
Show overview
Dark History: Where The Darkness See’s The Light has been publishing since 2022, and across the 4 years since has built a catalogue of 106 episodes. That works out to roughly 55 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a fortnightly cadence, with the show now in its 5th season.
Episodes typically run twenty to thirty-five minutes — most land between 27 min and 34 min — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. It is catalogued as a EN-language History show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed yesterday, with 18 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2024, with 30 episodes published. Published by Rob Bradley.
From the publisher
Step into the shadows of the past—where truth is more disturbing than fiction. The Dark History Podcast drags the forgotten, the forbidden, and the downright horrifying stories of our world into the light. From blood-soaked streets of Victorian London to the twisted minds of history’s most ruthless figures, every episode plunges you into an immersive narrative built on meticulous research and haunting detail.Hosted by Rob Bradley, Dark History doesn’t just tell stories—it makes you feel them. Each episode unravels real events that shaped our world in ways you were never taught, told through vivid storytelling that grips you from the first word to the last breath.History isn’t always written by the victors. Sometimes, it’s whispered from the gallows, buried beneath ruins, or etched in blood.If you crave the truth behind the horror, and the stories history tried to forget—welcome to The Dark History Podcast.Merch:https://www.teepublic.com/stores/dark-history?ref_id=36220Facebook:http...
Latest Episodes
View all 106 episodesExhibit IX: The Draugr’s Toll
S5 E9 The Plague of Justinian: The Pandemic That Nearly Ended the World
Exhibit VIII: The Last Candle of the Paris Catacombs
S5 E8 The Massacre at Béziers
Exhibit VII: The Refiner's Fire.
S5 E7: The Curse Of King Tut

S1 Ep 6Exhibit VI: The Treblinka Whistle
EStep carefully… this room holds something small, but its story is enormous. In Exhibit VI of The Dark Museum, we examine a simple metal whistle recovered from the grounds of Treblinka Extermination Camp after the war. To an ordinary person it might look insignificant. But inside Treblinka, a whistle like this could control the movement of hundreds of prisoners. One sharp blast could send men, women, and children further down the path toward the gas chambers. This episode explores the brutal efficiency of the camp built during Operation Reinhard and the system that turned death into an organised process. But it also tells the story of the prisoners who refused to accept that fate. In August 1943, inmates at Treblinka launched a desperate uprising. Hundreds attempted to escape. Most were killed, but some survived to tell the world what happened inside one of the deadliest sites of the The Holocaust. A tiny object. A terrifying history. Welcome to Exhibit VI. Follow Dark History 🌐 Facebook https://www.facebook.com/darkhistorypod?mibextid=LQQJ4d 🌐 Discord https://discord.gg/3mHPd3xg 🌐 TikTok https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMLSvwJJV/ 🌐 YouTube https://youtube.com/c/DarkHistory2021 🌐 Twitter / X @darkhistory2021 🌐 Instagram @dark_history21 📧 Email [email protected]
S5 Ep 6S5 E6 The Well of Angels – The Betrayal at Cawnpore
EIn this episode of The Dark History Podcast, we explore one of the most disturbing and controversial events of the Indian Rebellion of 1857—the Cawnpore Massacre and the horrifying events at the Bibighar. What began as a military uprising against the British East India Company quickly descended into one of the most brutal atrocities of the Victorian era. After weeks of siege and unbearable suffering, British soldiers, civilians, women, and children were promised safe passage from Cawnpore. The promise was a lie. At Satichaura Ghat, that promise turned into betrayal as gunfire erupted and the river ran red. Survivors—mostly women and children—were taken prisoner and confined inside a house known as the Bibighar, the “House of the Ladies.” What happened there next became one of the darkest chapters in the history of the British Empire, a story so brutal it shocked Victorian society and ignited a cycle of vengeance that would reshape colonial rule in India. In this deeply researched episode, we examine the religious and political tensions that sparked the Indian Rebellion of 1857, the siege of Cawnpore and the desperate conditions inside the British entrenchment, and the betrayal at Satichaura Ghat that turned a promise of safe passage into slaughter. We also uncover the imprisonment and massacre inside the Bibighar, the infamous well at Cawnpore later memorialised by the “Well of Angels” monument, and the brutal British retaliation that followed, giving rise to the cry “Remember Cawnpore!” This episode looks beyond the propaganda and myth to uncover the human horror behind the event—broken promises, calculated revenge, and the devastating consequences of colonial conflict. ⚠️ Listener discretion advised: This episode contains graphic historical descriptions involving violence against civilians. If you’re fascinated by dark history, Victorian history, colonial history, true historical crime, and the hidden atrocities of the British Empire, this is an episode you won’t forget. 🌐 Follow Dark History Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/darkhistorypod?mibextid=LQQJ4d Discord: https://discord.gg/3mHPd3xg TikTok: https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMLSvwJJV/ YouTube: https://youtube.com/c/DarkHistory2021 Twitter / X: @darkhistory2021 Instagram: @dark_history21 Email: [email protected]

S1 Ep 5Exhibit V: The Silence of the Asylum Keys
You've come deeper now. The air changes here—thinner, colder, like a room that's been closed for decades. Step carefully. The floor is worn smooth by feet that paced but never found an exit. Do you see them? There, on that rusted hook. A ring of iron keys, teeth worn soft by a million turns in a million locks. The tag reads: Ward 7, Willard Asylum, New York. 1898–1944. They look ordinary. Tools of order. But look closer at the largest key. See how it's polished? Not from use, but from the touch of women who asked to hold it. Just for a moment. They wanted to feel what it was like to be the one on the outside. This is Eleanor Vance's story. She came to Willard in 1898. Her daughter had died, and she refused to stop grieving. Her husband called it hysteria. The doctors called it insanity. So these keys turned, and for forty-six years, she walked these halls. Forty-six years. For the crime of loving her child too loudly. They tried to cure her. Ice baths. Shock treatments. Restraints. All the kindness a confident century could offer. Because back then, a woman who felt too much was dangerous. A woman who refused to be small, who refused to be quiet, who refused to stop aching—she needed to be locked away. The message was simple: This is what happens to those who won't behave. But Eleanor was not broken. When she died, they found a book beneath her mattress. Handmade from scraps. A story for her dead daughter, written in secret, about a castle with high walls and kindly giants who held the keys. She had taken her imprisonment and turned it into a lullaby. These keys locked away thousands like her. Women who grieved. Who questioned. Who were inconvenient. Women whose only crime was existing too loudly in a world that wanted them silent. Look at them now. Cold iron. Heavy. And yet, if you listen, you might hear a woman's voice, still telling her child a story. Still loving. Still here. The story is told. Carry it with you, but mind you do not mistake grief for madness. The world has always been clumsy in telling them apart. This museum... and its Keeper... will be here when you return.
S5 Ep 5S5 E5 The Dead Men’s Counterattack – The Ghosts of Osowiec
E' In the freezing marshes of eastern Europe, in the shadow of World War I, a poison cloud rolled toward a fortress the Germans believed was already finished. What happened next sounds like folklore. It isn’t. In August 1915, at Osowiec Fortress, thousands of German troops released chlorine gas and waited for silence. The men inside choked. Their lungs burned. Many drowned where they stood. By all logic, the fortress was theirs. Then the dead stood up. Blinded. Bleeding. Coughing up pieces of their own lungs. A handful of Russian soldiers—already dying—fixed bayonets and walked back into the gas. What followed would become known as the “Attack of the Dead Men.” It wasn’t a battle in the usual sense. It was something far worse. A final, desperate counterattack carried out by men who had nothing left to lose—not even their lives. This episode tells the full story. The swamp. The gas. The science of how chlorine kills. The moment the German advance broke in terror. And the young officer who made the decision to turn his own death into a weapon. It’s brutal. It’s disturbing. And it’s real. If you think you know the horrors of the First World War, this will challenge that. This is one of the strangest and most unsettling moments in modern warfare—a reminder that sometimes the most frightening thing on a battlefield isn’t the weapon. It’s the will of a man who refuses to die quietly. 🌐 Follow Dark History Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/darkhistorypod?mibextid=LQQJ4d Discord: https://discord.gg/3mHPd3xg TikTok: https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMLSvwJJV/ YouTube: https://youtube.com/c/DarkHistory2021 Twitter / X: @darkhistory2021 Instagram: @dark_history21 Email: [email protected]

S1 Ep 4Exhibit IV: The Tylwyth Teg’s Sentinel
Ah… still here, are you? I suspected you might linger. Exhibit IV has a way of settling in the bones. Step closer again, traveller — not too quickly. Some stories prefer patience. You’ve already seen the sentinel. That worn Welsh stone, its hollow gaze fixed somewhere just beyond us. Many dismiss it as folklore made solid. A curiosity. A rustic superstition dragged into the light. But I have learned — painfully, over many years — that the oldest objects rarely survive by accident. You see, boundaries are delicate things. Not just walls of stone or lines on maps, but agreements. Understandings. Quiet acknowledgements between worlds that were never meant to overlap too freely. The people who placed that head in the wall understood this instinctively. They didn’t worship it. They respected it. Rhys did not. Ambition makes a convincing argument, doesn’t it? More land. Straighter walls. Progress. Sensible improvements. He thought himself modern. Practical. Above the whisperings of old wives and shepherds. And for a brief moment, it must have felt like victory — the wall extended, the pasture widened, the old guardian discarded like rubble. But land remembers. And sometimes… something else remembers too. The souring milk, the uneasy livestock, the strange music under the floor — none of it violent at first. Just warnings. Gentle taps at the edge of perception. A chance, perhaps, to reconsider. But arrogance has a way of dulling the senses. By the time the lights danced across the field, by the time his son vanished into that impossible silence, the conversation was already over. When Rhys dragged the stone back, broken by grief, he wasn’t restoring masonry. He was repairing a promise he hadn’t realised he’d broken. And the return of the boy — alive, yet altered — well… that feels less like mercy than a reminder. A mark left behind so the lesson would not fade. Look again at that hollow eye. Go on. You may notice it does not appear entirely empty. Just depthless. As though it looks not at you, but through you, measuring where you stand. On which side of the boundary. That is the purpose of a sentinel, after all. Not to attack. Simply to watch. To remember. To ensure the line, once drawn, is not forgotten again. So we leave it where it rests. No more interference. No more clever improvements. Some artefacts serve best as warnings, not possessions. Step back now, traveller. Carefully. And when you return to your own familiar paths, tread them with just a little more respect than before. Not everything unseen is imaginary… and not every boundary is meant to be crossed. My duty, once again, is done. The story rests with you now. Carry it lightly — but not carelessly. This museum, and its Keeper, will remain… should curiosity bring you back.
S5 Ep 4S5 E4 Snake Oil Never Died — It Just Went Online
EQuack medicine never disappeared — it evolved. In this episode, we trace the dark history of snake oil cures, from Victorian soothing syrups packed with narcotics to today’s detox culture, miracle supplements, energy healing gadgets, and online wellness gurus. The language changed. The marketing improved. But the business model stayed the same: find fear, sell hope, repeat. We look at how fake health cures spread, why detox myths persist, how algorithms target vulnerable people, and why modern wellness scams can sometimes cause real harm. From historical patent medicines to modern “biohacking” culture and miracle mineral solution controversies, this is a story about trust, desperation, and the psychology behind health misinformation. This isn’t about mocking alternative ideas or defending big pharma. It’s about recognising the patterns — and protecting yourself from the same playbook that’s been running for centuries. Because the medicine show never closed. It just moved to your feed. 🌐 Follow Dark History Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/darkhistorypod?mibextid=LQQJ4d Discord: https://discord.gg/3mHPd3xg TikTok: https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMLSvwJJV/ YouTube: https://youtube.com/c/DarkHistory2021 Twitter / X: @darkhistory2021 Instagram: @dark_history21 Email: [email protected]

S1 Ep 3Exhibit III: The Resurrectionist’s Rope
EAh… this one carries weight. This is Exhibit III: The Resurrectionist’s Rope — a length of coarse hemp once used by William Calcraft, London’s most notorious executioner. It appears simple. Functional. The sort of object history rarely pauses to look at closely. But this rope stood at the meeting point of two dark trades: those who stole the dead, and the man paid to create them. This exhibit explores public execution in nineteenth-century London, the blurred line between justice and spectacle, and the machinery that turned death into routine. It is not a story about guilt or innocence. It is about process. About repetition. About what happens when killing becomes administrative. Some objects remember hands. This one remembers necks. Step closer — but not too close.
S5 Ep 3S5 E3 The Crying Children – Nigeria’s Biafran War
EWhile the world was fixated on Vietnam and the Cold War, another catastrophe was unfolding almost unnoticed. Between 1967 and 1970, Nigeria descended into one of the most devastating conflicts of the 20th century — the Biafran War — where starvation was deliberately used as a weapon, and children became the frontline. In this harrowing episode of The Dark History Podcast, we uncover the full story of the Nigerian Civil War and the breakaway state of Biafra. From colonial borders drawn by the British, to ethnic violence, oil politics, and mass civilian death, this is the history behind one of the first modern, televised humanitarian disasters. You’ll hear how over 1–3 million people died, most of them civilians. How a total land, air, and sea blockade starved an entire population into submission. And how the world was forced to confront a new horror — kwashiorkor, the starvation disease that left children skeletal, bloated, and silent in front of international cameras. This episode explores: The real causes of the Biafran War and Nigerian Civil War The Igbo massacres and the birth of the Republic of Biafra How starvation became an intentional military strategy The role of Britain, the Soviet Union, and Cold War geopolitics The origins of modern humanitarian aid and Doctors Without Borders Why Biafra still matters today This is not a simplified war story. It’s a deep, immersive, and disturbing account of genocide, famine, colonial legacy, and moral failure — and a warning about how easily silence can kill. If you’re searching for dark history podcasts, forgotten wars, true history, or disturbing historical events, this episode is essential listening. Come closer to the fire — and prepare for one of the heaviest episodes we’ve ever made. 🌐 Follow Dark History Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/darkhistorypod?mibextid=LQQJ4d Discord: https://discord.gg/3mHPd3xg TikTok: https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMLSvwJJV/ YouTube: https://youtube.com/c/DarkHistory2021 Twitter / X: @darkhistory2021 Instagram: @dark_history21 Email: [email protected]

S1 Ep 2Exhibit II: The Crying Boy
EAh… yes. This one makes people uneasy. They expect something violent. Something obvious. They rarely expect a picture. This is Exhibit II — The Crying Boy. He once hung in ordinary homes. Passed without comment. Bought cheaply. Placed wherever there was space on the wall. Nothing about him seemed remarkable — until people began taking him down. Quietly, at first. Then urgently. This particular print was recovered after everything else in the room was gone. I won’t tell you why. I won’t tell you what was found — or what wasn’t. Only this: some objects don’t need to act. They only need to remain. To watch. To survive things they shouldn’t. Look at him if you must. Just don’t ask why his eyes are still wet. We’ll open the cabinet now. Support The Dark History Podcast Patreon (ad-free episodes & exclusive content): https://patreon.com/Darkhistory2021?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=creatorshare_creator&utm_content=join_link Merch Store: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/dark-history?ref_id=36220 Follow & Contact Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/darkhistorypod?mibextid=LQQJ4d Discord: https://discord.gg/3mHPd3xg TikTok: https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMLSvwJJV/ YouTube: https://youtube.com/c/DarkHistory2021 Twitter / X: @darkhistory2021 Instagram: @dark_history21 Email: [email protected]
S5 Ep 2S5 E2 The Glass Delusion: When People Believed Their Bodies Were Made of Glass
EFor centuries, people across Europe were gripped by a terrifying belief: that their bodies were made of glass. In this episode of The Dark History Podcast, we uncover the forgotten psychological phenomenon known as The Glass Delusion — a historical mental illness that convinced kings, scholars, poets, and servants alike that a single touch could shatter them into pieces. From Charles VI of France, the king who ruled an empire while terrified of sitting down, to a learned scholar who believed he had transformed into a fragile glass vessel, this episode explores how fear, culture, medicine, and metaphor fused into one of the strangest mass delusions in recorded history. Set against the backdrop of the late Middle Ages, the Renaissance, and the Scientific Revolution, this story reveals: Why glass became the ultimate symbol of human fragility How early medicine failed those suffering from delusions Why the Glass Delusion spread among intellectual and aristocratic circles How cultural fears shape the way mental illness presents itself And why this condition vanished almost entirely by the 18th century This isn’t just a strange historical curiosity. It’s a deeply human story about anxiety, identity, and what happens when the mind turns the body into a prison. If you’re fascinated by dark history, forgotten mental illnesses, historical psychology, medieval madness, and the unsettling ways culture influences fear — this episode is for you. 🕯️ Support the Show Patreon (ad-free episodes & exclusive content): https://patreon.com/Darkhistory2021?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=creatorshare_creator&utm_content=join_link Merch Store: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/dark-history?ref_id=36220 🌐 Follow Dark History Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/darkhistorypod?mibextid=LQQJ4d Discord: https://discord.gg/3mHPd3xg TikTok: https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMLSvwJJV/ YouTube: https://youtube.com/c/DarkHistory2021 Twitter / X: @darkhistory2021 Instagram: @dark_history21 Email: [email protected]

S1 Ep 1Exhibit I: The Killer's Timepiece
A cracked brass pocket watch. Its glass is shattered. Its hands are frozen at 3:47. This is Exhibit I of the collection — recovered from the body of Thomas Cutbush in Whitechapel, 1887. At first glance, it’s unremarkable. A cheap timepiece. A forgotten object. But this watch was not used to keep time. It was used to announce endings. In the gaslit streets of Victorian London, Cutbush approached women with the same ritual. He would ask the time. When they answered, he would show them his watch — its ticking loud in the silence — and tell them their time was nearly up. What followed was violence, measured not in minutes, but in obsession. This exhibit traces the short, brutal career of a man some later suspected as a precursor to Jack the Ripper — a figure hovering on the edge of that greater terror. It explores fixation, escalation, and the thin line between the forgotten attacker and the monster history remembers. The watch stopped during Cutbush’s final struggle, wrenched from motion as he was overpowered, its hands locked forever at the moment his violence ended. It has never been rewound. In this museum, time does not heal. It only remembers. *** Patreon link https://patreon.com/Darkhistory2021?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=creatorshare_creator&utm_content=join_link *** Merch: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/dark-history?ref_id=36220 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/darkhistorypod?mibextid=LQQJ4d Discord https://discord.gg/3mHPd3xg Email: [email protected] Tiktok: https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMLSvwJJV/ YouTube :https://youtube.com/c/DarkHistory2021 Twitter: @darkhistory2021 Instagram: @dark_history21
S5 Ep 1S5 E1 When the Clock Ran Out: The Last Men Killed in the Great War
At 5:10 a.m. on November 11th, 1918, the First World War was officially over. But the killing didn’t stop. Six hours later, as clocks edged toward eleven, men were still being ordered forward. Shells were still falling. Machine guns were still firing. And across Europe, soldiers who had survived four years of industrial slaughter were killed in the final minutes — some seconds — before peace. In this episode of The Dark History Podcast, we narrow the lens to those last moments. We follow the final soldiers killed by Britain, France, the United States, Canada, and Germany — men who endured the entire war only to die when it no longer mattered. George Edwin Ellison. Augustin Trébuchon. Henry Gunther. George Lawrence Price. Names tied not to victory or defeat, but to timing. This isn’t a story about treaties or triumph. It’s about delay. Obedience. And a war that refused to end cleanly. Because when the guns finally fell silent, the world moved on — and left these men behind. *** Patreon link https://patreon.com/Darkhistory2021?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=creatorshare_creator&utm_content=join_link *** Merch: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/dark-history?ref_id=36220 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/darkhistorypod?mibextid=LQQJ4d Discord https://discord.gg/3mHPd3xg Email: [email protected] Tiktok: https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMLSvwJJV/ YouTube :https://youtube.com/c/DarkHistory2021 Twitter: @darkhistory2021 Instagram: @dark_history21

S4 Ep 24S4E24 Hearth & Home Horrors
In this first-ever Hearth & Home Horrors, we step away from grand events and turn instead to the darker histories hidden in the places we grow up, walk through, and call home. These are the stories that don’t make national headlines — the ones carried quietly in local memory, passed down in families, spoken of in pubs, whispered across generations. In this special post-Christmas bonus episode, Rob shares three true tragedies rooted in three very different hometowns: • Wigan, UK (1908): A coal mine explosion that tore through the Maypole Colliery, killing 75 miners and boys, and leaving a permanent scar on a northern community built on hard labour and harder lives. • York, UK (1800s): The chilling story of Mary Bateman, the “Yorkshire Witch,” whose manipulation, fraud, and eventual murder of Rebecca Perigo reveal how fear and superstition can be twisted into something far more dangerous than folklore. • Portland, Maine, USA (1866): A firestorm that swept through the city on Independence Day, destroying nearly 2,000 buildings and leaving 10,000 people homeless — a disaster that forced Portland to rebuild itself from the ashes. These are small places with enormous shadows — ordinary towns shaped by extraordinary events. Stories from hearth, home, and the edges of memory. Settle in by the fire. Pour a drink. This is a bonus tale told between holidays, where the world slows down and history feels close enough to touch.

S4 Ep 23S4 E23 A Very Dark Christmas: True Tragedies from the Winter Shadows
Christmas is a season wrapped in warmth, light, and nostalgia — but history doesn’t pause for the holidays. In this special episode of Dark History, we explore three true tragedies that unfolded in December’s deepest shadows. From the firestorm that tore Halifax apart in 1917, to the brutal Christmas Day massacre of the Lawson family in North Carolina, to the surrender of Hong Kong in 1941 — a moment that opened the door to one of the darkest chapters of the Second World War. These are not ghost stories or festive myths. They are real events, shaped by human fear, violence, and circumstance, all happening while the rest of the world sang carols and lit candles. This Christmas Special is a journey across continents and centuries, tracing the places where the season of light collided with the harshest edges of history. Settle in. Dim the room. Let the fire crackle. And step with me into the shadows. *** Patreon link https://patreon.com/Darkhistory2021?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=creatorshare_creator&utm_content=join_link *** Merch: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/dark-history?ref_id=36220 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/darkhistorypod?mibextid=LQQJ4d Discord https://discord.gg/3mHPd3xg Email: [email protected] Tiktok: https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMLSvwJJV/ YouTube :https://youtube.com/c/DarkHistory2021 Twitter: @darkhistory2021 Instagram: @dark_history21