PodcastCultura e societàHistory of the Germans

History of the Germans

Dirk Hoffmann-Becking
History of the Germans
Ultimo episodio

251 episodi

  • History of the Germans

    Ep. 232: The Ottomans – From Mehmet the Conqueror to Selim the Grim (1444-1520)

    09/04/2026 | 38 min
    These last dozen or so episodes we have examined the genesis of two of the three major strategic preoccupations of the Habsburg empire, the rivalry with the French kings and the relationship with the imperial princes. Today we will look at the build-up of the third major strategic challenge to the rulers of the Holy Roman Empire, the Ottomans. One can argue, and many have, that the threat of an Ottoman invasion in the 1520s and 1530s prevented the emperor Charles V from clamping down on the protestants in the empire. By the time the border had been stabilised and the Habsburgs could focus again on the religious and political changes in the German lands, it was too late to reverse events. There is an element of irony here that I will refrain from elaborating on.
    When Constantinople fell in 1453, the Christian nations of Western Europe assumed that they could regain the ancient capital of Byzantium and even Jerusalem if only they were united under the crusading banner. By the time Suleiman the Magnificent appeared before Belgrade in 1521, that had become inconceivable. The Christian nations, and in particular the Habsburgs were on their back foot.
    So, what had happened in these 70 years that made the Ottoman armies appear unbeatable?
    The music for the show is Flute Sonata in E-flat major, H.545 by Carl Phillip Emmanuel Bach (or some claim it as BWV 1031 Johann Sebastian Bach) performed and arranged by Michel Rondeau under Common Creative Licence 3.0.
    As always:
    Homepage with maps, photos, transcripts and blog: www.historyofthegermans.com
    If you wish to support the show go to: Support • History of the Germans Podcast
    For do it yourself merchandise go to: Merchandise • History of the Germans Podcast
    Facebook: @HOTGPod
    Threads: @history_of_the_germans_podcast
    Bluesky: @hotgpod.bsky.social
    Instagram: history_of_the_germans
    Twitter: @germanshistory
    To make it easier for you to share the podcast, I have created separate playlists for some of the seasons that are set up as individual podcasts. they have the exact same episodes as in the History of the Germans, but they may be a helpful device for those who want to concentrate on only one season.
    So far I have:
    The Ottonians
    Salian Emperors and Investiture Controversy
    Fredrick Barbarossa and Early Hohenstaufen
    Frederick II Stupor Mundi
    Saxony and Eastward Expansion
    The Hanseatic League
    The Teutonic Knights
    The Holy Roman Empire 1250-1356
    The Reformation before the Reformation
    The Empire in the 15th century
    The Fall and Rise of the Habsburgs
  • History of the Germans

    Ep.: 231 – Maximilian I (1493-1519) - Marrying Bohemia and Hungary

    02/04/2026 | 41 min
    You have almost certainly seen the image in today’s episode artwork before. It is a family portrait showing Maximilian, his first wife Marie of Burgundy, his son, Philip the Handsome and three children. When Bernhard Strigel painted this image in around the year 1516, Philip the Handsome was already dead for 10 years and Marie of Burgundy had gone more than 30 years before. Then there are the inscriptions over the heads of these well-known and easily identifiable figures. There is a lot of Habsburg chin on show here. But they do not describe Maximilian as emperor, but as Cleophas, blood brother of Joseph, husband of the divine Virgin Mary, Marie of Burgundy is Mary Cleophas, sister of the Virgin Mary, and Philip the Handsome as James the Lesser, apostle and son of the other two. Two of the three little boys are named as Joseph the Just and Simon the Zealot, the cousin of the lord. Who are these saints? Well they do appear in the bible, so they are real, but in very minor roles. One of them was even rejected as an apostle. But they do have something special, they are Jesus’ aunt, uncle, nephews and cousin. And since he had died without offspring, his heirs. So this is a picture about succession and inheritance, not necessarily about family love.
    Ok, making the emperor the brother in law of Joseph is quite odd already, but let’s talk about the three children. They were all alive when this picture was painted and roughly the age they are depicted as. The one in the middle is Charles, the future emperor Charles V. And the little boy cuddling up to Maximilian is his brother Ferdinand, the future emperor Ferdinand I., again identified as holy nephew and cousin. But who is the third child? Well, that is Louis, the future king Louis II of Hungary and Bohemia, son of king Vladislav II and his French wife Anne de Foix. So no close blood relation. What does he do in one of the most famous Habsburg family portraits? It must have something to do with succession and inheritance.
    That is indeed what we are going to talk about today. Little Louis will be the key to the creation of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, this agglomeration of lands centered around Austria, Czechia and Hungary that stayed or was made to stay together for nearly 400 years.
    The music for the show is Flute Sonata in E-flat major, H.545 by Carl Phillip Emmanuel Bach (or some claim it as BWV 1031 Johann Sebastian Bach) performed and arranged by Michel Rondeau under Common Creative Licence 3.0.
    As always:
    Homepage with maps, photos, transcripts and blog: www.historyofthegermans.com
    If you wish to support the show go to: Support • History of the Germans Podcast
    For do it yourself merchandise go to: Merchandise • History of the Germans Podcast
    Facebook: @HOTGPod
    Threads: @history_of_the_germans_podcast
    Bluesky: @hotgpod.bsky.social
    Instagram: history_of_the_germans
    Twitter: @germanshistory
    To make it easier for you to share the podcast, I have created separate playlists for some of the seasons that are set up as individual podcasts. they have the exact same episodes as in the History of the Germans, but they may be a helpful device for those who want to concentrate on only one season.
    So far I have:
    The Ottonians
    Salian Emperors and Investiture Controversy
    Fredrick Barbarossa and Early Hohenstaufen
    Frederick II Stupor Mundi
    Saxony and Eastward Expansion
    The Hanseatic League
    The Teutonic Knights
    The Holy Roman Empire 1250-1356
    The Reformation before the Reformation
    The Empire in the 15th century
    The Fall and Rise of the Habsburgs
  • History of the Germans

    Ep.230: Margaret of Austria (1480-1530) - The League of Cambrai

    26/03/2026 | 43 min
    Another Thursday and another episode dealing with another epic fail of our hero, Maximilian I. But despite a military campaign that once again failed for all the usual reasons, no money, no strategy, no luck, this time he is rescued not by a marriage or imperial princes suddenly inflicted with an unlikely case of backbone, but by his daughter, Margaret, archduchess of Austria, dowager duchess of Savoy and governor of the Netherlands.
    In an age that featured a number of impressive women, from Caterina Sforza to Elisabeth I, Margaret may be lesser known, but could easily hold her own amongst such illustrious company. She brought together an alliance that rescued her father’s lands, re-established imperial power in Northern Italy and brought the mighty republic of Venice almost to collapse. And then did it again, again and once more.
    Meanwhile her father first made himself emperor in the least impressive ceremony ever, before throwing his hat in the ring to become – tat, tat, taa – the pope.
  • History of the Germans

    Ep. 229: Joanna the (not?) Mad (1504-1555) - How the Habsburgs gained Spain

    19/03/2026 | 48 min
    “Bella gerant alii, tu felix Austria nube" – ‘Let others wage war; thou, happy Austria, marry’ is one of the few terms that almost anyone with a cursory interest in European history knows, only rivalled by the Voltaire quote thou shall not utter in my presence ever. It evokes the image of a handsome alpine boy full of charm and apple strudel wooing some princess into peacefully handing over the richest lands is Europe. And this narrative of peaceful transition to a benign dynasty is another one of the great propaganda successes of the house of Habsburg.
    The saying was attributed to Matthias Corvinus, the king of Hungary who had once occupied Vienna, then to the humanist Ulrich von Hutten, but first evidence of its use dates back to 1654, more than 150 years after the famous marriages that made an empire. From 1680 it was read out at Habsburg weddings to emphasise the peaceful nature of its rulers.
    It definitely did not originate in the days of Maximilian I when all these dynastic alliances were formed and bore fruit. Talking about gentle and peaceful transition was preposterous against the backdrop of a 15 -year long war over the succession to the grand Dukes of Burgundy, and the roller coaster ride that is today’s topic, the way the Habsburgs acquired the crown of Spain.
    The music for the show is Flute Sonata in E-flat major, H.545 by Carl Phillip Emmanuel Bach (or some claim it as BWV 1031 Johann Sebastian Bach) performed and arranged by Michel Rondeau under Common Creative Licence 3.0.
    As always:
    Homepage with maps, photos, transcripts and blog: www.historyofthegermans.com
    If you wish to support the show go to: Support • History of the Germans Podcast
    For do it yourself merchandise go to: Merchandise • History of the Germans Podcast
    Facebook: @HOTGPod
    Threads: @history_of_the_germans_podcast
    Bluesky: @hotgpod.bsky.social
    Instagram: history_of_the_germans
    Twitter: @germanshistory
    To make it easier for you to share the podcast, I have created separate playlists for some of the seasons that are set up as individual podcasts. they have the exact same episodes as in the History of the Germans, but they may be a helpful device for those who want to concentrate on only one season.
    So far I have:
    The Ottonians
    Salian Emperors and Investiture Controversy
    Fredrick Barbarossa and Early Hohenstaufen
    Frederick II Stupor Mundi
    Saxony and Eastward Expansion
    The Hanseatic League
    The Teutonic Knights
    The Holy Roman Empire 1250-1356
    The Reformation before the Reformation
    The Empire in the 15th century
    The Fall and Rise of the Habsburgs
  • History of the Germans

    Ep. 228 – Maximilian I (1493-1519) - The Princes and the Emperor.

    12/03/2026 | 26 min
    If there was one group that consistently thwarted Maximilian’s grand plans for world domination, it was the princes of the Holy Roman Empire. He had given in to their demands for Imperial Reform, had granted the Reichstag far reaching powers, had established the Reichskammergericht as a law court independent of imperial authority and had announced the much longed for ban on feuding. But did the princes, counts, knights and cities hold up their end of the bargain and paid him taxes to raise the armies needed to defend the borders of the empire – well you bet.
    They left him hanging before Livorno, they collected berries instead of fighting in the Swiss war, and – spoiler alert – they will not raise a little finger to help Ludovioco il Moro to regain his duchy of Milan, even though Milan had been an imperial fief since the days of Charlemagne and Otto the Great. No money, no soldiers, nothing.
    The music for the show is Flute Sonata in E-flat major, H.545 by Carl Phillip Emmanuel Bach (or some claim it as BWV 1031 Johann Sebastian Bach) performed and arranged by Michel Rondeau under Common Creative Licence 3.0.
    As always:
    Homepage with maps, photos, transcripts and blog: www.historyofthegermans.com
    If you wish to support the show go to: Support • History of the Germans Podcast
    For do it yourself merchandise go to: Merchandise • History of the Germans Podcast
    Facebook: @HOTGPod
    Threads: @history_of_the_germans_podcast
    Bluesky: @hotgpod.bsky.social
    Instagram: history_of_the_germans
    Twitter: @germanshistory
    To make it easier for you to share the podcast, I have created separate playlists for some of the seasons that are set up as individual podcasts. they have the exact same episodes as in the History of the Germans, but they may be a helpful device for those who want to concentrate on only one season.
    So far I have:
    The Ottonians
    Salian Emperors and Investiture Controversy
    Fredrick Barbarossa and Early Hohenstaufen
    Frederick II Stupor Mundi
    Saxony and Eastward Expansion
    The Hanseatic League
    The Teutonic Knights
    The Holy Roman Empire 1250-1356
    The Reformation before the Reformation
    The Empire in the 15th century
    The Fall and Rise of the Habsburgs

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Su History of the Germans

A narrative history of the German people from the Middle Ages to Reunification in 1991. Episodes are 25-35 min long and drop on Thursday mornings. "A great many things keep happening, some good, some bad". Gregory of Tours (539-594) HotGPod is now entering its 9th season. So far we have covered: Ottonian Emperors (# 1- 21) - Henry the Fowler (#1) - Otto I (#2-8) - Otto II (#9-11) - Otto II (#11-14) - Henry II (#15-17) - Germany in 1000 (#18-21) Salian Emperors(#22-42) - Konrad II (#22- 25) - Henry III (#26-29) - Henry IV/Canossa (#30-39) - Henry V (#40-42) - Concordat of Worms (#42) Early Hohenstaufen (#43-69) - Lothar III (#43-46) - Konrad III (#47-49) - Frederick Barbarossa (#50-69) Late Hohenstaufen (#70-94) - Henry VI (#70-72) - Philipp of Swabia (#73-74) - Otto IV (#74-75) - Frederick II (#75-90) - Epilogue (#91-94) Eastern Expansion (#95-108) The Hanseatic League (#109-127) The Teutonic Knights (#128-137) The Interregnum and the early Habsburgs (#138 ff - Rudolf von Habsburg (#139-141) - Adolf von Nassau (#142) - Albrecht von Habsburg (#143) - Heinrich VII (#144-148) - Ludwig the Bavarian (#149-153) - Karl IV (#154-163) The Reformation before the Reformation - Wenceslaus the Lazy (#165) - The Western Schism (#166/167) - The Ottomans (#168) - Sigismund (#169-#184 The Empire in the 15th Century - Mainz & Hessen #186 - Printing #187-#188 - Universities #190 - Wittelsbachs #189, #196-#199 - Baden, Wuerrtemberg, Augsburg, Fugger (#191-195) - Maps & Arms (#201-#202) The Fall and Rise of the House of Habsburg - Early habsburgs (#203-#207) - Albrecht II (#208) -Freidrich III (#209-
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