chatter, with sordid new details added for an extra helping of scandal. Just like a fairy tale ogre, Sade was painted as a poisoner and torturer, a bloodthirsty aristocrat who used and abused his privilege to inflict suffering on the poor with zero repercussions. This is a...somewhat ''excessive'' portrait, but conversely, Sade's proponents tended to play down the severity of his actions. {{Wiki|Guillaume Apollinaire|Apollinaire}} and the {{Wiki|Surrealism|surrealists}} after him attempted to turn the Marquis into a shining embodiment of a free mind with no master but its own desires. A gilded myth started to take shape, starring a Marquis-turned-martyr, a misunderstood artist, a target of pitiless repression. By his victims' accounts, however, it's ''difficult'' to imagine Sade as ''anything'' other than a torturer. Jeanne Testard, Rose Keller, and the women of Marseille were clearly raped, and sexual acts and corporal punishment they did not consent to were inflicted on them under threat. Whatever his admirers may say, Sade was a repeat sexual offender.<br><br>One other aspect of this dark legend is closer to fact than fiction: the impunity the Marquis enjoyed. He bought his victims' silence with gold—with Rose Keller, for example, receiving 2,400 ''[[livre]]s'' to stay quiet. His father and mother-in-law's political influence meant Sade was able to elude the justice system again and again, making the idea that he had been persecuted by the courts for petty moral matters or atheism not credible. By way of contrast, his contemporary {{Wiki|François-Jean de la Barre|François-Jean Lefebvre de la Barre}} was beheaded for blasphemy, even though the Marquis' crimes were much more serious. Yet Sade didn't enjoy complete impunity, either. His first long stint in prison was the result of an arbitrary royal decision. A ''lettre de cachet'', signed by Louis XV and confirmed by Louis XVI upon Madame de Montreuil's request, put him behind bars for a full 13 years. The Marquis was denied both trial a lawyer, but he nevertheless survived prison. Despite being locked away, denied walks, living among the rats, he wrote the books that would go on to make him famous.<br><br>In 1785, he wrote his best-known book in his cell at the [[Bastille]], ''{{Wiki|The 120 Days of Sodom}}'', drawing up a ''comprehensive'' catalogue of the most deviant sexual perversions on little sheets of paper he could hide from the prison guards, sticking them together in a scroll 12 meters long by 11 centimeters wide, and tucking it away in a small hole in the wall in his cell—he probably got a kick out of that. In fact, the Bastille is where the Marquis de Sade makes an appearance in the video game ''[[Assassin's Creed: Unity]]''. Protagonist [[Arno Dorian|Arno Victor Dorian]] is [[Imprisoned|incarcerated]] in Paris' famous prison in early July 1789. On the day he arrives, he meets Sade without realizing. Naked in his cell, the Marquis is clutching the bars of his tiny window, doing his best to get the people of Paris to [[Storming of the Bastille|storm the prison]]. ''"They're slitting our throats! They're murdering the prisoners of the Bastille!"'' The writer did actually say these words, causing him to he transferred to the {{Wiki|Charenton (asylum)|Charenton asylum}}, leaving his manuscript of ''The 120 Days of Sodom'' behind in the process. For the rest of his days, Sade remained convinced that the manuscript was destroyed along with the Bastille on the 14th of July 1789. In reality, the scroll was discovered by a worker who was helping demolish the fortress and who ''immediately'' decided to sell it.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/who-was-marquis-de-sade-180953980|title=Who Was the Marquis de Sade?| archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150122225642/https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/who-was-marquis-de-sade-180953980/|archivedate=22 January 2015|author=Perrottet, Tony|date=21 February 2015|publisher=''{{Wiki|Smithsonian Magazine}}''|accessdate=15 January 2024}}</ref> The manuscript changed hands several times until it was published in the 20th century.<br><br>In surrealist painter {{Wiki|Man Ray}}'s 1938 drawing,<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.johncoulthart.com/feuilleton/2020/09/25/man-ray-and-the-marquis/|title=Man Ray and the Marquis|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20201004223925/http://www.johncoulthart.com/feuilleton/2020/09/25/man-ray-and-the-marquis/|archivedate=4 October 2020|author=Coulthart, John|date=25 September 2020|publisher=''feuilleton – A journal by artist and designer John Coulthart''|accessdate=15 January 2024}}</ref> Sade's stone face appears against a backdrop of the Bastille in flames. The [[French Revolution]] is pivotal in the legend of the Marquis, and his biographers remain divided as to just how genuine his commitment to the cause was. In any event, the Revolution was what set him free, as on the 2nd of April 1790, all prisoners incarcerated on the King's orders were released. As an ex-nobleman, Sade was forced to prove his patriotic credentials, and further fueled the myths surrounding him in doing so. He claimed that he threw the king a searing letter just as the monarch was returning to Paris in his carriage following the [[flight to Varennes]]. The letter, Sade said, lambasted the king as a despot and traitor. This would have been impossible: anyone who came close to Louis XVI's carriage risked heading to the gallows. It's true Sade did write a letter criticizing the king, entitled "[[wikisource:fr:Adresse d’un citoyen de Paris au roi des Français|A Citizen Addressing the King of France]]", but it was merely plastered on a handful of walls across Paris and may have been read out in pubic—Louis XVI, most probably, never came to hear of it. Still, nice to be talked about.<br><br>What must be said, however, is that during France's [[Reign of Terror]], Sade displayed undeniable courage in publicly opposing the death penalty, a belief punishable...by the death penalty. Suspected of being {{Wiki|Modérantisme|a false patriot}}, he was arrested on the 8th of September 1793. Health issues meant he was spared the [[guillotine]]...''just''. The Reign of Terror and its bloody violence sickened him to the core, but according to darker version of the myth surrounding the man, [[Maximilien de Robespierre|Robespierre]] and [[Jean-Paul Marat|Marat]] took inspiration from the Marquis' writing in dishing out death penalties. The idea that Sade had inspired the Reign of Terror was a popular one. In his famous 1975 adaptation ''{{Wiki|Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom}}'', [[Italy|Italian]] director {{Wiki|Pier Paolo Pasolini}} takes the notion even further, positing that Sade had inspired totalitarianism.<br><br>Under [[Napoleon Bonaparte|Bonaparte]]'s {{Wiki|French Consulate}} regime and [[French Empire|Napoleon's Empire]], Sade was {{Wiki|Sainte-Pélagie Prison|imprisoned}} {{Wiki|Bicêtre Hospital|one last time}}. Having made a small fortune with his erotic and pornographic writings, the Marquis was arrested on the 6th of March 1801 and denied a trial, sentenced to spend the last twelve years of his life locked away. His crime? Being the ''suspected'' author of ''Zoloé'', an anonymous, erotic pamphlet published in 1800, a violent attack on [[Joséphine de Beauharnais]], wife of First Consul Bonaparte. In truth, he was sentenced for his ''entire'' scandalous body of work, and all of Sade's writings were seized. Deemed to be a maniac, in 1804, he was transferred to the Charenton lunatic asylum, where he died ten years later. The Marquis spent over ''a third'' of his life behind bars.<br><br>After his death, Sade went to Hell. Literally. In 19th century French libraries, that was the name given to the forbidden book section were the immoral writings were kept. While his work continued doing the rounds on the quiet, it wasn't until 1947 that his first book was officially published by {{Wiki|Jean-Jacques Pauvert}}, sparking ''years'' of legal proceedings as a result. But in 1958, the {{Wiki|Ministère public (France)|French courts}} acknowledged the Marquis de Sade as a writer worthy of the name.<ref>{{WP|fr:Jean-Jacques Pauvert|Jean-Jacques Pauvert}}</ref> And, since then, he's been added to the prestigious {{Wiki|Bibliothèque de la Pléiade|Pléiade}} collection, with some of his work even included in secondary school textbooks—I bet ''that'' makes a few schoolboys giggle. In 2021, the French state bought the manuscript<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/jorf/id/JORFTEXT000043149579|title=Avis d'appel au mécénat d'entreprise pour l'acquisition par l'Etat d'un trésor national dans le cadre de l'article 238 bis-0 A du code général des impôts|archiveurl=https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/download/file/dwCgVwUMeUdxkkmObXeh3QXLnvcMvxCi57urzifqcpw=/JOE_TEXTE|archivedate=18 February 2021|author={{Wiki|Légifrance}}|date=18 February 2021| publisher=''Légifrance''|accessdate=15 January 2024|language=French}}</ref> for ''The 120 Days of Sodom'' from {{Wiki|Gérard Lhéritier|a private collector}} for over {{Wiki|Euro|€}}4 million.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2021/jul/13/marquis-de-sade-manuscript-acquired-for-french-nation-120-days-of-sodom|title=€4.55m Marquis de Sade manuscript acquired for French nation|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20210713152732/https://www.theguardian.com/books/2021/jul/13/marquis-de-sade-manuscript-acquired-for-french-nation-120-days-of-sodom|archivedate=13 July 2021|author=Flood, Alison|date=13 July 2021|publisher=''{{Wiki|The Guardian}}''|accessdate=15 January 2024}}</ref> To France's {{Wiki|Ministry of Culture (France)|Ministry of Culture}}, the famous scroll, and by extension the Marquis de Sade himself, are {{Wiki|national treasure}}s.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.france24.com/en/20171218-france-dubs-120-days-sodom-national-treasure-stop-sale|title=France dubs '120 Days of Sodom' a national treasure to stop sale|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20171222081726/https://www.france24.com/en/20171218-france-dubs-120-days-sodom-national-treasure-stop-sale|archivedate=22 December 2017|author={{Wiki|Agence France-Presse}}|date=18 December 2017|publisher=''{{Wiki|France 24}}''|accessdate=15 January 2024}}</ref> Controversial? Maybe, but treasures all the same. Thanks for listening to ''Echoes of History: Behind the Legends'', a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media.'' |
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| ''Think of pirates and there's a great chance that the first image that comes to your mind is a [[Edward Thatch|Blackbeard]] look-a-like: a cruel [[captain]] with a long beard and a hat, thirsty for blood, yelling at his men from the upper deck of his ship as he prepares to board an unfortunate [[merchant]]'s boat. Well, this has been the {{Wiki|Blackbeard in popular culture|image of Blackbeard}}, alias Edward Teach, over the centuries. But the real Teach was not especially cruel and tyrannical, at least no more than any other pirate back in the days.'' | | ''Think of pirates and there's a great chance that the first image that comes to your mind is a [[Edward Thatch|Blackbeard]] look-a-like: a cruel [[captain]] with a long beard and a hat, thirsty for blood, yelling at his men from the upper deck of his ship as he prepares to board an unfortunate [[merchant]]'s boat. Well, this has been the {{Wiki|Blackbeard in popular culture|image of Blackbeard}}, alias Edward Teach, over the centuries. But the real Teach was not especially cruel and tyrannical, at least no more than any other pirate back in the days.'' |
| *'''Danny Wallace:''' ''It's Friday the 22nd of November 1996,<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://lat3440.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=90&Itemid=32|title= | | *'''Danny Wallace:''' ''It's Friday the 22nd of November 1996,<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://lat3440.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=90&Itemid=32|title= |
| Blackbeard's Flagship Discovered!|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120202135509/http://lat3440.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=90&Itemid=32|archivedate=2 February 2012|author=Interstal, Inc.|date=2012|publisher=''Interstal, Inc.''|accessdate=15 January 2024}}</ref> and archaeologist Richard Lawrence may just have made the discovery of a lifetime. It's something of a childhood dream come true. Off the coast of [[North Carolina]], thirty feet below the surface of the water, he can make out the vestiges of a [[shipwreck]]. And so, he begins to count. One cannon. Two cannons. A third. Too many cannons to count! The firepower is ''immense'', and the archaeologist knows there's a high chance that what he's looking at is ''[[Queen Anne's Revenge]]'', the ship belonging to probably the most famous pirate of all time: Blackbeard. Resting at the bottom of {{Wiki|Beaufort, North Carolina|Beaufort Inlet}}, the flagship's location is one ''hell'' of a clue: this is where the pirate ship was said to have run aground back in May 1718. But as he drifts back up to the surface, Lawrence is suddenly wracked with doubt. This part of the world is awash with shipwrecks. What if he's wrong? Out of nowhere, a memory stirs: Blackbeard died on November 22nd, 1718. That makes 278 years, to the day. Pure coincidence? Or destiny in motion? A few years later,<ref>Lawrence, Richard W., and Wilde-Ramsing, Mark. (February 2001). "[https://libres.uncg.edu/ir/asu/f/SoutheasternGeology_Vol40_No1_2001.pdf In Search of Blackbeard: Historical and Archaeological Research at Shipwreck Site 0003BUI]". ''Southeastern Geology'', '''40''' (1). pg. 1-9. Retrieved on 15 January 2024.</ref> his inkling was confirmed as fact, and the shipwreck unlocked some precious secrets about this [[bandit]] of the seas. Yet, despite it all, Blackbeard remains a mystery even today. We know little about his life except that his reign of terror stretched from the Caribbean to North America's eastern coast back in the [[Golden Age of Piracy]]. Famous yet unknown, over time, Blackbeard has come to be celebrated as the ''ultimate'' king of the pirates.<br><br>You're listening to ''Echoes of History: Behind the Legends'', the podcast that tells you the true stories of some of history's most legendary heroes. As the ''Assassin's Creed'' franchise turns 15, travel back through 2,500 years of history to meet the men and women whose destiny lead them to greatness. Uncover their stories and bring their legends back to life. Episode six, Blackbeard.<br><br>Tracking a pirate's murky footprints is never easy; these are tough guys to pin down. Firstly, because they rarely knew how to write, and secondly, because their lives as outlaws went hand-in-hand with keeping a low profile. When it comes to Blackbeard, the mystery starts with his name. Edward Drummond? Edward Thatch? Or Edward Teach, even. The archives aren't much help. Some historians believe he was born in [[Bristol]], England,<ref name="Johnson70">{{Cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/generalhistoryof00john/page/n11/mode/2up|title=''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''.|author=Johnson, Charles|date=14 May 1724|publisher={{Wiki|Charles Rivington}}, J. Lacy, and J. Stone|accessdate=15 January 2024|pages=p. 70}}</ref> while some claim he was the son of a [[South Carolina]] colonial. And others still are convinced he came from a wealthy [[Jamaica]]n family. Edward Teach—as we'll call him from now on—was born around 1618. However, even that basic detail is shrouded in uncertainty: it's based on the age he was ''thought'' to be when he died, which was around 38 years old. Most of the stories about him come from personal accounts from his victims and the people who tried to hunt him down. And, to be honest—well, it's not a pretty picture. Six years after his death, a book was published that would go on to cement Blackbeard's legacy and turn the man into legend. English captain [[Charles Johnson]]'s ''{{Wiki|A General History of the Pyrates|A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates}}'' was published in 1724, and, it was a runaway success right off the press. The book is a compendium of biographies, and the section on Edward Teach is very well researched. It explains how he serves on Britain's [[privateer]] ships during the [[War of the Spanish Succession]]<ref name="Johnson70"/> until the signing of the [[Peace of Utrecht|Treaty of Utrecht]] in 1713, which puts an end to the conflict.<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 64</ref> It was at ''that'' point that he decided it was his time to ''shine''.<br><br>In 1716, at the pirates' safehaven and [[The Bahamas|Bahamian]] island of [[New Providence]], he meets Captain [[Benjamin Hornigold|Hornigold]], a seasoned sea-bandit who becomes his mentor and entrusts him with a {{Wiki|sloop}}—a kind of small sailboat. The pair set off to plunder a series of ships off the North American coast.<ref name="Johnson70"/> The following year, in the {{Wiki|Lesser Antilles}}, Teach captures ''La Concorde'', a 300-ton French [[slave ship]]<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 70–71</ref> boasting 26 [[cannon]]s. He takes control of the ship and increases the cannon count to 40, making it the most powerful pirate ship to sail the seas at that moment. Backed by his crew, Teach is ''more'' than a match for the military vessels sent to cross his path. In February 1717, he even takes on—and forces to ''flee''—the ''{{Wiki|HMS Scarborough (1711)|Scarborough}}'', a British ship kitted out with 30 cannons<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 71</ref> and specifically launched to capture ''La Concorde''. With no real rival on the horizon, the frigate belonging to the pirate now known as "Blackbeard" captures ship after ship.<br><br>In January 1718, ''La Concorde'' is rechristened ''Queen Anne's Revenge''. Teach and his crew are an ''unstoppable'' force to be reckoned with. Rumor has it that the pirate was a cruel, bloodthirsty, and merciless man, and there is some truth to the stories. It's safe to say that Blackbeard was no bleeding heart and had no qualms about cutting off a finger here and there should his hostages deny him their [[diamond]]-studded rings. But the legends—well, they were overegged. There is no evidence to suggest that Teach was any more violent than ''any'' other pirate. Quite the contrary, in fact! With Blackbeard, if you submitted without resistance, you would be ''spared'' without harm. Often, ''no'' blood was shed, as the captured ships—cowed by the power of the ''Queen Anne's Revenge''—would surrender without a fight. Probably a good move!<br><br>Captain Johnson ''sometimes'' let his imagination loose in building up the legend of Blackbeard. He recounts how Edward Teach once shut himself away in his ship's hold and set fire to the [[Gunpowder|powder]] kegs, just to show off to his crew<ref name="Johnson88">Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 88</ref>—we've all done it. This kind of outlandish anecdote forms the bedrock of Johnson's general outlook, demonstrating, quote, "to what a Pitch of Wickedness human Nature may arrive".<ref name="Johnson88"/> Many experts believe that "Captain Johnson" was simply a ''nom de plume'' for none other than {{Wiki|Daniel Defoe}}, the famous author of ''{{Wiki|Robinson Crusoe}}''. The ultimate seafaring adventure novelist, he enjoyed blurring the boundaries between fact and fiction, and was also a marine insurerer and merchant back in Blackbeard's day. As you can imagine, he wasn't the ''biggest'' fan of pirates, although they did serve as an endless source of inspiration and fascination to him as a writer. In his business dealings, though, he had ''nothing'' but ''hatred'' for the buccaneers, and like nothing more than to see them hanged. Hence, Teach being protrayed as a monster, perhaps.<br><br>Irrespective of the man ''behind'' the writings, one thing's for sure: ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''—not the snappiest title, by the way—breathed live into Blackbeard's appearance in our collective consciousness. The pirate is known for one physical trait in particular—a black beard, obviously—which, according to the book, was left to "grow [to] an extravagant length".<ref name="Johnson87">Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 87</ref> Beards have been a symbol of manliness and authority since ancient Greek times, but the book adds one key detail that changes everything. Teach's beard, the author writes, was not only long, but, quote, "as to breadth, it came up to his eyes".<ref name="Johnson88"/> And so the beard here is a defect, not an asset. Behind his hairy mask, Teach is closer to beast than man. This monster-like description should be compared and contrasted with the handful of ''other '' descriptions of Blackbeard we have at our disposal, like that of Captain Henry Bostock. In December 1717, his merchant ship ''Margaret'' is attacked by ''La Concorde'' just off the coast of [[Puerto Rico]], with Teach and his mean sparing the crew but seizing its cargo. When Captain Bostock reports back to the British governor of {{Wiki|Leeeward Islands}}, he describes the pirate as a tall spare man with a very black beard, which he wore very long—which is, clearly, a less-terrifying description—and, as an aside, according to Bostock, no harm came to his crew. Once unarmed and pillaged, the ''Margaret'' and her crew are set free. All a ''far cry'' from the blood-curdling pirate of legend.<br><br>''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''—and again, I think I would probably just have called it ''Pirates''—also explains how Teach wore a hat fitted with two lit fuses designed to terrify his enemies. In ''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]'', upon treating the protagonist [[Edward Kenway]] to a [[Diving for Medicines|masterclass]] in piracy, Blackbeard pulls on a hat adorned with four smoking hemp fuses and spills his secrets. He says, "For an audience, aye. It's all a big show. Give your quarry something to fear, some hellish thing from a fever'd dream, and men will drop to their knees pleading for their Lord before aught else!". Maybe Teach isn't the devil incarnate—but he can certainly make you ''think'' he is.<br><br>His death mirrors his life: a violent finale befitting the most formidable of pirates. He humiliated the [[Royal Navy]], rendering it ''powerless'' to protect the merchant ships that were left prey to his pluundering. He delivered ''dazzling'' blows, like the ''majestic'' [[Siege of Charles-Towne|blockade of Charles-Town Harbor]] in May 1718.<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 72–74</ref> He ''laughed'' in the face of the [[George I of Great Britain|Royal]] Pardon. He sailed the seven seas, ''tirelessly'' prowing the waves, and ultimately, he enraged the colonial authorities. [[Alexander Spotswood]], Governor of [[Virginia (state)|Virginia]] finally places a ''hefty'' [[Bounty hunter|bounty]] on Blackbeard's head and his crew along with him: [[Pound sterling|£]]10 per sailor and ''£100'' for their captain. In those days, it was a pretty penny indeed. Governor Spotswood also entrusts Royal Navy lieutenant [[Robert Maynard|Maynard]] with leading a [[Attack on Ocracoke|crackdown expedition]] on [[Ocracoke]], an island just off the coast of North Carolina where Teach has set up shop.<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 78–81</ref><br><br>The battle takes place on November 22, 1718. Blackbeard is taken by surprise by Maynard at daybreak, with the pirate having ''just'' enough time to set sail on his new ship, the ''Adventure''.<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 81–83</ref> The fighting is fierce, the battle a bloodbath, the cannons deafening. Armed with his cutlass and six-pistol harness, Blackbeard eventually boards Maynard's [[frigate]]. The lieutenant and pirate clash in an ''almighty'' duel,<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 83–84</ref> with Teach quickly wounded by a first bullet. Staggering, but not down, he fights tooth and nail, and ''just'' as he's about to deliver the ''final'' blow to his adversary, he's cut down from behind by one of Maynard's men. Legend has it that he suffers 25 wounds, including 5 gunshot wounds, before falling.<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 84</ref> Lieutenant Maynard has his head cut off and placed on a pole as a trophy. It's fixed to the mast of the ship as it sails towards Virginia bearing news of his feat.<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 85</ref><br><br>No pirate worth his [[salt]] is complete without a buried treasure. Did Blackbeard take the secret of his booty to the grave with him? Legend has it that he trusted nobody but the Devil himself, and Teach was even believed to have made a pact with Satan, according to which whoever lived longest could claim the treasure for himself.<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 88–89</ref> Historians tend to take a more grounded view: Teach was a ''big'' spender, and despite his glory on the seas, his looting was often modest compared to the ''sums'' raked in by other pirates such as [[Bartholomew Roberts]], {{Wiki|Henry Every}}. The island of Ocracoke was dug up and ''scoured'' by ''thousands'' of treasure hunters, but, to no avail.<br><br>Blackbeard may not have been the ''richest'' of pirates, but he was, without the shadow of a doubt, the most famous. In novels, films, manga, video games, his legacy has lived on through the stereotype of the bloodthirsty pirate. The man himself lives on in myth, too. Still today, sailors refer to the unexplained lights that dance on the horizon of the open sea as "Teach's light". And some believe that the pirate continues to wander the seven seas, haunting the oceans for all eternity.<br><br>Thanks for listening to ''Echoes of History: Behind the Legends'', a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media.'' | | Blackbeard's Flagship Discovered!|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120202135509/http://lat3440.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=90&Itemid=32|archivedate=2 February 2012|author=Interstal, Inc.|date=2012|publisher=''Interstal, Inc.''|accessdate=15 January 2024}}</ref> and archaeologist Richard Lawrence may just have made the discovery of a lifetime. It's something of a childhood dream come true. Off the coast of [[North Carolina]], thirty feet below the surface of the water, he can make out the vestiges of a [[shipwreck]]. And so, he begins to count. One cannon. Two cannons. A third. Too many cannons to count! The firepower is ''immense'', and the archaeologist knows there's a high chance that what he's looking at is ''[[Queen Anne's Revenge]]'', the ship belonging to probably the most famous pirate of all time: Blackbeard. Resting at the bottom of {{Wiki|Beaufort, North Carolina|Beaufort Inlet}}, the flagship's location is one ''hell'' of a clue: this is where the pirate ship was said to have run aground back in May 1718. But as he drifts back up to the surface, Lawrence is suddenly wracked with doubt. This part of the world is awash with shipwrecks. What if he's wrong? Out of nowhere, a memory stirs: Blackbeard died on November 22nd, 1718. That makes 278 years, to the day. Pure coincidence? Or destiny in motion? A few years later,<ref>Lawrence, Richard W., and Wilde-Ramsing, Mark. (February 2001). "[https://libres.uncg.edu/ir/asu/f/SoutheasternGeology_Vol40_No1_2001.pdf In Search of Blackbeard: Historical and Archaeological Research at Shipwreck Site 0003BUI]". ''Southeastern Geology'', '''40''' (1). pg. 1-9. Retrieved on 15 January 2024.</ref> his inkling was confirmed as fact, and the shipwreck unlocked some precious secrets about this [[bandit]] of the seas. Yet, despite it all, Blackbeard remains a mystery even today. We know little about his life except that his reign of terror stretched from the Caribbean to North America's eastern coast back in the [[Golden Age of Piracy]]. Famous yet unknown, over time, Blackbeard has come to be celebrated as the ''ultimate'' king of the pirates.<br><br>You're listening to ''Echoes of History: Behind the Legends'', the podcast that tells you the true stories of some of history's most legendary heroes. As the ''Assassin's Creed'' franchise turns 15, travel back through 2,500 years of history to meet the men and women whose destiny lead them to greatness. Uncover their stories and bring their legends back to life. Episode six, Blackbeard.<br><br>Tracking a pirate's murky footprints is never easy; these are tough guys to pin down. Firstly, because they rarely knew how to write, and secondly, because their lives as outlaws went hand-in-hand with keeping a low profile. When it comes to Blackbeard, the mystery starts with his name. Edward Drummond? Edward Thatch? Or Edward Teach, even. The archives aren't much help. Some historians believe he was born in [[Bristol]], England,<ref name="Johnson70">{{Cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/generalhistoryof00john/page/n11/mode/2up|title=''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''.|author=Johnson, Charles|date=14 May 1724|publisher={{Wiki|Charles Rivington}}, J. Lacy, and J. Stone|accessdate=15 January 2024|pages=p. 70}}</ref> while some claim he was the son of a [[South Carolina]] colonial. And others still are convinced he came from a wealthy [[Jamaica]]n family. Edward Teach—as we'll call him from now on—was born around 1618. However, even that basic detail is shrouded in uncertainty: it's based on the age he was ''thought'' to be when he died, which was around 38 years old. Most of the stories about him come from personal accounts from his victims and the people who tried to hunt him down. And, to be honest—well, it's not a pretty picture. Six years after his death, a book was published that would go on to cement Blackbeard's legacy and turn the man into legend. English captain [[Charles Johnson]]'s ''{{Wiki|A General History of the Pyrates|A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates}}'' was published in 1724, and, it was a runaway success right off the press. The book is a compendium of biographies, and the section on Edward Teach is very well researched. It explains how he serves on Britain's [[privateer]] ships during the [[War of the Spanish Succession]]<ref name="Johnson70"/> until the signing of the [[Peace of Utrecht|Treaty of Utrecht]] in 1713, which puts an end to the conflict.<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 64</ref> It was at ''that'' point that he decided it was his time to ''shine''.<br><br>In 1716, at the pirates' safehaven and [[The Bahamas|Bahamian]] island of [[New Providence]], he meets Captain [[Benjamin Hornigold|Hornigold]], a seasoned sea-bandit who becomes his mentor and entrusts him with a {{Wiki|sloop}}—a kind of small sailboat. The pair set off to plunder a series of ships off the North American coast.<ref name="Johnson70"/> The following year, in the {{Wiki|Lesser Antilles}}, Teach captures ''La Concorde'', a 300-ton French [[slave ship]]<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 70–71</ref> boasting 26 [[cannon]]s. He takes control of the ship and increases the cannon count to 40, making it the most powerful pirate ship to sail the seas at that moment. Backed by his crew, Teach is ''more'' than a match for the military vessels sent to cross his path. In February 1717, he even takes on—and forces to ''flee''—the ''{{Wiki|HMS Scarborough (1711)|Scarborough}}'', a British ship kitted out with 30 cannons<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 71</ref> and specifically launched to capture ''La Concorde''. With no real rival on the horizon, the frigate belonging to the pirate now known as "Blackbeard" captures ship after ship.<br><br>In January 1718, ''La Concorde'' is rechristened ''Queen Anne's Revenge''. Teach and his crew are an ''unstoppable'' force to be reckoned with. Rumor has it that the pirate was a cruel, bloodthirsty, and merciless man, and there is some truth to the stories. It's safe to say that Blackbeard was no bleeding heart and had no qualms about cutting off a finger here and there should his hostages deny him their [[diamond]]-studded rings. But the legends—well, they were overegged. There is no evidence to suggest that Teach was any more violent than ''any'' other pirate. Quite the contrary, in fact! With Blackbeard, if you submitted without resistance, you would be ''spared'' without harm. Often, ''no'' blood was shed, as the captured ships—cowed by the power of the ''Queen Anne's Revenge''—would surrender without a fight. Probably a good move!<br><br>Captain Johnson ''sometimes'' let his imagination loose in building up the legend of Blackbeard. He recounts how Edward Teach once shut himself away in his ship's hold and set fire to the [[Gunpowder|powder]] kegs, just to show off to his crew<ref name="Johnson88">Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 88</ref>—we've all done it. This kind of outlandish anecdote forms the bedrock of Johnson's general outlook, demonstrating, quote, "to what a Pitch of Wickedness human Nature may arrive".<ref name="Johnson88"/> Many experts believe that "Captain Johnson" was simply a ''nom de plume'' for none other than {{Wiki|Daniel Defoe}}, the famous author of ''{{Wiki|Robinson Crusoe}}''. The ultimate seafaring adventure novelist, he enjoyed blurring the boundaries between fact and fiction, and was also a marine insurerer and merchant back in Blackbeard's day. As you can imagine, he wasn't the ''biggest'' fan of pirates, although they did serve as an endless source of inspiration and fascination to him as a writer. In his business dealings, though, he had ''nothing'' but ''hatred'' for the buccaneers, and like nothing more than to see them hanged. Hence, Teach being protrayed as a monster, perhaps.<br><br>Irrespective of the man ''behind'' the writings, one thing's for sure: ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''—not the snappiest title, by the way—breathed live into Blackbeard's appearance in our collective consciousness. The pirate is known for one physical trait in particular—a black beard, obviously—which, according to the book, was left to "grow [to] an extravagant length".<ref name="Johnson87">Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 87</ref> Beards have been a symbol of manliness and authority since ancient Greek times, but the book adds one key detail that changes everything. Teach's beard, the author writes, was not only long, but, quote, "as to breadth, it came up to his eyes".<ref name="Johnson88"/> And so the beard here is a defect, not an asset. Behind his hairy mask, Teach is closer to beast than man. This monster-like description should be compared and contrasted with the handful of ''other '' descriptions of Blackbeard we have at our disposal, like that of Captain Henry Bostock. In December 1717, his merchant ship ''Margaret'' is attacked by ''La Concorde'' just off the coast of [[Puerto Rico]], with Teach and his mean sparing the crew but seizing its cargo. When Captain Bostock reports back to the British governor of {{Wiki|Leeward Islands}}, he describes the pirate as a tall spare man with a very black beard, which he wore very long—which is, clearly, a less-terrifying description—and, as an aside, according to Bostock, no harm came to his crew. Once unarmed and pillaged, the ''Margaret'' and her crew are set free. All a ''far cry'' from the blood-curdling pirate of legend.<br><br>''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''—and again, I think I would probably just have called it ''Pirates''—also explains how Teach wore a hat fitted with two lit fuses designed to terrify his enemies. In ''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]'', upon treating the protagonist [[Edward Kenway]] to a [[Diving for Medicines|masterclass]] in piracy, Blackbeard pulls on a hat adorned with four smoking hemp fuses and spills his secrets. He says, "For an audience, aye. It's all a big show. Give your quarry something to fear, some hellish thing from a fever'd dream, and men will drop to their knees pleading for their Lord before aught else!". Maybe Teach isn't the devil incarnate—but he can certainly make you ''think'' he is.<br><br>His death mirrors his life: a violent finale befitting the most formidable of pirates. He humiliated the [[Royal Navy]], rendering it ''powerless'' to protect the merchant ships that were left prey to his pluundering. He delivered ''dazzling'' blows, like the ''majestic'' [[Siege of Charles-Towne|blockade of Charles-Town Harbor]] in May 1718.<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 72–74</ref> He ''laughed'' in the face of the [[George I of Great Britain|Royal]] Pardon. He sailed the seven seas, ''tirelessly'' prowing the waves, and ultimately, he enraged the colonial authorities. [[Alexander Spotswood]], Governor of [[Virginia (state)|Virginia]] finally places a ''hefty'' [[Bounty hunter|bounty]] on Blackbeard's head and his crew along with him: [[Pound sterling|£]]10 per sailor and ''£100'' for their captain. In those days, it was a pretty penny indeed. Governor Spotswood also entrusts Royal Navy lieutenant [[Robert Maynard|Maynard]] with leading a [[Attack on Ocracoke|crackdown expedition]] on [[Ocracoke]], an island just off the coast of North Carolina where Teach has set up shop.<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 78–81</ref><br><br>The battle takes place on November 22, 1718. Blackbeard is taken by surprise by Maynard at daybreak, with the pirate having ''just'' enough time to set sail on his new ship, the ''Adventure''.<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 81–83</ref> The fighting is fierce, the battle a bloodbath, the cannons deafening. Armed with his cutlass and six-pistol harness, Blackbeard eventually boards Maynard's [[frigate]]. The lieutenant and pirate clash in an ''almighty'' duel,<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 83–84</ref> with Teach quickly wounded by a first bullet. Staggering, but not down, he fights tooth and nail, and ''just'' as he's about to deliver the ''final'' blow to his adversary, he's cut down from behind by one of Maynard's men. Legend has it that he suffers 25 wounds, including 5 gunshot wounds, before falling.<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 84</ref> Lieutenant Maynard has his head cut off and placed on a pole as a trophy. It's fixed to the mast of the ship as it sails towards Virginia bearing news of his feat.<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 85</ref><br><br>No pirate worth his [[salt]] is complete without a buried treasure. Did Blackbeard take the secret of his booty to the grave with him? Legend has it that he trusted nobody but the Devil himself, and Teach was even believed to have made a pact with Satan, according to which whoever lived longest could claim the treasure for himself.<ref>Johnson, Charles. ''A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates''. pg. 88–89</ref> Historians tend to take a more grounded view: Teach was a ''big'' spender, and despite his glory on the seas, his looting was often modest compared to the ''sums'' raked in by other pirates such as [[Bartholomew Roberts]], {{Wiki|Henry Every}}. The island of Ocracoke was dug up and ''scoured'' by ''thousands'' of treasure hunters, but, to no avail.<br><br>Blackbeard may not have been the ''richest'' of pirates, but he was, without the shadow of a doubt, the most famous. In novels, films, manga, video games, his legacy has lived on through the stereotype of the bloodthirsty pirate. The man himself lives on in myth, too. Still today, sailors refer to the unexplained lights that dance on the horizon of the open sea as "Teach's light". And some believe that the pirate continues to wander the seven seas, haunting the oceans for all eternity.<br><br>Thanks for listening to ''Echoes of History: Behind the Legends'', a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media.'' |
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| ''Painter, scientist, engineer, inventor, anatomist, sculptor, [[architect]], urban planner, botanist, musician, philosopher, writer: [[Leonardo da Vinci]] was all that and even more. The Italian Renaissance {{Wiki|polymath}} artist brought his touch to every field of knowledge possible in his time and is now widely considered as one of the greatest minds ever. But what do we really owe him? The real impact of his inventions and artistic work is still subject to debate today.'' | | ''Painter, scientist, engineer, inventor, anatomist, sculptor, [[architect]], urban planner, botanist, musician, philosopher, writer: [[Leonardo da Vinci]] was all that and even more. The Italian Renaissance {{Wiki|polymath}} artist brought his touch to every field of knowledge possible in his time and is now widely considered as one of the greatest minds ever. But what do we really owe him? The real impact of his inventions and artistic work is still subject to debate today.'' |
| *'''Danny Wallace:''' "Not only in his lifetime was Leonardo da Vinci held in esteem, but his reputation became even greater among posterity after his death," ''wrote {{Wiki|Giorgio Vasari|Vasari}}, the first art historian, in 1550.<ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''[[wikisource:it:Le vite de' più eccellenti pittori, scultori e architettori (1568)|Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori, et architettori, scritte et di nuovo Ampliate da M. Giorgio Vasari Pittore et Architetto Aretino, co' ritratti loro et con le nuove vite dal 1550 insino al 1567]]''. Florence, {{Wiki|Giunti (printers)|Giunti}}, 1568. 2nd ed, vol. 2. "Vita di Lionardo da Vinci Pittore e Scultore Fiorentino". pg. 2. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "La forza in lui fu molta e congiunta con la destrezza, l'animo e 'l valore, sempre regio e magnanimo. E la fama del suo nome tanto s'allargò, che non solo nel suo tempo fu tenuto in pregio, ma pervenne ancora molto più ne' posteri dopo la morte sua."</ref><ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''{{Wiki|Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects}}''. London, {{Wiki|Macmillan Publishers|Macmillan and Co. Ltd.}} & [https://www.medici.co.uk/ The Medici Society, Ltd.], 1913. [https://www.gutenberg.org/files/28420/28420-h/28420-h.htm Vol. 4]. Translated by Gaston du C. De Vere. "Life of Leonardo da Vinci Painter and Sculptor of Florence". pg. 89. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "In him was great bodily strength, joined to dexterity, with a spirit and courage ever royal and magnanimous; and the fame of his name so increased, that not only in his lifetime was he held in esteem, but his reputation became even greater among posterity after his death."</ref> More than ''five centuries'' after his death, the genius still inspires the same admiration. And even now, he's breaking records: in 2017, ''{{Wiki|Salvator Mundi (Leonardo)|Salvator Mundi}}'', a painting attributed to him—though that ''is'' disputed—was sold for $450 million.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-art-auction-da-vinci-abudhabi/abu-dhabi-to-acquire-leonardo-da-vincis-salvator-mundi-christies-idUSKBN1E22IN/|title=Abu Dhabi to acquire Leonardo da Vinci's 'Salvator Mundi': Christie's|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20171208235650/https://www.reuters.com/article/us-art-auction-da-vinci-abudhabi/abu-dhabi-to-acquire-leonardo-da-vincis-salvator-mundi-christies-idUSKBN1E22IN/|archivedate=8 December 2017|author=Bayoumy, Yara|date=8 December 2017|publisher=''{{Wiki|Reuters}}''|accessdate=3 March 2024}}</ref><ref>{{Youtube|video=3orkmMlSpmI|text=Leonardo da Vinci's 'Salvator Mundi' <nowiki>|</nowiki> 2017 World Auction Record <nowiki>|</nowiki> Christie's|channel=christies|channelname=Christie's}}</ref> And in 2019, the [[Louvre]] dedicated a ''major'' exhibition to him<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.louvre.fr/en/what-s-on/exhibitions/leonardo-da-vinci|title=Leonardo da Vinci|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20210413201603/https://www.louvre.fr/en/what-s-on/exhibitions/leonardo-da-vinci|archivedate=13 April 2021|author=Louvre|date=24 October 2019|publisher=''Louvre''|accessdate=3 March 2024}}</ref> which attracted more than a ''million'' visitors in four months.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://presse.louvre.fr/1-1-million-visitors-for-leonardo-da-vincibr-a-new-record-for-an-exhibitionnbspat-the-louvre/|title=1.1 million visitors for "Leonardo da Vinci": A new record for an exhibition at the Louvre|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20200715183448/https://presse.louvre.fr/1-1-million-visitors-for-leonardo-da-vincibr-a-new-record-for-an-exhibitionnbspat-the-louvre/|archivedate=15 July 2020|author=Louvre|date=25 February 2020|publisher=''Louvre''|accessdate=3 March 2024}}</ref> Bringing together his greatest paintings and ''many'' drawings, the museum celebrated an ''exceptional'' mind with ''limitless'' curiosity. Da Vinci explored many areas of knowledge, including {{Wiki|Perspective (graphical)|perspective}}, geometry, astronomy, architecture, and engineering. Each era has created its own legend about Leonardo: from the 16th century onwards, he was celebrated as a painter; in the 19th, the discovery of his {{Wiki|Category:Codices by Leonardo da Vinci|forgotten manuscripts}} made him famous as an engineer. More recently, some people have tried to ''tarnish'' this image, pointing out the gaps in Leonardo da Vinci's knowledge and claiming him a fraud. Despite these sometimes legitimate criticisms, the myth of the "universal man" capable of inventing the future has taken hold—he ''did'' design [[Flying Machine]]s and [[tank]]s, after all. However, nothing predisposed the young boy, born in 1552 in the [[Tuscany|Tuscan]] countryside, to such glory.<br><br>You're listening to ''Echoes of History: Behind the Legends'', the podcast that tells you the true stories of some of history's most legendary heroes. As the ''Assassin's Creed'' franchise turns 15, travel back through 2,500 years of history to meet the men and women whose destiny lead them to greatness. Uncover their stories and bring their legends back to life. Episode ten, Leonardo da Vinci.<br><br>Born in {{Wiki|Vinci, Tuscany|Vinci}}, a small town halfway between [[Pisa]] and Florence, Leonardo was the son of Piero da Vinci, a {{Wiki|Civil law notary|notary}}, and a woman named Caterina, about whom we know almost nothing. Leonardo didn't follow in his father's footsteps—attending university was ''out of the question'' as he born out of wedlock. Surrounded by his grandparents' love, he was self-taught. He ''devoured'' [[Ovid]]'s ''[[Metamorphoses]]'' and spent most of his time contemplating nature. This appreciation of the beauty of landscapes and animals, combined with a particularly ''keen'' sense of observation, gave rise to his unmatched drawing skills. A [[commons:Category:Codex on the Flight of Birds|bird in flight]], the anatomy of a bee,<ref>Kritsky, Gene and Daniel Mader (1 July 2010). "Leonardo's Insects", ''{{Wiki|Entomological Society of America|American Entomologist}}'', '''56'''(3). [[Oxford]], {{Wiki|Oxford University Press}}. pg. 178–184. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/ae/56.3.178. Retrieved on 3 March 2024.</ref> from an early age, Leonardo ''filled'' his small notebooks with sketches.<br><br>In 1466, the young man moved to Florence. His father got him an apprenticeship with [[Andrea del Verrocchio]] at one of the most prestigious workshops in the city. In this ''[[wikt:bottega|bottega]]'', the master and his pupils ''excelled'' in a wide range of crafts, from painting and sculpture to goldsmithing, cabinetmaking, and metalworking. Alongside his talented fellow students—including [[Pietro Perugino|Perugino]] and [[Sandro Botticelli|Botticelli]]—Leonardo observed, exchanged, and accumulated impressive skills. And the city was a ''constant'' work in progress; he was ''fascinated'' by the building site for the dome of the [[Cattedrale di Santa Maria del Fiore|Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore]]. Engineers had designed special cranes to position the building materials with ''great'' precision nearly 100 meters above the ground. Young Leonardo was responsonble for making the {{Wiki|Gilding|gilt}} [[copper]] bowl topping the dome. As it was made of several pieces, he had to climb to the top of the Duomo to assemble and solder it using a mirror to reflect the sun's light.<br><br>During his time in Florence, Leonardo da Vinci established himself as an independant artist. In 1473, he painted ''[[Annunciation]]'', an early work with ''some'' inaccuracies, but ''already'' showing incredible technical skill and originality. However, when he set up his own [[Bottega di Leonardo|workshop]] five years later at the age of 26, he ''struggled'' to stand out from the ''fierce'' competition. The [[House of Medici|Medici]] court remained inaccessible; without {{Wiki|Italian Renaissance painting|classical training}}, Leonardo ''did not'' have the ''vital'' cultural background to ''shine'' among the elite. In 1482, he seized the opportunity to spread his wings. The next chapter of his story would be played out in [[Milan]].<br><br>When [[Lorenzo de' Medici]] sent him to the court of [[Ludovico Sforza]] to stage a musical, Leonardo made a bold move: he offered his services to the nobleman. In {{Wiki|Personal life of Leonardo da Vinci#Résumé|his letter}} to Sforza, the artist boasts, oddly enough, of his talents as a ''military'' engineer. He claims to be able to design [[war machine]]s; cannons; and'' "covered vehicles, safe and unassailable, which will penetrate the enemy and their artillery, and there is no host of armed men so great that they would not break through it."<ref>da Vinci, Leonardo. ''[[wikisource:The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci|The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci]]''. Translated by {{Wiki|Jean Paul Richter}}. 1888. Vol. 2. "XXI. Letters. Personal Records. Dated Notes". Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "6) Item. I will make covered chariots, safe and unattackable which, entering among the enemy with their artillery, there is no body of men so great but they would break them. And behind these, infantry could follow quite unhurt and without any hindrance."</ref> ''By doing so, he created his own myth. It's true that Leonardo had drawn many military technical drawings, but they were merely sketches designed by borrowing extensively from contemporary engineers, and often unworkable. Except, that Leonardo surpassed ''all'' his predecessors in ''one'' area: technical drawings where the accuracy of his line worked ''wonders''. In an exploded view of an object, be broke it down, describing ''each part'' in detail. He had a perfect understanding of perspective. Leonardo may have taken and compiled the ideas of his predecessors, but in doing so, he surpassed them. Sforza was ''not so easily'' won over, and the so-called "engineer" had to wait until 1489 to ''properly'' gain entry to {{Wiki|Castello Sforzesco}}.<br><br>In the Milanese court, Leonardo gained a reputation for organizing celebrations, a key tool in political communication—and I suppose just fun! To celebrate the wedding of {{Wiki|Isabella of Aragon, Duchess of Milan|Isabella of Aragon}} and {{Wiki|Gian Galeazzo Sforza}} in 1490 during the famous ''{{Wiki|it:Festa del Paradiso|Festa del Paradiso}}'', he staged a ''marvelous'' {{Wiki|operetta}}, ''Il Paradiso'', using complex machinery and special effects. A ''gigantic'' golden sphere spun among the costumed dancers and musicians. Glowing stars, and the seven planets known of at the time, were revealed through openings in the sphere.<ref>{{Wiki|it:Pietro Fanfani|Fanfani, Pietro}}. ''[https://archive.org/details/rimebernardo02belluoft/rimebernardo02belluoft/page/n7/mode/2up Le Rime di Bernardo Bellincioni, riscontrate sui manoscritti]''. {{Wiki|Bologna}}: Presso Gaetano Romagnoli, 1878. Vol. II. pg. 208. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "Festa ossia rappresentazione chiamata Paradiso, che fece fare il Signore Ludovico in laude délia duchessa di Milano, e così chiamasi, perchè vi era fabbricato con il grande ingegno ed arte di maestro Leonardo Vinci fiorentino il Paradiso, con tutti li sette pianeti che girovano, e li pianeti erano rappresentati da uomini nella forma ed abiti che si descrivono dai poeti, e tutti parlano in Iode délia prefata duchessa Isabella."</ref><ref>{{Wiki|Eugène Müntz|Müntz, Eugène}}. ''[https://archive.org/details/leonardodavincia01munt/mode/page/n11/2up Leonardo da Vinci: Artist, Thinker, and Man of Science]''. London: {{Wiki|William Heinemann}}; New York: {{Wiki|Charles Scribner's Sons}}, 1898. Vol. I. "Chapter IV". pg. 107. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "In 1489, on the occasion of the marriage of Gian Galeazzo Sforza, the latter collaborated with the poet {{Wiki|Bernardo Bellincioni|Bellincioni}}, in the construction of a theatrical machine, which they christened "Il Paradiso." It was a colossal orrery, in which the planets, represented by actors of flesh and blood, revolved round the princess by means of an ingenious mechanism, and sang her praises."</ref> Between 1495 and 1498, Leonardo, who ''hadn't'' abandoned painting, produced one of his masterpieces, ''{{Wiki|The Last Supper (Leonardo)|The Last Supper}}'', which hung in the {{Wiki|refectory}} of the Dominican convent of {{Wiki|Santa Maria delle Grazie, Milan|Santa Maria delle Grazie}}. In 1499, when Louis XII, the king of France, chased the Sforza family from Milan, he was ''blown away'' by this ''gorgeous'' {{Wiki|fresco}}. He even thought of taking it back with him to ''France''<ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori, et architettori, scritte et di nuovo Ampliate da M. Giorgio Vasari Pittore et Architetto Aretino, co' ritratti loro et con le nuove vite dal 1550 insino al 1567''. "Vita di Lionardo da Vinci Pittore e Scultore Fiorentino". pg. 6–7. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "La nobiltà di questa pittura, sì per il componimento, sì per essere finita con una incomparabile diligenza, fece venir voglia al re di Francia, di condurla nel regno: onde tentò per ogni via, se ci fussi stato architetti, che con travate di legnami e di ferri, l’avessino potuta armar di maniera, che ella si fosse condotta salva, senza considerare a spesa, che vi si fusse potuta fare, tanto la desiderava."</ref><ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects''. "Life of Leonardo da Vinci Painter and Sculptor of Florence". pg. 97. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "The nobility of this picture, both because of its design, and from its having been wrought with an incomparable diligence, awoke a desire in the King of France to transport it into his kingdom; wherefore he tried by all possible means to discover whether there were architects who, with cross-stays of wood and iron, might have been able to make it so secure that it might be transported safely; without considering any expense that might have been involved thereby, so much did he desire it."</ref>—which was a bit cheeky!<br><br>During the turbulent [[Italian Wars]], Leonardo became a sort of travelling military engineer, moving from town to town. He'd amassed ''real'' skills during this time in Milan, working with the ''best'' gunsmiths, observing cannon production in the arsenals, and increasing his knowledge of the art of war. While in Venice in 1500, he tried, but failed, to convince the {{Wiki|Venetian Senate|Senate}} to carry out ''major'' fortification works. In 1502,he was 50 years old and entered the service of Cesare Borgia, who had just captured [[Urbino]]. At his side, Leonardo travelled his territory as his chief military engineer. He designed war machines, strengthened fortresses, and drew maps. His {{Wiki|File:Leonardo da Vinci - Plan of Imola - Google Art Project.jpg|map}} of {{Wiki|Imola}}, which he created in 1502, ''revolutionized'' cartography. His design offered the ''first'' view of the town from above. But Cesare Borgia's rise came to an end in 1503, when he was imprisoned by his rivals. Leonardo then returned to Florence.<br><br>This was where he started the portrait of [[Lisa del Giocondo]]. It was never delivered to the wealthy silk merchant who commissioned it. Little did he know he was married to the most famous model of all time.<ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori, et architettori, scritte et di nuovo Ampliate da M. Giorgio Vasari Pittore et Architetto Aretino, co' ritratti loro et con le nuove vite dal 1550 insino al 1567''. "Vita di Lionardo da Vinci Pittore e Scultore Fiorentino". pg. 8. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "Prese Lionardo a fare per Francesco del Giocondo il ritratto di Monna Lisa sua moglie, e quattro anni penatovi lo lasciò imperfetto, la quale opera oggi è appresso il re Francesco di Francia in Fontanableò."</ref><ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects''. "Life of Leonardo da Vinci Painter and Sculptor of Florence". pg. 100. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "Leonardo undertook to execute, for Francesco del Giocondo, the portrait of Monna Lisa, his wife; and after toiling over it for four years, he left it unfinished; and the work is now in the collection of King Francis of France, at Fontainebleau."</ref> Leonardo never finished the ''{{Wiki|Mona Lisa}}'' until 1515 because he was involved in a ''massive'' project. In 1503, [[Piero Soderini]], the new statesman of Florence, commissioned him to make a ''monumental'' {{Wiki|The Battle of Anghiari (Leonardo)|fresco}} of the [[Battle of Anghiari]], celebrating the {{Wiki|Anghiari|Tuscan city}}'s triumph over Milan in 1440.<ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori, et architettori, scritte et di nuovo Ampliate da M. Giorgio Vasari Pittore et Architetto Aretino, co' ritratti loro et con le nuove vite dal 1550 insino al 1567''. "Vita di Lionardo da Vinci Pittore e Scultore Fiorentino". pg. 8. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "E tra il gonfalonieri et i cittadini grandi si praticò che essendosi fatta di nuovo la gran sala del consiglio [...] La quale finita, con grande prestezza fu per decreto publico ordinato, che a Lionardo fussi dato a dipignere qualche opera bella; e così da Piero Soderini, gonfaloniere allora di giustizia, gli fu allogata la detta sala. Per il che volendola condurre Lionardo, cominciò un cartone alla sala del papa, luogo in S. Maria Novella, dentrovi la storia di Niccolò Piccinino, capitano del duca Filippo di Milano."</ref><ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects''. "Life of Leonardo da Vinci Painter and Sculptor of Florence". pg. 101–102. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "And it was decided between the Gonfalonier and the chief citizens, the Great Council Chamber having been newly built [...] and having been finished in great haste, it was ordained by public decree that Leonardo should be given some beautiful work to paint; and so the said hall was allotted to him by Piero Soderini, then Gonfalonier of Justice. Whereupon Leonardo, determining to execute this work, began a cartoon in the Sala del Papa, an apartment in S. Maria Novella, representing the story of Niccolò Piccinino, Captain of Duke Filippo of Milan."</ref> The painter experimented with ''new'' techniques involving wax and resin for the project. But the experiment was a ''catastrophic'' failure; the colors ran down the wall. In 1506, Leonardo ''abandoned'' the work for good<ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori, et architettori, scritte et di nuovo Ampliate da M. Giorgio Vasari Pittore et Architetto Aretino, co' ritratti loro et con le nuove vite dal 1550 insino al 1567''. "Vita di Lionardo da Vinci Pittore e Scultore Fiorentino". pg. 9. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "Et imaginandosi di volere a olio colorire in muro, fece una composizione d’una mistura sì grossa, per lo incollato del muro, che continuando a dipignere in detta sala, cominciò a colare, di maniera che in breve tempo abbandonò quella, vedendola guastare."</ref><ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects''. "Life of Leonardo da Vinci Painter and Sculptor of Florence". pg. 102. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "And conceiving the wish to color on the wall in oils, he made a composition of so gross an admixture, to act as a binder on the wall, that, going on to paint in the said hall, it began to peel off in such a manner that in a short time he abandoned it, seeing it spoiling."</ref>—still, a lovely way of painting a wall.<br><br>Alongside painting, the inventor tried to uncover the secrets of flight, because, why not? This ''long-standing'' obsession can be seen in ''many'' drawings in the {{Wiki|Codex on the Flight of Birds}} in 1505. In the game ''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'', Ezio Auditore [[Infrequent Flier|uses]] a prototype Flying Machine, designed by his friend Leonardo, to enter the [[Palazzo Ducale di Venezia|Doge's palace]] in Venice, where the Templar Knights are threatening to kill the Doge. The device used by the hero is an {{Wiki|ornithopter}} with articulated wings. Leonardo ''really'' did design such a machine, aiming to imitate the shape and flapping of the wings of a bird of prey, but it would never have worked due to the lack of a sufficiently powerful engine. The scientist did not invent the plane—far from it. On the other hand, he is ''unquestionably'' a precursor of ''{{Wiki|Biomimetics|biomimicry}}'', technical innovation ''inspired'' by nature. Careful observation of birds in flight had enabled him to isolate the principle of {{Wiki|Lift (force)|lift}}—so, those long, lazy afternoons as a teenager staring at nature ''really'' weren't wasted.<br><br>In 1506, Leonardo returned to Milan, now governed by the French. He became the ''key'' organizer of celebrations in the small court that formed around the {{Wiki|Marshal of France}}, {{Wiki|Charles II d'Amboise|Charles d'Amboise}}. In 1509, he was tasked with staging the victory celebrations of Louis XII, who returned to the city a hero after his [[War of the League of Cambrai|victory]] over the Venetians. After a few years in Rome, where he was the protégée of {{Wiki|Giuliano de' Medici, Dule of Nemours|Giuliano de' Medici}},<ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori, et architettori, scritte et di nuovo Ampliate da M. Giorgio Vasari Pittore et Architetto Aretino, co' ritratti loro et con le nuove vite dal 1550 insino al 1567''. "Vita di Lionardo da Vinci Pittore e Scultore Fiorentino". pg. 8. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "Andò a Roma col duca Giuliano de' Medici nella creazione di papa Leone, che attendeva molto a cose filosofiche e massimamente alla alchimia."</ref><ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects''. "Life of Leonardo da Vinci Painter and Sculptor of Florence". pg. 99. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "He [Leonardo] went to Rome with Duke Giuliano de' Medici, at the election of Pope Leo, who spent much of his time on philosophical studies, and particularly on alchemy."</ref> Leonardo accepted an invitation from [[Francis I of France|Francis I]] in 1516.<ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori, et architettori, scritte et di nuovo Ampliate da M. Giorgio Vasari Pittore et Architetto Aretino, co' ritratti loro et con le nuove vite dal 1550 insino al 1567''. "Vita di Lionardo da Vinci Pittore e Scultore Fiorentino". pg. 8. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "Lionardo intendendo ciò partì, et andò in Francia, dove il re avendo avuto opere sue, gli era molto affezzionato."</ref><ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects''. "Life of Leonardo da Vinci Painter and Sculptor of Florence". pg. 103. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "Leonardo, understanding this [disdain from Michelangelo], departed and went into France, where the King, having had works by his hand, bore him great affection."</ref> The King of France admired him and wanted him by his side on the banks of the River [[Loire]]. ''"More than my crown, you will be the jewel of my kingdom,"''{{Cite|3 March 2024}} promised the king—which was very friendly, though, a little creepy.<br><br>After a ''grueling'' journey, an aging Leonardo moved into the ''{{Wiki|Clos Lucé|Manoir du Cloux}}'', a manor house given to him by the monarch just a few hundred meters from ''his own'' residence, the {{Wiki|Château d'Amboise}}. The scientist brought his books and precious manuscripts with him, as well as some of his best works, including the ''Mona Lisa''. The young Francis I was at the ''height'' of his glory following his {{Wiki|Battle of Marignano|victory}} over [[Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor|Charles V]] at {{Wiki|Melegnano}}. He gave him a pension of 1,000 [[Écu|crowns]] and named him the King's first painter, engineer, and architect. For the King of France, Leonardo ''once again'' became a great orchestrator of court festivities. In April 1515, he built his mechanical [[lion]]<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://iicparigi.esteri.it/it/gli_eventi/calendario/le-lion-mecanique-de-leonard-de/|title=Il Leone meccanico di Leonardo Da Vinci|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20230604232955/https://iicparigi.esteri.it/it/gli_eventi/calendario/le-lion-mecanique-de-leonard-de/|archivedate=4 June 2023|author={{Wiki|it:Istituto italiano di cultura di Parigi|Istituto italiano di cultura di Parigi}}|date=12 September 2019|publisher=''Istituto italiano di cultura di Parigi''|accessdate=3 March 2024|language=Italian}}</ref> for the baptism of the {{Wiki|Dauphin of France|Dauphin}}, {{Wiki|Francis III, Duke of Brittany|Francis}}. When the king touched the mechanical animal, a secret hatch swung open on its chest releasing ''lilies'', in reference to the fleur-de-lis, the symbol of French royalty.<ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori, et architettori, scritte et di nuovo Ampliate da M. Giorgio Vasari Pittore et Architetto Aretino, co' ritratti loro et con le nuove vite dal 1550 insino al 1567''. "Vita di Lionardo da Vinci Pittore e Scultore Fiorentino". pg. 8. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "E per tornare alle opere di Lionardo, venne al suo tempo in Milano il re di Francia, onde pregato Lionardo di far qualche cosa bizzarra, fece un lione, che caminò parecchi passi, poi s'aperse il petto e mostrò tutto pien di gigli."</ref><ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects''. "Life of Leonardo da Vinci Painter and Sculptor of Florence". pg. 99. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "And to return to the works of Leonardo; there came to Milan, in his time, the King of France, wherefore Leonardo being asked to devise some bizarre thing, made a lion which walked several steps and then opened its breast, and showed it full of lilies."</ref><ref>{{Youtube|video=jlBMWf-429I|text=Leonardo3 Museum - Leone meccanico/Mechanical Lion|channel=leonardo3museum|channelname=Leonardo3 Museum and Exhibitions}}</ref><br><br>It was one of the Italian genius' ''last'' magical creations. Much weakened, Leonardo died on the 2nd of May 1519 at the age of 67. During his lifetime, he skillfully created his own myth, and after his death, the legend continued. In a famous painting by {{Wiki|Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres}}, ''{{Wiki|The Death of Leonardo da Vinci}}'', painted in 1819 for the 300th anniversary of his death, the old man takes his last breath in the arms of the King of France, who embraces him like a son.<ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori, et architettori, scritte et di nuovo Ampliate da M. Giorgio Vasari Pittore et Architetto Aretino, co' ritratti loro et con le nuove vite dal 1550 insino al 1567''. "Vita di Lionardo da Vinci Pittore e Scultore Fiorentino". pg. 8. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "Sopragiunseli il re che spesso et amorevolmente lo soleva visitare; per il che egli per riverenza rizzatosi a sedere sul letto, contando il mal suo e gli accidenti di quello mostrava tuttavia quanto avea offeso Dio e gli uomini del mondo, non avendo operato nell'arte come si conveniva. Onde gli venne un parossismo messaggero della morte. Per la qual cosa rizzatosi il re e presoli la testa per aiutarlo e porgerli favore, acciò che il male lo allegerisse, lo spirito suo, che divinissimo era, conoscendo non potere avere maggiore onore, spirò in braccio a quel re nella età sua d'anni 75."</ref><ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects''. "Life of Leonardo da Vinci Painter and Sculptor of Florence". pg. 104. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "The King, who was wont often and lovingly to visit him, then came into the room; wherefore he, out of reverence, having raised himself to sit upon the bed, giving him an account of his sickness and the circumstances of it, showed withal how much he had offended God and mankind in not having worked at his art as he should have done. Thereupon he was seized by a paroxysm, the messenger of death; for which reason the King having risen and having taken his head, in order to assist him and show him favor, to the end that he might alleviate his pain, his spirit, which was divine, knowing that it could not have any greater honor, expired in the arms of the King, in the seventy-fifth year of his age."</ref> It's pure ''fiction'', as Francis I was in ''{{Wiki|Saint-Germain-en-Laye}}'' at the time of Leonardo's death, but it reflects Leonardo's place in our imagination. With his ''unforgettable'' pieces that ''revolutionized'' painting, and drawings that sometimes feel like he has ''seen'' the future, Leonardo da Vinci embodied the creative power of human genius. His career, with its sometimes circuitous path, failures, and many borrowings from the discoveries of others, reminds us that arts and science are first and foremost ''collective'' adventures. He may have been a genius, but Leonardo da Vinci was just one cog in the great machine we call progress. Thanks for listening to ''Echoes of History: Behind the Legends'', a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media.'' | | *'''Danny Wallace:''' "Not only in his lifetime was Leonardo da Vinci held in esteem, but his reputation became even greater among posterity after his death," ''wrote {{Wiki|Giorgio Vasari|Vasari}}, the first art historian, in 1550.<ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''[[wikisource:it:Le vite de' più eccellenti pittori, scultori e architettori (1568)|Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori, et architettori, scritte et di nuovo Ampliate da M. Giorgio Vasari Pittore et Architetto Aretino, co' ritratti loro et con le nuove vite dal 1550 insino al 1567]]''. Florence, {{Wiki|Giunti (printers)|Giunti}}, 1568. 2nd ed, vol. 2. "Vita di Lionardo da Vinci Pittore e Scultore Fiorentino". pg. 2. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "La forza in lui fu molta e congiunta con la destrezza, l'animo e 'l valore, sempre regio e magnanimo. E la fama del suo nome tanto s'allargò, che non solo nel suo tempo fu tenuto in pregio, ma pervenne ancora molto più ne' posteri dopo la morte sua."</ref><ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''{{Wiki|Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects}}''. London, {{Wiki|Macmillan Publishers|Macmillan and Co. Ltd.}} & [https://www.medici.co.uk/ The Medici Society, Ltd.], 1913. [https://www.gutenberg.org/files/28420/28420-h/28420-h.htm Vol. 4]. Translated by Gaston du C. De Vere. "Life of Leonardo da Vinci Painter and Sculptor of Florence". pg. 89. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "In him was great bodily strength, joined to dexterity, with a spirit and courage ever royal and magnanimous; and the fame of his name so increased, that not only in his lifetime was he held in esteem, but his reputation became even greater among posterity after his death."</ref> More than ''five centuries'' after his death, the genius still inspires the same admiration. And even now, he's breaking records: in 2017, ''{{Wiki|Salvator Mundi (Leonardo)|Salvator Mundi}}'', a painting attributed to him—though that ''is'' disputed—was sold for $450 million.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-art-auction-da-vinci-abudhabi/abu-dhabi-to-acquire-leonardo-da-vincis-salvator-mundi-christies-idUSKBN1E22IN/|title=Abu Dhabi to acquire Leonardo da Vinci's 'Salvator Mundi': Christie's|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20171208235650/https://www.reuters.com/article/us-art-auction-da-vinci-abudhabi/abu-dhabi-to-acquire-leonardo-da-vincis-salvator-mundi-christies-idUSKBN1E22IN/|archivedate=8 December 2017|author=Bayoumy, Yara|date=8 December 2017|publisher=''{{Wiki|Reuters}}''|accessdate=3 March 2024}}</ref><ref>{{Youtube|video=3orkmMlSpmI|text=Leonardo da Vinci's 'Salvator Mundi' <nowiki>|</nowiki> 2017 World Auction Record <nowiki>|</nowiki> Christie's|channel=christies|channelname=Christie's}}</ref> And in 2019, the [[Louvre]] dedicated a ''major'' exhibition to him<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.louvre.fr/en/what-s-on/exhibitions/leonardo-da-vinci|title=Leonardo da Vinci|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20210413201603/https://www.louvre.fr/en/what-s-on/exhibitions/leonardo-da-vinci|archivedate=13 April 2021|author=Louvre|date=24 October 2019|publisher=''Louvre''|accessdate=3 March 2024}}</ref> which attracted more than a ''million'' visitors in four months.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://presse.louvre.fr/1-1-million-visitors-for-leonardo-da-vincibr-a-new-record-for-an-exhibitionnbspat-the-louvre/|title=1.1 million visitors for "Leonardo da Vinci": A new record for an exhibition at the Louvre|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20200715183448/https://presse.louvre.fr/1-1-million-visitors-for-leonardo-da-vincibr-a-new-record-for-an-exhibitionnbspat-the-louvre/|archivedate=15 July 2020|author=Louvre|date=25 February 2020|publisher=''Louvre''|accessdate=3 March 2024}}</ref> Bringing together his greatest paintings and ''many'' drawings, the museum celebrated an ''exceptional'' mind with ''limitless'' curiosity. Da Vinci explored many areas of knowledge, including {{Wiki|Perspective (graphical)|perspective}}, geometry, astronomy, architecture, and engineering. Each era has created its own legend about Leonardo: from the 16th century onwards, he was celebrated as a painter; in the 19th, the discovery of his {{Wiki|Category:Codices by Leonardo da Vinci|forgotten manuscripts}} made him famous as an engineer. More recently, some people have tried to ''tarnish'' this image, pointing out the gaps in Leonardo da Vinci's knowledge and claiming him a fraud. Despite these sometimes legitimate criticisms, the myth of the "universal man" capable of inventing the future has taken hold—he ''did'' design [[Flying Machine]]s and [[tank]]s, after all. However, nothing predisposed the young boy, born in 1552 in the [[Tuscany|Tuscan]] countryside, to such glory.<br><br>You're listening to ''Echoes of History: Behind the Legends'', the podcast that tells you the true stories of some of history's most legendary heroes. As the ''Assassin's Creed'' franchise turns 15, travel back through 2,500 years of history to meet the men and women whose destiny lead them to greatness. Uncover their stories and bring their legends back to life. Episode ten, Leonardo da Vinci.<br><br>Born in {{Wiki|Vinci, Tuscany|Vinci}}, a small town halfway between [[Pisa]] and Florence, Leonardo was the son of Piero da Vinci, a {{Wiki|Civil law notary|notary}}, and a woman named Caterina, about whom we know almost nothing. Leonardo didn't follow in his father's footsteps—attending university was ''out of the question'' as he born out of wedlock. Surrounded by his grandparents' love, he was self-taught. He ''devoured'' [[Ovid]]'s ''[[Metamorphoses]]'' and spent most of his time contemplating nature. This appreciation of the beauty of landscapes and animals, combined with a particularly ''keen'' sense of observation, gave rise to his unmatched drawing skills. A [[commons:Category:Codex on the Flight of Birds|bird in flight]], the anatomy of a bee,<ref>Kritsky, Gene and Daniel Mader (1 July 2010). "Leonardo's Insects", ''{{Wiki|Entomological Society of America|American Entomologist}}'', '''56'''(3). [[Oxford]], {{Wiki|Oxford University Press}}. pg. 178–184. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/ae/56.3.178. Retrieved on 3 March 2024.</ref> from an early age, Leonardo ''filled'' his small notebooks with sketches.<br><br>In 1466, the young man moved to Florence. His father got him an apprenticeship with [[Andrea del Verrocchio]] at one of the most prestigious workshops in the city. In this ''[[wikt:bottega|bottega]]'', the master and his pupils ''excelled'' in a wide range of crafts, from painting and sculpture to goldsmithing, cabinetmaking, and metalworking. Alongside his talented fellow students—including [[Pietro Perugino|Perugino]] and [[Sandro Botticelli|Botticelli]]—Leonardo observed, exchanged, and accumulated impressive skills. And the city was a ''constant'' work in progress; he was ''fascinated'' by the building site for the dome of the [[Cattedrale di Santa Maria del Fiore|Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore]]. Engineers had designed special cranes to position the building materials with ''great'' precision nearly 100 meters above the ground. Young Leonardo was responsonble for making the {{Wiki|Gilding|gilt}} [[copper]] bowl topping the dome. As it was made of several pieces, he had to climb to the top of the Duomo to assemble and solder it using a mirror to reflect the sun's light.<br><br>During his time in Florence, Leonardo da Vinci established himself as an independant artist. In 1473, he painted ''[[Annunciation]]'', an early work with ''some'' inaccuracies, but ''already'' showing incredible technical skill and originality. However, when he set up his own [[Bottega di Leonardo|workshop]] five years later at the age of 26, he ''struggled'' to stand out from the ''fierce'' competition. The [[House of Medici|Medici]] court remained inaccessible; without {{Wiki|Italian Renaissance painting|classical training}}, Leonardo ''did not'' have the ''vital'' cultural background to ''shine'' among the elite. In 1482, he seized the opportunity to spread his wings. The next chapter of his story would be played out in [[Milan]].<br><br>When [[Lorenzo de' Medici]] sent him to the court of [[Ludovico Sforza]] to stage a musical, Leonardo made a bold move: he offered his services to the nobleman. In {{Wiki|Personal life of Leonardo da Vinci#Résumé|his letter}} to Sforza, the artist boasts, oddly enough, of his talents as a ''military'' engineer. He claims to be able to design [[war machine]]s; cannons; and'' "covered vehicles, safe and unassailable, which will penetrate the enemy and their artillery, and there is no host of armed men so great that they would not break through it."<ref>da Vinci, Leonardo. ''[[wikisource:The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci|The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci]]''. Translated by {{Wiki|Jean Paul Richter}}. 1888. Vol. 2. "XXI. Letters. Personal Records. Dated Notes". Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "6) Item. I will make covered chariots, safe and unattackable which, entering among the enemy with their artillery, there is no body of men so great but they would break them. And behind these, infantry could follow quite unhurt and without any hindrance."</ref> ''By doing so, he created his own myth. It's true that Leonardo had drawn many military technical drawings, but they were merely sketches designed by borrowing extensively from contemporary engineers, and often unworkable. Except, that Leonardo surpassed ''all'' his predecessors in ''one'' area: technical drawings where the accuracy of his line worked ''wonders''. In an exploded view of an object, be broke it down, describing ''each part'' in detail. He had a perfect understanding of perspective. Leonardo may have taken and compiled the ideas of his predecessors, but in doing so, he surpassed them. Sforza was ''not so easily'' won over, and the so-called "engineer" had to wait until 1489 to ''properly'' gain entry to {{Wiki|Castello Sforzesco}}.<br><br>In the Milanese court, Leonardo gained a reputation for organizing celebrations, a key tool in political communication—and I suppose just fun! To celebrate the wedding of {{Wiki|Isabella of Aragon, Duchess of Milan|Isabella of Aragon}} and {{Wiki|Gian Galeazzo Sforza}} in 1490 during the famous ''{{Wiki|it:Festa del Paradiso|Festa del Paradiso}}'', he staged a ''marvelous'' {{Wiki|operetta}}, ''Il Paradiso'', using complex machinery and special effects. A ''gigantic'' golden sphere spun among the costumed dancers and musicians. Glowing stars, and the seven planets known of at the time, were revealed through openings in the sphere.<ref>{{Wiki|it:Pietro Fanfani|Fanfani, Pietro}}. ''[https://archive.org/details/rimebernardo02belluoft/rimebernardo02belluoft/page/n7/mode/2up Le Rime di Bernardo Bellincioni, riscontrate sui manoscritti]''. {{Wiki|Bologna}}: Presso Gaetano Romagnoli, 1878. Vol. II. pg. 208. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "Festa ossia rappresentazione chiamata Paradiso, che fece fare il Signore Ludovico in laude délia duchessa di Milano, e così chiamasi, perchè vi era fabbricato con il grande ingegno ed arte di maestro Leonardo Vinci fiorentino il Paradiso, con tutti li sette pianeti che girovano, e li pianeti erano rappresentati da uomini nella forma ed abiti che si descrivono dai poeti, e tutti parlano in Iode délia prefata duchessa Isabella."</ref><ref>{{Wiki|Eugène Müntz|Müntz, Eugène}}. ''[https://archive.org/details/leonardodavincia01munt/mode/page/n11/2up Leonardo da Vinci: Artist, Thinker, and Man of Science]''. London: {{Wiki|William Heinemann}}; New York: {{Wiki|Charles Scribner's Sons}}, 1898. Vol. I. "Chapter IV". pg. 107. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "In 1489, on the occasion of the marriage of Gian Galeazzo Sforza, the latter collaborated with the poet {{Wiki|Bernardo Bellincioni|Bellincioni}}, in the construction of a theatrical machine, which they christened "Il Paradiso." It was a colossal orrery, in which the planets, represented by actors of flesh and blood, revolved round the princess by means of an ingenious mechanism, and sang her praises."</ref> Between 1495 and 1498, Leonardo, who ''hadn't'' abandoned painting, produced one of his masterpieces, ''{{Wiki|The Last Supper (Leonardo)|The Last Supper}}'', which hung in the {{Wiki|refectory}} of the Dominican convent of {{Wiki|Santa Maria delle Grazie, Milan|Santa Maria delle Grazie}}. In 1499, when Louis XII, the king of France, chased the Sforza family from Milan, he was ''blown away'' by this ''gorgeous'' {{Wiki|fresco}}. He even thought of taking it back with him to ''France''<ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori, et architettori, scritte et di nuovo Ampliate da M. Giorgio Vasari Pittore et Architetto Aretino, co' ritratti loro et con le nuove vite dal 1550 insino al 1567''. "Vita di Lionardo da Vinci Pittore e Scultore Fiorentino". pg. 6–7. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "La nobiltà di questa pittura, sì per il componimento, sì per essere finita con una incomparabile diligenza, fece venir voglia al re di Francia, di condurla nel regno: onde tentò per ogni via, se ci fussi stato architetti, che con travate di legnami e di ferri, l’avessino potuta armar di maniera, che ella si fosse condotta salva, senza considerare a spesa, che vi si fusse potuta fare, tanto la desiderava."</ref><ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects''. "Life of Leonardo da Vinci Painter and Sculptor of Florence". pg. 97. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "The nobility of this picture, both because of its design, and from its having been wrought with an incomparable diligence, awoke a desire in the King of France to transport it into his kingdom; wherefore he tried by all possible means to discover whether there were architects who, with cross-stays of wood and iron, might have been able to make it so secure that it might be transported safely; without considering any expense that might have been involved thereby, so much did he desire it."</ref>—which was a bit cheeky!<br><br>During the turbulent [[Italian Wars]], Leonardo became a sort of travelling military engineer, moving from town to town. He'd amassed ''real'' skills during this time in Milan, working with the ''best'' gunsmiths, observing cannon production in the arsenals, and increasing his knowledge of the art of war. While in Venice in 1500, he tried, but failed, to convince the {{Wiki|Venetian Senate|Senate}} to carry out ''major'' fortification works. In 1502,he was 50 years old and entered the service of Cesare Borgia, who had just captured [[Urbino]]. At his side, Leonardo travelled his territory as his chief military engineer. He designed war machines, strengthened fortresses, and drew maps. His {{Wiki|File:Leonardo da Vinci - Plan of Imola - Google Art Project.jpg|map}} of {{Wiki|Imola}}, which he created in 1502, ''revolutionized'' cartography. His design offered the ''first'' view of the town from above. But Cesare Borgia's rise came to an end in 1503, when he was imprisoned by his rivals. Leonardo then returned to Florence.<br><br>This was where he started the portrait of [[Lisa del Giocondo]]. It was never delivered to the wealthy silk merchant who commissioned it. Little did he know he was married to the most famous model of all time.<ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori, et architettori, scritte et di nuovo Ampliate da M. Giorgio Vasari Pittore et Architetto Aretino, co' ritratti loro et con le nuove vite dal 1550 insino al 1567''. "Vita di Lionardo da Vinci Pittore e Scultore Fiorentino". pg. 8. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "Prese Lionardo a fare per Francesco del Giocondo il ritratto di Monna Lisa sua moglie, e quattro anni penatovi lo lasciò imperfetto, la quale opera oggi è appresso il re Francesco di Francia in Fontanableò."</ref><ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects''. "Life of Leonardo da Vinci Painter and Sculptor of Florence". pg. 100. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "Leonardo undertook to execute, for Francesco del Giocondo, the portrait of Monna Lisa, his wife; and after toiling over it for four years, he left it unfinished; and the work is now in the collection of King Francis of France, at Fontainebleau."</ref> Leonardo never finished the ''{{Wiki|Mona Lisa}}'' until 1515 because he was involved in a ''massive'' project. In 1503, [[Piero Soderini]], the new statesman of Florence, commissioned him to make a ''monumental'' {{Wiki|The Battle of Anghiari (Leonardo)|fresco}} of the [[Battle of Anghiari]], celebrating the {{Wiki|Anghiari|Tuscan city}}'s triumph over Milan in 1440.<ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori, et architettori, scritte et di nuovo Ampliate da M. Giorgio Vasari Pittore et Architetto Aretino, co' ritratti loro et con le nuove vite dal 1550 insino al 1567''. "Vita di Lionardo da Vinci Pittore e Scultore Fiorentino". pg. 8. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "E tra il gonfalonieri et i cittadini grandi si praticò che essendosi fatta di nuovo la gran sala del consiglio [...] La quale finita, con grande prestezza fu per decreto publico ordinato, che a Lionardo fussi dato a dipignere qualche opera bella; e così da Piero Soderini, gonfaloniere allora di giustizia, gli fu allogata la detta sala. Per il che volendola condurre Lionardo, cominciò un cartone alla sala del papa, luogo in S. Maria Novella, dentrovi la storia di Niccolò Piccinino, capitano del duca Filippo di Milano."</ref><ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects''. "Life of Leonardo da Vinci Painter and Sculptor of Florence". pg. 101–102. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "And it was decided between the Gonfalonier and the chief citizens, the Great Council Chamber having been newly built [...] and having been finished in great haste, it was ordained by public decree that Leonardo should be given some beautiful work to paint; and so the said hall was allotted to him by Piero Soderini, then Gonfalonier of Justice. Whereupon Leonardo, determining to execute this work, began a cartoon in the Sala del Papa, an apartment in S. Maria Novella, representing the story of Niccolò Piccinino, Captain of Duke Filippo of Milan."</ref> The painter experimented with ''new'' techniques involving wax and resin for the project. But the experiment was a ''catastrophic'' failure; the colors ran down the wall. In 1506, Leonardo ''abandoned'' the work for good<ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori, et architettori, scritte et di nuovo Ampliate da M. Giorgio Vasari Pittore et Architetto Aretino, co' ritratti loro et con le nuove vite dal 1550 insino al 1567''. "Vita di Lionardo da Vinci Pittore e Scultore Fiorentino". pg. 9. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "Et imaginandosi di volere a olio colorire in muro, fece una composizione d’una mistura sì grossa, per lo incollato del muro, che continuando a dipignere in detta sala, cominciò a colare, di maniera che in breve tempo abbandonò quella, vedendola guastare."</ref><ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects''. "Life of Leonardo da Vinci Painter and Sculptor of Florence". pg. 102. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "And conceiving the wish to color on the wall in oils, he made a composition of so gross an admixture, to act as a binder on the wall, that, going on to paint in the said hall, it began to peel off in such a manner that in a short time he abandoned it, seeing it spoiling."</ref>—still, a lovely way of painting a wall.<br><br>Alongside painting, the inventor tried to uncover the secrets of flight, because, why not? This ''long-standing'' obsession can be seen in ''many'' drawings in the {{Wiki|Codex on the Flight of Birds}} in 1505. In the game ''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'', Ezio Auditore [[Infrequent Flier|uses]] a prototype Flying Machine, designed by his friend Leonardo, to enter the [[Palazzo Ducale di Venezia|Doge's palace]] in Venice, where the Templar Knights are threatening to kill the Doge. The device used by the hero is an {{Wiki|ornithopter}} with articulated wings. Leonardo ''really'' did design such a machine, aiming to imitate the shape and flapping of the wings of a bird of prey, but it would never have worked due to the lack of a sufficiently powerful engine. The scientist did not invent the plane—far from it. On the other hand, he is ''unquestionably'' a precursor of ''{{Wiki|Biomimetics|biomimicry}}'', technical innovation ''inspired'' by nature. Careful observation of birds in flight had enabled him to isolate the principle of {{Wiki|Lift (force)|lift}}—so, those long, lazy afternoons as a teenager staring at nature ''really'' weren't wasted.<br><br>In 1506, Leonardo returned to Milan, now governed by the French. He became the ''key'' organizer of celebrations in the small court that formed around the {{Wiki|Marshal of France}}, {{Wiki|Charles II d'Amboise|Charles d'Amboise}}. In 1509, he was tasked with staging the victory celebrations of Louis XII, who returned to the city a hero after his [[War of the League of Cambrai|victory]] over the Venetians. After a few years in Rome, where he was the protégée of {{Wiki|Giuliano de' Medici, Duke of Nemours|Giuliano de' Medici}},<ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori, et architettori, scritte et di nuovo Ampliate da M. Giorgio Vasari Pittore et Architetto Aretino, co' ritratti loro et con le nuove vite dal 1550 insino al 1567''. "Vita di Lionardo da Vinci Pittore e Scultore Fiorentino". pg. 8. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "Andò a Roma col duca Giuliano de' Medici nella creazione di papa Leone, che attendeva molto a cose filosofiche e massimamente alla alchimia."</ref><ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects''. "Life of Leonardo da Vinci Painter and Sculptor of Florence". pg. 99. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "He [Leonardo] went to Rome with Duke Giuliano de' Medici, at the election of Pope Leo, who spent much of his time on philosophical studies, and particularly on alchemy."</ref> Leonardo accepted an invitation from [[Francis I of France|Francis I]] in 1516.<ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori, et architettori, scritte et di nuovo Ampliate da M. Giorgio Vasari Pittore et Architetto Aretino, co' ritratti loro et con le nuove vite dal 1550 insino al 1567''. "Vita di Lionardo da Vinci Pittore e Scultore Fiorentino". pg. 8. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "Lionardo intendendo ciò partì, et andò in Francia, dove il re avendo avuto opere sue, gli era molto affezzionato."</ref><ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects''. "Life of Leonardo da Vinci Painter and Sculptor of Florence". pg. 103. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "Leonardo, understanding this [disdain from Michelangelo], departed and went into France, where the King, having had works by his hand, bore him great affection."</ref> The King of France admired him and wanted him by his side on the banks of the River [[Loire]]. ''"More than my crown, you will be the jewel of my kingdom,"''{{Cite|3 March 2024}} promised the king—which was very friendly, though, a little creepy.<br><br>After a ''grueling'' journey, an aging Leonardo moved into the ''{{Wiki|Clos Lucé|Manoir du Cloux}}'', a manor house given to him by the monarch just a few hundred meters from ''his own'' residence, the {{Wiki|Château d'Amboise}}. The scientist brought his books and precious manuscripts with him, as well as some of his best works, including the ''Mona Lisa''. The young Francis I was at the ''height'' of his glory following his {{Wiki|Battle of Marignano|victory}} over [[Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor|Charles V]] at {{Wiki|Melegnano}}. He gave him a pension of 1,000 [[Écu|crowns]] and named him the King's first painter, engineer, and architect. For the King of France, Leonardo ''once again'' became a great orchestrator of court festivities. In April 1515, he built his mechanical [[lion]]<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://iicparigi.esteri.it/it/gli_eventi/calendario/le-lion-mecanique-de-leonard-de/|title=Il Leone meccanico di Leonardo Da Vinci|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20230604232955/https://iicparigi.esteri.it/it/gli_eventi/calendario/le-lion-mecanique-de-leonard-de/|archivedate=4 June 2023|author={{Wiki|it:Istituto italiano di cultura di Parigi|Istituto italiano di cultura di Parigi}}|date=12 September 2019|publisher=''Istituto italiano di cultura di Parigi''|accessdate=3 March 2024|language=Italian}}</ref> for the baptism of the {{Wiki|Dauphin of France|Dauphin}}, {{Wiki|Francis III, Duke of Brittany|Francis}}. When the king touched the mechanical animal, a secret hatch swung open on its chest releasing ''lilies'', in reference to the fleur-de-lis, the symbol of French royalty.<ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori, et architettori, scritte et di nuovo Ampliate da M. Giorgio Vasari Pittore et Architetto Aretino, co' ritratti loro et con le nuove vite dal 1550 insino al 1567''. "Vita di Lionardo da Vinci Pittore e Scultore Fiorentino". pg. 8. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "E per tornare alle opere di Lionardo, venne al suo tempo in Milano il re di Francia, onde pregato Lionardo di far qualche cosa bizzarra, fece un lione, che caminò parecchi passi, poi s'aperse il petto e mostrò tutto pien di gigli."</ref><ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects''. "Life of Leonardo da Vinci Painter and Sculptor of Florence". pg. 99. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "And to return to the works of Leonardo; there came to Milan, in his time, the King of France, wherefore Leonardo being asked to devise some bizarre thing, made a lion which walked several steps and then opened its breast, and showed it full of lilies."</ref><ref>{{Youtube|video=jlBMWf-429I|text=Leonardo3 Museum - Leone meccanico/Mechanical Lion|channel=leonardo3museum|channelname=Leonardo3 Museum and Exhibitions}}</ref><br><br>It was one of the Italian genius' ''last'' magical creations. Much weakened, Leonardo died on the 2nd of May 1519 at the age of 67. During his lifetime, he skillfully created his own myth, and after his death, the legend continued. In a famous painting by {{Wiki|Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres}}, ''{{Wiki|The Death of Leonardo da Vinci}}'', painted in 1819 for the 300th anniversary of his death, the old man takes his last breath in the arms of the King of France, who embraces him like a son.<ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori, et architettori, scritte et di nuovo Ampliate da M. Giorgio Vasari Pittore et Architetto Aretino, co' ritratti loro et con le nuove vite dal 1550 insino al 1567''. "Vita di Lionardo da Vinci Pittore e Scultore Fiorentino". pg. 8. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "Sopragiunseli il re che spesso et amorevolmente lo soleva visitare; per il che egli per riverenza rizzatosi a sedere sul letto, contando il mal suo e gli accidenti di quello mostrava tuttavia quanto avea offeso Dio e gli uomini del mondo, non avendo operato nell'arte come si conveniva. Onde gli venne un parossismo messaggero della morte. Per la qual cosa rizzatosi il re e presoli la testa per aiutarlo e porgerli favore, acciò che il male lo allegerisse, lo spirito suo, che divinissimo era, conoscendo non potere avere maggiore onore, spirò in braccio a quel re nella età sua d'anni 75."</ref><ref>Vasari, Giorgio. ''Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects''. "Life of Leonardo da Vinci Painter and Sculptor of Florence". pg. 104. Retrieved on 3 March 2024. "The King, who was wont often and lovingly to visit him, then came into the room; wherefore he, out of reverence, having raised himself to sit upon the bed, giving him an account of his sickness and the circumstances of it, showed withal how much he had offended God and mankind in not having worked at his art as he should have done. Thereupon he was seized by a paroxysm, the messenger of death; for which reason the King having risen and having taken his head, in order to assist him and show him favor, to the end that he might alleviate his pain, his spirit, which was divine, knowing that it could not have any greater honor, expired in the arms of the King, in the seventy-fifth year of his age."</ref> It's pure ''fiction'', as Francis I was in ''{{Wiki|Saint-Germain-en-Laye}}'' at the time of Leonardo's death, but it reflects Leonardo's place in our imagination. With his ''unforgettable'' pieces that ''revolutionized'' painting, and drawings that sometimes feel like he has ''seen'' the future, Leonardo da Vinci embodied the creative power of human genius. His career, with its sometimes circuitous path, failures, and many borrowings from the discoveries of others, reminds us that arts and science are first and foremost ''collective'' adventures. He may have been a genius, but Leonardo da Vinci was just one cog in the great machine we call progress. Thanks for listening to ''Echoes of History: Behind the Legends'', a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media.'' |
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| *'''Dan Snow:''' ''Is the legacy of the Crusades any different just from the legacy ''so many'' other terrible, costly, barbaric wars that we've fought over the years? What is it about the Crusades?'' | | *'''Dan Snow:''' ''Is the legacy of the Crusades any different just from the legacy ''so many'' other terrible, costly, barbaric wars that we've fought over the years? What is it about the Crusades?'' |
| *'''Jonathan Phillips:''' ''I think the Crusades' legacy is, is ''sharper'' and ''harsher'' in the sense that it's done for religion and the ''binary'' that it manages to create. I think in the Muslim Near East, it's the memory of the Crusades. OK, the Crusaders are ''thrown out'' in 1291, but the ''memory'' of, of that Christian occupation doesn't disappear entirely. You've got, over the successive dynasties, the {{Wiki|Ottoman Turks}}; you've got people who are trying to attack Europe, so they're on the receiving end of an {{Wiki|Ottoman wars in Europe|Ottoman invasion}}; and then there are Crusades ''{{Wiki|List of Crusades|back}}'' against the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottomans]]. The idea doesn't ''disappear'' from the consciousness of the Near East. But the big change is in the 19th century, when Western Europeans start coming into the Mediterranean again and ''they themselves'' look back to the crusading era. The French go, "Ah, you know, our Crusading ancestors, we're recovering those lands." And the Muslim Near East ''recognizes'', "Ah, it's the Europeans again, we've seen this before." So that then ''brings'' this idea that's, that's been there, in the ether, should we say, ''back'' to prominence. And that's why I think the language, the ''rhetoric'' of crusading has such a strong place, particularly in the 19th and then the 20th centuries.'' | | *'''Jonathan Phillips:''' ''I think the Crusades' legacy is, is ''sharper'' and ''harsher'' in the sense that it's done for religion and the ''binary'' that it manages to create. I think in the Muslim Near East, it's the memory of the Crusades. OK, the Crusaders are ''thrown out'' in 1291, but the ''memory'' of, of that Christian occupation doesn't disappear entirely. You've got, over the successive dynasties, the {{Wiki|Ottoman Turks}}; you've got people who are trying to attack Europe, so they're on the receiving end of an {{Wiki|Ottoman wars in Europe|Ottoman invasion}}; and then there are Crusades ''{{Wiki|List of Crusades|back}}'' against the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottomans]]. The idea doesn't ''disappear'' from the consciousness of the Near East. But the big change is in the 19th century, when Western Europeans start coming into the Mediterranean again and ''they themselves'' look back to the crusading era. The French go, "Ah, you know, our Crusading ancestors, we're recovering those lands." And the Muslim Near East ''recognizes'', "Ah, it's the Europeans again, we've seen this before." So that then ''brings'' this idea that's, that's been there, in the ether, should we say, ''back'' to prominence. And that's why I think the language, the ''rhetoric'' of crusading has such a strong place, particularly in the 19th and then the 20th centuries.'' |
| *'''Dan Snow:''' ''Doesn't that French commander during the First World War {{Wiki|Battle of Maysalun|go into}} {{Wiki|The Mausoleum of Saladin|Saladin's tomb}} in Jerusalem and say "We're back."?'' | | *'''Dan Snow:''' ''Doesn't that French commander during the First World War {{Wiki|Battle of Maysalun|go into}} {{Wiki|Mausoleum of Saladin|Saladin's tomb}} in Jerusalem and say "We're back."?'' |
| *'''Jonathan Phillips:''' ''Yes, General {{Wiki|Henri Gouraud|Gouraud}} goes into Damascus—'' | | *'''Jonathan Phillips:''' ''Yes, General {{Wiki|Henri Gouraud|Gouraud}} goes into Damascus—'' |
| *'''Dan Snow:''' ''It's Damascus.'' | | *'''Dan Snow:''' ''It's Damascus.'' |
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| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''And, it sounds like the Nizaris were keen to use assassination as a way to ''magnify'' their power. So you say they were fighting large armies?'' | | *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''And, it sounds like the Nizaris were keen to use assassination as a way to ''magnify'' their power. So you say they were fighting large armies?'' |
| *'''Farhad Daftary:''' ''It had, really, two purpose. One was, of course, to remove ''key'' enemies in ''key'' localities. Secondly was to ''intimidate'' the enemies. So they either did this or did not attempt to ''refute'' if they were not behind attempts. For instance, we have, uh, a number of stories portraying the ''fedayis'' putting knives—daggers—by the bedside of various judges and so on but not killing them. Just to warn them.'' | | *'''Farhad Daftary:''' ''It had, really, two purpose. One was, of course, to remove ''key'' enemies in ''key'' localities. Secondly was to ''intimidate'' the enemies. So they either did this or did not attempt to ''refute'' if they were not behind attempts. For instance, we have, uh, a number of stories portraying the ''fedayis'' putting knives—daggers—by the bedside of various judges and so on but not killing them. Just to warn them.'' |
| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''Yeah, it's a bit like ''[[w:c:godfather:The Godfather|The Godfather]]'', [[w:c:godfather:Khartoum|horse's head]] in the bed—'' | | *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''Yeah, it's a bit like '{{Wiki|The Godfather}}'', horse's head in the bed—'' |
| *'''Farhad Daftary:''' ''Exactly!'' | | *'''Farhad Daftary:''' ''Exactly!'' |
| *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''—kind of thing.'' | | *'''Matthew Lewis:''' ''—kind of thing.'' |
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| ;The Templars and The Holy Grail | | ;The Templars and the Holy Grail |
| ''This is the most sought after Christian relic, believed to have miraculous healing powers and divine origins. What isn't known is exactly what it is that we're supposed to be looking for. Different mythologies describe different grails with different properties. To find out more about the folklore of The Grail, how it became so entwined with that of the Knights Templar, and what this story shares with other folklore, Matt speaks to Dr. Juliette Wood. Is there a chance that this object really exists?'' | | ''This is the most sought after Christian relic, believed to have miraculous healing powers and divine origins. What isn't known is exactly what it is that we're supposed to be looking for. Different mythologies describe different grails with different properties. To find out more about the folklore of The Grail, how it became so entwined with that of the Knights Templar, and what this story shares with other folklore, Matt speaks to Dr. Juliette Wood. Is there a chance that this object really exists?'' |
| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
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| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
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| ;The Fall of the Templars | | ;The fall of the Templars |
| ''With a network of fortifications spanning [[Europe]], the backing of the Pope and a fierce reputation, how did the reign of the Knights Templar end in arrest, torture, disbandment and, in some cases, execution? Mike Carr is with Matt Lewis to share the rumors that led to the [[Persecution of the Templars|Knights' downfall]], the possible motives of [[Philip IV of France|Philip IV]], and to explore whether the order continued in any form.'' | | ''With a network of fortifications spanning [[Europe]], the backing of the Pope and a fierce reputation, how did the reign of the Knights Templar end in arrest, torture, disbandment and, in some cases, execution? Mike Carr is with Matt Lewis to share the rumors that led to the [[Persecution of the Templars|Knights' downfall]], the possible motives of [[Philip IV of France|Philip IV]], and to explore whether the order continued in any form.'' |
| }} | | }} |
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| {{#tag:tabber| | | {{#tag:tabber| |
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| ;City of Peace | | ;City of peace |
| ''What would a visitor have seen entering the City of Peace? Deana and Ali tour the medieval metropolis that is Baghdad. Capital city of the Abbasid empire, heart of the Islamic civilization, home to mighty architectural marvels and great intellectual achievements!'' | | ''What would a visitor have seen entering the City of Peace? Deana and Ali tour the medieval metropolis that is Baghdad. Capital city of the Abbasid empire, heart of the Islamic civilization, home to mighty architectural marvels and great intellectual achievements!'' |
| *'''Deana Hassanein:''' ''Hello! I'm Deana Hassanein. Welcome to this season of ''Echoes of History'', inspired by ''Assassin's Creed''{{'}}s "''Mirage''" from Ubisoft, a series of {{Wiki|soundwalk}}s where we take you through 9th-century Baghdad. So over the next ten episodes, we'll be making our way through the winding contours of time, getting to the heart of this civilization, and discovering what makes it so important. I'm joined by Prof. Ali A. Olomi. Ali, why don't you tell us a bit about yourself?'' | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' ''Hello! I'm Deana Hassanein. Welcome to this season of ''Echoes of History'', inspired by ''Assassin's Creed''{{'}}s "''Mirage''" from Ubisoft, a series of {{Wiki|soundwalk}}s where we take you through 9th-century Baghdad. So over the next ten episodes, we'll be making our way through the winding contours of time, getting to the heart of this civilization, and discovering what makes it so important. I'm joined by Prof. Ali A. Olomi. Ali, why don't you tell us a bit about yourself?'' |
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| *'''Ali Olomi:''' (laughs) ''Time to decompress!'' | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' (laughs) ''Time to decompress!'' |
| *'''Deana Hassanein:''' ''Yeah, exactly! But I imagine the answer you're looking for, Ali, is establishing a capital and making sure trade is flowing in my new city.'' | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' ''Yeah, exactly! But I imagine the answer you're looking for, Ali, is establishing a capital and making sure trade is flowing in my new city.'' |
| *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''Absolutely right, you want to get trade flowing, want to make sure you've got ''money'' in this new empire you've created. But as you rightly point out, you establish a capital city. Under caliph [[al-Mansur|Mansur]] in 762, they decide that they need a center for their new empire. And according to the historian [[al-Tabari]], Mansur heard a prophecy, an ancient Christian prophecy, and we ''do'' love our prophecies here. According to this prophecy, a man named "Miklas" will establish a city in the area that will eventually become Baghdad. And Mansur ''loved'' that, because he claimed that he was ''called'' "Miklas" when he was younger. Now, whether that's true or not is up in the air, but certainly it lends some ''reasoning'' for caliph Mansur's establishment of the city. So what does he do? He gathers around him his greatest thinkers and [[architect]]s and astrologers, people like {{Wiki|Naubakht}} and {{Wiki|Mashallah ibn Athari}} and {{Wiki|Omar Tiberiades|Umar al-Tabari}}. And he tells them, "Build me a city". These people were city planners and they were also astrologers. What they decide is that they are going to pick a ''specific time'' in order to capure a celestial meaning for the city. So on July 30, 762 CE, when the Sun was in {{Wiki|Leo (astrology)|Leo}}—the sign of royalty—and {{Wiki|Jupiter}} was rising over the horizon in {{Wiki|Sagittarius (astrology)|Sagittarius}}—the sign of the philosopher—they created the first ground for Baghdad. This would be a city of nobility, of wealth, and of learning. And together with hundreds of thousands of builders and scores of architects, they would build a blossoming city that would be a cultural and intellectual hub for the known world for the next ''500 years''. And it would change the course of history forever. Al-Mansur would name this city the "City of Peace", so, very ''bold'' ambition there.'' | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''Absolutely right, you want to get trade flowing, want to make sure you've got ''money'' in this new empire you've created. But as you rightly point out, you establish a capital city. Under caliph [[al-Mansur|Mansur]] in 762, they decide that they need a center for their new empire. And according to the historian [[al-Tabari]], Mansur heard a prophecy, an ancient Christian prophecy, and we ''do'' love our prophecies here. According to this prophecy, a man named "Miklas" will establish a city in the area that will eventually become Baghdad. And Mansur ''loved'' that, because he claimed that he was ''called'' "Miklas" when he was younger. Now, whether that's true or not is up in the air, but certainly it lends some ''reasoning'' for caliph Mansur's establishment of the city. So what does he do? He gathers around him his greatest thinkers and [[architect]]s and astrologers, people like {{Wiki|Naubakht}} and {{Wiki|Mashallah ibn Athari}} and {{Wiki|Omar Tiberiades|Umar al-Tabari}}. And he tells them, "Build me a city". These people were city planners and they were also astrologers. What they decide is that they are going to pick a ''specific time'' in order to capure a celestial meaning for the city. So on July 30, 762 CE, when the Sun was in {{Wiki|Leo (astrology)|Leo}}—the sign of royalty—and {{Wiki|Jupiter}} was rising over the horizon in {{Wiki|Sagittarius (astrology)|Sagittarius}}—the sign of the philosopher—they created the first ground for Baghdad. This would be a city of nobility, of wealth, and of learning. And together with hundreds of thousands of builders and scores of architects, they would build a blossoming city that would be a cultural and intellectual hub for the known world for the next ''500 years''. And it would change the course of history forever. Al-Mansur would name this city the "city of peace", so, very ''bold'' ambition there.'' |
| *'''Deana Hassanein:''' ''So, prophecies, dreams, and astrology were pretty big back then?'' | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' ''So, prophecies, dreams, and astrology were pretty big back then?'' |
| *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''Absolutely. It was a way for them to say that they were ordained by the heavens themselves.'' | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''Absolutely. It was a way for them to say that they were ordained by the heavens themselves.'' |
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| *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''Exactly.'' | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''Exactly.'' |
| *'''Deana Hassanein:''' ''And just in case people don't know, what is a caliph?'' | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' ''And just in case people don't know, what is a caliph?'' |
| *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''The caliph is the political leader of the Islamic world, it literally translates to "successor" or "{{Wiki|vicergerent}}". It's a political and social leader of the Muslim empires.'' | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''The caliph is the political leader of the Islamic world, it literally translates to "successor" or "[[wikt:viceregent|vicegerent]]". It's a political and social leader of the Muslim empires.'' |
| *'''Deana Hassanein:''' ''OK, so, round city for symbolism and practical reasons, too?'' | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' ''OK, so, round city for symbolism and practical reasons, too?'' |
| *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''Yeah! Ease of navigation, population flow. Actually, I always tell people, whenever I teach this class about Baghdad, I say, "Have you ever seen ''{{Wiki|Avatar: The Last Airbender}}''?", which is one of my favorite cartoons.'' | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''Yeah! Ease of navigation, population flow. Actually, I always tell people, whenever I teach this class about Baghdad, I say, "Have you ever seen ''{{Wiki|Avatar: The Last Airbender}}''?", which is one of my favorite cartoons.'' |
| *'''Deana Hassanein:''' ''Yeah.'' | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' ''Yeah.'' |
| *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''There's a city in it, the city of [[w:c:avatar:Ba Sing Se|Ba Sing Se]]. And it's a lot like Baghdad, round cities with concentric rings in the [[w:c:avatar:Earth Kingdom|Earth Kingdom]].'' | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''There's a city in it, the city of [https://avatar.fandom.com/wiki/Ba_Sing_Se Ba Sing Se]. And it's a lot like Baghdad, round cities with concentric rings in the [https://avatar.fandom.com/wiki/Earth_Kingdom Earth Kingdom].'' |
| *'''Deana Hassanein:''' ''And what do they always say in that cartoon?'' | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' ''And what do they always say in that cartoon?'' |
| *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''"There is no war in Ba Sing Se."'' (laughs) | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''"There is no war in Ba Sing Se."'' (laughs) |
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| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
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| ;Culture of Prosperity | | ;Culture of prosperity |
| ''Medieval Muslims imagined themselves as scholarly warriors, poets, and philosophers, knights, and cavaliers. This elite culture and the way it filtered down to the masses is what made this period of Baghdad so exciting. In this episode, we explore the culture of chivalry and the ideal household as the basic foundation of Abbasid culture and society. From the art of horsemanship to the ethos of the powerful, we'll find out what makes Baghdad so unique.'' | | ''Medieval Muslims imagined themselves as scholarly warriors, poets, and philosophers, knights, and cavaliers. This elite culture and the way it filtered down to the masses is what made this period of Baghdad so exciting. In this episode, we explore the culture of chivalry and the ideal household as the basic foundation of Abbasid culture and society. From the art of horsemanship to the ethos of the powerful, we'll find out what makes Baghdad so unique.'' |
| *'''Deana Hassanein:''' '' Hello! I'm Deana'' | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' '' Hello! I'm Deana'' |
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| *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''And I'm Ali. We have got a ''juicy'' one for you today, Deana.'' | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''And I'm Ali. We have got a ''juicy'' one for you today, Deana.'' |
| *'''Deana Hassanein:''' (laughs) | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' (laughs) |
| *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''When I say "harem", what do you imagine—actually, let me rephrase that: if you were a {{Wiki|Hollywood}} ''producer''—'' | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''When I say "harem", what do you imagine—actually, let me rephrase that: if you were a {{Wiki|Cinema of the United States|Hollywood}} ''producer''—'' |
| *'''Deana Hassanein:''' (laughs) | | *'''Deana Hassanein:''' (laughs) |
| *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''—and I said "harem", what would you imagine?'' | | *'''Ali Olomi:''' ''—and I said "harem", what would you imagine?'' |
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| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
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| ;War between the Brothers | | ;War between the brothers |
| ''[[Islam|Muslims]] spilled a lot of ink pondering what good government should look like, what a wise ruler should be like, and why it mattered for society. And this is the type of political intrigue that makes [[Baghdad]], the city of Peace, into a place of civil war. The [[Fourth Fitna|War of the Two Brothers]] starts on the Night of the Three Caliphs, where the succession of the throne is shaped by the death of [[Al-Hadi|one caliph]], the ascension of [[Harun al-Rashid|another]], and the birth of [[Al-Ma'mun|a third]]... it's a turning point... will Baghdad survive it?'' | | ''[[Islam|Muslims]] spilled a lot of ink pondering what good government should look like, what a wise ruler should be like, and why it mattered for society. And this is the type of political intrigue that makes [[Baghdad]], the City of Peace, into a place of civil war. The [[Fourth Fitna|War of the Two Brothers]] starts on the Night of the Three Caliphs, where the succession of the throne is shaped by the death of [[Al-Hadi|one caliph]], the ascension of [[Harun al-Rashid|another]], and the birth of [[Al-Ma'mun|a third]]... it's a turning point... will Baghdad survive it?'' |
| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
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| {{#tag:tabber| | | {{#tag:tabber| |
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| ;Civil War in Feudal Japan<nowiki>:</nowiki> The Sengoku Period | | ;Civil war in feudal Japan<nowiki>:</nowiki> The Sengoku Period |
| ''Dating from 1467-1603, the [[Sengoku period|Sengoku]] or 'Warring States' period is known as the bloodiest in [[Japan]]'s history; an era of continuous social upheaval and civil war which transformed the country. Shogun-led authority was shattered and 150 years of murder and betrayal followed as fearsome warlords ruled local territories with unflinching ruthlessness.<br><br>In the first episode of this series delving into the history behind the latest [[Assassin's Creed (series)|''Assassin's Creed'' game]], ''[[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]]'', Matt Lewis and Dr. {{Wiki|Christopher Harding}} discuss the origins of the Sengoku Period. Together, they explore how political power was organised in Japan during this time, introduce some of the key players, and discuss how the seeds were sown for Japanese unification.'' | | ''Dating from 1467-1603, the [[Sengoku period|Sengoku]] or 'Warring States' period is known as the bloodiest in [[Japan]]'s history; an era of continuous social upheaval and civil war which transformed the country. Shogun-led authority was shattered and 150 years of murder and betrayal followed as fearsome warlords ruled local territories with unflinching ruthlessness.<br><br>In the first episode of this series delving into the history behind the latest [[Assassin's Creed (series)|''Assassin's Creed'' game]], ''[[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]]'', Matt Lewis and Dr. {{Wiki|Christopher Harding}} discuss the origins of the Sengoku Period. Together, they explore how political power was organised in Japan during this time, introduce some of the key players, and discuss how the seeds were sown for Japanese unification.'' |
| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| 2= | | 2= |
| ;The Unification of Japan | | ;The unification of Japan |
| ''In the 16th century, [[Japan]] was embroiled in what is known as ''[[Sengoku period|Sengoku jidai]]''—'The Warring States' period. It was a time of bloody battles, social upheaval, and is known as the most violent in Japan's history.<br><br>But how, and when, did 150 years of bitter warfare and division come to an end? How did unification change the face of Japanese society?<br><br>In the second episode of this series delving into the history behind the latest [[Assassin's Creed (series)|''Assassin's Creed'' game]], ''[[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]]'', Matt Lewis and Dr. Christopher Harding discover how three men overpowered and outwitted Japan's rival warlords and in doing so, brought about the unification of a fractured region.'' | | ''In the 16th century, [[Japan]] was embroiled in what is known as ''[[Sengoku period|Sengoku jidai]]''—'The Warring States' period. It was a time of bloody battles, social upheaval, and is known as the most violent in Japan's history.<br><br>But how, and when, did 150 years of bitter warfare and division come to an end? How did unification change the face of Japanese society?<br><br>In the second episode of this series delving into the history behind the latest [[Assassin's Creed (series)|''Assassin's Creed'' game]], ''[[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]]'', Matt Lewis and Dr. Christopher Harding discover how three men overpowered and outwitted Japan's rival warlords and in doing so, brought about the unification of a fractured region.'' |
| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| 3= | | 3= |
| ;Portuguese missionaries in Japan | | ;Portuguese missionaries in Japan |
| | <!-- Later reissued 28 Dec 2025 under title "The first Europeans in Japan" per ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/the-first-europeans-in-japan, with the following blurb: |
| | :When Portuguese merchants ran aground on the Japanese isle of Tanegashima in 1543, two worlds collided—Europeans encountered Japan for the first time. For the next 50 years, Portuguese and their partners flooded into this newly discovered land aiming to spread the power of the Christian Church and sell wares that could revolutionise Japan, like the powerful gun. But in the fiery cauldron of Sengoku Japan, Portuguese missionaries were but one player in the most bloody and brutal of political games.<br><br>''Assassin's Creed: Shadows'' delves into the tensions at the heart of this culture clash. Did Buddhist and Shinto Japanese accept Christianity? Why did the Japanese see Europeans as [[wikt:南蛮|barbaric]]? Were Japanese warlords like Oda Nobunaga exploited by Western traders and church leaders, or were the Europeans unwittingly being exploited by the Japanese?<br><br>Matt Lewis and Prof. Frederik Cryns, historical advisor on the hit TV show ''{{Wiki|Shōgun (2024 TV series)|Shōgun}}'', uncover how Europeans fit into 16th century Japan's patchwork of daimyos and the momentous impact they had on feudal Japanese warfare and society.--> |
| | |
| ''When [[Portuguese Empire|Portuguese]] [[merchant]]s ran aground on the [[Japan]]ese isle of {{Wiki|Tanegashima}} in 1543 two worlds collided—[[Europe]]ans had encountered Japan for the first time. For the next 50 years, Portuguese-sponsored [[Priest|missionaries]] flooded into this newly discovered land aiming to exploit it for western benefit. But in the fiery cauldron of Sengoku Japan, Portuguese missionaries were but one player in the most bloody and brutal of political games.<br><br>In the third episode of this series delving into the history behind the latest [[Assassin's Creed (series)|''Assassin's Creed'' game]], ''[[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]]'', join Matt Lewis and Prof. Fredrick Cryns as they uncover how these missionaries fit into 16th century Japan's patchwork of warlords and daimyos, and the momentous impact they had on feudal Japanese warfare and society.'' | | ''When [[Portuguese Empire|Portuguese]] [[merchant]]s ran aground on the [[Japan]]ese isle of {{Wiki|Tanegashima}} in 1543 two worlds collided—[[Europe]]ans had encountered Japan for the first time. For the next 50 years, Portuguese-sponsored [[Priest|missionaries]] flooded into this newly discovered land aiming to exploit it for western benefit. But in the fiery cauldron of Sengoku Japan, Portuguese missionaries were but one player in the most bloody and brutal of political games.<br><br>In the third episode of this series delving into the history behind the latest [[Assassin's Creed (series)|''Assassin's Creed'' game]], ''[[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]]'', join Matt Lewis and Prof. Fredrick Cryns as they uncover how these missionaries fit into 16th century Japan's patchwork of warlords and daimyos, and the momentous impact they had on feudal Japanese warfare and society.'' |
| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
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| ;Oda Nobunaga | | ;Oda Nobunaga |
| | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/oda-nobunaga later renamed to "The ultimate samurai warlord: Oda Nobunaga, Japan's first Great Unifier" --> |
| ''[[Oda Nobunaga]]. He's one of feudal [[Japan]]'s most infamous and consequential figures, known to many as Japan's first '{{Wiki|ja:三英傑|Great Unifier}}'. From humble beginnings as the daimyo of [[Owari|Owari Province]], he embarked on a mission to unite all of Japan under his sole control. But how did he emerge as Japan's dominant warlord in an era of incessant social upheaval and civil war?<br><br>In the fifth episode delving into the history behind the latest [[Assassin's Creed (series)|''Assassin's Creed'' game]], ''[[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]]'', Matt Lewis and Nathan Ledbetter explore Nobunaga's ruthless ascent to power, his brutal battles with the [[Ninja|Shinobi]] Ikki league, and his [[Honnō-ji incident|tragic downfall]] at the hands of his ally, [[Akechi Mitsuhide]].'' | | ''[[Oda Nobunaga]]. He's one of feudal [[Japan]]'s most infamous and consequential figures, known to many as Japan's first '{{Wiki|ja:三英傑|Great Unifier}}'. From humble beginnings as the daimyo of [[Owari|Owari Province]], he embarked on a mission to unite all of Japan under his sole control. But how did he emerge as Japan's dominant warlord in an era of incessant social upheaval and civil war?<br><br>In the fifth episode delving into the history behind the latest [[Assassin's Creed (series)|''Assassin's Creed'' game]], ''[[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]]'', Matt Lewis and Nathan Ledbetter explore Nobunaga's ruthless ascent to power, his brutal battles with the [[Ninja|Shinobi]] Ikki league, and his [[Honnō-ji incident|tragic downfall]] at the hands of his ally, [[Akechi Mitsuhide]].'' |
| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| 6= | | 6= |
| ;The Tensho Iga War | | ;The Tensho Iga War |
| | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/the-tensho-iga-war later renamed to "Samurai vs shinobi: The Tensho Iga War" --> |
| ''In the sixth episode delving into the history behind the latest [[Assassin's Creed (series)|''Assassin's Creed'' game]], ''[[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]]'', Matt Lewis and Nathan Ledbetter follow the sound of marching footsteps and clashing blades into [[Japan]]'s mountainous [[Iga]] province, to learn about the fearsome conflict between [[samurai]] armies and guerrilla ''[[Ninja|shinobi]]'', or ninja, that was the [[Tenshō Iga War]] between 1578 and 1581.'' | | ''In the sixth episode delving into the history behind the latest [[Assassin's Creed (series)|''Assassin's Creed'' game]], ''[[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]]'', Matt Lewis and Nathan Ledbetter follow the sound of marching footsteps and clashing blades into [[Japan]]'s mountainous [[Iga]] province, to learn about the fearsome conflict between [[samurai]] armies and guerrilla ''[[Ninja|shinobi]]'', or ninja, that was the [[Tenshō Iga War]] between 1578 and 1581.'' |
| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
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| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
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| ;How To Fit In<nowiki>:</nowiki> Feudal Japan | | ;How to fit in<nowiki>:</nowiki> Feudal Japan |
| | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/how-to-fit-in-feudal-japan later renamed to "Shogun and Shinto: What life was like in Feudal Japan" --> |
| ''What was life like in feudal [[Japan]]? If you were born into the chaos of the [[Sengoku period|Warring States period]], would you have been a farmer, a [[merchant]], or a [[samurai]]? Or perhaps even an {{Wiki|Emperor of Japan|Emperor}}?<br><br>Delving into the history behind the latest [[Assassin's Creed (series)|''Assassin's Creed'' game]], ''[[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]]'', Matt Lewis and Dr. Tomoko Kate Kitagawa shed light on the customs, culture and class structures of medieval Japan. They explore what daily life would have been like for people beyond the famous names of history and legend, and how they saw themselves within the shifting society of the Sengoku era.'' | | ''What was life like in feudal [[Japan]]? If you were born into the chaos of the [[Sengoku period|Warring States period]], would you have been a farmer, a [[merchant]], or a [[samurai]]? Or perhaps even an {{Wiki|Emperor of Japan|Emperor}}?<br><br>Delving into the history behind the latest [[Assassin's Creed (series)|''Assassin's Creed'' game]], ''[[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]]'', Matt Lewis and Dr. Tomoko Kate Kitagawa shed light on the customs, culture and class structures of medieval Japan. They explore what daily life would have been like for people beyond the famous names of history and legend, and how they saw themselves within the shifting society of the Sengoku era.'' |
| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
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| ;Queen Victoria | | ;Queen Victoria |
| <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/queen-victoria later renamed to "Queen Victoria: The woman behind an era --> | | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/queen-victoria later renamed to "Queen Victoria: The woman behind an era" --> |
| ''Queen [[Victoria]] was the last English monarch of the {{Wiki|House of Hanover}} and gave her name to [[Victorian era|an era]] in [[United Kingdom|British]] history. Although small in stature, she was a towering figure as she witnessed major turning points in British history. Yet she is often caricatured as a spiky and stubborn woman to deal with.<br><br>In this episode, historian Alex Churchill joins Matt Lewis to lift the veil on Victoria's life as queen, unpacking the myths about her personality, exploring how she ruled in tandem with her beloved husband [[Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha|Albert]], survived eight [[assassination]] attempts, and then emerged from his shadow to rule with imperial magnificence.'' | | ''Queen [[Victoria]] was the last English monarch of the {{Wiki|House of Hanover}} and gave her name to [[Victorian era|an era]] in [[United Kingdom|British]] history. Although small in stature, she was a towering figure as she witnessed major turning points in British history. Yet she is often caricatured as a spiky and stubborn woman to deal with.<br><br>In this episode, historian Alex Churchill joins Matt Lewis to lift the veil on Victoria's life as queen, unpacking the myths about her personality, exploring how she ruled in tandem with her beloved husband [[Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha|Albert]], survived eight [[assassination]] attempts, and then emerged from his shadow to rule with imperial magnificence.'' |
| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| 2= | | 2= |
| ;Scotland Yard<nowiki>:</nowiki> The origins of London's police | | ;Scotland Yard<nowiki>:</nowiki> The origins of London's police |
| <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/scotland-yard-the-origins-of-londons-police later renamed to "How the Metropolitan Police shaped London --> | | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/scotland-yard-the-origins-of-londons-police later renamed to "How the Metropolitan Police shaped London" --> |
| ''[[Scotland Yard]]: the home of [[London]]'s [[Metropolitan Police Service|Metropolitan Police Force]]. In this episode, Matt Lewis and Dr. Jonah Miller look at the history of both Scotland Yard as a place and on the [[police]]men and detectives that worked within it. What went on inside? Why did it come to be known as Scotland Yard? And how significant a role did it play in shaping [[Victorian era|Victorian]] London?'' | | ''[[Scotland Yard]]: the home of [[London]]'s [[Metropolitan Police Service|Metropolitan Police Force]]. In this episode, Matt Lewis and Dr. Jonah Miller look at the history of both Scotland Yard as a place and on the [[police]]men and detectives that worked within it. What went on inside? Why did it come to be known as Scotland Yard? And how significant a role did it play in shaping [[Victorian era|Victorian]] London?'' |
| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
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| ;The Industrial Revolution<nowiki>:</nowiki> The birth of modern London | | ;The Industrial Revolution<nowiki>:</nowiki> The birth of modern London |
| ''The [[Industrial Revolution]] began in [[United Kingdom|Britain]] in the late 18th century, giving birth to an era that has changed world history. The period was characterized by rapid economic, social, and technological growth. Marked by innovation and inventions like the steam engine, {{Wiki|spinning jenny}}, and telephone, industrialization also saw a rise in urbanization, the factory system, poverty, and the exploitation of a new urban working class. This in turn led to social and political movements such as [[communism]].<br><br>Matt Lewis and Tom Furber from {{Wiki|London Metropolitan Archives|The London Archives}} provide an overview of how the Industrial Revolution came about and transformed the city of [[London]] at its epicenter. What were some of the most important advances during this period? What were the effects of rapid industrialization on [[Victorian era|Victorian]] society? '' | | ''The [[Industrial Revolution]] began in [[United Kingdom|Britain]] in the late 18th century, giving birth to an era that has changed world history. The period was characterized by rapid economic, social, and technological growth. Marked by innovation and inventions like the steam engine, {{Wiki|spinning jenny}}, and telephone, industrialization also saw a rise in urbanization, the factory system, poverty, and the exploitation of a new urban working class. This in turn led to social and political movements such as [[communism]].<br><br>Matt Lewis and Tom Furber from {{Wiki|The London Archives}} provide an overview of how the Industrial Revolution came about and transformed the city of [[London]] at its epicenter. What were some of the most important advances during this period? What were the effects of rapid industrialization on [[Victorian era|Victorian]] society? '' |
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| ;The Crown's Greatest Jewel<nowiki>:</nowiki> The Koh-i-Noor Diamond | | ;The Crown's greatest jewel<nowiki>:</nowiki> The Koh-i-Noor diamond |
| ''The literal jewel in the British crown, the [[Koh-i-Noor]] [[diamond]] has a history as rich as its caratage. Queen Victoria received it from the [[Duleep Singh|last maharaja]] of the [[Sikh Empire]], and it has become a symbol of British colonialism ever since—even in the eyes of the Empress of India herself.<br><br>In this episode, thanks to a glitch in the [[Animus]], Dan Snow steps in to interview {{Wiki|Shrabani Basu}} about the famous Koh-i-Noor diamond—its origin and its storied journey to modern day controversy.'' | | ''The literal jewel in the British crown, the [[Koh-i-Noor]] [[diamond]] has a history as rich as its caratage. Queen Victoria received it from the [[Duleep Singh|last maharaja]] of the [[Sikh Empire]], and it has become a symbol of British colonialism ever since—even in the eyes of the Empress of India herself.<br><br>In this episode, thanks to a glitch in the [[Animus]], Dan Snow steps in to interview {{Wiki|Shrabani Basu}} about the famous Koh-i-Noor diamond—its origin and its storied journey to modern day controversy.'' |
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| ;How did Assassin's Creed Syndicate bring Victorian London to life? | | ;How did Assassin's Creed<nowiki>:</nowiki> Syndicate bring Victorian London to life? |
| <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/how-did-assassins-creed-syndicate-bring-victorian-london-to- later renamed to "How Victorian London was brought to life in Assassin's Creed Syndicate" and then "Dev Talk: How was Queen Victoria brought to life in Assassin's Creed Syndicate? --> | | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/how-did-assassins-creed-syndicate-bring-victorian-london-to- later renamed to "How Victorian London was brought to life in Assassin's Creed Syndicate" and then "Dev Talk: How was Queen Victoria brought to life in Assassin's Creed Syndicate?" --> |
| ''For the past few weeks, Matt Lewis has investigated the history behind ''[[Assassin's Creed: Syndicate]]''. In this episode, Matt joins historian and video game writer Holly Nielsen to step into the [[Animus]] and uncover how history and gaming interact. Holly speaks exclusively to [[Jeffrey Yohalem]], Lead Writer on ''Assassin's Creed: Syndicate'', about how the developers met the challenge of recreating the people and places of the past.'' | | ''For the past few weeks, Matt Lewis has investigated the history behind ''[[Assassin's Creed: Syndicate]]''. In this episode, Matt joins historian and video game writer Holly Nielsen to step into the [[Animus]] and uncover how history and gaming interact. Holly speaks exclusively to [[Jeffrey Yohalem]], Lead Writer on ''Assassin's Creed: Syndicate'', about how the developers met the challenge of recreating the people and places of the past.'' |
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| ;The Ancient Olympics<nowiki>:</nowiki> Games of the gods | | ;The ancient Olympics<nowiki>:</nowiki> Games of the gods |
| ''A tradition that endured millennia. The ancient [[Olympic Games]] began in 776 BC and took place every four years until at least 396 AD. It was a major religious and sporting festival, attended by over 40,000 spectators who flocked to watch athletes compete in sports like wrestling, [[chariot]] racing, and athletics.<br><br>Matt Lewis is joined by Dr. {{Wiki|Nigel Spivey}} to explore the history of the ancient Olympic games, delving into its various origin stories and outlining how the games evolved over a thousand years of history. What was competing and spectating at the games like for ordinary people? What was the significance of the Olympic Games on wider Hellenic society?'' | | ''A tradition that endured millennia. The ancient [[Olympic Games]] began in 776 BC and took place every four years until at least 396 AD. It was a major religious and sporting festival, attended by over 40,000 spectators who flocked to watch athletes compete in sports like wrestling, [[chariot]] racing, and athletics.<br><br>Matt Lewis is joined by Dr. {{Wiki|Nigel Spivey}} to explore the history of the ancient Olympic games, delving into its various origin stories and outlining how the games evolved over a thousand years of history. What was competing and spectating at the games like for ordinary people? What was the significance of the Olympic Games on wider Hellenic society?'' |
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| ;The Parthenon<nowiki>:</nowiki> Humble temple or power play? | | ;The Parthenon<nowiki>:</nowiki> Humble temple or power play? |
| | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/the-parthenon-humble-temple-or-power-play later renamed to "Who built the Parthenon?" --> |
| ''An enduring symbol of ancient [[Greece|Greek]] artistry and architecture. Arguably the most recognizable monument they left behind. The [[Parthenon]].<br><br>Built atop the [[Akropolis Sanctuary|Acropolis]] in [[Athens]] during the 5th century BCE, its construction was completed just before the start of the [[Peloponnesian War]]. Today, its ruined [[marble]] pillars are printed on postcards the world over, and visited daily by hordes of bustling tourists. Tristan Hughes from ''The Ancients'' podcast guides Matt Lewis through the very long story of the Parthenon—from its origins in embezzlement, to its ruin in war, and the mysterious functions it served in between.'' | | ''An enduring symbol of ancient [[Greece|Greek]] artistry and architecture. Arguably the most recognizable monument they left behind. The [[Parthenon]].<br><br>Built atop the [[Akropolis Sanctuary|Acropolis]] in [[Athens]] during the 5th century BCE, its construction was completed just before the start of the [[Peloponnesian War]]. Today, its ruined [[marble]] pillars are printed on postcards the world over, and visited daily by hordes of bustling tourists. Tristan Hughes from ''The Ancients'' podcast guides Matt Lewis through the very long story of the Parthenon—from its origins in embezzlement, to its ruin in war, and the mysterious functions it served in between.'' |
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| ;The Minoan Labyrinth<nowiki>:</nowiki> Myth or Reality? | | ;The Minoan labyrinth<nowiki>:</nowiki> Myth or reality? |
| Assassin's Creed: Odyssey ''immerses players in the mythology of Ancient [[Greece]]. In particular, they can walk in the footsteps of [[Theseus]] through the [[Labyrinth of Lost Souls|Labyrinth]] and come face to face with the mythical [[Minotaur]].<br><br>Commonly associated with the maze-like [[Knossos Palace]] on [[Krete|Crete]], how much of the myth is rooted in reality? Prof. {{Wiki|Nicoletta Momigliano}} guides Tristan Hughes through the pathways between myth and reality of the Minoan Labyrinth.'' | | Assassin's Creed: Odyssey ''immerses players in the mythology of Ancient [[Greece]]. In particular, they can walk in the footsteps of [[Theseus]] through the [[Labyrinth of Lost Souls|Labyrinth]] and come face to face with the mythical [[Minotaur]].<br><br>Commonly associated with the maze-like [[Knossos Palace]] on [[Krete|Crete]], how much of the myth is rooted in reality? Prof. {{Wiki|Nicoletta Momigliano}} guides Tristan Hughes through the pathways between myth and reality of the Minoan Labyrinth.'' |
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| ;How Assassin's Creed Odyssey recreated Ancient Greece | | ;How Assassin's Creed<nowiki>:</nowiki> Odyssey recreated ancient Greece |
| <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/how-assassins-creed-odyssey-recreated-ancient-greece later renamed to "Dev Talk: How did honeycomb inspire the world of Assassin's Creed Odyssey?" and then "Ancient Greek Architecture in Assassin's Creed Odyssey" --> | | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/how-assassins-creed-odyssey-recreated-ancient-greece later renamed to "Dev Talk: How did honeycomb inspire the world of Assassin's Creed: Odyssey?" and then "Ancient Greek Architecture in Assassin's Creed: Odyssey" --> |
| ''For the past few weeks, Matt Lewis has investigated the history behind ''[[Assassin's Creed: Odyssey]]''. In this episode, Matt Lewis joins historian and video game writer Holly Nielsen to step into the [[Animus]] and uncover how history and gaming interact. Holly speaks exclusively to [[Benjamin Hall]], World Director of ''Assassin's Creed: Odyssey'', about how the developers met the challenge of bringing the past to life.'' | | ''For the past few weeks, Matt Lewis has investigated the history behind ''[[Assassin's Creed: Odyssey]]''. In this episode, Matt Lewis joins historian and video game writer Holly Nielsen to step into the [[Animus]] and uncover how history and gaming interact. Holly speaks exclusively to [[Benjamin Hall]], World Director of ''Assassin's Creed: Odyssey'', about how the developers met the challenge of bringing the past to life.'' |
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| ;The Alexandrian War<nowiki>:</nowiki> Caesar's mistake | | ;The Alexandrian War<nowiki>:</nowiki> Caesar's mistake |
| | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/the-alexandrian-war-caesars-mistake later renamed to "The Alexandrian War: Julius Caesar's biggest military blunder" --> |
| ''In 47 BCE, [[Gaius Julius Caesar|Julius Caesar]] arrived in [[Egypt]] as a victorious general, ready to make an easy alliance with the [[Pharaoh]]. Instead, he found himself [[Siege of Alexandria|besieged]] in Egypt's [[Alexandria|capital city]] by the [[Ptolemy XIII|very ruler]] who wanted to ally with him. Trapped and outnumbered, Caesar's glory was almost cut short.<br><br>In this episode, Matt Lewis and Dr. Jen Gerrish unravel the messy politics, personalities, and relationships that led to Caesar's most dangerous moment.'' | | ''In 47 BCE, [[Gaius Julius Caesar|Julius Caesar]] arrived in [[Egypt]] as a victorious general, ready to make an easy alliance with the [[Pharaoh]]. Instead, he found himself [[Siege of Alexandria|besieged]] in Egypt's [[Alexandria|capital city]] by the [[Ptolemy XIII|very ruler]] who wanted to ally with him. Trapped and outnumbered, Caesar's glory was almost cut short.<br><br>In this episode, Matt Lewis and Dr. Jen Gerrish unravel the messy politics, personalities, and relationships that led to Caesar's most dangerous moment.'' |
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| ;Ancient Egyptian architecture in Assassin's Creed Origins | | ;Ancient Egyptian architecture in Assassin's Creed: Origins |
| ''In ''Assassin's Creed: Origins'', players can do what no tour group today can do: [[Freerunning|clamber all over]] and inside the monuments of ancient [[Egypt]], from the [[Great Sphinx of Giza|Sphinx]] to [[Cleopatra]]'s [[Ptolemaic Royal Palace|Palace]], from the [[temple]] at [[Karnak]] to the [[Giza|Great Pyramids]].<br><br>In this episode, Matt Lewis and Dr. Holly Nielsen review the game's adaptation of history, before interviewing Ubisoft resident historian and ''[[Assassin's Creed (series)|Assassin's Creed]]'' World Director [[Maxime Durand]] about how the game developers recreated ancient Egypt.'' | | ''In ''Assassin's Creed: Origins'', players can do what no tour group today can do: [[Freerunning|clamber all over]] and inside the monuments of ancient [[Egypt]], from the [[Great Sphinx of Giza|Sphinx]] to [[Cleopatra]]'s [[Ptolemaic Royal Palace|Palace]], from the [[temple]] at [[Karnak]] to the [[Giza|Great Pyramids]].<br><br>In this episode, Matt Lewis and Dr. Holly Nielsen review the game's adaptation of history, before interviewing Ubisoft resident historian and ''[[Assassin's Creed (series)|Assassin's Creed]]'' World Director [[Maxime Durand]] about how the game developers recreated ancient Egypt.'' |
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| ;Napoleon<nowiki>:</nowiki> The dictator of Democracy | | ;Napoleon<nowiki>:</nowiki> The dictator of democracy |
| ''[[Napoleon Bonaparte]] is a household name; a rare example of someone who is as well remembered by his supporters as by his enemies. His life is rich with dramatic irony. He was a key figure in the creation of the [[First French Republic]], yet became a self-appointed [[French Empire|Emperor]]. Surrounded by enemies, he secured peace in France through [[Napoleonic Wars|war abroad]] and was hated by the [[Monarchy|monarchies]] of [[Europe]], who feared he would bring [[democracy]] to their lands.<br><br>{{Wiki|Dan Snow}} from ''Dan Snow's History Hit'' joins Matt Lewis to ask who exactly was this man? [[Corsica|Where]] did he come from and what is his legacy for the Western world?'' | | ''[[Napoleon Bonaparte]] is a household name; a rare example of someone who is as well remembered by his supporters as by his enemies. His life is rich with dramatic irony. He was a key figure in the creation of the [[First French Republic]], yet became a self-appointed [[French Empire|Emperor]]. Surrounded by enemies, he secured peace in France through [[Napoleonic Wars|war abroad]] and was hated by the [[Monarchy|monarchies]] of [[Europe]], who feared he would bring [[democracy]] to their lands.<br><br>{{Wiki|Dan Snow}} from ''Dan Snow's History Hit'' joins Matt Lewis to ask who exactly was this man? [[Corsica|Where]] did he come from and what is his legacy for the Western world?'' |
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| ;Notre Dame<nowiki>:</nowiki> Surviving the fire of History | | ;Notre Dame<nowiki>:</nowiki> Surviving the fire of history |
| ''[[Notre-Dame|Notre Dame]] is arguably the [[Earth|world]]'s most famous [[Church|cathedral]] and has watched over the [[Paris]]ian skyline since its construction in the [[Middle Ages]]. But we are lucky that it remains standing at all.<br><br>Dr. {{Wiki|Emma J. Wells|Emma Wells}} joins Matt Lewis to reveal how Notre Dame acquired this symbolic status. How was it built? And how did the [[French Revolution]] nearly destroy it?'' | | ''[[Notre-Dame|Notre Dame]] is arguably the [[Earth|world]]'s most famous [[Church|cathedral]] and has watched over the [[Paris]]ian skyline since its construction in the [[Middle Ages]]. But we are lucky that it remains standing at all.<br><br>Dr. {{Wiki|Emma J. Wells|Emma Wells}} joins Matt Lewis to reveal how Notre Dame acquired this symbolic status. How was it built? And how did the [[French Revolution]] nearly destroy it?'' |
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| ;Hagia Sophia<nowiki>:</nowiki> were worlds collide | | ;Hagia Sophia<nowiki>:</nowiki> Where worlds collide |
| ''The [[Hagia Sophia]] is a landmark that has stood for 1500 years, and that players can clamber all over in ''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]''. It is remarkable not only for its longevity, but also for its blending of multiple cultures: their art, architecture, languages, and faiths.<br><br>To unpack this complex history, Matt Lewis is joined by Emily Neumeier, Assistant Professor of of Islamic art and architecture at {{Wiki|Temple University}}.'' | | ''The [[Hagia Sophia]] is a landmark that has stood for 1500 years, and that players can clamber all over in ''[[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]]''. It is remarkable not only for its longevity, but also for its blending of multiple cultures: their art, architecture, languages, and faiths.<br><br>To unpack this complex history, Matt Lewis is joined by Emily Neumeier, Assistant Professor of of Islamic art and architecture at {{Wiki|Temple University}}.'' |
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| ;Samurai x Shinobi | | ;Chasing Shadows<nowiki>:</nowiki> Samurai x Shinobi |
| | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/chasing-shadows-samurai-x-shinobi later renamed to "What was life like as a samurai and shinobi in medieval Japan?" --> |
| [[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]] ''gives players the chance to experience history as two icons of medieval [[Japan]]: [[samurai]] and ''[[Ninja|shinobi]]'' (known today as ninja). In this special series, Matt Lewis and Professor Eric Rath from the {{Wiki|University of Kansas}} take an in-depth look at how these legendary warriors lived and answer the question, what is the difference between samurai and ''shinobi''?<br><br>This episode explores the warriors' culture. Did samurai really live by a code called {{Wiki|bushido}}? What were the guiding principles of ''shinobi''? And what was daily life like for them—their hobbies, their religion, and their diet?'' | | [[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]] ''gives players the chance to experience history as two icons of medieval [[Japan]]: [[samurai]] and ''[[Ninja|shinobi]]'' (known today as ninja). In this special series, Matt Lewis and Professor Eric Rath from the {{Wiki|University of Kansas}} take an in-depth look at how these legendary warriors lived and answer the question, what is the difference between samurai and ''shinobi''?<br><br>This episode explores the warriors' culture. Did samurai really live by a code called {{Wiki|bushido}}? What were the guiding principles of ''shinobi''? And what was daily life like for them—their hobbies, their religion, and their diet?'' |
| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
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| ;Samurai and Shinobi<nowiki>:</nowiki> Who really ruled Medieval Japan? | | ;Samurai x Shinobi<nowiki>:</nowiki> Politics |
| | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/chasing-shadows-samurai-x-shinobi-2-politics later renamed to "Samurai and Shinobi: Who really ruled Medieval Japan?" --> |
| [[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]] ''gives players the chance to experience history as two icons of medieval [[Japan]]: [[samurai]] and ''[[Ninja|shinobi]]'' (known today as ninja). In this special series, Matt Lewis and Professor Eric Rath from the {{Wiki|University of Kansas}} take an in-depth look at how these legendary warriors lived and answer the question, what is the difference between samurai and ''shinobi''?<br><br>This episode explores the political structures of medieval imperial Japan. How much power did the emperor really have in the age of the samurai warlord? And did the ''shinobi'' really form democratic republics to challenge the status quo?'' | | [[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]] ''gives players the chance to experience history as two icons of medieval [[Japan]]: [[samurai]] and ''[[Ninja|shinobi]]'' (known today as ninja). In this special series, Matt Lewis and Professor Eric Rath from the {{Wiki|University of Kansas}} take an in-depth look at how these legendary warriors lived and answer the question, what is the difference between samurai and ''shinobi''?<br><br>This episode explores the political structures of medieval imperial Japan. How much power did the emperor really have in the age of the samurai warlord? And did the ''shinobi'' really form democratic republics to challenge the status quo?'' |
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| ;Swords and throwing stars<nowiki>:</nowiki> What weapons did samurai and shinobi Use? | | ;Samurai x Shinobi<nowiki>:</nowiki> Weapons |
| | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/chasing-shadows-samurai-x-shinobi-3-weapons later renamed to "Swords and throwing stars: What weapons did samurai and shinobi use?" --> |
| [[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]] ''gives players the chance to experience history as two icons of medieval [[Japan]]: [[samurai]] and ''[[Ninja|shinobi]]'' (known today as ninja). In this special series, Matt Lewis and Professor Eric Rath from the {{Wiki|University of Kansas}} take an in-depth look at how these legendary warriors lived and answer the question, what is the difference between samurai and ''shinobi''?<br><br>This episode dives into the tools of the trade—from ''[[katana]]'' to [[grappling hook]], samurai [[helmet]]s to ''shinobi'' [[Smoke screen bomb|smoke bombs]], Eric and Matt discuss the weapons used by the warriors of [[Sengoku period|Sengoku]] Japan.'' | | [[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]] ''gives players the chance to experience history as two icons of medieval [[Japan]]: [[samurai]] and ''[[Ninja|shinobi]]'' (known today as ninja). In this special series, Matt Lewis and Professor Eric Rath from the {{Wiki|University of Kansas}} take an in-depth look at how these legendary warriors lived and answer the question, what is the difference between samurai and ''shinobi''?<br><br>This episode dives into the tools of the trade—from ''[[katana]]'' to [[grappling hook]], samurai [[helmet]]s to ''shinobi'' [[Smoke screen bomb|smoke bombs]], Eric and Matt discuss the weapons used by the warriors of [[Sengoku period|Sengoku]] Japan.'' |
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| ;How did samurai and shinobi fight battles in Medieval Japan? | | ;Samurai x Shinobi<nowiki>:</nowiki> Warfare |
| | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/chasing-shadows-samurai-x-shinobi-4-warfare later renamed to "How did samurai and shinobi fight battles in Medieval Japan?" --> |
| [[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]] ''gives players the chance to experience history as two icons of medieval [[Japan]]: [[samurai]] and ''[[Ninja|shinobi]]'' (known today as ninja). In this special series, Matt Lewis and Professor Eric Rath from the {{Wiki|University of Kansas}} take an in-depth look at how these legendary warriors lived and answer the question, what is the difference between samurai and ''shinobi''?<br><br>This episode thrusts us into the thick of combat. How did samurai battle tactics compare to shinobi guerilla warfare?'' | | [[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]] ''gives players the chance to experience history as two icons of medieval [[Japan]]: [[samurai]] and ''[[Ninja|shinobi]]'' (known today as ninja). In this special series, Matt Lewis and Professor Eric Rath from the {{Wiki|University of Kansas}} take an in-depth look at how these legendary warriors lived and answer the question, what is the difference between samurai and ''shinobi''?<br><br>This episode thrusts us into the thick of combat. How did samurai battle tactics compare to shinobi guerilla warfare?'' |
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| ;Samurai & Shinobi<nowiki>:</nowiki> Assassin's Creed Shadows Review | | ;Samurai x Shinobi<nowiki>:</nowiki> Assassin's Creed Shadows Review |
| | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/samurai-shinobi-assassins-creed-shadows-review later renamed to "Samurai & Shinobi: Historians review Assassin's Creed: Shadows" --> |
| [[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]] ''is now available to play! Matt Lewis had advanced access to the new game and stepped into the shoes of a [[samurai]] and ''[[Ninja|shinobi]]'' in [[Middle Ages|medieval]] [[Japan]], armed with the knowledge he's gained about Japan's legendary warriors from this special series.<br><br>He's joined by historian and video game narrative designer Holly Nielsen, who brings her experience to review how the developers of ''Assassin's Creed'' adapted real history into entertainment.'' | | [[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]] ''is now available to play! Matt Lewis had advanced access to the new game and stepped into the shoes of a [[samurai]] and ''[[Ninja|shinobi]]'' in [[Middle Ages|medieval]] [[Japan]], armed with the knowledge he's gained about Japan's legendary warriors from this special series.<br><br>He's joined by historian and video game narrative designer Holly Nielsen, who brings her experience to review how the developers of ''Assassin's Creed'' adapted real history into entertainment.'' |
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| ;The Anglo-Sikh Wars | | ;The Anglo-Sikh Wars |
| Assassin’s Creed Chronicles: India ''puts players in the heart of the [[Sikh Empire]] in 1841, at a time when only the Sikh Empire remained unconquered by the [[British Empire|British]]. Perhaps inevitably, this decade witnessed the bloody {{Wiki|First Anglo-Sikh War|Anglo-Sikh Wars}}. These conflicts would ultimately determine the fate of British power in [[India]], and by extension, the power of [[United Kingdom|Britain]] worldwide for the next century.<br><br>To shed light on these complex events, Matt is joined by historian, author, and Director of the Sikh Museum Initiative, {{Wiki|Gurinder Singh Mann}}.''
| | Assassin's Creed Chronicles: India ''puts players in the heart of the [[Sikh Empire]] in 1841, at a time when only the Sikh Empire remained unconquered by the [[British Empire|British]]. Perhaps inevitably, this decade witnessed the bloody {{Wiki|First Anglo-Sikh War|Anglo-Sikh Wars}}. These conflicts would ultimately determine the fate of British power in [[India]], and by extension, the power of [[United Kingdom|Britain]] worldwide for the next century.<br><br>To shed light on these complex events, Matt is joined by historian, author, and Director of the Sikh Museum Initiative, {{Wiki|Gurinder Singh Mann}}.'' |
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| ;Amritsar Summer Palace<nowiki>:</nowiki> The heart of the Sikh Empire | | ;Amritsar Summer Palace<nowiki>:</nowiki> The heart of the Sikh Empire |
| | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/amritsar-summer-palace-the-heart-of-the-sikh-empire later renamed in reverse to "The heart of the Sikh Empire: Amritsar Summer Palace" --> |
| [[Assassin's Creed Chronicles: India]] ''begins in the glorious [[Ranjit Singh's summer palace|Amritsar Summer Palace]], and allows players to [[Freerunning|climb]], jump, and fight over its rooftops against the spectacular backdrop of the [[Amritsar|capital]] of the [[Sikh Empire]].<br><br>The Palace was the brainchild of [[Ranjit Singh]]. To help conjure the experience of visiting the Summer Palace, and to understand its wider significance, Matt Lewis is joined once again by Davinder Toor. | | [[Assassin's Creed Chronicles: India]] ''begins in the glorious [[Ranjit Singh's summer palace|Amritsar Summer Palace]], and allows players to [[Freerunning|climb]], jump, and fight over its rooftops against the spectacular backdrop of the [[Amritsar|capital]] of the [[Sikh Empire]].<br><br>The Palace was the brainchild of [[Ranjit Singh]]. To help conjure the experience of visiting the Summer Palace, and to understand its wider significance, Matt Lewis is joined once again by Davinder Toor. |
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| ;The First World War<nowiki>:</nowiki> The Seven Years' War | | ;The First World War<nowiki>:</nowiki> The Seven Years' War |
| <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/the-first-world-war-the-seven-years-war later renamed to "Britain vs France in America: The First World War?" --> | | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/the-first-world-war-the-seven-years-war later renamed to "Britain vs France in America: The First World War?" and then "What caused the Seven Years' War?" --> |
| [[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]] ''takes us back to a time when the troubles of [[Monarchy|royal]] houses in [[Europe]] violently affected the lives of people across the [[Atlantic Ocean]]. When the Old World and the [[Americas|New World]] violently collided in the {{Wiki|French and Indian War|French-Indian War}}. But that was just one part of a clash of empires.<br><br>Professor Emma Hart joins Dan Snow to explain the complex causes and events of an 18th century conflict that was so huge, it might truly claim the title of the first world war: the [[Seven Years' War]]. | | [[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]] ''takes us back to a time when the troubles of [[Monarchy|royal]] houses in [[Europe]] violently affected the lives of people across the [[Atlantic Ocean]]. When the Old World and the [[Americas|New World]] violently collided in the [[Seven Years' War|French-Indian War]]. But that was just one part of a clash of empires.<br><br>Professor Emma Hart joins Dan Snow to explain the complex causes and events of an 18th century conflict that was so huge, it might truly claim the title of the first world war: the [[Seven Years' War]]. |
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| [[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]] ''and'' [[Assassin's Creed III]] let us sail through the frozen waters of the Northwest Passage at the most dangerous time in history.<br><br>From {{Wiki|Hudson Bay}} to {{Wiki|Hawaii}}, the coasts of [[Canada]] and the [[United States|USA]] were mapped as an unintended consequence of history’s greatest [[Age of Discovery|explorers]] trying to find a [[Northwest Passage|navigable path]] from the [[Atlantic Ocean|Atlantic]] to the [[Pacific Ocean|Pacific]]. Just what was it that made this route so hard to find? And how did explorers overcome the fatal challenges it posed? Historian and adventurer Ken McGoogan helps Dan Snow discover the answers.'' | | [[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]] ''and'' [[Assassin's Creed III]] let us sail through the frozen waters of the Northwest Passage at the most dangerous time in history.<br><br>From {{Wiki|Hudson Bay}} to {{Wiki|Hawaii}}, the coasts of [[Canada]] and the [[United States|USA]] were mapped as an unintended consequence of history’s greatest [[Age of Discovery|explorers]] trying to find a [[Northwest Passage|navigable path]] from the [[Atlantic Ocean|Atlantic]] to the [[Pacific Ocean|Pacific]]. Just what was it that made this route so hard to find? And how did explorers overcome the fatal challenges it posed? Historian and adventurer Ken McGoogan helps Dan Snow discover the answers.'' |
| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| 4=Assassin's Creed writer reveals how they brought 18th century war to life | | 4= |
| <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/assassins-creed-writer-reveals-how-ubisoft-brought-18th-cent later renamed to "Assassin's Creed writer reveals how they brought the French-Indian War to life", then "Dev Talk: Why did Assassin's Creed Rogue make a villain the hero?", and then "The Seven Years War in Assassin's Creed Rogue" --> | | ;Assassin's Creed writer reveals how they brought 18th century war to life |
| | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/assassins-creed-writer-reveals-how-ubisoft-brought-18th-cent later renamed to "Assassin's Creed writer reveals how they brought the French-Indian War to life", then "Dev Talk: Why did Assassin's Creed Rogue make a villain the hero?", and then "The Seven Years War in Assassin's Creed: Rogue" --> |
| [[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]] ''lets players explore the frozen world of the [[Arctic Ocean|Arctic]] coastline of [[North America]]. Players inhabit the memories of [[Shay Cormac]], an [[Ireland|Irish]] [[Assassins|Assassin]] who [[Assassin-Templar War|switches sides]] to join the [[Templars]], against the backdrop of the [[Seven Years' War]], or as its [[Americas|American]] theatre is known, the French-Indian War.<br><br>Dr. Holly Nielsen is joined by [[James Nadiger]], scriptwriter on ''Assassin's Creed: Rogue'', to shed light on the dramatic shifts behind this unusual entry in the [[Assassin's Creed (series)|series]].'' | | [[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]] ''lets players explore the frozen world of the [[Arctic Ocean|Arctic]] coastline of [[North America]]. Players inhabit the memories of [[Shay Cormac]], an [[Ireland|Irish]] [[Assassins|Assassin]] who [[Assassin-Templar War|switches sides]] to join the [[Templars]], against the backdrop of the [[Seven Years' War]], or as its [[Americas|American]] theatre is known, the French-Indian War.<br><br>Dr. Holly Nielsen is joined by [[James Nadiger]], scriptwriter on ''Assassin's Creed: Rogue'', to shed light on the dramatic shifts behind this unusual entry in the [[Assassin's Creed (series)|series]].'' |
| }} | | }} |
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| ;What film inspired the look of Assassin's Creed? | | ;What film inspired the look of Assassin's Creed? |
| <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/dev-talk-what-film-inspired-the-look-of-assassins-creed later renamed to "How did medieval Damascus change for better gameplay in Assassin's Creed?" and then "The Medieval Holy Land in Assassin's Creed" --> | | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/dev-talk-what-film-inspired-the-look-of-assassins-creed later renamed to "How did medieval Damascus change for better gameplay in Assassin's Creed?" and then "The medieval Holy Land in Assassin's Creed" --> |
| ''For nearly two decades, the [[Assassin's Creed (series)|''Assassin's Creed'' video games]] have transported players to worlds of the past. From the hot sands of the [[Middle Ages|medieval]] [[Middle East]] to the frozen [[Arctic Ocean|Arctic]] of 18th century [[Canada]]; the variety of periods, people, and places of the past that have been built from scratch, in detail, is immense. But video games are also meant to entertain, and there are gaps in our knowledge of history which must be filled when creating these interactive worlds for players to escape into.<br><br>Today, Dr. Holly Nielsen speaks to [[Raphael Lacoste]], concept artist and art director on the very first ''[[Assassin's Creed]]'' game and many more since, to recount the evolution of the series.'' | | ''For nearly two decades, the [[Assassin's Creed (series)|''Assassin's Creed'' video games]] have transported players to worlds of the past. From the hot sands of the [[Middle Ages|medieval]] [[Middle East]] to the frozen [[Arctic Ocean|Arctic]] of 18th century [[Canada]]; the variety of periods, people, and places of the past that have been built from scratch, in detail, is immense. But video games are also meant to entertain, and there are gaps in our knowledge of history which must be filled when creating these interactive worlds for players to escape into.<br><br>Today, Dr. Holly Nielsen speaks to [[Raphael Lacoste]], concept artist and art director on the very first ''[[Assassin's Creed]]'' game and many more since, to recount the evolution of the series.'' |
| }} | | }} |
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| ;The Nabataeans | | ;The Nabataeans |
| [[Assassin's Creed: Mirage]] [[Valley of Memory]] takes players to the haunting tomb city of {{Wiki|Hegra}}, a remarkable memento of the [[Nabataeans]]. Hewn from the hard rock of the mountainside are spectacular, seemingly countless tombs that contain inscriptions, artifacts, and echoes of this lost civilization... Who were the Nabataeans? Where did they come from? And why do they suddenly disappear from the archaeological record at Hegra?<br><br>To teach Matt Lewis more about Hegra and the Nabataean civilization, he's joined by Professor {{Wiki|Laïla Nehmé}}. Her books, ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=DVNgzgEACAAJ Guide to Hegra: Archaeology in the Land of the Nabataeans of Arabia]'' and ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=9REj0AEACAAJ AlUla: Wonder of Arabia]'' are available online. | | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/the-nabataeans later renamed to "Who were the Nabataeans?" --> |
| | [[Assassin's Creed: Mirage]] [[Valley of Memory]] takes players to the haunting tomb city of [[Hegra]], a remarkable memento of the [[Nabataeans]]. Hewn from the hard rock of the mountainside are spectacular, seemingly countless tombs that contain inscriptions, artifacts, and echoes of this lost civilization... Who were the Nabataeans? Where did they come from? And why do they suddenly disappear from the archaeological record at Hegra?<br><br>To teach Matt Lewis more about Hegra and the Nabataean civilization, he's joined by Professor {{Wiki|Laïla Nehmé}}. Her books, ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=DVNgzgEACAAJ Guide to Hegra: Archaeology in the Land of the Nabataeans of Arabia]'' and ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=9REj0AEACAAJ AlUla: Wonder of Arabia]'' are available online. |
| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| 2= | | 2= |
| ;The Incense Route through Arabia | | ;The incense route through Arabia |
| [[Assassin's Creed: Mirage]] [[Valley of Memory]] ''takes our hero [[Basim ibn Ishaq]] from the glory of [[Baghdad]] in the [[Abbasid Caliphate|Abbasid]] era to the remote oasis at [[Al-Ula]]. There, he discovers mysteries hidden in the mountains and ancient dwellings of [[Nabataeans|civilizations]] that fell long ago.<br><br>Even though the oasis at AlUla has provided sustenance to people living there throughout history, that doesn't entirely explain why so many civilizations wanted to rule it. Instead, the answer may lie in its position on the {{Wiki|Incense trade route|trade routes}} that carried spices and incense from [[Arabia]] to the rest of the world. Where did the Incense Route travel to and from? How did it influence life in Al-Ula? And what relevance does the Route have to today's spice trade?<br><br>To answer these questions, Matt Lewis is joined by Dr. Sterenn Le Maguer, whose expertise in Islamic archaeology, trade, and pilgrimage routes in Arabia makes her the perfect person to explore the Incense Route.'' | | [[Assassin's Creed: Mirage]] [[Valley of Memory]] ''takes our hero [[Basim ibn Ishaq]] from the glory of [[Baghdad]] in the [[Abbasid Caliphate|Abbasid]] era to the remote oasis at [[al-Ula]]. There, he discovers mysteries hidden in the mountains and ancient dwellings of [[Nabataeans|civilizations]] that fell long ago.<br><br>Even though the oasis at AlUla has provided sustenance to people living there throughout history, that doesn't entirely explain why so many civilizations wanted to rule it. Instead, the answer may lie in its position on the [[Incense Road|trade routes]] that carried spices and incense from [[Arabia]] to the rest of the world. Where did the Incense Route travel to and from? How did it influence life in Al-Ula? And what relevance does the Route have to today's spice trade?<br><br>To answer these questions, Matt Lewis is joined by Dr. Sterenn Le Maguer, whose expertise in Islamic archaeology, trade, and pilgrimage routes in Arabia makes her the perfect person to explore the Incense Route.'' |
| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| 3= | | 3= |
| ;Ancient civilizations of Arabia in Assassin's Creed Mirage<nowiki>:</nowiki> Valley of Memory | | ;Ancient civilizations of Arabia in Assassin's Creed Mirage<nowiki>:</nowiki> Valley of Memory |
| [[Assassin's Creed: Mirage]]: [[Valley of Memory]] ''recreates life in the [[Al-Ula|AlUla]] oasis as it was over a millennium ago. Players can climb the battlements of a [[Islam|Muslim]] fortress, wander through an ancient city carved into the mountainside, and experience the vibrant sights and sounds of a medieval spice market.<br><br>In this episode, Creative Director Olivier Leonardi divulges the behind-the-scenes secrets of how the game developers combined history and artistry to transport players to the unique locations and ancient atmosphere of AlUla.'' | | [[Assassin's Creed: Mirage]]: [[Valley of Memory]] ''recreates life in the [[al-Ula]] oasis as it was over a millennium ago. Players can climb the battlements of a [[Islam|Muslim]] fortress, wander through an ancient city carved into the mountainside, and experience the vibrant sights and sounds of a medieval spice market.<br><br>In this episode, Creative Director Olivier Leonardi divulges the behind-the-scenes secrets of how the game developers combined history and artistry to transport players to the unique locations and ancient atmosphere of AlUla.'' |
| | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| | 4= |
| | ;The ancient open-air library of Jabal Ikmah |
| | [[Assassin's Creed: Mirage]]: [[Valley of Memory]] ''transports players to the medieval [[Abbasid Caliphate]]. One place in particular that is recreated in the game is the remarkable [[Ikmah Mountain|Jabal Ikmah]], the ancient open-air library. Here, on the mountains surrounding [[al-Ula]], archaeologists have found a treasure trove of texts that stretch across centuries in multiple languages and from several civilisations. Who made these inscriptions, and why? What do they reveal about the daily lives of the ancient peoples who lived in the oasis?<br><br>Matt Lewis is joined by Solaiman al-Theeb, professor at the AlUla Language Institute. His work with ancient languages and inscriptions at Jabal Ikmah makes him the perfect person to reveal more about the writings in the rock.'' |
| | }} |
| |-|21= | | |-|21= |
| ;Uncategorized | | ;Uncategorized |
| {{#tag:tabber| | | {{#tag:tabber| |
| 1= | | 1= |
| ;Vikings in Medieval Baghdad | | ;Vikings in medieval Baghdad |
| ''In the ninth century, the [[Vikings]] earned a fearsome reputation along the coasts of western [[Europe]]. But they also travelled eastwards and reached [[Constantinople]], the {{Wiki|Caspian Sea}}, and even [[Baghdad]], the bustling heart of the mighty [[Islam]]ic [[Abbasid Caliphate|Abbasid Empire]].<br><br>Matt Lewis is joined by Dr. {{Wiki|Cat Jarman}} to explore why Viking [[raid]]ers traded the frozen hinterlands of [[Scandinavia|Northern Europe]] for the heat and hubbub of the [[Middle East|Near East]].'' | | ''In the ninth century, the [[Vikings]] earned a fearsome reputation along the coasts of western [[Europe]]. But they also travelled eastwards and reached [[Constantinople]], the {{Wiki|Caspian Sea}}, and even [[Baghdad]], the bustling heart of the mighty [[Islam]]ic [[Abbasid Caliphate|Abbasid Empire]].<br><br>Matt Lewis is joined by Dr. {{Wiki|Cat Jarman}} to explore why Viking [[raid]]ers traded the frozen hinterlands of [[Scandinavia|Northern Europe]] for the heat and hubbub of the [[Middle East|Near East]].'' |
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| 4= | | 4= |
| ;Revolutionary Paris in Assassin's Creed Unity | | ;Revolutionary Paris in Assassin's Creed<nowiki>:</nowiki> Unity |
| Assassin's Creed: Unity ''offers a stunning recreation of 18th century [[Paris]], which in modern times is the home of [[Ubisoft]]. How did this setting affect the developers' work? Did this personal connection make things easier or harder? And how did the developers approach the intense history of the [[French Revolution]], which is still an emotive period for many people?<br><br>Dr. Holly Nielsen is joined by Ubisoft resident historian and ''Assassin's Creed'' World Director [[Maxime Durand]] to uncover the challenges and surprising discoveries made by the game developers when recreating Paris during the French Revolution.'' | | Assassin's Creed: Unity ''offers a stunning recreation of 18th century [[Paris]], which in modern times is the home of [[Ubisoft]]. How did this setting affect the developers' work? Did this personal connection make things easier or harder? And how did the developers approach the intense history of the [[French Revolution]], which is still an emotive period for many people?<br><br>Dr. Holly Nielsen is joined by Ubisoft resident historian and ''Assassin's Creed'' World Director [[Maxime Durand]] to uncover the challenges and surprising discoveries made by the game developers when recreating Paris during the French Revolution.'' |
| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| 5= | | 5= |
| ;Isaac Newton vs Fake Money | | ;Isaac Newton vs Fake Money |
| <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/isaac-newton-vs-fake-money later renamed to "Isaac Newton vs Counterfeiters at the Royal Mint" --> | | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/isaac-newton-vs-fake-money later renamed to "Isaac Newton vs counterfeiters at the Royal Mint" --> |
| ''Everyone knows the great achievements of Sir [[Isaac Newton]]. Or do they? ''[[Assassin's Creed: Gold]]'' focuses not on the first half of Newton's career, describing gravity and the fundamental laws of physics, but on the second half of his life, working at the [[Royal Mint]] in [[London]]. This responsibility included chasing down counterfeiters. [[William Chaloner|One man]] in particular would became his nemesis—the {{Wiki|Professor Moriarty}} to Newton's {{Wiki|Sherlock Holmes}}.<br><br>To shed light on this fascinating time in Newton's life, Matt Lewis is joined by Dr. {{Wiki|Patricia Fara}}, Emeritus Fellow of {{Wiki|Clare College, Cambridge}} and author of'' [https://books.google.com/books?id=vb4cEAAAQBAJ Life After Gravity: Isaac Newton's London Career]. | | ''Everyone knows the great achievements of Sir [[Isaac Newton]]. Or do they? ''[[Assassin's Creed: Gold]]'' focuses not on the first half of Newton's career, describing gravity and the fundamental laws of physics, but on the second half of his life, working at the [[Royal Mint]] in [[London]]. This responsibility included chasing down counterfeiters. [[William Chaloner|One man]] in particular would became his nemesis—the {{Wiki|Professor Moriarty}} to Newton's {{Wiki|Sherlock Holmes}}.<br><br>To shed light on this fascinating time in Newton's life, Matt Lewis is joined by Dr. {{Wiki|Patricia Fara}}, Emeritus Fellow of {{Wiki|Clare College, Cambridge}} and author of'' [https://books.google.com/books?id=vb4cEAAAQBAJ Life After Gravity: Isaac Newton's London Career]. |
| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| 6= | | 6= |
| ;Life as a Greek philosopher | | ;Life as a Greek philosopher |
| <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/life-as-a-greek-philosopher later renamed to "Life as a Greek Philosopher: Socrates, Hippocrates & Herodotus" --> | | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/life-as-a-greek-philosopher later renamed to "Life as a Greek Philosopher: Socrates, Hippocrates, & Herodotus" --> |
| ''One of the most profoundly influential periods in history is the 5th century BCE, when when a collection of great minds in Ancient [[Greece]] formed the foundations of Western philosophy, medicine, and history itself. How did ancient doctors heal the sick? How did historians share their research with a society that didn't read? What influence did female intellectuals have on the Fathers of Philosophy?<br><br>Matt Lewis presents the expertise of Prof. Michael Griffin, Prof. {{Wiki|Helen King(classicist)|Helen King}}, and {{Wiki|Justin Marozzi}} about [[Sokrates|Socrates]], [[Hippokrates|Hippocrates]], and [[Herodotus]]—all of whom are brought to life in [[Assassin's Creed: Odyssey]] for players to get a taste of what it might have been like to walk alongside these remarkable people in their daily lives.'' | | ''One of the most profoundly influential periods in history is the 5th century BCE, when when a collection of great minds in Ancient [[Greece]] formed the foundations of Western philosophy, medicine, and history itself. How did ancient doctors heal the sick? How did historians share their research with a society that didn't read? What influence did female intellectuals have on the Fathers of Philosophy?<br><br>Matt Lewis presents the expertise of Prof. Michael Griffin, Prof. {{Wiki|Helen King (classicist)|Helen King}}, and {{Wiki|Justin Marozzi}} about [[Sokrates|Socrates]], [[Hippokrates|Hippocrates]], and [[Herodotus]]—all of whom are brought to life in [[Assassin's Creed: Odyssey]] for players to get a taste of what it might have been like to walk alongside these remarkable people in their daily lives.'' |
| {{!}}-{{!}} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| 7= | | 7= |
| ;The real motives behind the Boston Tea Party | | ;The real motives behind the Boston Tea Party |
| <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/the-real-motives-behind-the-boston-tea-party later renamed to "The Boston Tea Party: Did the Sons of Liberty really dress up as Native Americans?" --> | | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/the-real-motives-behind-the-boston-tea-party later renamed to "The Boston Tea Party: Did the Sons of Liberty really dress up as Native Americans?" and then "...really disguise as Mohawks?" --> |
| [[Assassin's Creed III]] ''recreates many key events from the [[American Revolution]], including the [[Boston Tea Party]], when [[United States|colonists]] resisted [[United Kingdom|British]] taxes by dumping [[tea]] into [[Boston Harbor]]. But the game challenges the popular perception of the protest as a pure and noble defiance of tyranny. In fact, the legend of the Party started to develop nearly half a century after the event. What were the true motives of the [[Sons of Liberty]]? Was the Boston Tea Party really as impactful as its reputation suggests? And how much tea did they really destroy?<br><br>Matt Lewis is joined by Prof. James Fichter, author of ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=59DKEAAAQBAJ Tea: Consumption, Politics, and Revolution 1773-1776]'', to explain the real intentions and outcomes of the Boston Tea Party.'' | | [[Assassin's Creed III]] ''recreates many key events from the [[American Revolution]], including the [[Boston Tea Party]], when [[United States|colonists]] resisted [[United Kingdom|British]] taxes by dumping [[tea]] into [[Boston Harbor]]. But the game challenges the popular perception of the protest as a pure and noble defiance of tyranny. In fact, the legend of the Party started to develop nearly half a century after the event. What were the true motives of the [[Sons of Liberty]]? Was the Boston Tea Party really as impactful as its reputation suggests? And how much tea did they really destroy?<br><br>Matt Lewis is joined by Prof. James Fichter, author of ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=59DKEAAAQBAJ Tea: Consumption, Politics, and Revolution 1773-1776]'', to explain the real intentions and outcomes of the Boston Tea Party.'' |
| }} | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| </tabber> | | 8= |
| | | ;Alfred the Great's downfall<nowiki>:</nowiki> The Battle of Chippenham |
| ==Cast== | | ''Among the many cool characters from the [[Viking expansion|Viking Age]] that are brought to life in ''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' is [[Alfred the Great]]. Before his military success against the [[Vikings]], Alfred also boasts one of the all-time great comeback stories. In January 878, all looked lost: Alfred was hiding in [[Athelnay|marshlands]], his army defeated and scattered, and the Vikings controlled his [[Wessex|kingdom]]. The key event that almost saw the end of [[Anglo-Saxons|Anglo-Saxon]] [[England]] was the [[Battle of Chippenham]].<br><br>''Assassin's Creed: Valhalla'' [[Holy Day|recreates]] the battle and puts players in the heart of combat. But what do we really know about the battle? How big was a [[Great Heathen Army|Viking army]]? What did the Anglo-Saxons count as a 'real' battle?<br><br>To help answer these questions, Matt Lewis is joined by Professor Ryan Lavelle from the {{Wiki|University of Winchester}}. In addition to writing ''[https://books.google.com/books/?id=Adn2JCYnwRwC Alfred's Wars: Sources and Interpretations of Anglo-Saxon Warfare in the Viking Age]]', he consulted on'' Assassin's Creed: Valhalla. |
| (By order of appearance, hosts indicated with italics) | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| <div style="float:left; width:48;"> | | 9= |
| ;Behind the Legends | | ;Rasputin: Russia's Greatest Propaganda Machine? |
| *''[[Danny Wallace]] as himself'' | | ''[[Grigori Rasputin]] is a household name, mostly thanks to the {{Wiki|Boney M.}} {{Wiki|Rasputin (song)|song}}. And such is Rasputin's reputation that you can't help but think of the "mad monk" when playing ''[[Assassin's Creed Chronicles: Russia]]'', even though he doesn't appear in the game.<br><br>Was he really [[Russia]]'s greatest love machine? Did he have supernatural abilities? Was he even an ordained [[priest]]? To help answer these questions and more, Matt Lewis is joined by Professor Leonid Trofimov from {{Wiki|Bentley University}}. As well as being senior lecturer in history and an expert on Russian relations with the rest of the world, he is the co-author of'' [https://books.google.com/books/?id=KDSnEAAAQBAJ Seven Myths of the Russian Revolution]. |
| **''[[w:c:assassinscreed:fr:Bruno Choël|Bruno Choël]]'' (French) | | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| </div> | | 10= |
| <div style="float:right; width:48%;"> | | ;The Haitian Revolution |
| ;Assassins vs. Templars | | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/the-haitian-revolution later renamed to "The First Slave Republic & The Haitian Revolution" --> |
| | [[Freedom Cry|Assassin's Creed: Freedom Cry]] ''reminds us of an often overlooked turning point in history: the [[Haitian Revolution]], when the [[Slavery|slaves]] of [[Haiti]] overthrew their masters and the might of the [[French Army|French]], [[British Army|British]], and [[Spanish Army|Spanish militaries]] to create {{Wiki|First Empire of Haiti|their own state}}. But this remarkable achievement was overshadowed by the [[American Revolution|American]] and [[French Revolution]]s, and has traditionally been viewed as just a byproduct of those famous rebellions. When did the Haitian Revolution take place? How did the slaves defeat both [[Napoleon Bonaparte|Napoleon]]'s army and the [[British Empire]]? How did [[Piracy|pirates]] influence the course of Haiti's history?<br><br>To learn more about what Haiti was like in the 18th century, and the key people and moments of the Haitian Revolution, Matt Lewis is joined by Dr. Erica Johnson, author of ''[https://books.google.com/books/?id=3OpgDwAAQBAJ Philanthropy and Race in the Haitian Revolution]'', and contributor to the Universities Studying Slavery consortium, a huge research project to uncover and understand the links of US universities' {{Wiki|Slavery at American colleges and universities|history with slavery}}.'' |
| | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| | 11= |
| | ;The Tang Dynasty<nowiki>:</nowiki> The Golden Age of China |
| | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/the-tang-dynasty-the-golden-age-of-china later renamed to "The Tang Dynasty: The end of China's Golden Age?" --> |
| | Assassin's Creed: Dynasty ''provides a vivid recreation of [[China]] as it was 1300 years ago, during the reign of the [[Tang dynasty]]. The story focuses on a pivotal moment for the emperors, when a [[An Lushan Rebellion|huge rebellion]] plunged the empire into a civil war that took nearly a decade—and the brutal deaths of millions—to end.<br><br>Yet despite this turbulence, the Tang dynasty is often thought to have ruled over a golden age in Chinese history, characterised by peace, stability, and the peak of ancient art.<br><br>To make sense of this apparent contradiction, Matt Lewis welcomes back Dr. Jeremiah Jenne, host of the ''Barbarians at the Gate'' history podcast, and the historical travel podcast'', By Their Own Compass. |
| | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| | 12= |
| | ;Viking Age music in Assassin's Creed<nowiki>:</nowiki> Valhalla |
| | ''The [[Assassin's Creed (series)|''Assassin's Creed'' games]] specialize in recreating the places and sounds of the past. But how can we know what music our ancestors listened to? If we can, how well does ancient music work within a modern audience's expectations of what music is? And how does making music for a video game differ from all the other forms of entertainment we have today?<br><br>Dr. Holly Nielsen is joined by [[Stephanie Economou]], the composer for ''Assassin's Creed: Valhalla [[The Siege of Paris]]'' and ''[[Dawn of Ragnarök]]'', for which she won the first ever {{Wiki|Grammy Awards|Grammy award}} for video game music. Rounding out the trio is Ari Mason, who performed on both scores, and who is a specialist in the art of historical performance. Together, they can shed light on the fascinating process of transporting us to the past through music.'' |
| | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| | 13= |
| | ;Did Isaac Newton find the Philosopher's Stone? |
| | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/did-isaac-newton-find-the-philosophers-stone later renamed to "The Philosopher's Stone: Isaac Newton & Alchemy" --> |
| | ''The {{Wiki|philosopher's stone}}: the source of infinite wealth and everlasting life. It is one of the most famous myths in the world. But for centuries, it was not a myth. Some of the greatest and most pioneering scientists in history believed in the power of the stone, and pursued its riches. Amongst them was Sir [[Isaac Newton]]. As is depicted in the audio drama ''[[Assassin's Creed: Gold]]'', his private notes reveal his secret pursuit of alchemy and the Philosopher's Stone.<br><br>How far did Isaac Newton take his alchemical experiments? What did the Philosopher's Stone mean to a rational scientist of Newton’s standing? And why was his research into alchemy only recently brought to light, even though he wrote over one million words about it in his personal notes?<br><br>Matt Lewis is joined by Dr. Joel Klein, Molina Curator for the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences at {{Wiki|Huntington Library|The Huntingdon}}, to explain the origins of alchemy and the science of the Philosopher's Stone.'' |
| | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| | 14= |
| | ;The first Vikings invaders of Britain<nowiki>:</nowiki> The Great Heathen Army |
| | ''The [[Great Heathen Army]]: the cool, or terrifying, name given to a huge [[Norway|Norse]] army that landed in [[England]] in the middle of the 9th century and stayed for 13 years, devastating the [[Anglo-Saxon]] [[Heptarchy|kingdoms]]. The [[Vikings|Viking]] leaders are semi-legendary, cloaked in the mythology of the Norse and the scaremongering of the Anglo-Saxons. Was the army really led by the [[Sons of Ragnar|three sons]] of the infamous [[Ragnar Lothbrok]], as depicted in ''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]''? What were they trying to achieve? And after [[Alfred the Great]], would the Great Heathen Army have considered itself successful?<br><br>Matt Lewis is joined by Dr. Caitlin Ellis, Associate Professor of Nordic Medieval History at the {{Wiki|University of Oslo}}. She'll be the guide to lead us on our quest for answers!'' |
| | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| | 15= |
| | ;Who was the Oracle of Delphi? |
| | ''Wouldn't it be nice to know the future? To have solid advice on what is about to happen in your life, so that you know exactly what to do when the time comes? For the Ancient [[Greece|Greeks]], this wasn't a daydream: it was a real possibility, thanks to Oracles.<br><br>The most important soothsayer was the [[Pythia|Oracle of Delphi]]. Located high on the remote slopes of [[Grand Mount Parnassos|Mount Parnassus]], ''[[Assassin's Creed: Odyssey]]'' recreates the [[Sanctuary of Delphi|sanctuary]] in beautiful detail and allows players to meet the Oracle [[Pythia (431 BCE)|herself]]. She is as famous as she is mysterious. Who was the Oracle? Why was Delphi such a special place? And what sorts of questions did Ancient Greeks seek answers to?<br><br>Matt Lewis is joined by Dr. Garrett Ryan, the historian behind the wonderful ''Told in Stone''. His excellent book, [https://books.google.com/books/?id=sFkzEAAAQBAJ Naked Statues, Fat Gladiators, and War Elephants] answers 36 frequently asked questions about the Greeks and [[Rome|Romans]] that are both fascinating and fun to read.'' |
| | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| | 16= |
| | ;Queens of medieval Baghdad |
| | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/queens-of-medieval-baghdad later renamed to "Deadly Queens of Medieval Baghdad" --> |
| | ''"Behind every great man is an even greater woman." During the first century of the [[Abbasid Caliphate]], the [[caliph]]s oversaw an [[Islamic Golden Age]]. These men expanded territory, science, and the arts, leaving a lasting mark on [[human]] civilization. But the caliphs were managed, sometimes manipulated, and even murdered, by the women at their side. Most notorious amongst these is [[Qabiha]], the [[Ra's Al-Af'a|ultimate villain]] of ''[[Assassin's Creed: Mirage]]''.<br><br>Matt Lewis is joined by Dr. Ali A. Olomi, historian, writer and podcaster, to talk to us about the lives of three formidable women in the medieval Middle East, and how they influenced the course of history from behind the curtain.'' |
| | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| | 17= |
| | ;The Assassination of Julius Caesar |
| | ''The {{Wiki|Ides of March}} is the best-known date in the ancient world, thanks to one of the [[Assassination of Julius Caesar|most infamous acts]] in history: the [[assassination]] of [[Gaius Julius Caesar]]. ''[[Assassin's Creed: Origins]]'' portrays Caesar at the peak of his powers, who was shockingly assassinated by a gang of {{Wiki|Roman Senate|Senators}}, including his most loyal friends and followers, like [[Marcus Junius Brutus|Brutus]]. What had Caesar done to deserve this? [[Amunet|Who]] stabbed him first? And how did the assassins' plan to save the [[Roman Republic]] ultimately [[Liberators' civil war|lead]] to the creation of the [[Roman Empire]]?<br><br>Prof. Colin Elliot from {{Wiki|Indiana University Bloomington}}, host of the ''Pax Romana'' podcast, joins Matt Lewis to reveal the true events of that fateful day. His book ''[https://books.google.com/books/?id=iGfQEAAAQBAJ Pox Romana: The Plague That Shook The World]'' offers a comprehensive, wide-ranging account of the [[Earth|world]]'s {{Wiki|Antonine Plague|first pandemic}}.'' |
| | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| | 18= |
| | ;Samurai armor explained |
| | ''In the 16th century world of ''[[Assassin's Creed: Shadows]]'', we meet the [[samurai]] as they had to be: soldiers in a [[Sengoku period|world on fire]]. But today, we're looking at the samurai as they wanted to be seen. In this special episode, Matt Lewis joins Dr. Rosina Buckland, Curator of the {{Wiki|British Museum Department of Asia|Japanese Collections}} at the [[British Museum]], to examine a 500-year-old puzzle: this suit of {{Wiki|Japanese armour|samurai armour}}.<br><br>It has been passed down through generations as a single suit: in reality, it's a 'Greatest Hits' of samurai history—while the {{Wiki|Kabuto|helmet}} dates back to the era of [[Oda Nobunaga]] and the battles we see in the game, other parts of this suit were forged centuries later. Through this suit, we'll find out what it really meant to be a samurai, and how the warriors of the past wrote the story we're still playing today.'' |
| | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| | 19= |
| | ;Sons of Moses<nowiki>:</nowiki> The da Vinci of Medieval Baghdad? |
| | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/sons-of-moses-the-davinci-of-medieval-baghdad later renamed to "The Da Vinci of Medieval Baghdad: Who Were The Sons Of Moses?" --> |
| | [[Assassin's Creed: Mirage]] ''sheds a rare light on {{Wiki|Banū Mūsā brothers|Banu Musa}}—the Sons of Moses. These genius brothers play a small but crucial role in the game, aiding the player with a wealth of revolutionary gadgets to overcome enemies and obstacles. Did these inventors really exist? And if they were so clever, why do we not list them alongside [[Archimedes]], [[Thomas Edison]], or [[Leonardo da Vinci]]?<br><br>Dr. Ali Olomi from {{Wiki|Loyola Marymount University}} returns to the podcast to introduce Matt Lewis to the Banu Musa. As an expert on medieval [[Baghdad]] and consultant on the video game, who better to shed light on these lost geniuses?'' |
| | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| | 20= |
| | ;Saladin |
| | <!-- Per original ACast link https://shows.acast.com/echoes-of-history/episodes/saladin later renamed to "Saladin: The Third Crusade's Greatest General?" --> |
| | ''The original ''[[Assassin's Creed]]'' game focuses on the [[Assassins]]' efforts to [[Hunt for the Nine|bring down]] the [[Templars]] during the [[Third Crusade]] from 1189–1192. He encounters real figures from history, including [[Grand Master of the Templar Order|Templar Grand Masters]] and [[Christianity|Christian]] kings. One person who doesn't appear as a character is the [[Islam|Muslim]] leader, [[Saladin]]. Nevertheless his presence—and his legend—is felt.<br><br>The [[Ayyubid dynasty|first Sultan]] of both [[Egypt]] and [[Levant|Syria]], Saladin pushed back against the Christian {{Wiki|Crusader states|Crusader kingdoms}} and {{Wiki|Siege of Jerusalem (1187)|retook}} [[Jerusalem]]. His success led to the [[Third Crusade]]. He's the reason [[Richard I of England|Richard the Lionheart]] was in the Holy Land, and he was the sworn enemy of the Templars. To find out more about Saladin's rise to power and his astonishing successes, I’m joined by the wonderful Professor Jonathan Phillips from {{Wiki|Royal Holloway, University of London|Royal Holloway}}, {{Wiki|University of London}}. He explains how Saladin rose to power, and may not have been as accomplished as his legendary reputation suggests.'' |
| | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| | 21= |
| | ;The Battles of Lexington & Concord |
| | [[Assassin's Creed III]] ''gives players a unique chance to take part in the [[Battles of Lexington and Concord]], and to influence the course of history. But why did the shot heard 'round the [[Earth|world]], that started the [[American Revolution]], happen in a small farmtown with as many [[Cattle|cows]] as people living in it?<br><br>To help solve this colonial conundrum, Matt Lewis is joined by our cousin from across the pond, Don Wildman, the host of'' American History Hit. |
| | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| | 22= |
| | ;The Ottoman conquest of Constantinople |
| | [[Assassin's Creed: Revelations]] ''transports us to [[Constantinople]], only a couple of generations after its [[Fall of Constantinople|conquest]] by the [[Ottoman Empire]]. It is one of history's defining events, turning the city into the bridge between [[Christianity|Christian]] West and [[Islam]]ic East. Dr. Gemma Masson gives Matt Lewis an overview of the events of the conquest and the impact it had on both the face of the city and the lives of the people who called it home.'' |
| | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| | 23= |
| | ;Pirates in the Caribbean<nowiki>:</nowiki> how it all began |
| | [[Assassin's Creed: Black Flag Resynced]] ''recreates the beautiful islands of the [[Caribbean]] in stunning detail, and introduces players to some of the most famous [[Piracy|pirates]] in history. Why did the Caribbean, in all the world, became so associated with pirates? When did piracy in the Caribbean begin? And when did it end?<br><br>Matt Lewis is joined by pirate historian Dr. Rebecca Simon, author of ''[https://books.google.com/books/?id=GUUIEAAAQBAJ Why We Love Pirates]'' and ''[https://books.google.com/books/?id=HQN0EAAAQBAJ Pirate Queens: The Lives of Anne Bonny and Mary Read]'' to answer these questions and more!'' |
| | }}<br> |
| | {{#tag:tabber| |
| | 31= |
| | ;TITLE |
| | ''SUMMARY'' |
| | {{!}}-{{!}} |
| | 32= |
| | ;TITLE |
| | ''SUMMARY'' |
| | }} |
| | </tabber> |
| | |
| | ==Cast== |
| | (By order of appearance, hosts indicated with italics) |
| | <div style="float:left; width:48;"> |
| | ;Behind the Legends |
| | *''[[Danny Wallace]] as himself'' |
| | **''Bruno Choël'' (French) |
| | </div> |
| | <div style="float:right; width:48%;"> |
| | ;Assassins vs. Templars |
| *''Dan Snow as himself'' | | *''Dan Snow as himself'' |
| *Prof. Jonathan Phillips as himself | | *Prof. Jonathan Phillips as himself |
| Line 1,270: |
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| </div> | | </div> |
| {{-}} | | {{-}} |
| <div style="float:left; width:68;"> | | <div style="float:left; width:48;"> |
| ;Baghdad Soundwalks, Figures of Baghdad | | ;Baghdad Soundwalks, Figures of Baghdad |
| *''Deana Hassanein as herself'' | | *''Deana Hassanein as herself'' |
| Line 1,293: |
Line 1,394: |
| </div> | | </div> |
| {{-}} | | {{-}} |
| <div style="float:left; width:68;"> | | <div style="float:left; width:48;"> |
| ;Syndicate | | ;Syndicate |
| *''Matthew Lewis as himself'' | | *''Matthew Lewis as himself'' |
| Line 1,320: |
Line 1,421: |
| </div> | | </div> |
| {{-}} | | {{-}} |
| <div style="float:left; width:68;"> | | <div style="float:left; width:48;"> |
| ;Origins | | ;Origins |
| *''Matthew Lewis as himself'' | | *''Matthew Lewis as himself'' |
| Line 1,334: |
Line 1,435: |
| *Alexis Coe as herself | | *Alexis Coe as herself |
| </div> | | </div> |
| <div style="float:left; width:68;"> | | {{-}} |
| | <div style="float:left; width:48;"> |
| ;Unity | | ;Unity |
| *''Matthew Lewis as himself'' | | *''Matthew Lewis as himself'' |
| Line 1,352: |
Line 1,454: |
| </div> | | </div> |
| {{-}} | | {{-}} |
| <div style="float:left; width:68;"> | | <div style="float:left; width:48;"> |
| ;Renaissance | | ;Renaissance |
| *''Matthew Lewis as himself'' | | *''Matthew Lewis as himself'' |
| Line 1,371: |
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| </div> | | </div> |
| {{-}} | | {{-}} |
| <div style="float:left; width:48%;"> | | <div style="float:left; width:48;"> |
| ;Chasing Shadows | | ;Chasing Shadows |
| *''Matthew Lewis as himself'' | | *''Matthew Lewis as himself'' |
| Line 1,377: |
Line 1,479: |
| *''Dr. Holly Nielsen as herself'' | | *''Dr. Holly Nielsen as herself'' |
| </div> | | </div> |
| <div style="float:right; width:68;"> | | <div style="float:right; width:48%;"> |
| ;Indian Chronicles | | ;Indian Chronicles |
| *''Matthew Lewis as himself'' | | *''Matthew Lewis as himself'' |
| Line 1,384: |
Line 1,486: |
| </div> | | </div> |
| {{-}} | | {{-}} |
| <div style="float:left; width:48%;"> | | <div style="float:left; width:48;"> |
| ;Rogue | | ;Rogue |
| *''Dan Snow as himself'' | | *''Dan Snow as himself'' |
| Line 1,392: |
Line 1,494: |
| *James Nadiger as himself | | *James Nadiger as himself |
| </div> | | </div> |
| <div style="float:right; width:68;"> | | <div style="float:right; width:48%;"> |
| ;Crusades | | ;Crusades |
| *''Matthew Lewis as himself'' | | *''Matthew Lewis as himself'' |
| Line 1,402: |
Line 1,504: |
| </div> | | </div> |
| {{-}} | | {{-}} |
| <div style="float:left; width:48%;"> | | <div style="float:left; width:48;"> |
| :Valley of Memory | | :Valley of Memory |
| *''Matthew Lewis as himself'' | | *''Matthew Lewis as himself'' |
| *Prof. Laïla Nehmé as herself | | *Prof. Laïla Nehmé as herself |
| *Dr. Sterenn Le Maguer as herself | | *Dr. Sterenn Le Maguer as herself |
| | *Olivier Leonardi as himself |
| | *Prof. Solaiman al-Theeb as himself |
| </div> | | </div> |
| <div style="float:right; width:68;"> | | <div style="float:right; width:48%;"> |
| ;Uncategorized | | ;Uncategorized |
| *''Matthew Lewis as himself'' | | *''Matthew Lewis as himself'' |
| Line 1,421: |
Line 1,525: |
| *Justin Marozzi as herself | | *Justin Marozzi as herself |
| *Prof. James Fichter as himself | | *Prof. James Fichter as himself |
| | *Prof. Ryan Lavelle as himself |
| | *Prof. Leonid Trofimov as himself |
| | *Dr. Erica Johnson as herself |
| | *Dr. Jeremiah Jenne as himself |
| | *[[Stephanie Economou]] as herself |
| | *Dr. Joel Klein as himself |
| | *Dr. Caitlin Ellis as herself |
| | *Dr. Garrett Ryan as himself |
| | *Dr. Ali A. Olomi as himself |
| | *Prof. Colin Elliot as himself |
| | *Dr. Rosina Buckland as herself |
| | *Prof. Jonathan Phillips as himself |
| | *Don Wildman as himself |
| | *Dr. Gemma Masson as herself |
| | *Dr. Rebecca Simon as herself |
| </div> | | </div> |
| {{-}} | | {{-}} |
| | |
| ==Episodes list== | | ==Episodes list== |
| {|class="wikitable" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%" style="text-align:center;" | | {|class="wikitable" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%" style="text-align:center;" |
| Line 1,511: |
Line 1,631: |
| |9 April 2023 | | |9 April 2023 |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[The Templars and The Holy Grail]] | | |[[The Templars and the Holy Grail]] |
| |16 April 2023 | | |16 April 2023 |
| |- | | |- |
| Line 1,517: |
Line 1,637: |
| |23 April 2023 | | |23 April 2023 |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[The Fall of the Templars]] | | |[[The fall of the Templars]] |
| |30 April 2023 | | |30 April 2023 |
| |- | | |- |
| |rowspan="10"|5 | | |rowspan="10"|5 |
| |[[City of Peace]] | | |[[City of peace]] |
| |21 August 2023 | | |21 August 2023 |
| |rowspan="10"|[[File:AC Echoes of History Baghdad Soundwalks.jpg|200px]]<br>''[[Baghdad Soundwalks]]'' | | |rowspan="10"|[[File:AC Echoes of History Baghdad Soundwalks.jpg|200px]]<br>''[[Baghdad Soundwalks]]'' |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[Culture of Prosperity]] | | |[[Culture of prosperity]] |
| |28 August 2023 | | |28 August 2023 |
| |- | | |- |
| Line 1,546: |
Line 1,666: |
| |1 October 2023 | | |1 October 2023 |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[War between the Brothers]] | | |[[War between the brothers]] |
| |8 October 2023 | | |8 October 2023 |
| |- | | |- |
| Line 1,585: |
Line 1,705: |
| |- | | |- |
| |rowspan="14"|7 | | |rowspan="14"|7 |
| |[[Civil War in Feudal Japan: The Sengoku Period]] | | |[[Civil war in feudal Japan: The Sengoku period]] |
| |15 May 2024 | | |15 May 2024 |
| |rowspan="13"|[[File:AC Echoes of History Shadows.jpg|200px]]<br>''[[Shadows (Echoes of History)|Shadows]]'' | | |rowspan="13"|[[File:AC Echoes of History Shadows.jpg|200px]]<br>''[[Shadows (Echoes of History)|Shadows]]'' |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[The Unification of Japan]] | | |[[The unification of Japan]] |
| |15 May 2024 | | |15 May 2024 |
| |- | | |- |
| Line 1,607: |
Line 1,727: |
| |17 June 2024 | | |17 June 2024 |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[How To Fit In: Feudal Japan]] | | |[[How to fit in: Feudal Japan]] |
| |24 June 2024 | | |24 June 2024 |
| |- | | |- |
| Line 1,639: |
Line 1,759: |
| |15 July 2024 | | |15 July 2024 |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[The Crown's Greatest Jewel: The Koh-i-Noor Diamond]] | | |[[The Crown's greatest jewel: The Koh-i-Noor diamond]] |
| |23 July 2024 | | |23 July 2024 |
| |- | | |- |
| Line 1,651: |
Line 1,771: |
| |27 April 2025 | | |27 April 2025 |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[How Assassin's Creed Syndicate brought Victorian London to life|How Assassin's Creed Syndicate<br>brought Victorian London to life]] | | |[[How Assassin's Creed: Syndicate brought Victorian London to life|How Assassin's Creed: Syndicate<br>brought Victorian London to life]] |
| |4 May 2025 | | |4 May 2025 |
| |- | | |- |
| Line 1,662: |
Line 1,782: |
| |rowspan="8"|[[File:AC Echoes of History Odyssey.jpg|200px]]<br>''[[Odyssey (Echoes of History)|Odyssey]]'' | | |rowspan="8"|[[File:AC Echoes of History Odyssey.jpg|200px]]<br>''[[Odyssey (Echoes of History)|Odyssey]]'' |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[The Ancient Olympics: Games of the gods]] | | |[[The ancient Olympics: Games of the gods]] |
| |5 August 2024 | | |5 August 2024 |
| |- | | |- |
| Line 1,674: |
Line 1,794: |
| |18 May 2025 | | |18 May 2025 |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[The Minoan Labyrinth: Myth or Reality?]] | | |[[The Minoan Labyrinth: Myth or reality?]] |
| |25 May 2025 | | |25 May 2025 |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[How Assassin's Creed Odyssey recreated Ancient Greece|How Assassin's Creed Odyssey<br>recreated Ancient Greece]] | | |[[How Assassin's Creed: Odyssey recreated Ancient Greece|How Assassin's Creed: Odyssey<br>recreated Ancient Greece]] |
| |1 June 2025 | | |1 June 2025 |
| |- | | |- |
| Line 1,709: |
Line 1,829: |
| |- | | |- |
| |rowspan="6"|12 | | |rowspan="6"|12 |
| |[[Napoleon: The Dictator of Democracy]] | | |[[Napoleon: The dictator of democracy]] |
| |30 September 2024 | | |30 September 2024 |
| |rowspan="6"|[[File:AC Echoes of History Unity.jpg|200px]]<br>''[[Unity (Echoes of History)|Unity]]'' | | |rowspan="6"|[[File:AC Echoes of History Unity.jpg|200px]]<br>''[[Unity (Echoes of History)|Unity]]'' |
| Line 1,733: |
Line 1,853: |
| |rowspan="3"|[[File:AC Echoes of History Valhalla.jpg|200px]]<br>''[[Valhalla (Echoes of History)|Valhalla]]'' | | |rowspan="3"|[[File:AC Echoes of History Valhalla.jpg|200px]]<br>''[[Valhalla (Echoes of History)|Valhalla]]'' |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[Samhain: The First Halloween]] | | |[[Samhain: The first Halloween]] |
| |27 October 2024 | | |27 October 2024 |
| |- | | |- |
| Line 1,753: |
Line 1,873: |
| |29 December 2024 | | |29 December 2024 |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[Hagia Sophia: where worlds collide]] | | |[[Hagia Sophia: Where worlds collide]] |
| |5 January 2025 | | |5 January 2025 |
| |- | | |- |
| Line 1,770: |
Line 1,890: |
| |rowspan="3"|[[File:AC Echoes of History Chinese Chronicles.jpg|200px]]<br>''[[Chinese Chronicles]]'' | | |rowspan="3"|[[File:AC Echoes of History Chinese Chronicles.jpg|200px]]<br>''[[Chinese Chronicles]]'' |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[The Eight Tigers: Imperial Euneuchs]] | | |[[The Eight Tigers: Imperial euneuchs]] |
| |8 December 2024 | | |8 December 2024 |
| |- | | |- |
| Line 1,781: |
Line 1,901: |
| |rowspan="5"|[[File:AC Echoes of History Chasing Shadows.jpg|200px]]<br>''[[Chasing Shadows]]'' | | |rowspan="5"|[[File:AC Echoes of History Chasing Shadows.jpg|200px]]<br>''[[Chasing Shadows]]'' |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[Samurai and Shinobi: Who really ruled Medieval Japan?|Samurai and Shinobi: Who<br>really ruled Medieval Japan?]] | | |[[Samurai x Shinobi: Politics]] |
| |27 February 2025 | | |27 February 2025 |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[Swords and throwing stars: What weapons did samurai and shinobi use?|Swords and throwing stars: What<br>weapons did samurai and shinobi use?]] | | |[[Samurai x Shinobi: Weapons]] |
| |6 March 2025 | | |6 March 2025 |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[How did samurai and shinobi fight battles in Medieval Japan?|How did samurai and shinobi<br>fight battles in Medieval Japan?]] | | |[[Samurai x Shinobi: Warfare]] |
| |13 March 2025 | | |13 March 2025 |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[Samurai & Shinobi: Assassin's Creed Shadows Review]] | | |[[Samurai x Shinobi: Assassin's Creed Shadows Review]] |
| |20 March 2025 | | |20 March 2025 |
| |- | | |- |
| Line 1,809: |
Line 1,929: |
| |rowspan="4"|[[File:AC Echoes of History Rogue.jpg|200px]]<br>''[[Rogue (Echoes of History)|Rogue]]'' | | |rowspan="4"|[[File:AC Echoes of History Rogue.jpg|200px]]<br>''[[Rogue (Echoes of History)|Rogue]]'' |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[Captain James Cook: The Ultimate Explorer?]] | | |[[Captain James Cook: The ultimate explorer?]] |
| |15 June 2025 | | |15 June 2025 |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[The Northwest Passage: Doom of Arctic Explorers]] | | |[[The Northwest Passage: Doom of Arctic explorers]] |
| |22 June 2025 | | |22 June 2025 |
| |- | | |- |
| Line 1,832: |
Line 1,952: |
| |27 July 2025 | | |27 July 2025 |
| |- | | |- |
| |rowspan="3"|20 | | |rowspan="4"|20 |
| |[[The Nabataeans]] | | |[[The Nabataeans]] |
| |16 November 2025 | | |16 November 2025 |
| |rowspan="3"|[[File:AC Echoes of History Valley of Memory.jpg|200px]]<br>''[[Valley of Memory (Echoes of History|Valley of Memory]]'' | | |rowspan="4"|[[File:AC Echoes of History Valley of Memory.jpg|200px]]<br>''[[Valley of Memory (Echoes of History|Valley of Memory]]'' |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[The Incense Route through Arabia]] | | |[[The Incense Route through Arabia]] |
| |24 November 2025 | | |24 November 2025 |
| |- | | |- |
| |[ | | |[[Ancient civilizations of Arabia in Assassin's Creed Mirage: Valley of Memory]] |
| |14 December 2025 | | |14 December 2025 |
| |- | | |- |
| |rowspan="15"|21 | | |[The ancient open-air library of Jabal Ikmah]] |
| | |21 December 2025 |
| | |- |
| | |rowspan="35"|21 |
| |[[Vikings in Medieval Baghdad]] | | |[[Vikings in Medieval Baghdad]] |
| |22 December 2024 | | |22 December 2024 |
| Line 1,850: |
Line 1,973: |
| |[[The Russian Revolution: what really happened?]] | | |[[The Russian Revolution: what really happened?]] |
| |5 October 2025 | | |5 October 2025 |
| |rowspan="4"|Uncategorized
| |
| |- | | |- |
| |[[Vinland: Vikings in America]] | | |[[Vinland: Vikings in America]] |
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| |30 November 2025 | | |30 November 2025 |
| |- | | |- |
| |[The real motives behind the Boston Tea Party]] | | |[[The real motives behind the Boston Tea Party]] |
| |7 December 2025 | | |7 December 2025 |
| |rowspan="10"|Uncategorized
| |
| |- | | |- |
| | | | |[[Alfred the Great's downfall: The Battle of Chippenham]] |
| |21 December 2025 | | |4 January 2026 |
| | |- |
| | |[[Rasputin: Russia's Greatest Propaganda Machine?]] |
| | |11 January 2026 |
| | |- |
| | |[[The Haitian Revolution]] |
| | |18 January 2026 |
| | |- |
| | |[[The Tang Dynasty: The Golden age of China]] |
| | |25 January 2026 |
| | |- |
| | |[[Viking Age music in Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]] |
| | |1 February 2026 |
| | |- |
| | |[[Did Isaac Newton find the Philosopher's Stone?]] |
| | |8 February 2026 |
| | |- |
| | |[[The first Vikings invaders of Britain: The Great Heathen Army]] |
| | |15 February 2026 |
| | |- |
| | |[[Who was the Oracle of Delphi?]] |
| | |22 February 2026 |
| | |- |
| | |[[Queens of medieval Baghdad]] |
| | |1 March 2026 |
| | |- |
| | |[[The Assassination of Julius Caesar]] |
| | |8 March 2026 |
| | |- |
| | |[[Samurai armor explained]] |
| | |15 March 2026 |
| | |- |
| | |[[Sons of Moses: The da Vinci of Medieval Baghdad?]] |
| | |22 March 2026 |
| | |- |
| | |[[Saladin (Echoes of History)|Saladin]] |
| | |29 March 2026 |
| | |- |
| | |[[The Battles of Lexington & Concord]] |
| | |12 April 2026 |
| |- | | |- |
| | | | |[[The Ottoman conquest of Constantinople]] |
| |28 December 2025 | | |26 April 2026 |
| |- | | |- |
| | | | |[[Pirates in the Caribbean: how it all began]] |
| |4 January 2026 | | |7 May 2026 |
| --> | | --> |
| |} | | |} |
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| *[https://www.qtfm.cn/podcasters/333a96291c3048cb93fc9cf5ac6e0f8e/ ''历史的回声 蜻蜓 FM'' 上的] | | *[https://www.qtfm.cn/podcasters/333a96291c3048cb93fc9cf5ac6e0f8e/ ''历史的回声 蜻蜓 FM'' 上的] |
| </tabber> | | </tabber> |
| [[fr:Échos de l'Histoire]]
| | {{Echoes}} |
| [[de:Echos der Geschichte]]
| |
| [[es:Ecos de la historia]]
| |
| [[zh:历史的回声]]
| |
| [[Category:Promotional media]] | | [[Category:Promotional media]] |