• The History Chap Podcast

  • Auteur(s): Chris Green
  • Podcast

The History Chap Podcast

Auteur(s): Chris Green
  • Résumé

  • Join Chris Green - The History Chap - as he explores the stories behind British history - the great events, the forgotten stories and the downright bizarre!Chris is a historian by training, and has a way of bringing history to life by making it relevant, interesting and entertaining.www.thehistorychap.com
    © 2025 The History Chap Podcast
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Épisodes
  • 167: The Craziest Land Swap in History? Manhattan for a tiny island in Indonesia
    Feb 6 2025

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    Would you swap a tiny island just 1 mile (or 3 kilometres) square for New York City?

    Crazy though that sounds, that is exactly what the British and the Dutch did in 1667.

    In a peculiar twist in history, the Dutch swapped their settlement of New Amsterdam on Manhattan island for the island of Run, in modern-day Indonesia.

    The Barbary Pirates & England's White Slaves

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    15 min
  • 166: The Barbary Pirates & England's White Slaves
    Feb 4 2025

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    The little known story of the Barbary pirates and England's White Slaves.


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    Did you know that at the same time that the British were involved in the trans-Atlantic slave trade, white Britons were being sold into slavery in Africa?

    For over 200 years, from the reign of James I right up until George III, Muslim pirates from the abducted thousands of British sailors and sold them in the slave markets on the Barbary Coast in North Africa.

    They even landed in Cornwall raiding coastal villages and taking men, women and children into captivity.

    It is a fascinating and little known story from British history.

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    28 min
  • 165: Heligoland, the Tiny Forgotten Outpost of the British Empire.
    Jan 28 2025

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    Measuring less than one square mile, the island of Heligoland in the North Sea, just 30 miles off the north German coast, is an easily forgotten British colony.
    But, this Frisian (not German) peaking island of 3,000 inhabitants was part of the British Empire from 1814 to 1890.

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    Heligoland had its own British governor (or.Lt. governor), its own flag incorporating the Union flag, and from 1867 issued its own stamps with Queen Victoria’s head on them.

    During British rule, the island became a spa resort attracting the cream of European society.
    The laid-back colony, became a hub for German liberals, avoiding the more draconian
    governments in places like Prussia.
    One of these liberal was the poet, August Heinrich Hoffman von Fallersleben.
    Whilst staying on the island in 1841 he wrote a poem entitled “Das Lied der Deutschen”
    Put to a tune previously written by Joseph Hayden 40 years before, it has become the German National Anthem.

    In 1890 in a bizarre land deal, Britian gave up the island to Kaiser Wilhelm II's Germany in return for recognition of her colonial ambitions in Uganda, Kenya & Zanzibar.

    During both the First and Second World Wars the island was heavily fortified by the Germans.
    During WW2, it suffered from a 1,000 bomber raid from the RAF and after the war, in 1947 the British conduscted one of the largest ever non-nuclear explosions to destroy German fortifications once and for all (operation Big Bang).

    Nowadays, Heligoland, with a population of just over 1,000 is part of the German state of Schleswig-Holstein.




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    15 min

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