Fall of Civilizations Podcast
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fallofcivilizations.com
Fall of Civilizations Podcast
@fallofcivilizations.com
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A history podcast by @PaulMMCooper.com looking at a different collapsed society each episode. patreon.com/fallofcivilizations_podcast
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Thank you! Yes I will try for before Christmas but we'll see what we can do
⛰️🏔️ Episode 20 is now available for all subscribers! 🏔️⛰️

In this episode, we look at the amazing story of the Achaemenid Persian Empire.

With readings in Old Persian and Ancient Greek, find out how the world's largest empire rose, flourished, and finally fell in ash and flame.
20. Persia - An Empire in Ashes **Now available for subscribers!** | Fall of Civilizations Podcast
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Thanks Josh, really glad you liked it!
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Sitting down today to record for Fall of Civilizations Episode 20!
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Really proud Fall of Civilizations has been named a Waterstones paperback of the year. Get it at your local Waterstones!

LINK: www.waterstones.com/book/fall-of...
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Some of the most remarkable lost artefacts from the ancient world were the titanic wrecks of the Nemi ships, built for a Roman emperor.

In their first-century heyday they held gardens, palaces and baths in a floating wonderland. But barely a decade after their recovery, they were lost forever.
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For #RomanSiteSaturday let's go to my favourite #Roman site: the temple complex of #Baalbek, located in the Bekaa Valley, #Lebanon. The breathtaking site contains some of the largest Roman temples ever built. The so-called....🧵1/2

📷 Rami Rizk

🏺 #archaeology
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The remains of the south west turret of Aesica Roman Fort (Great Chesters) on Hadrian’s Wall in Northumberland. The fort was built in around AD 128, the ninth fort built along the line of the Wall. 📸 My own. #AdoorableThursday #RomanBritain #HadriansWall #Northumberland
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Excavations at Rome ahead of a new subway route have found a Roman-era street preserved nearly as well as parts of Pompeii, some walls still with remains of plaster!
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Beauty of wild flowers next to stones in the ruins of the Roman city of Valeria. Cuenca.
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On a hill in Tuscany, the spectacular Castello di Sammezzano was originally constructed in Moorish style in 1605 as a private palazzo, later used as 365-room luxury hotel, then abandoned for a number of years until recent eye-boggling restorations
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It's hilarious. 3rd C authors look back to the glory days of Marcus Aurelius. Marcus Aurelius looks back to the glory days of Trajan. People in Trajan's day look back to Cicero. Cicero looks back to Cato the Elder. Cato looks back beyond them all.

And none of them are happy in their own time.
There's this great thing about reading thinkers and philosophers and historians from the past -- they are *always* sure that things were a lot better a few generations ago. You never find anyone writing, "Gosh, the world these days is the best it's ever been."
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All murdered—for within the hollow crown
That rounds the mortal temples of a king
Keeps Death his court
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For God’s sake let us sit upon the ground
And tell sad stories of the death of kings:
How some have been depos’d, some slain in war,
Some haunted by the ghosts they have deposed,
Some poisoned by their wives, some sleeping kill’d,
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According to @fallofcivspod.bsky.social one of Genghis Khan’s sons used this strategy
Man Cuts Back From 6 Normal Beers Per Day To 3 Huge Ones
theonion.com/man-cut...
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Every so often you do feel like a citizen of the Late Roman Empire watching Honorius worry about his chickens