HistMuse
HistMuse
Where History Inspires
Where to listen?
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Episodes
The History of Video Games From Arcade Cabinets to Cloud Gaming 11.07.2026 23:41
Video games began as simple experiments on university computers and grew into one of the world’s biggest entertainment industries. This episode follows that journey through arcade cabinets, home consoles, Nintendo and Sega, PC gaming, online multiplayer, mobile games, esports, and cloud streaming. It is the story of how a few blinking pixels became global communities, blockbuster worlds, and games...
The History of Biotechnology from Gene Editing to Personalized Medicine 08.07.2026 22:20
From recombinant DNA to CRISPR, this episode explores the history of biotechnology and how it reshaped medicine. We follow the path from early genetics to gene editing and personalized treatment, showing how scientists learned not just to study life, but to intervene in it.
The History of Quantum Computing 04.07.2026 22:20
How did quantum computing go from abstract theory to real prototype machines? This episode explores the history of quantum computing, from the foundations of quantum physics to the scientists, algorithms, and early hardware that turned a radical idea into one of the most important technological experiments of our time.
The Forgotten AI Boom Before ChatGPT 30.06.2026 16:21
The AI revolution didn’t begin with ChatGPT. Decades before today’s chatbot boom, businesses, governments, and researchers were already convinced that artificial intelligence would change the world. In this episode, we explore the forgotten AI boom of the 1980s, when expert systems, specialized AI computers, and huge promises made it seem like thinking machines were just around the corner. Then th...
The History of Robotics 27.06.2026 19:41
From the first industrial robotic arms on factory floors to today’s humanoid machines, this episode explores the remarkable history of robotics and how automation evolved from repetitive mechanical labor into intelligent, human-like systems. We trace the breakthroughs that transformed manufacturing, medicine, logistics, and everyday life, and examine why the dream of building robots that can move,...
The History of Spaceflight From the Space Race to SpaceX 24.06.2026 17:33
From Sputnik and the Moon landing to the rise of reusable rockets, this episode explores the incredible history of spaceflight and how it evolved from Cold War rivalry into a new era of private innovation. We trace the key moments of the Space Race, the triumph of Apollo, the era of space stations and shuttles, and the game-changing arrival of SpaceX. It’s the story of how humanity’s greatest leap...
The History of Semiconductors From Lab Discovery to Global Power 19.06.2026 25:40
From lab benches to global power politics, this episode tells the story of how semiconductors changed the world. We follow the breakthroughs that led from early discoveries to the transistor in 1947 and the integrated circuit era, then examine how chips became essential to modern technology and central to geopolitical competition.
The History of Artificial Intelligence From Expert Systems to ChatGPT 17.06.2026 18:48
From rule-based machines to neural networks and generative AI, this episode of Histmuse traces the long, surprising history of artificial intelligence. We explore how early thinkers imagined intelligent machines, how expert systems helped launch the first major AI boom, and why decades of hype, failure, and breakthrough shaped the technology we know today. It’s the story of big ambitions, brutal s...
Ice King: The Dumbest Startup Idea That Built an Empire 15.06.2026 19:18
Before modern refrigeration, the idea of shipping frozen water across the ocean sounded like an absolute punchline. In 1806, when Frederic Tudor decided to harvest ice from New England ponds and sail it to the Caribbean, society laughed him straight into debtor's prison. In this episode of Histmuse, we explore the chillingly brilliant story of the "Ice King." Discover how a mocked visionary battle...
The Family That Invented Venture Capital 600 Years Ago 12.06.2026 21:30
Long before startups, seed rounds, and venture funds, one family in Renaissance Florence was already doing something that feels remarkably familiar. In this episode of Histmuse, we explore how the Medici used capital, networks, and political influence to fund ambition, spread risk, and help invent the logic behind modern venture capital. It’s a story about money, power, and backing the future 600...
The Renaissance Banker Who Made Elon Musk Look Poor 09.06.2026 20:33
Modern billionaires buy social media platforms and rocket companies. Jakob Fugger bought emperors. In this episode of Histmuse, we explore the story of the most powerful banker of the Renaissance—a man who controlled Europe's mining industry, financed the Habsburg dynasty, and essentially treated the Holy Roman Empire like a venture investment. Discover how Fugger the Rich turned loans into ul...
The Roman Billionaire Who Invented the Real Estate Hustle 05.06.2026 21:57
Rome had emperors, generals, and conquerors — but it also had speculators. This is the story of Marcus Licinius Crassus, the ultra-wealthy Roman power broker who built a fortune buying distressed property, exploiting fires, and turning urban chaos into opportunity. It’s a story about real estate, predation, and how some of the oldest business hustles are much older than they look.
The Empire That Invented the Money Printer (And Caused Hyperinflation) 02.06.2026 17:42
Long before modern economies, imperial China transformed paper into one of history’s most powerful financial tools—and set the stage for a major inflation crisis. In this episode of Histmuse, we examine how paper money reshaped the economy, why it was such a groundbreaking innovation, and how overuse of the system began to unravel its stability. It’s a story of bold invention, rising ambition, and...
The Medieval Shipping Cartel That Worked Like Amazon Prime 30.05.2026 20:18
A network of medieval merchants once built a shipping system that functioned remarkably like Amazon Prime. In this Histmuse episode, we explore the Hanseatic League—an alliance of trading cities that dominated northern Europe by controlling routes, standardizing trade, and making delivery faster, safer, and more reliable. It’s the story of how a medieval business network became the indispensable m...
How Crusader Knights Built the World's First Credit Card 27.05.2026 18:00
A group of crusader knights once built one of the world’s earliest international banking systems. In this Histmuse episode, we explore how the Knights Templar helped pilgrims move money across continents using deposit records and letters of credit—an early version of the modern credit card. We follow the rise of their financial network, why kings and nobles trusted them, and how one of the most po...
How Britain Got Rich From American Slavery 23.05.2026 19:53
How did a country that loves to talk about freedom and law build its early wealth on a system of brutal exploitation? In this episode of Histmuse, we dive into the uncomfortable truth behind the rise of the British Empire. We explore how the Atlantic slave trade wasn't just a distant colonial project—it was a massive economic engine that built modern Britain. From the merchants of Liverpool an...
Why Spain Went Broke After Stealing So Much Silver 17.05.2026 16:18
In this episode, we explore one of history’s great financial paradoxes: how Spain became the wealthiest empire in Europe through American silver, yet still kept going broke. From the mines of Potosí to royal debt, inflation, endless wars, and a fragile economy, this is the story of how treasure created the illusion of strength while quietly weakening an empire from within. If money was pouring in,...
The 1952 Smog and Radical Invention of Environmental Law 10.05.2026 24:07
In this episode, we dive into the 1952 Great Smog of London, the five-day disaster that turned ordinary city air into a mass killer and helped force a radical rethink of the state’s responsibility to protect public health. From coal smoke and trapped weather systems to the deaths of thousands and the legal aftermath that led to the Clean Air Act of 1956, this is the story of how one environmental...
Why the 1858 Great Stink of London Changed Urban Planning Forever 03.05.2026 14:48
In 1858, London’s river became so foul that it forced the British government to confront a crisis it could no longer ignore. This episode tells the story of the Great Stink, the failed ideas that made it worse, and the engineering breakthrough that transformed sewage, public health, and modern urban planning forever. It’s a tale of heat, politics, miasma theory, and one visionary engineer whose un...
The New London School Explosion 1937 27.04.2026 16:51
Discover the true story of the 1937 New London School Explosion, the deadliest school disaster in US history. When an undetected natural gas leak ignited inside a wealthy East Texas school, it claimed nearly 300 lives and changed American safety laws forever. Learn the heartbreaking history behind this forgotten tragedy, the massive oilfield rescue effort, and how this exact event is the reason wh...
Deadly Glow - The Radium Poisoning Scandal 13.04.2026 15:58
1920s New Jersey. Factory women paint watch dials with radium-laced paint. Company tells them: "Lick the brush—it's safe ✨" Teeth fall out. Jaws disintegrate. Glowing skeletons haunt hospital X-rays. One woman's 6-year lawsuit vs U.S. Steel changes labor law forever. HistMuse: When corporate greed made glow-in-the-dark a death sentence.
The Vajont Dam Disaster 12.04.2026 14:00
The Vajont Dam Disaster: World's Tallest Dam Survives—250 Million Tons Don't October 9, 1963. Northern Italy. Vajont Dam—one of world's tallest—fills reservoir. Engineers ignore landslide warnings from unstable Mt. Toc above. 10:39 PM. 260 million cubic meters of rock collapse into lake at 100 km/h. Creates 250-meter megatsunami. Water clears 820-foot dam intact, thunders into Piave Va...
The USS Jeannette Disaster 12.04.2026 14:28
The USS Jeannette Disaster: Arctic Expedition Crushed by Ice 1879. USS Jeannette sails from San Francisco seeking open polar sea. 33 men under Lt. Cmdr. George De Long trapped in ice pack north of Siberia. Nearly 2 years adrift. Ship crushed June 1881—300 miles from land. Crew drags boats across ice. Storm separates boats. Starvation. Scurvy. Exposure. Captain De Long's party starves on Lena D...
The Survival of Juliane Koepcke - LANSA Flight 508 Crash 12.04.2026 19:54
The Survival of Juliane Koepcke: Fell 10,000 Feet Through Amazon Hell December 24, 1971. LANSA Flight 508. 17-year-old Juliane Koepcke flies with mother over Peruvian Amazon. Lightning strikes wing. Plane disintegrates mid-air. Juliane falls 3km strapped to row seat—**sole survivor** of 92. Broken collarbone. Gashed leg. Swollen eye. Wakes in canopy wreckage. Mother's seat empty nearby. 11 day...
The Survival of Ada Blackjack - 1921 Wrangel Island Expedition 12.04.2026 17:29
The Survival of Ada Blackjack: Arctic's Forgotten Heroine 1921. 23-year-old Iñupiaq seamstress Ada Blackjack joins all-white Wrangel Island expedition for $50/month. Promised other Natives. Discovers she's sole Indigenous member. Resupply fails. Three men walk for help—never return. Final companion dies of scurvy. Ada alone with expedition cat Vic. Traps foxes. Fends off polar bears. Build...
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