Episodios

  • Al Biruni's Impressions of India
    Jan 19 2026

    Listen to the story of how Al-Biruni approached India not as a conqueror or convert, but as a scientist. By learning Sanskrit and documenting Indian religion, astronomy, and philosophy without judgment, he revealed a civilisation that was internally coherent, mathematically sophisticated, and intellectually self-aware.

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    12 m
  • Were There Chariots in Ancient India? Sanauli and a 4,000-Year-Old Mystery
    Jan 13 2026

    This podcast takes listeners deep into the Sanauli excavation, unfolding the story of a discovery that unsettles comfortable timelines of ancient India. Expect a clear, evidence-led journey through the 2018 ASI dig, the science of radiocarbon and thermoluminescence dating, and the engineering details of the copper-plated wheeled vehicles. The narrative balances excitement with scholarly caution, walking readers through global comparisons with Mesopotamian and Egyptian chariots, the sharp debates among archaeologists, and how modern tools like 3D modelling and spectroscopy are reshaping what we can responsibly claim about Bronze Age India. What emerges is not myth-making, but a richer, more complex picture of Harappan-era craftsmanship, trade, and social hierarchy, grounded in archaeological method and ongoing academic debate.

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    13 m
  • Marco Polo's Impressions of India!
    Jan 8 2026

    This podcast explores India through Marco Polo’s merchant eyes, revealing a civilization defined by ports, spices, textiles, and global trade networks. Blending Polo’s vivid descriptions with modern historical scholarship, it shows how India functioned as a central engine of the pre-modern global economy—and why its coastal rhythms still feel unmistakably international today.

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    14 m
  • Murshidabad: The city that funded Empires and then vanished!
    Jan 6 2026

    Discover Murshidabad—Bengal’s forgotten capital that once rivalled European empires in wealth and influence. Explore palaces, mosques, and silk towns while uncovering how colonial rule reshaped global history. Private guided tours reveal the stories most history books leave out.

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    12 m
  • India Beyond the Bucket List: What You Only Experience on a Private Cultural Journey
    Jan 1 2026

    Explore why India cannot be understood through monuments and itineraries alone, and how the country reveals its true character through time, context, and human connection. It explains why private, immersive journeys allow travellers to move beyond surface-level sightseeing to experience India as a living civilization—through conversations, rituals, everyday moments, and cultural interpretation. By blending insights from psychology, anthropology, and travel research, the piece gently shows how thoughtfully curated journeys transform India from a list of places into an experience that stays with you long after the journey ends.

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    10 m
  • Walking in Chandor, Goa's old capital before the Portuguese
    Dec 31 2025

    Long before churches reshaped the skyline and coastal trade drew global attention, power in Goa flowed from inland valleys, fertile fields, and river-fed settlements. Chandor—ancient Chandrapura—was once the political and cultural heart of the region under the Kadamba dynasty. Today, it appears almost modest: a quiet village of temples, mansions, and shaded lanes. Yet beneath this calm lies a deep continuity of life, belief, and governance that stretches back over a thousand years

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    14 m
  • Panjim — A Heritage Walk Through Goa’s Living Capital
    Dec 31 2025

    Panjim reveals Goa in motion—pastel houses in Fontainhas, riverfront promenades along the Mandovi, old bakeries, and neighborhoods where history is still lived, not preserved behind glass. A heritage walk through Panjim connects colonial architecture, everyday life, and modern Goa into one continuous story.

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    11 m
  • Goa’s grand heritage mansions- Braganza and Sara Fernandes House
    Dec 30 2025

    Step inside Goa’s grand heritage mansions, including Braganza and Sara Fernandes, to uncover intimate stories of Indo-Portuguese life beyond churches and coastlines.

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    13 m