Episode 202 – Arms and Armour

Germany emerged as Europe’s premier arms and armor center in the 15th and 16th centuries through skilled craftsmanship, economic strategy, and technological innovation.
Episode 201 – Mapping the world

In 1507 two Germans invented America, or at least the name. The question is how and why? Come along to find out.
Episode 200 – Divide and Lose

In 1485 two brothers split the electorate of Saxony in two, creating the distinctly different Länder of Thuringia and Saxony in the process. All that after 20 years of successful joint rule and at the risk of materially reducing their family’s power. Why did they do it?
Episode 199 – How Holland Was Lost to the Holy Roman Empire (Part 2)

The second part of our series on the exiit of the Netherlands from the Holy Roman Empire, this time with a focus on demographics, economics and climate.
Episode 198 – How Holland Was Lost to the Holy Roman Empire (Part 1)

How did the Low Countries, once one of the heartlands of the Holy Roman Empire, gradually slip out of the ploitical entity it had belonged for centuries
Episode 197 – The Landshuter Hochzeit – Love and War in Bavaria (Part 2)

The most spectacular wedding of the 15th century took place in 1475 in Landshut – how could a duke of half of Bavaria pull that off?
Episode 196 – Agnes Bernauer – Love and War in Bavaria (Part 1)

The early 15th century is the political nadir but peak drama for the house of Wittelsbach – featuring Agnes Bernauer and Isabeau of Bavaria
Episode 195– Engraving the German Renaissance

If there was one major contribiution the Gemrans made to the Renaissance – apart from the printing press, it was the prodcution of drawings, engravings and woodcuts to be enjoyed by many and individually.
Episode 194– The Fuggers of Augsburg

Within just 40 years the heart of the banking industry moved from Florence and Venice where it had held sway since it was invented and moved north, into a medium sized Swabian city, Augsburg.
Episode 193– The Trades and Tribulations of the Free Imperial Cities

In 1911 an archivist found the almost complete accounts of the largest late medieval trading company in germany, giving us insights into the world of Free Imperial Cities