Placecloud (English)

Viewpoints – Placecloud (English)

Society EN ↓ 500 episodes

Leading cultural researchers tell stories of places around the world. For the full spatial multimedia experience and more episodes visit www.placecloud.io.

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Placecloud (English)

Category

Society

Podcast website

placecloud.io

Latest episode

Apr 21, 2026

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Episodes

Thames Barrier – Holding Back the Sea 21.04.2026

Diocese of London United Kingdom Holding the North Sea at bay to protect London from flooding, the Thames Barrier is an extraordinary feat of engineering. It is also constantly under threat, in a world where time and tide are slowly, inexorably, winning. How long can it hold? Nobody knows.

A Line Through Time: The Prime Meridian, Greenwich 19.03.2026

Diocese of London United Kingdom Standing at the Prime Meridian in Greenwich, this short audio viewpoint explores the line from which global time and longitude are measured. It explains how and why this point was fixed here, and considers how Britain’s drive to measure the world continues to shape how we locate ourselves within it.

It looks like meat’s back on the menu, boys 09.01.2026

The Hague The Netherlands The Gevangenenpoort, Prisoner’s Gate, here in The Hague, from 1420 until 1828, was used for housing people who had committed serious crimes while they awaited sentencing. It has since then been home to a literary club, a museum, and an art gallery. It’s also the location where, the only time in world history, a prime minister was eaten by his people.

Will the real Amazon please stand up? 08.01.2026

Terme T rkiye We find ourselves a few kilometers outside of the small town of Terme, on the southern shores of the Black Sea, in Turkey. Just ahead, we can see a statue of an Amazonian warrior, raising a bow and arrow.

The contested origins of Fortaleza 18.06.2025

Fortaleza Brazil The Brazilian state of Ceará is one of the poorer regions of Brazil. The GDP per capita is just a third of that of the people in the state of Sao Paulo, and not even a fifth of those in the district around the capital of Brasilia.

Echoes of empire: On Itaparica, where Dutch ambition met Machiavellian brutality 17.06.2025

Vera Cruz Brazil Standing on Itaparica Island today, with the sea breeze brushing past the ramparts of the old fort of São Lourenço, it’s easy to be lulled by the slow rhythms of Bahia. But beneath these waters and stones lies a deeper, darker current; one that stretches back to a fleeting empire built on commerce, ambition, and blood.

A secretary’s plea for a colonial vision 24.05.2025

The Hague The Netherlands You are standing in the Binnenhof, the heart of the Dutch Republic. Imagine this is the winter of 1642; narrow windows filter the pale northern light into the vaulted chambers. Stone floors echo with quiet footsteps. The thick oak doors are shut, but beyond them, the States-General is in session, a body of burghers, regents, and envoys who hold the fate of an empire in th...

How a dinnerless palace ended a colonial reign 24.05.2025

Amsterdam The Netherlands It was the spring of 1642, and the corridors of the Dutch West India Company headquarters were quiet, dimly lit by daylight slanting through small windows, the air heavy with the scent of parchment and pipe smoke. Behind closed doors, a handful of directors, merchants, not monarchs, reviewed ledgers and letters from the tropics. Among them, one decision had begun to cryst...

Tension at the top: From Fort Maurits to the heart of a colonial power struggle 24.05.2025

Teot nio Vilela Brazil Stand on the windswept grounds of Fort Maurits today, near the banks of the São Francisco River in northeastern Brazil, and it’s hard to imagine the colonial drama that once unfolded here, where cannon fire echoed across the mangroves and Dutch banners flew over newly conquered land. This was not only a frontier of empire, but also the outer edge of a conflict that would sha...

What if the Dutch had stayed? 07.05.2025

Jaboat o dos Guararapes Brazil We are at Praça do Córrego da Batalha, in the municipality of Jaboatão dos Guararapes. A córrego is a brook, or stream. The square marks the beginning of an avenue also called Córrego da Batalha, as well as the ascent to the Guararapes Hills. Everything in the surrounding area seems to reference the Dutch period in Pernambuco, lasting from 1630 to 1654, more specific...

Slave-Smuggling, Power, and the Humanist Prince of Dutch Brazil 05.05.2025

Cidade Velha Cabo Verde We’re at the pelourinho in Cidade Velha, in the south of the island of Santiago, in Cape Verde. The historic centre of Cidade Velha is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The town of Ribeira Grande, renamed Cidade Velha, ‘Old Town’, in the late 18th century, was the first European colonial outpost in the tropics. The town features some of the original street layout and impressive...

How Livorno’s Jews Quietly Shaped Dutch Brazil 04.05.2025

Livorno Italy We’re standing in front of the new synagogue of Livorno. It was completed in 1962, just around the corner from where the old synagogue used to stand, which was destroyed during World War 2. That synagogue was originally built in 1607, when it became the central place of worship for the Sephardic jewish community in Livorno.

From monopoly to compromise 04.05.2025

Bergen The Netherlands We’re at the former offices of the Noorderkwartier, one of the chambers of the Dutch West India Company, in Hoorn. In the 17th century, its officers were swayed by anonymous pamphlets attempting to influence policy on trade with Brazil.

The Poti: Catholics and Calvinists 03.05.2025

Pedro R gis Brazil It's true that the Paraíba coast is one of the most popular destinations for tourism in Brazil. There are many beautiful beaches along the coast of Paraíba, one of which is where we are now, the beach called Baía da Traição. Today, the warm sea and long stretch of sand guarantee a calm and paradisiacal setting, very different from what we would have found in 1645, when the war t...

A Dutch Amazon 02.05.2025

We are on the banks of the Xingu River, in the heart of the Brazilian Amazon. When we think of the Dutch occupation of Brazil in the 17th century, we usually think of the Brazilian north-east, where the invaders financed by the Dutch West India Company stayed for 24 years, but they also came to occupy territories in the north, deep into the rainforest.

Becoming part of the lexicon 01.05.2025

Recife Brazil We stand here before the statue of the goddess Athena, or, if you’re more Roman inclined, Minerva, at the head of the Maurício de Nassau Bridge, in Recife. The goddess of wisdom, the arts, and strategy arrived here in 1917 as part of a major urban reform. Recife wanted to present itself as a modern capital, and to do so, it looked to Europe for inspiration. The governor at the time,...

The spectacle 30.04.2025

The Hague The Netherlands The German John Maurice de Nassau-Siegen enlisted in the Dutch army at the tender age of 16. Though from a respectable family with royal connections, his father had spent most of his resources supporting the Dutch independence war against Spain, which meant that for John, his father’s 13th child, there was little left to go around.

A good trade 29.04.2025

Middelburg The Netherlands We’re in the town of Middelburg, at the location of the West India house, once the home of the offices of the Zeeland chamber of the Dutch West India Company. The current building houses a fancy stroopwafel store.

The German polymath 22.03.2025

Cape Town South Africa The term ‘polymath’ dates back to at least 1603, when it was first used in the title of a published work, by the German Johann van Wowern. He defined polymathy as "knowledge of various matters, drawn from all kinds of studies ... ranging freely through all the fields of the disciplines, as far as the human mind, with unwearied industry, is able to pursue them".

The department of government expansion 22.03.2025

Venice Italy 17th century Europeans, specifically the capitalist elite, were recognizably cosmopolitan. They moved between countries, had commercial fingers in international pies, and exploited the imperial periphery for the good of their people, but mostly for the good of themselves.

Death of a prince 22.03.2025

Kranenburg Germany We’re standing in front of the tomb of John Maurice de Nassau-Siegen. We’re in the village of Hau, on the border of Kleve, and just a few kilometers away from the border with the Netherlands. John Maurice de Nassau’s life story is not quite one from rags to riches, but it’s certainly one from an origin of relative obscurity, to a grand finale of hobnobbing with Europe’s kings an...

Nassau in love 12.03.2025

Kranenburg Germany This lovely wooded area here in Kleve, was home to the Prinzenhof, the Prince’s Court. Built for John Maurice de Nassau Siegen in the second half of the 17th century, it was badly damaged during the Second World War, before being demolished, though the associated gardens remain.

Introducing the Pre-Adamites 10.03.2025

Albany United States After the United States declared its independence from the United Kingdom on July 2, 1776, Albany became the capital of the state of New York the next year. The city had already been chartered, given official status as a city, in 1686, making it the oldest city in the state, after it had been named Albany when the English had taken over the colony from the Dutch in 1664.

Dutch Brazil in academia 10.03.2025

Jo o Pessoa Brazil We find ourselves in front of the rectory of the Federal University of Paraíba, a public higher education institution in the north-east of Brazil, which will be 70 years old in 2025. From this campus in the capital João Pessoa, young researchers are conducting contemporary studies on an important period in Brazilian history: the Dutch occupation of 17th century Brazil.

To do battle 10.03.2025

Recife Brazil If you're visiting the city of Recife and want to enjoy an urban landscape that combines modernity and tradition, an appropriate area to visit, is the neighbourhood of Casa Forte, in the northern part of the city, where you'll find this beautiful square with the same name, designed in the 1930s by the great Brazilian modernist landscaper Roberto Burle Marx.

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