One day in history, a podcast story to listen to free on auvio for free

One day in history, a podcast story to listen to free on auvio for free
One day in history, a podcast story to listen to free on auvio for free

From prehistory to the twentieth century revolutions, including antiquity, the Middle Ages or the Age of Enlightenment, Laurent Dehossay and his guests travel on the time line to analyze the major stages that have led to the world today Hui. Humanism, wars, arts and sciences, economics, gastronomy: history is told by leaving in the footsteps of those who have shaped our present: Cleopatra, Olympe de Gouge, Napoleon, Churchill, Edith Cavell … The past sheds light on us News issues: gender and sexuality, feminism, environment, relationships between Orient and West … Learn to understand. One day in the story presented by Laurent Dehossay returns for an eleventh season with Yasmine Boudaka, Régine Dubois, Cindya Izzarelli, Cécile Apus, Axelle Thiry, Helena Verrier, Nicolas Bogaerts, Eric Loze, Jean-Marc Panis and Jonathan Remy. Monday January 20: 1:15 p.m.: 1750, Bruno Lenoir and Jean Diot: death sentence for homosexuality. They are the last death row inmates for homosexuality in . With Pauline Valade “Bruno and Jean” published by Editions Acte Sud 2 pm: she is nicknamed the princess of algorithms and yet Ada Lovelace is one of the figures that history has long left in the shadows. Pioneer of computer science, she was the first computer development in history, 1 century BC. Yasmine Boudaka evokes this imminent scientist with Avner Bar-Hen, professor at CNAM, the National Conservatory of Arts and Trade, holder of statistical and massive data. Tuesday January 21 1:15 p.m.: What role did women play during the Great War? Time has polished the images of the devoted and courageous nurse, of the tender and generous godmother, of the falsely exotic spy like Mata Hari, of the grieving but worthy widow … So many stereotypes which do not always account for a essential, of a feeling shared by a large number of them, that of guilt. But things will no longer be quite as before. With Françoise Thébaud, historian, directs Clio review: women, genres, history. Auction of “women at the time of war 14-18” Editions Petite Library Payot 2 pm: What is the fate of a family ordinary can us tell us about social mobility and economic changes in a long 19th century? Many are the bet of the novelists. It is also the one that Emma Rothschild, in a historian, brilliantly points out. The guest of Nicolas Bogaerts is Emma Rothschild, professor of history and author “from Near, an ordinary family in the history of France” published by the editions of the Seuil Wednesday January 22 1:15 pm: in November 1835, Pierre-François Lacenaire is sentenced to death for false writing, thefts and assassinations. The trial was spectacular. It must be said that the accused is exceptional: not only does he not hide his packages, but he claims others; He does not fall asleep from the fate that awaits him, he laughs; He does not repel the guillotine, he claims it. In the eyes of his contemporaries, he is a moral and social monster that crystallizes the concerns of society born of the Revolution of 1789. 14 hours: from the end of the Roman Empire to the present day, Pôle plains in Ireland , from Romania to the Norman bocage – Stan Neumann has traveled fifteen centuries of history of the European peasantry. In the wake of his documentary series broadcast on Arte in 2024, the time of peasants (threshold) reveals an little known story. A sequence produced by Nicolas Bogaerts Thursday January 23 1:15 p.m.: The “History Mirror”, a medieval encyclopedia translated in the 14th century by Jean de Vignay. This text traces the history of humanity in 32 pounds. How did we conceive history to the MA, what are the principles of the compilation of sources, why this development of translation, how did language evolve? 2 pm: we are interested today in the hectic life of the pioneer of Eadweard Muybridge cinema, with Jean-Marc Panis and his guest Guy Delisle, author of the comic book “for a fraction of a second” published by Delcourt. Friday, January 24, 1:15 p.m.: Ambroise de Milan: one of the four fathers of the Church, inventor of the Christian city. How did his thought go through the centuries? This is what we are going to see … with Patrick Boucheron, historian, professor at the Cvollege of France. Author of: “The trace and the aura – Lives posthumous of Ambroise de Milan”; Threshold. 2 p.m.: Cyprus, whose capital is Nicosia, joined European Union in 2004. But what is its history and what are these major archaeological sites? To answer these questions, Johanne Dussez is with Sabine Fourrier, archaeologist and research director at the CNRS. Sunday, January 26: 1:15 p.m.: Heir to the spirit of the Enlightenment, spinning straight to romantic darkness, Edmond d’Hoffschmidt de remnant is crossed tumultuous eras, from the old regime to bourgeois democracy. He died, Belgian citizen, during the reign of Léopold I. Let us attach, today, to a little-known, singular and paradoxical life … with Pierre Jodogne, of the Royal Academy of Belgium. Author of: “Edmond of Hoffschmidt de remountigne dit l’Hermitite (1777-1861), a singular life” published in the ed. From the Royal Academy of Belgium 1:50 p.m.: Located in the province of Luxembourg, the Attert valley is imbued with mysteries and ancient stories where legends and Christian faith intertwine. This territory is home to fascinating stories featuring protective saints and miracles. Among them, let us discover two striking legends: that of Saint Thomas and his traveler statue, and that of a robust tree, indestructible thanks to the intervention of a well -known representation of another well -known saint. These legends are told by Franz Clément at the microphone of Fanny Cuisset.

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