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I Take History With My Coffee
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I Take History With My Coffee

Author: Bruce Boyce

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Discover the fascinating world of Early Modern History in the time it takes to enjoy a cup of coffee. "I Take History With My Coffee" is a history podcast that brings you engaging and accessible history education through captivating historical storytelling. From the Renaissance to the Enlightenment, we explore pivotal events, influential figures, and untold stories that shaped our modern world. Whether you're a seasoned history enthusiast or just curious, this podcast makes history come alive with evidence-based insights and compelling narratives that connect the past to our present with a global perspective. Join me, a public historian and educator, and rediscover the relevance of history today! Listen now and rediscover the joy of history.

86 Episodes
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On January 5, 1477, Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, died on a frozen battlefield outside Nancy. His death sparked one of the most intense constitutional crises of the fifteenth century. Charles left behind his nineteen-year-old daughter Mary, an empty treasury, a destroyed army, and a state on the brink of collapse. Within weeks, French forces began invading Burgundian lands as internal revolts erupted across the Low Countries. To secure recognition as her father's successor, Mary ...
When Queen Isabel of Castile died on November 26, 1504, she left behind a unified Spain and a disastrous succession crisis. Over the following thirteen years, a series of unexpected deaths, political conspiracies, and a convenient declaration of madness would turn Spain from an independent power into the centerpiece of a massive Habsburg empire. This episode explores how Isabel and Fernando's carefully planned anti-French diplomatic strategy—based on marriage alliances with the Habsbur...
On the night of January 1, 1492, Christian soldiers quietly entered Granada's Alhambra palace. By dawn, the banners of Castile and Aragon flew from the towers of Iberia's last Muslim kingdom. Royal heralds announced a glorious military conquest blessed by divine providence. The reality was much messier—Granada fell due to secret negotiations and betrayal, not battlefield heroics. However, this orchestrated victory marked a truly transformative moment: the end of a decade-long campaign that bu...
The year 1492 is one of the most important in Spanish history. While Columbus sailed west across the Atlantic, Jews were forced to flee east, ending over a thousand years of Jewish presence on the Iberian Peninsula. That same year, the Catholic Monarchs completed the reconquest by defeating the Muslim-controlled Kingdom of Granada. These seemingly separate events were driven by a single unified goal: transforming Spain into a fully Christian nation. In this episode, we examine the fourt...
In 1480, the kingdoms of Castile and Aragon faced a pivotal moment. Years of civil war, noble violence, and weakening royal authority had left Spain divided and fragile. However, during a single parliamentary session—the Cortes of Toledo—Isabel and Fernando implemented reforms that would turn their kingdoms into one of Europe's strongest monarchies. This episode examines the landmark 1480 Cortes and the institutional innovations that helped the Catholic Monarchs consolidate power. We explore ...
In October 1469, two 17-year-old cousins made a decision that would change European history. Their secret marriage, performed with a possibly forged papal bull and in direct defiance of the King of Castile, sparked a decade-long struggle that would determine the future of medieval Spain. This episode details the unlikely alliance between Isabel of Castile and Fernando of Aragon—from their secret wedding in Valladolid to their ultimate victory in the War of Succession. We examine how Isabella,...
In the 15th century, the Iberian Peninsula stood at a crossroads between medieval fragmentation and modern unity. Four Christian kingdoms—Castile, Aragon, Portugal, and Navarre—shared the peninsula with the Muslim emirate of Granada, each fiercely independent yet shaped by centuries of warfare that had created militarized societies and unstable political structures. This episode explores the dramatic political crises that transformed Iberia between 1400 and 1468. In Castile, weak kings battle...
Europe's urban landscape experienced a major change between 1450 and 1650, but this wasn't just about cities growing larger. This episode explores how demographic recovery after the Black Death caused a complex geographical shift, with some cities gaining unprecedented importance while others faced long-term decline. We examine how London grew from a modest market town of 50,000 to a major European city of 400,000, while Amsterdam transformed from a small port into a global commercial ...
Imagine waking up not to an alarm clock, but to roosters crowing and church bells ringing across the valley. For most Europeans between 1450 and 1650, life followed rhythms we've nearly forgotten—tracking the sun's natural rise and set, responding to seasonal needs, observing sacred feast and fast days, and moving with the weekly beat of busy market towns. In this episode, we examine how early modern Europeans navigated multiple overlapping time systems that influenced every part of da...
How did the spaces where people lived shape their family relationships, privacy, and daily interactions? This episode examines domestic architecture across three major cities during a period of significant social transformation. We explore how Renaissance Florence evolved from medieval tower houses to horizontal palazzi, creating new concepts of individual privacy within family structures. In Protestant Amsterdam, narrow canal houses reflected Calvinist values while integrating commercial and...
The 16th century marked a culinary revolution that permanently changed global eating habits. In lively Venice kitchens, merchant families hired cooks from around the Mediterranean to develop the first authentic fusion dishes. At the same time, Antwerp's sugar refineries turned a rare medicine into a common ingredient, while Ottoman coffeehouses introduced a social ritual that would later spread worldwide. This wasn't merely about exotic ingredients making their way to European tables. It mark...
In 1629, a failed prediction of a solar eclipse by imperial astronomers sparked a crisis that would significantly change the relationship between East and West. This episode examines the forty-year period during which European Jesuit missionaries, led by Adam Schall von Bell, introduced Western astronomical techniques to China's Imperial court through the Calendar Reform Bureau. We follow Schall's journey from his arrival in Beijing in 1623 to his rise as Director of the Imperial Astronomical...
The death of Matteo Ricci in 1610 left the Jesuit mission in China vulnerable, facing waves of persecution and political upheaval that threatened to end European influence in the empire. This episode explores how the missionaries endured by strategically applying scientific knowledge, highlighting the work of Johann Schreck, a German Jesuit who studied under Galileo and brought European astronomical expertise to the Chinese imperial court. We examine the turbulent period from 1610 to 1630, in...
In the early 1600s, a broken mechanical clock in Beijing's Forbidden City became an unlikely catalyst for one of history's most significant cross-cultural intellectual exchanges. This episode explores the extraordinary collaboration between Matteo Ricci, a Jesuit missionary trained in advanced European mathematics, and Xu Guangqi, a Chinese scholar-official seeking practical solutions to his empire's challenges. Through their partnership, these two figures achieved what many believed to be im...
In this episode, we delve into the remarkable journey of Matteo Ricci, the Italian Jesuit who accomplished what many deemed impossible: establishing a permanent European presence in the heart of Ming China. After twenty years of patient effort, Ricci's arrival in Beijing in 1601 marked a crucial moment in East-West relations. Unlike his predecessors, who failed to penetrate China's cultural and political barriers, Ricci developed a revolutionary approach. By mastering Chinese, adopting schola...
In ancient China, astronomy wasn't merely a science but the foundation of political legitimacy. This episode explores how the "Mandate of Heaven" doctrine transformed celestial observation into the cornerstone of imperial authority, creating a system where a ruler's ability to accurately predict astronomical events demonstrated divine approval. From the Taosi observatory in 2400 BCE to the Ming Dynasty's complex bureaucracy of court astronomers, we trace how Chinese emperors validated their r...
Beyond the simplified myth of a martyr for science lies the true story of Galileo Galilei's fateful collision with the Catholic Church. This episode unravels how astronomical discoveries made through a revolutionary new instrument—the telescope—became entangled with Counter-Reformation politics, theological debate, and one brilliant astronomer's confrontational personality. We begin by reviewing Galileo's rise to prominence as the "philosopher" to the Grand Duke of Tuscany and how his early t...
Join us as we explore how a simple optical device in the hands of Galileo Galilei sparked one of history's greatest scientific revolutions. In this episode, we'll journey to Renaissance Italy where Galileo transformed a Dutch novelty into an instrument of discovery that revealed startling celestial truths: mountains on the Moon, countless hidden stars, moons orbiting Jupiter, and phases of Venus. These observations not only challenged centuries of Aristotelian cosmology but provided crucial e...
In this episode, we explore the remarkable story of Johannes Kepler, the 17th-century astronomer whose unique blend of mathematical genius and mystical vision forever changed our understanding of the cosmos. Born into poverty and turmoil in 1571, Kepler's journey to scientific greatness began when he joined the flamboyant Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe at the imperial court of Prague in 1600. Despite their profound personal differences – Tycho the aristocratic observer, Kepler the theoretical ...
In the decades following Copernicus's publication of his heliocentric model in 1543, European astronomy stood at a critical juncture. While mathematically elegant, the sun-centered system failed to predict celestial positions with greater accuracy than traditional models. This episode explores the extraordinary life and scientific contributions of Tycho Brahe (1546-1601), whose unprecedented observational precision transformed astronomy despite his paradoxical rejection of heliocentrism...
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