『History at Nigtht』のカバーアート

History at Nigtht

History at Nigtht

著者: History at Nigtht
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📜 Welcome to History at Night — Where the Past Bleeds Into the Dark. 🩸✨History isn't always beautiful. Behind the grand empires, the famous monuments, and the celebrated heroes lies a darker, grimmer reality. History at Night is a deep dive into the historical horrors, terrifying conspiracies, unsolved crimes, and eerie mysteries that time tried to wash away. 🗝️🌌Under the crimson night sky, we unlock the vaults to explore:
  • 🪦 Grim Historical Horror: The bloodiest battles, cruelest figures, and terrifying ancient rituals.
  • 📁 Dark Archives & Conspiracies: Secret societies, hidden agendas, and cover-ups that changed the world.
  • 🕯️ Eerie Anomalies: Unexplained historical phenomena and eerie folklore told under the dim glow of a lantern.
  • 👁️ Immersive Dark Storytelling: Rich, atmospheric narratives designed for late-night listening.
If you have a passion for dark history, eerie atmospheres, and the chilling truths of the past, you have just found your nightly sanctuary. 💀🚪✨ Subscribe now, light your lantern, and let's face the shadows of history together. 🌟Copyright History at Nigtht
ノンフィクション犯罪 出世 就職活動 社会科学 経済学
エピソード
  • How Did an Ordinary Worker Actually Survive the Revolution in Petrograd _ Fall Asleep
    2026/07/15
    In the winter of 1917, Petrograd was a city of whispers and long queues. While history remembers the grand speeches and political upheaval, for the millions of ordinary workers, survival meant waking before dawn to the cruel, unheated dark, worrying not about the future of Russia, but about the price of a loaf of bread and a sack of coal [citation:1].
    This episode invites you to fall asleep to the story of civilian life during the Russian Revolution, told from the ground up. You will be guided through the sensory details of daily survival: the frost creeping across the windows, the worn boots on cobblestone streets, the shared humor and simmering arguments in communal kitchens, and the endless patience required for the bread queues [citation:1]. Through the eyes of a single worker, we uncover the stark reality of 1917—the yawning gap between politics and survival, where the fall of an empire was often less important than a tram schedule and the ceaseless, stubborn persistence of everyday life [citation:3][citation:1].
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    51 分
  • Heracles 12 Labors You Won_t Believe
    2026/07/15
    A hero driven mad by a goddess, forced to serve a cowardly king, and tasked with feats that defy all logic. From wrestling an invincible lion to capturing the hound of hell itself, the twelve labors of Heracles are the ultimate ancient world challenges [citation:1][citation:7].
    In this episode, we break down the legendary twelve labors of Heracles, the greatest hero of Greek mythology [citation:6][citation:11]. It all began with a tragedy: Hera, Zeus's wife, drove Heracles mad, causing him to kill his wife and children. To atone, the Oracle of Delphi commanded him to serve King Eurystheus, who assigned a series of impossible tasks [citation:1][citation:2][citation:5].
    We cover Heracles' first six labors across the Peloponnese: strangling the Nemean lion with its impenetrable skin, slaying the nine-headed Hydra (which would be disqualified as he had help), capturing the sacred golden-horned hind of Artemis, and bringing back the Erymanthian boar [citation:4][citation:5][citation:8]. Then, the creative solution: diverting two rivers to clean the Augean stables in a single day. We also discuss the Stymphalian birds, which he scared off with a magical rattle from Athena [citation:5][citation:8].
    The final six labors took him further afield: capturing the Cretan bull, bringing back the man-eating mares of Diomedes, and securing the girdle of Hippolyta—which nearly started a war with the Amazons [citation:5][citation:8]. He then seized the cattle of the three-bodied giant Geryon, stole the golden apples of the Hesperides with Atlas' help, and finally descended to the underworld to capture Cerberus, the three-headed dog who guarded its gates [citation:1][citation:4][citation:5].
    The labors took a twist when King Eurystheus refused to count two—the Hydra and the stables—so Heracles had to complete the final tasks to reach the total of twelve [citation:2][citation:5][citation:7]. Subscribe and hit the bell for more deep dives into the myths that shaped history.
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    44 分
  • Herodotus Father of History or Master of Ancient Fake News
    2026/07/14
    He's been called both the "Father of History" and the "Father of Lies" – often by the same scholars. So was Herodotus a pioneer of factual inquiry, or the ancient world's greatest spinner of tall tales? The answer is more fascinating than either label suggests.
    In this episode, we unravel the complicated legacy of Herodotus, the 5th-century Greek historian whose work *The Histories* single-handedly invented the genre we call history [citation:1][citation:2]. We explore the origin of his infamous nicknames: how the Roman orator Cicero gave him the title "Father of History," while critics, ancient and modern, have derided him as a purveyor of fables [citation:2][citation:3]. We break down his greatest hits of controversy, from his exaggerated descriptions of Babylon with its impossible 100 bronze gates to his famed account of fox-sized gold-digging "ants" in Persia, which modern scholarship suggests were actually a species of marmot, the victim of a simple translation error [citation:2][citation:3].
    We'll also examine the profound debate on his methods: his insistence on recording "whatever is told me" as a primary source versus the more scientific approach of his rival, Thucydides [citation:6]. We'll discuss how modern archaeology and a shift in understanding what ancient historians were trying to achieve have dramatically rehabilitated his reputation [citation:12]. Ultimately, we discover that the real Herodotus was not a liar, but a master storyteller and a brilliant researcher who saw history as a grand inquiry into human behavior, weaving together fact, myth, and cultural memory to tell a story that would resonate for millennia [citation:5][citation:11]. Subscribe and hit the bell to separate fact from ancient fiction.
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    40 分
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