A History of Italy
A podcast by Mike Corradi - Tuesdays
274 Episodes
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4th anniversary episode
Published: 1/4/2022 -
Re-release: 129 – Catherine of Siena – Medieval UN ambassador
Published: 12/29/2021 -
Happy Whatever episode
Published: 12/25/2021 -
129 – Catherine of Siena – Medieval UN ambassador
Published: 12/21/2021 -
128 – Caterina of Siena: God's teenage rebel
Published: 12/14/2021 -
127 – Milan vs Florence: fight to the death (1395 – 1402)
Published: 12/7/2021 -
126 – Visconti family feud and a new duchy is born (1378 – 1395)
Published: 12/1/2021 -
The Great Q & A session
Published: 11/23/2021 -
125 – War and rebellion in Tuscany (1348 to 1382)
Published: 11/16/2021 -
124 – Troubled Tuscan times and Boccaccio's Decameron
Published: 11/9/2021 -
Halloween Special: The Ghost of Bardi Castle
Published: 10/31/2021 -
123 – The Tuscan scene and Florence rising (1302 – 1327)
Published: 10/26/2021 -
Tech update test and free "NewsCappuccino" episode
Published: 10/20/2021 -
122 – Braccio da Montone's last stand (1417 – 1424)
Published: 10/19/2021 -
121 Braccio da Montone, Lord of Perugia (1407 – 1417)
Published: 10/13/2021 -
120 – Braccio da Montone, early life of a condottiero (1368 – 1406)
Published: 10/5/2021 -
119 – Joanna II of Naples and some schism fixing
Published: 9/21/2021 -
Update and announcement
Published: 9/14/2021 -
Italian citizenship milestones – Crossover with "The Italian Citizenship Podcast"
Published: 9/1/2021 -
118 Sicily goes Spanish and Naples gets big ideas (1372 – 1414)
Published: 8/17/2021
Join history buff, Mike Corradi on a journey through time as he unfolds the rich tapestry of the Italian peninsula's history. This chronological story starts with the collapse of the Western Roman Empire and leads you through the most iconic events, influential figures, and cultural milestones that have shaped Italy into what we see today. It’s all serious stuff, but we do take time to stop and laugh at battles over a bucket, rude names, naughty priests and popes, rabbits winning sieges, doves winning battles, bits of dead bodies as tokens of love, and whole series of real historical silly situations that no comedian could think of. Come along every other week for a compelling and insightful glimpse into A History of Italy.