120: King the Conqueror

Head from a statue of Hephaestion via Wikimedia

In 324 BCE, Alexander the Great took his first real break from war since he became king. At Susa, he orchestrated the mass marriage of his highest officers with Iranian noblewomen and honored the war heroes of his recent campaigns. Alexander faced another mutiny at Opis before heading to Ecbatana, where his closest companion, Hephaestion, died suddenly of an unknown illness, throwing the king into a deep depression.
Download

Patreon Support Page STORE 

Twitter Facebook Instagram

119: Pirates of the Arabian

Map of major stops along Nearchos’ route from the Indus to Susa

While Alexander the Great crossed Gedrosia, Nearchus sailed from the Indus to explore the Arabian Sea and chart the coast of the Macedonian Empire. They faced obstacles, became pirates, and fought seas monsters before even reaching the Persian Gulf.
Download

Patreon Support Page STORE 

Twitter Facebook Instagram

118: Dead Men’s Rest

Map of the Macedonians’ route through Eastern Iran and India via Wikimedia

After the Battle of the Hydaspes, Alexander the Great began moving south through the Indus River Valley, battling the Mallians before nearly dying during the siege of their capital city. When he recovered, the Macedonians began to move west for their homeward journey, leaving only Nearchus’ fleet and a few small garrisons behind.
Download

Patreon Support Page STORE 

Twitter Facebook Instagram

Welcome to America: Secret Wars

Title card
America: Secret Wars
A HoPful Media Podcast
The United States has more than its fair share of famous wars in history, but that doesn’t even scratch the surface. Have you ever wondered why we don’t talk about the Korean War or the War of 1812 very often? Do you even know the names of the wars fought against Native American nations? What about the battle with Japan during the Civil War? In this podcast, Trevor Culley will sit down with friends and guests to discuss all of the American military history that’s been forgotten, overlooked, or even covered up to explore lost stories from American history.

Reveille Variation (https://freemusicarchive.org/music/The_United_States_Army_Old_Guard_Fife_and_Drum_Corps/Celebrating_50_Years/09_1434/) and Soldiers Farewell Fanfare (https://freemusicarchive.org/music/The_United_States_Army_Old_Guard_Fife_and_Drum_Corps/Celebrating_50_Years/07_1250/) by The United States Army Old Guard Fife and Drum Corps under Creative Commons Public Domain Mark 1.0 Universal License (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/) via FreeMusicArchive.com

117: At World’s End

“Surrender of Porus to the Emperor Alexander,” by Alonzo Chappel, 1865

After subduing Bactria, Alexander the Great invaded India. The crossing through the Hindu Kush was heavily contested by various mountain peoples. The Macedonians conquered each opponent before facing of with King Porus in the Battle of the Hydaspes River.
Download

Patreon Support Page STORE 

Twitter Facebook Instagram

115: Meet the Neighbors #1

Map of the Nanda Empire at its height via Wikimedia Commons

In a new recurring episode format, it’s time to meet the neighbors, specifically the Nanda Dynasty of India. Of course, India’s been here the whole time, but before Alexander the Great campaigns there in person, I should explain a bit about what was going on across the Indus River.
Download

Patreon Support Page STORE 

Twitter Facebook Instagram

114: The Age of Heroes

Humay Chehrzad, the Kayanian Queen, illustration by Jalal al-Din Mirza Jelveh Yazdi, 19th Century

After the conquests of Alexander the Great, the history of the Achaemenids slipped into legend, myth, and obscurity. By the 6th Century CE, the likes of Cyrus the Great, Darius the Great, Xerxes, and Artaxerxes had been all but forgotten in Iran. Instead, the Sassanid Persian Empire remembered the stories of great heroes from the Avesta, occupying the equivalent of the Achaemenids’ place in history.
Download

Patreon Support Page STORE 

Twitter Facebook Instagram

113: Alexander – King of the Monsters

Iskandar (Alexander) comforts the dying Dara (Darius III-ish), illustrated Shahnameh 1604

In the centuries following Alexander the Great’s conquest of the Persian Empire, Iranian cultural memory changed and shifted, often in strange and unexpected ways. Alexandros Megas ton Makedon was remembered as Gizistag Iskandar-i Rhomiyag – the Accursed Alexander of Rome.
Download

Patreon Support Page STORE 

Twitter Facebook Instagram