Showing posts with label History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label History. Show all posts
Monday, 18 March 2013
Cheese-eating Surrender Monkeys - Not so much!
Kevin Stroud's "The History of English podcast" is still going strong and is a fascinating listen. One interesting snippet of information from a recent episode was that one possible explanation of the success of the steppe-peoples who spoke the proto-indo-european language, and their expansion out of their ancestral lands north of the Black Sea around 2500BC, was the acquisition of the ability to digest lactose and the subsequent development of dairy farming. The ability to process lactose gave them a significant nutritional advantage to the extent that archeological evidence suggests that they were on average 3 to 4 inches taller than the people they supplanted in Eastern Europe. Together with their domestication of the horse and their use of the chariot in battle, they were able to expand out of the steppes, taking their language with them.
Friday, 22 February 2013
History Podcasts
I used to love listening to Mike Duncan's "The History of Rome" podcast until it finished last year. It was great to listen to someone, an amateur in the true sense of the word, speak about ancient history and I've been struggling to find something like this since its sad demise.
There's Dan Carlin's "Hardcore History" of course, which is excellent, but this is thematic rather than episodic.
However, I've just discovered Kevin Stroud's "The History of English". The style is a bit different from THoR but the content is absolutely fascinating and a couple of times when I've been casually listening to it, I have just had to stop what I'm doing because the lights go on in my head and I can see the connections between the various Indo-European languages that he talks about.
Really fascinating.
There's Dan Carlin's "Hardcore History" of course, which is excellent, but this is thematic rather than episodic.
However, I've just discovered Kevin Stroud's "The History of English". The style is a bit different from THoR but the content is absolutely fascinating and a couple of times when I've been casually listening to it, I have just had to stop what I'm doing because the lights go on in my head and I can see the connections between the various Indo-European languages that he talks about.
Really fascinating.
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