The Real Pied Piper
What happened to the 130 children that went missing from the town of Hamlein, Lower Saxony on 26th June, 1284? According to legend, a vindictive ‘Pied Piper’ took revenge after the town had failed to stump up for his mag...
Podcast Index
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Today In History with The Retrospectors
The Retrospectors
Next Level Soul Podcast with Alex Ferrari
Alex Ferrari
Meeting of Minds Podcast
Salem Podcast Network
FreestyleMixtapes.Com
FreestyleMixtapes.Com
Who Ordered the Pie? | Classic Rock Music History & Cocktails
Christopher Machado
Scripting News podcast
Dave Winer
Toute l'actualité en temps réel avec Europe 1
Europe 1
As The Story Grows
Bryan Patton
The Canadian Gothic
CanadianGothic / Curiouscast
Elvis Duran and the Morning Show ON DEMAND
Elvis Duran Podcast Network and iHeartPodcasts
Enigmas sin resolver
Uforia Podcasts
Radio Retropolis
Radio Retropolis
Betrouwbare Bronnen
Jaap Jansen - Dag en Nacht Media
Haunted American History
Bloody FM
The Ten Minute Bible Hour Podcast
Matt Whitman
Takin' A Walk - Music History with Buzz Knight
iHeartPodcasts
Catholic Saints
Augustine Institute
Top Stories!
The Bugle
Michigan Minute
WKAR Public Media
The Backstory with Patty Steele
iHeartPodcasts
The Moon in Carolina
Shelby Bundy
History Shorts
History Shorts Network
Best of the US
Mechanical Music Radio
On This Day in Working Class History
Working Class History
Disturbing History
Disturbing History-True Stories
This Day in History
The HISTORY Channel
Commuter Bible OT
John Ross
Commuter Bible NT
John Ross
The Strange History Podcast
Strange History
This Day in Sports History
Thrive Sweet Productions
Playlist Culture G : les podcasts pour apprendre chaque jour
Acast France
Daily Sports History
Ethan Reese
Harold's Old Time Radio
Harolds Old Time Radio
truthunedited
truthunedited
Curiosidades de la Historia National Geographic
National Geographic España
Histoire
The Retrospectors
What happened to the 130 children that went missing from the town of Hamlein, Lower Saxony on 26th June, 1284? According to legend, a vindictive ‘Pied Piper’ took revenge after the town had failed to stump up for his mag...
The fork had only recently received Royal approval in Britain when it was gifted to the Governor of Massachusetts, John Winthrop, on 25th June, 1633. It took centuries for Americans to feel comfortable with this new way ...
Anne of Cleves was dumped by her profligate husband Henry VIII on 24th June, 1540, when she was summoned to Richmond Palace and asked to accept an annulment from her tyrannical spouse. In return for her compliance, she r...
Lorena Bobbitt cut off her husband John Wayne Bobbitt’s penis with a kitchen knife while he was asleep in their apartment in Manassas, Virginia on 23rd June, 1993. After a nine-hour surgery, Bobbitt’s penis was successfu...
Sea Captain Hanson Gregory claimed to have first cut a hole in a donut on 22nd June, 1847, sparking an American tradition: the nation now consumes ten billion donuts per year. But Americans munched on Dutch “oily cakes”...
Sir Robert Peel received royal assent for the Metropolis Police Improvement Bill on 19th June, 1829 - leading to the creation of London's first professional police force, who were soon nicknamed ‘Bobbies’ in tribute. The...
Designed by Imagineers, and located on the outskirts of Walt Disney World, the town of Celebration, Florida welcomed its first residents on 18th June, 1996. Over 5,000 families had applied to be amongst the first ever ho...
O.J. Simpson, wanted for questioning over the murders of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ron Goldman, was followed by both the LAPD and the world’s news cameras on 17th June, 1994, as he sat creeping alon...
The world’s first animal charity, the RSPCA, was set up on June 16th, 1824, by a small group of men who met in Old Slaughter’s Coffee House in St. Martin’s Lane, London. They had been brought together by Arthur Broome, a...
Future poetic powerhouse Dante Alighieri was enshrined as one of Florence’s six priors on 15th June, 1300: a top political gig in the city’s complex guild-based government. But his beloved hometown was a powder keg, spl...
Before McDonalds, there was the Horn & Hardart Automat - a chain restaurant featuring coin-operated glass windows, which opened its first branch in Philadelphia on 12th June, 1902. The business would grow to serve 800,0...
It was the THIRD time behind bars for legendary rock n’ roller Chuck Berry when he was found to have dodged $110,000 in income tax on 11th June, 1979. He insisted on being paid cash-in-hand for his sometimes shambolic pe...
Benjamin Franklin’s legendary ‘kite experiment’ supposedly took place on 10th June, 1752, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. According to the traditional account, the future Founding Father flew a kite fitted with a metal ke...
Nero, the final emperor of the Julio-Claudian dynasty, killed himself on 9th June AD 68. Having fled Rome to a suburban villa after being declared a ‘public enemy’ by the Senate, he stabbed himself through the throat. Pr...
‘Ghostbusters’ opened in US cinemas on 8th June, 1984, quickly becoming the highest-grossing comedy of all time. The brainchild of SNL’s Dan Aykroyd - whose great-grandfather was a 19th-century psychic investigator - th...
When Lord Byron’s 17 year-old daughter, Ada Lovelace, attended a soirée at the home of academic Charles Babbage on 5th June, 1833, the pair hit it off immediately. He invited her to see his ‘Difference Engine’ - an early...
‘The Annoying Thing’ is how the begenitaled amphibian animated by Erik Wernquist was first described; but by the time he released his first single ‘Axel F’ he was universally known as The Crazy Frog, and beat Coldplay’s ...
Los Angeles erupted in racist violence on 3rd June, 1943 in a week of riots that exposed deep tensions in wartime America. California’s Mexican-American “Pachuco” youth had adopted the zoot suit style from African-Americ...
Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas Watson made an important discovery, by accident, on June 2, 1875. While working on their ‘harmonic telegraph’. Watson inadvertently plucked a reed that had been tightly wound around the p...
Crown Prince Dipendra opened fire on his whole family at a family dinner at Kathmandu’s Narayanhiti Palace on 1st June, 2001. He killed nine royals, including his father, King Birendra, his mother, Queen Aishwarya, and h...
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