Episode 1.9 - Hayreddin Barbarossa

Hayreddin Barbarossa was a Turkish pirate who helped expand the Ottoman Empire west, turned from corsair to admiral, built the Ottoman Navy, and helped change the balance of power in the Mediterranean.

Sources

  • Ernle Bradford, The Sultan's Admiral

  • E. Hamilton Currey, Sea-Wolves of the Mediterranean

  • Islands and Military Orders, c.1291-c.1798, Ed: Simon Phillips

  • Kenneth Setton, A History of the Crusades

Names Mentioned

Episode 1.8 - Paramesawara

Parameswara was the last prince of a once-mighty empire that went on to found a powerful maritime, trade-based kingdom

Sources:

  • The Malay Annals

  • Tomé Pires, Suma Oriental que trata do Mar Roxo até aos Chins

  • William J. Bernstein, A Splendid Exchange

  • Philip D. Curtin, Cross-Cultural Trade in World History

  • The Cambridge History of Southeast Asia, Ed. Nicholas Tarling

Names Mentioned:

Episode 1.7 - Enrico Dandolo

Enrico Dandolo was a Doge of Venice who helped usher in several centuries of Venetian dominance in the eastern Mediterranean, and the destruction of the Byzantine Empire.

Sources:

  • Thomas Madden, Enrico Dandolo and the Rise of Venice

  • Roger Crowley, City of Fortune

  • Jonathan Phillips, The Fourth Crusade and the Sack of Constantinople

Names Mentioned:

Episode 1.6 - Otto the Great

Episode 1.6 is about Otto the Great. Otto I was the King of Saxony, King of East Francia, and eventually, the Holy Roman Emperor. His re-establishment of the Empire set it on a path to essentially be a continuous empire for the next 1,000 years.

Sources:

  • Timothy Reuter, Germany in the Middle Ages c. 800-1056

  • James Westfall Thompson, Feudal Germany

  • Karl Leyser, "The Battle of Lech. A Study in 10th Century Warfare", History

  • Karl Leyser, "Ottonian Government", The Journal of Historical Review

  • Gerhardt B Ladner, "The Holy Roman Empire of the Tenth Century and East Central Europe", The Polish Review

Names Mentioned:

Episode 1.5 - Emperor Wen of Sui

Episode 1.5 is about Yang Jian, Emperor Wen of Sui, or, Sui Wen-di. Emperor Wen unified China for the first time in 300 years, since the great Han Dynasty. In doing so, he helped to usher in 6 centuries of unified and ascendant China.

Sources:

  • The Cambridge History of China, Ed. Denis C. Twitchett

  • Ann Paludan, Chronicle of Chinese Emperors

  • Victor Cunrui Xiong, Historical Dictionary of Medieval China

  • Charles Holcombe, Southern Integration: The Sui-Tang (581-907) Reach South

  • Denis A Graff, Medieval Chinese Warfare, 300-900 AD

Names Mentioned:

Episode 1.4 - Zenobia

Episode 1.4 is about Zenobia, a Syrian queen who helped defend Rome against Persian invaders, before declaring her own kingdom and pulling 1/3 of the Roman Empire away for a time.

Sources:

  • Historia Augusta

  • Gary K Young, Rome's Eastern Trade

  • Alaric Watson, Aurelian and Third Century

  • Appian, The Civil Wars

  • Mike Duncan, The History of Rome Podcast

Names Mentioned:

Episode 1.3 - Mithridates the Great

Episode 1.3 is about Mithridates the Great, who created an empire to rival that of Rome itself, and was called by Cicero "The greatest king since the time of Alexander the Great"

Sources:

  • Adrienne Meyer, The Poison King, The Life and Legend of Mithridates, Rome's Deadliest Enemy

  • Cassius Dio, Roman History

  • Appian, Mithridatic Wars

Names Mentioned:

Episode 1.2 - Chandragupta Maurya

This episode is about Chandragupta Maurya, founder of India's biggest empire for 2000 years, and grandfather of Ashoka the Great

Sources:

  • Purshottam Lal Bharcave, Chadragupta Maurya

  • Radhakumud Mookerji, Chadragupta Maurya and His Times

  • Megasthenes, Indika

Names Mentioned

Episode 1.1 - Marcus Furius Camillus

Welcome to The Almost Forgotten! The first episode of the podcast is about the Second Founder of Rome: Marcus Furius Camillus. Hope you enjoy!

 

Sources:

  • Livy, The History of Rome

  • Plutarch, The Parallel Lives - The Life of Camillus

  • http://www.livius.org/

Names Mentioned: