Let's Talk About Myths, Baby! Greek & Roman Mythology Retold

The most entertaining and enraging stories from mythology told casually, contemporarily, and (let's

Episodes

Total: 664

In this (late, it's still free for a reason) Hermes Historia episode, Michaela shares a brief histor

Liv teams up with Genn and Jenny of Ancient History Fangirl to tell the first half of Lucian's True

Liv speak with Asrar Mattsson Chaara about female suicides in Ovid's Heroides. Submit your questions

Liv reads three letters of Ovid's Heroides: Dido to Aeneas, Deianeira to Hercules, and Phyllis to De

An episode of the Partial Historians podcast about Spartacus, because why not? Pre-order Dr Rad and

Liv reads speeches from Seneca's Thyestes and Agamemnon, translated by Frank Justus Miller. Ask your

Revisiting... Hecate! A re-airing of the 2022 episode looking at everything there is to know about H

Liv speaks with Cosi Carnegie about sparagmos, the tearing apart of Pentheus, in Euripides Bacchae.

The final narrative episode of the Euripides series has been postponed... For now, welcome to Spooky

Liv speaks with Sean Gurd who specialized in, and records reconstructions of, ancient music from its

Hermes Historia is a new series hosted by Liv and Michaela, brief lessons in ancient history. This t

Some of the most realistic, sympathetic, complex, and villainous women of the ancient world are foun

What if Antigone had a happy ending, or if Oedipus was blind before he ever reached the city of Theb

Like most things Euripides wrote, his treatment of the Olympian gods and what they were capable of (

Liv speaks with Dr Melissa Funke about the gender and the women in Euripides' fragmentary works. Fin

Hermes Historia is a new series hosted by Liv and Michaela, brief lessons in ancient history. In the

Continuing with the life of Euripides we look closer at 5th Century Athens and how the events happen

Liv speaks with Sarah Olsen, editor of Queer Euripides, about performance and gender, and performing

We have more of Euripides' work than either of the other tragedians combined and yet the details of

Liv speaks with Professor Helen King about her new book Immaculate Forms, and the history of the fem