Audio recordings of some of our talks from previous festivals, released throughout the years.

Fighting on the Home Front: The Legacy of Women in World War One

Audio from Kate Adie’s talk at the Chalke Valley Festival on Monday, 23rd June 2014.

Renowned broadcaster and bestselling author Kate Adie reveals the ways in which women’s lives changed during WWI with fascinating details of their struggle for admission into the world of men. She charts the seismic move towards equal rights that began a century ago and show how women emerged from the shadows of their domestic lives.

The Arc Before Noah: Decoding the Story of the Flood

Recording from Dr Irving Finkel’s talk at CVHF on Monday, 23rd June 2014.

British Museum expert Dr Irving Finkel will reveal how decoding the symbols on a 4,000 year old piece of clay has led to a radical new interpretation of the Noah’s Ark myth. This enthralling real-life detective story begins with a modest-sized babylonian tablet from 1850 bc and will challenge our view of ancient history by decoding the story of the flood.

The Cockleshell Heroes And The Most Courageous Raid of WW2

Recording from Paddy Ashdown’s talk at CVHF on Tuesday, 25th June 2013.

This is the story of the remarkable canoe raid on German ships in Bordeaux harbour told by a man who himself served in the Special Boat Squadron. The plan was a suicidally daring one: to drop twelve Commandos at the mouth of the Gironde River and for them to paddle ‘cockleshell’ canoes right into Bordeaux harbour. There they were to sink the enemy ships at anchor. To do this they would have to survive terrifying tidal races, the heavily defended port, and then escape across the Pyrenees. In this compelling talk, Paddy Ashdown reveals some devastating new research that serves only to make the achievements of the ‘Cockleshell Heroes’ all the more remarkable.

STALINGRAD: Hunting the Reality of War

Recording from Antony Beevor’s CVHF talk on Thursday, 27th June 2013.

Antony Beevor’s monumental book, Stalingrad, has been one of the most read and highly praised accounts of the Second World War to have been written in the past twenty-five years. It was also the book that ignited our fascination with the war anew, published, as it was, nearly a decade after the collapse of the Soviet Union and drawing on previously unseen Russian archives. It was these archives, barely examined by historians, that revealed the depths of the brutality, depravations and horror of one of the most terrible battles in history. In this talk, Antony Beevor discusses this important turning-point in the war, his own search to unlock the truth about that terrible battle, and shares some of the heart-breaking stories he discovered and the lengths he went to in order to foil the guards watching over him in the Moscow archives.

Double Cross: The True Story Of The D-Day Spies

Recording from Ben Macintyre’s talk, ‘Double Cross: The True Story of The D-Day Spies’ for CVHF, Sunday, 30th June 2013.

D-Day, 6 June 1944, the turning point of the Second World War, was a victory of arms. But it was also a triumph for a different kind of operation: one of deceit. At the heart of the deception was the ‘Double Cross System’, a team of double agents whose bravery, treachery, greed and inspiration succeeded in convincing the Nazis that Calais and Norway, not Normandy, were the targets of the 150,000-strong Allied invasion force. These were not conventional warriors, but their masterpiece of duplicity saved thousands of lives. In this talk, bestselling author, Ben MacIntyre, tells the astonishing tale of Operation Fortitude, the D-Day deception plan, recounted with his usual encyclopaedic knowledge and driest of wits. This is a talk for all fans of espionage and derring-do.

Henry III

Recording from David Carpenter’s talk ‘Henry III’ at CVHF on Tuesday, 25th June 2013.

The Festival is always keen to open eyes to lesser-known episodes and characters from history, which is why we included an event about Henry III, the son of King John and one of our longest-reigning but least known monarchs. To talk on this fascinating man, we asked Professor David Carpenter, one of the world’s leading experts on King Henry’s reign. Much of his reign was spent fighting the barons over Magna Carta, yet under Henry, England prospered. He also made Westminster his seat of government and expanded the abbey. David Carpenter is a superb lecturer and brings his deep knowledge and passion for the subject in a talk that reveals a critical but often forgotten period of our history.

IQ2 Debate: Ancients v Moderns

Ancient History Matters More Than Modern History. A recording from the IQ2 Debate at CVHF on 29th June 2013 with Boris Johnson, Tom Holland, Dan Snow and Jeremy Black. Chair: Edward Stourton.

What have the Romans ever done for us? Monty Python’s eternal question is put to the vote in this year’s IQ2 debate. This dazzling cast of historians pitted their knowledge and wit against each other in arguing whether ancient or modern history is more instructive and relevant to the times we live in. In this blizzard of repartee in our second, annual IQ2 debate, the audience got to speak and vote on some of the critical questions of history.

The Brother Gardeners: Botany, Empire and the Birth of an Obsession

A recording from Andrea Wulf’s CVHF talk on Sunday, 30th June 2013.

One January morning in 1734, cloth merchant Peter Collinson hurried down to the docks at London’s Custom House to collect cargo just arrived from John Bartram in the American colonies. But it was not bales of cotton that awaited him, but plants and seeds… Over the next forty years, Bartram would send hundreds of American species to England, where Collinson was one of a handful of men who would foster a national obsession and change the gardens of Britain forever: Philip Miller, author of the bestselling Gardeners Dictionary; the Swede Carl Linnaeus, whose standardised botanical nomenclature popularised botany; the botanist-adventurer Joseph Banks and his colleague Daniel Solander who both explored the strange flora of Tahiti and Australia on Captain Cook’s Endeavour. In this charming and utterly fascinating talk, Andrea Wulf tells the story of these men – friends, rivals, enemies, united by a passion for plants. History and gardening meet in this telling of the birth of Britain’s green-fingered obsession.

Three Kings: How Alfred the Great & His Family Made England

Recording from Michael Wood’s CVHF talk on Friday, 28th June 2013.

Michael Wood is one of our most enduringly popular television historians. Although he has crossed continents and travelled seas to tell us the stories of ancient civilisations and even Nazi cults, his first love in history was the Anglo-Saxons. In this talk, he tells the amazing story of Alfred the Great and his family, a tale that takes us across the British Isles in the Viking Age, to Rome and beyond, and to the Battle of Brunanburh, when England finally became one.

People’s DNA: A People’s History

Recording from Alistair Moffat’s talk ‘People’s DNA: A People’s History at CVHF on Thursday, 27th June 2013.

Hidden inside all of us – every human being on Earth – is the story of our ancestry. Printed on our DNA are the origins of our lineages, the time in history and prehistory when they arose, and the epic journeys people have made across the globe. Based on exciting new research involving the most wide-ranging sampling of DNA ever made in Britain, Alistair Moffat will show how all of us who live on these islands are immigrants. The last ice age erased any trace of more ancient inhabitants, and the ancestors of everyone who now lives in Britain came here after the glaciers retreated and the land greened once more. This talk is about an epic, often profoundly moving and astonishing, journey. From Africa to caves in southern France and across Europe, Alistair Moffat will reveal a very different and new history of Britain.