Episodios

  • The Belgian Congo
    Mar 30 2025

    Join Kelli as she goes over the Congo Free State, owned not by Belgium, but by its King - Leopold II.

    During the 19th century in Africa, seven European countries - Britain, France, Germany, Belgium, Italy, Spain, and Portugal, met to divide up Africa; they had already encroached on about 10% of it, mostly the coasts, but now they wanted more. In this episode we discuss why, and what happened to the Congolese men, women, and children who were suddenly under the control of King Leopold.

    Support me on my Patreon - your support helps keep this podcast going!
    http://www.patreon.com/APHOUT

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    Intro and Outro music credit: @nedricmusic
    Find him on all streaming services and YouTube!
    http://www.nedricmusic.com


    Sources

    Books

    • Adam Hochschild, King Leopold’s Ghost. https://www.amazon.com/King-Leopolds-Ghost-Heroism-Colonial/dp/0618001905
    • David Van Reybrouck, Congo: The Epic History of a People.

    Articles/Websites

    • Germany officially recognises colonial-era Namibia genocide - BBC, 2021 | https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-57279008
    • Rudyard Kipling, “The White Man’s Burden” 1899 | https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/poem/poems_burden.htm
    • George Washington Williams, “An Open Letter to His Serene Majesty Leopold II, King of the Belgians and Sovereign of the Independent State of Congo By Colonel, The Honorable Geo. W. Williams, of the United States of America” as found on BlackPast | https://www.blackpast.org/global-african-history/primary-documents-global-african-history/george-washington-williams-open-letter-king-leopold-congo-1890/

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    46 m
  • The 1381 English Peasant's Rebellion
    Mar 16 2025

    Join Kelli as she goes over the history of the English Peasant's Rebellion, 1381.

    The Black Death had severely impacted England - not just in high mortality rates, but also its ability to function within its strict feudal order. To help compensate for the drop in workers, and to try and get the economy back on track, Edward III passes the Statute of Laborers in 1351. But what this did was set in motion a rage against feudalism, government intervention, and inequality that manifested as the Peasant's Rebellion, led by men like Wat Tyler and John Ball, in 1381.

    The Peasant army would meet King Richard II in London, and it was an absolute bloodbath.

    Let's go over the historical context that leads us to the Rebellion, then the event itself. It's a fascinating story that shows us how far the common folk are willing to be pushed before they break.

    Support me on my Patreon - your support helps keep this podcast going!
    http://www.patreon.com/APHOUT

    Follow the APHOUT YouTube channel!

    Intro and Outro music credit: @nedricmusic
    Find him on all streaming services and YouTube!
    http://www.nedricmusic.com


    Sources
    Books:

    • Dan Jones, Summer of Blood (2009)
    • Elizabeth Kimball Kendall, Source-book of English History (2015)
    • Rosemary Horrox, The Black Death Medieval Sourcebook (1994)

    Articles/Online Sources:

    • “Ordinance of Laborers, 1349” Fordham University Medieval History Sourcebook https://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/seth/ordinance-labourers.asp
    • “Tales from Froissart: Beginning of the English Peasant Revolt” Nipissing University https://uts.nipissingu.ca/muhlberger/FROISSART/PEASANTS.HTM

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    41 m
  • The Tanganyika Laughter Epidemic
    Mar 2 2025

    Join Kelli as she goes over the history behind the Tanganyika Laughter Epidemic, an event that started with three schoolgirls in late January 1962 and spread to nearby villages. It took roughly 18-24 months for the epidemic to finally stop, and luckily, nobody died.

    It was determined that this was a case of mass psychogenic illness - the more modern name for "mass hysteria."

    But how did it start? Why schoolgirls in Tanganyika in early 1962? Let's look to the historical context to get an understanding of what happened here and why.

    And a special thanks to one of my cannibal patrons, Zack, for recommending this episode!

    Support me on my Patreon - your support helps keep this podcast going!
    http://www.patreon.com/APHOUT

    Follow the APHOUT YouTube channel!

    Intro and Outro music credit: @nedricmusic
    Find him on all streaming services and YouTube!
    http://www.nedricmusic.com

    Support the show

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    25 m
  • The Guatemala Syphilis Experiments
    Feb 16 2025

    Join Kelli as she goes over another case where the US government experimented on humans - but this time, they purposefully infected Guatemalans with syphilis, taking what happened with the men of Tuskegee a whole step further.

    So today we'll do some historical context to figure out why Guatemala - what happened in history that led to such a level of interventionism that the US government would conduct medical experiments on the Guatemalan people?

    Once that's squared away, we'll briefly go over syphilis so we have a complete understanding on what the infected Guatemalans faced. Then, we'll talk about the event itself - and how we only just learned about it.

    I really hope I run out of examples of the US doing this.

    Support me on my Patreon - your support helps keep this podcast going!
    http://www.patreon.com/APHOUT

    Follow the APHOUT YouTube channel!

    Intro and Outro music credit: @nedricmusic
    Find him on all streaming services and YouTube!
    http://www.nedricmusic.com

    Support the show

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    35 m
  • The Stonehenge Mystery
    Feb 2 2025

    Join Kelli as she goes over Stonehenge. We'll start with the basics - what stonehenge is, what it's made of, who might have built it, how they built it, what a henge even is... before talking about some of the more recent explanations for some of its mysteries.

    We'll also talk about its purpose - a gathering place to celebrate the summer and winter solstices? A burial ground? Both? And does it have a connection with nearby Durrington Walls, only two miles away, and a henge complex that might have the evidence needed to understand who built Stonehenge, and why.

    Sources referenced:
    Stonehenge―A New Understanding: Solving the Mysteries of the Greatest Stone Age Monument by Mike Parker Pearson and the Stonehenge Riverside Project

    Support me on my Patreon - your support helps keep this podcast going!
    http://www.patreon.com/APHOUT

    Follow the APHOUT YouTube channel!

    Intro and Outro music credit: @nedricmusic
    Find him on all streaming services and YouTube!
    http://www.nedricmusic.com

    Support the show

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    28 m
  • The Scottish Cannibal, Sawney Bean
    Jan 19 2025

    Join Kelli as she goes over a tale of a Scottish incestuous cannibal family - the Beans.

    As legend goes, they lived in a cave in southwest Scotland, only venturing out to kill passersby and loot them for good - and meat. Over 25 years, it's said they killed over 1,000 people.

    But how much truth is there to this grisly tale? It sounds a little too gross to be real.

    Let's dive into the history to find out where the Sawney Bean story comes from, how credible the sources are, and whether there's any truth we can corroborate from the story.

    From James I and his bloodhounds to the Jacobite Rebellion and Battle of Culloden (I see you, Outlander fans), let's see how much history we can attribute to this gory story.

    Support me on my Patreon - your support helps keep this podcast going!
    http://www.patreon.com/APHOUT

    Follow the APHOUT YouTube channel!

    Intro and Outro music credit: @nedricmusic
    Find him on all streaming services and YouTube!
    http://www.nedricmusic.com

    Support the show

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    24 m
  • The Holmesburg Prison Experiments
    Jan 5 2025

    Join Kelli as she goes over yet another example of US doctors experimenting on their own people.

    Starting in the 1950s, dermatology Dr. Albert Kligman came to the Holmesburg Prison in Philadelphia and experimented on its prisoners. What started as a simple cure for an athlete's foot outbreak turned into a decades-long series of experiments, ranging from testing lotions and cremes to hallucinogenic drugs to the toxic compounds found in Agent Orange.

    Though the experiments eventually stopped in 1974, it was more or less swept under the rug, despite prisoner/victims filing lawsuits. But thanks to the work of men like Allen Hornblum, and the victims and their families who never gave up, the horrors at what happened at Holmesburg are coming to light.

    Source referenced:
    Acres of Skin: Human Experiments at Holmesburg Prison by Allen Hornblum

    Support me on my Patreon - your support helps keep this podcast going!
    http://www.patreon.com/APHOUT

    Follow the APHOUT YouTube channel!

    Intro and Outro music credit: @nedricmusic
    Find him on all streaming services and YouTube!
    http://www.nedricmusic.com

    Support the show

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    27 m
  • The Christmas Massacre at Abergavenny
    Dec 22 2024

    Happy holidays, APHOUT fans! Join Kelli as she goes over a Welsh Christmas Day Massacre! In 1175, William de Braose committed a massacre against some rival families in Gwent, southeast Wales.

    De Braose, a Norman who was given control of Abergavenny Castle after his uncle Henry Fitzmiles was killed, decided to seek retribution against the man responsible - Seisyll ap Dyfnwal. Seisyll, his son, and many of his men, came to have a peaceful Christmas dinner at de Braose's Abergavenny keep. Once inside, de Braose locked the doors and slaughtered them all - a scene that no doubt inspired Game of Thrones' Red Wedding.

    De Braose then went out to slaughter the rest of Seisyll's family, including his wife and 7-year-old son Cadwalladr.

    He got vengeance for his Uncle's death, but worsened tensions between the Welsh noble families and the invading Normans.

    So let's take a look at this story and place it in historical context - what was this massacre really about?

    Support me on my Patreon - your support helps keep this podcast going!
    http://www.patreon.com/APHOUT

    Follow the APHOUT YouTube channel!

    Intro and Outro music credit: @nedricmusic
    Find him on all streaming services and YouTube!
    http://www.nedricmusic.com

    Support the show

    Más Menos
    19 m

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