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Curated History Playlists

32 handpicked collections of world history stories. From beginners to deep dives — pick a theme and start listening.

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Every empire thinks it will last forever. None of them do.

Sargon of Akkad
c. 2334 BCE
Sargon of Akkad
An abandoned baby floats down a river in a basket and grows up to build the world's first empire. Sound familiar?
Cyrus the Great
c. 539 BCE
Cyrus the Great
A Persian shepherd boy ends up freeing the Jews, conquering Babylon, and inventing human rights. Nobody saw it coming.
Alexander the Great
336 BCE
Alexander the Great
By age 32 he's conquered most of the known world and reportedly cried because there was nothing left to conquer.
Augustus Becomes Emperor
27 BCE
Augustus Becomes Emperor
Caesar's quiet 18-year-old nephew somehow outplays everyone, ends 100 years of civil war, and quietly turns Rome into an empire.
Charlemagne is Crowned
800 CE
Charlemagne is Crowned
On Christmas Day, the Pope drops a crown on a Frankish king's head and declares the Roman Empire is back. Charlemagne pretends to be surprised.
Genghis Khan Rises
1206 CE
Genghis Khan Rises
An abandoned boy on the Mongolian steppe unites every warring tribe and ends up conquering more land than any human in history.
The Ming Dynasty Rises
1368 CE
The Ming Dynasty Rises
A Chinese peasant overthrows the Mongols and founds a dynasty that will rebuild the Great Wall and run the world's biggest fleet.
The Fall of Tenochtitlan
1521 CE
The Fall of Tenochtitlan
After a brutal 75-day siege, the largest city in the Americas falls. Mexico City rises on its bones.
The Soviet Union Collapses
1991 CE
The Soviet Union Collapses
On Christmas Day, the hammer and sickle is lowered over the Kremlin for the last time. 15 new countries are born overnight.
The Fall of Saigon
1975 CE
The Fall of Saigon
American helicopters lift the last people off the embassy roof while North Vietnamese tanks crash through the gates. The Vietnam War ends.

The battles that redrew the map of the world.

The Battle of Marathon
490 BCE
The Battle of Marathon
Outnumbered Athenians charge a much bigger Persian army and somehow win. A guy runs 26 miles to deliver the news, then drops dead.
The 300 at Thermopylae
480 BCE
The 300 at Thermopylae
King Leonidas and 300 Spartans hold a mountain pass against an entire Persian empire. They lose the battle but win the legend.
Hannibal Crosses the Alps
218 BCE
Hannibal Crosses the Alps
A Carthaginian general marches an army and 37 war elephants over snowy mountains to surprise-attack Rome from the north. Rome did not see it coming.
The Battle of Cannae
216 BCE
The Battle of Cannae
Hannibal surrounds and slaughters 60,000 Romans in a single afternoon. Still studied as the perfect battle 2,200 years later.
The Battle of Tours
732 CE
The Battle of Tours
Charles Martel and the Franks stop a massive Umayyad invasion in central France. Basically decides whether Europe stays Christian.
The Battle of Hastings
1066 CE
The Battle of Hastings
William of Normandy invades England, fakes a retreat, and an arrow goes through King Harold's eye. England is never the same.
The Hundred Years' War
1337 CE
The Hundred Years' War
England and France fight over the French throne for 116 years. Longbows, knights, plague, and Joan of Arc. Nobody really wins.
The Spanish Armada
1588 CE
The Spanish Armada
Spain sends 130 ships to invade England. Storms, fireships, and English cannons send most of them to the bottom of the sea.
The Battle of Waterloo
1815 CE
The Battle of Waterloo
Back from exile, Napoleon rolls the dice one last time. Wellington and the Prussians end his career on a muddy Belgian field in a single afternoon.
The Battle of Gettysburg
1863 CE
The Battle of Gettysburg
Three days, 50,000 casualties, and Pickett's Charge into a meat grinder. The South never recovers. Lincoln gives a 272-word speech about it.
The Battle of the Somme
1916 CE
The Battle of the Somme
On day one, 19,000 British soldiers die. Most of them in the first hour. The battle drags on for four more months.
D-Day
1944 CE
D-Day
On June 6, 156,000 Allied troops storm five beaches in Normandy. The largest amphibious invasion ever. The beginning of the end for Hitler.
The Battle of Stalingrad
1942 CE
The Battle of Stalingrad
Five months of street-to-street fighting in a frozen ruined city. Two million casualties. Germany's army gets surrounded and surrenders.
The Vietnam War
1965 CE
The Vietnam War
The U.S. spends 20 years, 58,000 lives, and immense moral capital trying to stop South Vietnam from going Communist. It goes Communist anyway.

When the people decided enough was enough.

The Magna Carta
1215 CE
The Magna Carta
Furious barons corner King John in a meadow and force him to sign away his absolute power. The first paper limit on a king. Ever.
The Boston Tea Party
1773 CE
The Boston Tea Party
Colonists dressed as Mohawks dump 342 chests of British tea into Boston Harbor. The most expensive tantrum in history.
The Declaration of Independence
1776 CE
The Declaration of Independence
Thirteen tiny colonies write a breakup letter to the world's biggest empire. 'All men are created equal' becomes a problem they don't fully solve.
The Haitian Revolution
1791 CE
The Haitian Revolution
Enslaved people in France's richest colony rise up, defeat Napoleon's army, and found the first free Black republic. Then France charges them for it.
The 1848 Revolutions
1848 CE
The 1848 Revolutions
Almost every European capital catches fire at once. Kings flee, constitutions are signed, and a year later most of it is rolled back.
The Taiping Rebellion
1850 CE
The Taiping Rebellion
A failed civil servant decides he's Jesus's brother and raises a 30 million-strong rebellion. Maybe the deadliest civil war ever fought.
The Russian Revolution
1917 CE
The Russian Revolution
A bread riot in Petrograd brings down the tsar in a week. Lenin returns from exile in a sealed train. Russia is suddenly Soviet.
Mao Founds the People's Republic
1949 CE
Mao Founds the People's Republic
After 22 years of civil war, Mao stands on a balcony in Beijing and declares China is now Communist. The losing side flees to Taiwan.
The Hungarian Revolution
1956 CE
The Hungarian Revolution
Hungarians topple the Soviet-backed government in 13 days. Then 200,000 Soviet troops and 2,500 tanks roll in. The West does nothing.
The Fall of the Berlin Wall
1989 CE
The Fall of the Berlin Wall
An East German official misreads a memo on live TV. Within hours, thousands of Berliners are tearing the wall down with hammers. The Cold War is essentially over.
The Arab Spring
2011 CE
The Arab Spring
A Tunisian street vendor sets himself on fire. Within months, dictators across the Arab world are falling. Then it gets complicated.

The breakthroughs that built the modern world.

Ashurbanipal's Library
c. 668 BCE
Ashurbanipal's Library
A brutal Assyrian king collects every book in the known world. The first librarian was a war criminal.
Archimedes Yells Eureka
c. 250 BCE
Archimedes Yells Eureka
A Greek genius figures out displacement in the bath, runs naked through the streets shouting about it. Later dies because he's too busy doing math to notice the Romans invading.
The House of Wisdom
830 CE
The House of Wisdom
Baghdad becomes the brain of the world: algebra, astronomy, medicine, every Greek text translated and improved. Then the Mongols torch it.
Gutenberg Prints the Bible
1455 CE
Gutenberg Prints the Bible
A German tinkerer builds the printing press, mass-produces the Bible, and accidentally invents mass communication, science, and revolution.
Leonardo da Vinci
1503 CE
Leonardo da Vinci
Paints the Mona Lisa, designs flying machines, dissects corpses, writes backwards. One man casually invents the future in his spare time.
Galileo's Trial
1633 CE
Galileo's Trial
He says the Earth orbits the Sun. The Church says recant or die. He recants, mutters 'and yet it moves' on the way out, and gets house arrest forever.
Newton's Apple
1666 CE
Newton's Apple
A young Cambridge student goes home during plague lockdown and basically invents calculus, optics, and gravity in 18 months.
Darwin Publishes the Origin
1859 CE
Darwin Publishes the Origin
A quiet English naturalist publishes a book about finches and accidentally rewrites how humans understand themselves.
Sputnik Launches
1957 CE
Sputnik Launches
A beach ball-sized Soviet satellite goes 'beep' from orbit. America panics, dumps money into NASA, and the Space Race is on.

When the world fell apart — fire, water, and pestilence.

Pompeii Destroyed
79 CE
Pompeii Destroyed
Mount Vesuvius erupts and buries an entire Roman city under 20 feet of ash in hours. We can still see the people frozen mid-step.
The Plague of Justinian
541 CE
The Plague of Justinian
Bubonic plague hits Constantinople and kills 25-50 million people across the empire. The first pandemic on this scale in recorded history.
The Black Death
1347 CE
The Black Death
A plague riding on rats and fleas wipes out a third of Europe in four years. People paint dancing skeletons everywhere.
The Great Fire of London
1666 CE
The Great Fire of London
A bakery fire spreads for four days and burns down 13,000 houses and 87 churches. Silver lining: kills off the plague rats too.
The Irish Potato Famine
1845 CE
The Irish Potato Famine
A potato disease wipes out the food of an entire country. A million Irish die, a million flee. Britain ships food out the whole time.
The Titanic Sinks
1912 CE
The Titanic Sinks
The 'unsinkable' ship hits an iceberg on its maiden voyage. Not enough lifeboats. 1,500 people die in the freezing North Atlantic.
The Spanish Flu
1918 CE
The Spanish Flu
A virus rides the troopships home and kills 50 million people in two years. More than the war that just ended.
The Stock Market Crashes
1929 CE
The Stock Market Crashes
On Black Tuesday, the market loses billions in a single day. Bankers jump out of windows. The world plunges into the Great Depression.
Hiroshima and Nagasaki
1945 CE
Hiroshima and Nagasaki
Two atomic bombs vaporize two Japanese cities in three days. Over 200,000 people die. Japan surrenders. The nuclear age begins.
The COVID-19 Pandemic
2020 CE
The COVID-19 Pandemic
A virus from a market in Wuhan locks down the entire planet. Millions die. The world learns the word 'unprecedented' the hard way.

They sailed past the edge of the map and lived to tell.

Marco Polo in China
1271 CE
Marco Polo in China
A Venetian teenager travels the Silk Road, lives in Kublai Khan's court for 17 years, and comes home to a Europe that thinks he's making it all up.
Zheng He's Treasure Fleet
1405 CE
Zheng He's Treasure Fleet
A Chinese eunuch admiral leads 300 ships and 28,000 men across the Indian Ocean. Then China decides exploring isn't worth it and burns the fleet.
Vasco da Gama Reaches India
1498 CE
Vasco da Gama Reaches India
A Portuguese captain finally finds the actual sea route to India. Returns home with cargo worth 60 times the cost of the voyage.
Magellan Circumnavigates the Globe
1519 CE
Magellan Circumnavigates the Globe
He sets out with 5 ships and 270 men. Three years later, 1 ship and 18 starving survivors limp back. Magellan is not one of them.
Cortés Conquers the Aztecs
1519 CE
Cortés Conquers the Aztecs
600 Spaniards walk into the Aztec capital, take the emperor hostage, and burn their own ships so nobody can retreat. Two years later, the empire is gone.
Pizarro and the Inca
1532 CE
Pizarro and the Inca
168 Spaniards walk up the Andes, kidnap the Inca emperor in front of his army, and take a room full of gold as ransom. Then kill him anyway.
Drake Circumnavigates
1577 CE
Drake Circumnavigates
An English pirate-captain robs Spanish ships all the way around the world and comes home loaded with treasure. Elizabeth I knights him on his own deck.
Jamestown Founded
1607 CE
Jamestown Founded
104 Englishmen show up in Virginia thinking they'll find gold. Most starve to death. The few who survive accidentally start America.
The Mayflower Lands
1620 CE
The Mayflower Lands
Religious separatists aiming for Virginia get blown off course and land in Massachusetts. Half of them die that first winter.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are History Tea playlists?

Playlists are curated collections of history stories organized by theme, era, or figure. History Tea has 32 playlists to help you find the perfect stories to listen to.

What's the best playlist for beginners?

Start with the 'Start Here' playlist — it covers the most iconic moments in world history in a perfect first listen.

Are playlists free?

Yes! All playlists and every story in them are completely free to listen to on the History Tea app for iOS.

Can I listen to playlists in order?

Absolutely. Each playlist is arranged in a deliberate order — whether that's chronological, thematic, or building to a climax. Just hit play on the first story.

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