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  • The Phoenicians - The Civilization That Invented The Alphabet...Then Vanished.
    2026/07/14

    The Phoenicians invented the alphabet, founded Carthage, built one of history's greatest trading networks, and quietly shaped the modern world—yet most people have never heard their story.


    In this episode of Previously On Earth, we explore the civilization behind our letters, the rise of Carthage, the mystery of their disappearance, and the forgotten legacy that still influences the world today.


    Topics Covered: Phoenicians, Carthage, Hannibal, Alphabet History, Byblos, Tyrian Purple, Ancient Mediterranean, Ancient Trade, Archaeology, Ancient Civilizations, World History


    Continue Your Journey Through History


    🌀 Episode 1 – The Minoans

    A brilliant Bronze Age civilization that vanished without explanation.


    🔬 Episode 2 – Silence at the Lab

    The strange stories of brilliant scientists who disappeared without a trace.


    ❄️ Episode 3 – The Franklin Expedition

    129 men entered the Arctic. None came home.


    💡 Episode 4 – Edison

    The famous inventor... and the controversial legacy history often leaves out.



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    17 分
  • The Wizard's Curtain: The Dark Side of Thomas Edison and Who Really Did The Work.
    2026/07/07

    Here's something they left out of the history books.


    Thomas Edison held over 1,000 patents. He's celebrated

    as one of the greatest inventors in American history.

    His name is on schools, awards, and a national park.

    And a lot of what made him famous was built by people

    you have never heard of.


    This episode of Previously On Earth tells the whole

    story. The invention factory at Menlo Park where

    dozens of workers built what one man got credit for.

    Lewis Howard Latimer, the Black inventor whose

    improved lightbulb filament made electric light

    affordable for ordinary families — and whose name

    almost nobody knows. The broken promise to Nikola

    Tesla that set off one of the ugliest business wars

    in American history. The public animal electrocutions.

    The electric chair, lobbied for by a man who spent

    his whole life opposing the death penalty — because

    it was good for business.


    Edison was brilliant. He was also ruthless. And the

    people who stood behind him and built what he took

    credit for deserve to finally have their names said

    out loud.


    This is Previously On Earth. Episode 4.

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    16 分
  • Dead Reckoning - The Disturbing Case Of The Franklin Expedition
    2026/06/30

    In May of 1845, 129 men sailed out of the Thames on two

    ships — HMS Erebus and HMS Terror — searching for the

    Northwest Passage through the Arctic. It was supposed to

    be the voyage that closed the last gap on the map.


    Not one of them came home.


    For 180 years, most of those men had no confirmed

    identities. They were a number. A statistic in a

    historical disaster that has fascinated researchers,

    explorers, and historians for generations.


    This past May, a DNA research team published findings

    that changed that. Using genetic material matched to

    living descendants tracked down through genealogical

    research, they identified four more of those men by

    name after 166 years of uncertainty. One of them —

    a sailor found alone on a frozen ridge, in the wrong

    uniform, with his own papers in his pocket — had been

    a mystery since 1859.


    He has a name now.


    This episode tells the full story. The expedition, the

    ice, the Victory Point Note — the only written record

    ever recovered from the disaster. What actually killed

    the crew. The Inuit oral testimony that described the

    truth for 160 years while the Victorian establishment

    refused to believe it. And the 2026 DNA breakthrough

    that finally gave four of those men their names back

    after a century and a half of silence.


    This is one of the greatest mysteries in the history

    of exploration. And it just got a little closer to

    being solved. Episode 3.

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    16 分
  • Silence At The Lab: How Oppenheimer and Others Paid for Asking Questions
    2026/06/30

    What actually happens when a scientist working inside a

    classified government laboratory starts asking questions

    they're not supposed to ask?


    Not the dramatic version. The real version. Because the

    real version turns out to be documented, consistent, and

    running from the 1950s all the way to right now.


    In 1954, Robert Oppenheimer, the physicist who led the

    Manhattan Project and built the American atomic bomb —

    had his security clearance revoked after he started

    raising inconvenient questions about the hydrogen bomb

    program. The government he had served destroyed him

    through a secret hearing. He never held a government

    position again. His name wasn't officially cleared until

    2022. He'd been dead for 55 years.


    In 1999, a scientist named Wen Ho Lee spent nine months

    in solitary confinement for a crime the government

    ultimately couldn't prove. A federal judge said from the

    bench that what had been done to him embarrassed the

    nation. He settled his civil suit for $1.6 million.


    These aren't isolated incidents. They're part of a

    pattern, one that has a structure, a set of tools,

    and a logic that makes a lot more sense once you

    understand how it actually works.


    This episode of Previously On Earth is about that

    pattern. What it looks like. How it operates. And why

    it matters that the people whose job it is to tell us

    the truth are sometimes afraid to.


    None of this is speculation. All of it is documented.

    Episode 2.

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    13 分
  • The Minoans - The Language We Can't Read and The People We Forgot
    2026/06/30

    Let's start with a civilization that had indoor plumbing

    before Rome existed, painted art that looks almost modern,

    and built a trading empire that stretched across the entire

    Mediterranean. They were doing all of this roughly 3,600

    years ago, which means they were one of the most

    sophisticated peoples on the planet at a time when most

    of the world was still figuring out the basics.


    Here's the part that should stop you cold. We have no

    idea what they called themselves. We can't read their

    writing. We don't know their language, their laws, their

    prayers, or their creation stories. And we still don't

    fully know why they vanished.


    This is the story of the Minoans, and it's also the

    story of the man who found them, named them after a Greek

    myth that might not even be true, and then rebuilt their

    ruins with concrete based on his own imagination.


    It's the story of a writing system called Linear A that

    the world's best linguists and cryptographers still cannot

    crack. It's the story of a volcanic eruption so massive

    it may be the real origin of the Atlantis myth. And it's

    the story of what DNA testing confirmed in 2013 , that

    these forgotten people were among the founding peoples

    of Europe itself.


    This is what the textbook left out. This is Previously

    On Earth. Welcome to Episode 1.

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    18 分