The Complete History of Civilization Through Nations and Borders
Fexingo History · World
The Complete History of Civilization Through Nations and Borders
From the first city-states of Mesopotamia to the digital borders of the 21st century, this show tracks humanity’s ceaseless re-drawing of lines on the map. Lucas and Luna guide listeners through the rise and fall of empires—the Achaemenid satrapies, the Roman limes, the Mauryan edicts carved on pillars, the Treaty of Westphalia, the Berlin Conference of 1884, the Sykes-Picot Agreement, the partition of India, the fall of the Iron Curtain. Why did the Qin dynasty standardize borders and writing? How did the Mongol Empire’s Pax Mongolica rewire trade routes from Korea to Hungary? What made the Congress of Vienna a turning point in European diplomacy? Each episode dissects a single border or nation: the Durand Line between Afghanistan and Pakistan, the 38th parallel in Korea, the Green Line in Cyprus, the DMZ between the two Koreas. We explore the people behind the lines—cartographers like Ptolemy and al-Idrisi, conquerors like Cyrus and Genghis Khan, diplomats like Metternich and Bismarck, and the millions whose lives were shaped by invisible boundaries. This is not a triumphalist march; it’s a search for how our maps became weapons, identities, and stories. Can any border ever be permanent? The answer, etched in sand and stone, is more fragile than you think.