On the night of January 1, 1492, Christian soldiers quietly entered Granada's Alhambra palace. By dawn, the banners of Castile and Aragon flew from the towers of Iberia's last Muslim kingdom. Royal heralds announced a glorious military conquest blessed by divine providence. The reality was much messier—Granada fell due to secret negotiations and betrayal, not battlefield heroics. However, this orchestrated victory marked a truly transformative moment: the end of a decade-long campaign that bu...
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On the night of January 1, 1492, Christian soldiers quietly entered Granada's Alhambra palace. By dawn, the banners of Castile and Aragon flew from the towers of Iberia's last Muslim kingdom. Royal heralds announced a glorious military conquest blessed by divine providence. The reality was much messier—Granada fell due to secret negotiations and betrayal, not battlefield heroics. However, this orchestrated victory marked a truly transformative moment: the end of a decade-long campaign that bu...
69: The Scientist and The Church: Politics, Piety, and the Persecution of Galileo
I Take History With My Coffee
32 minutes
7 months ago
69: The Scientist and The Church: Politics, Piety, and the Persecution of Galileo
Send Me A Text Message Beyond the simplified myth of a martyr for science lies the true story of Galileo Galilei's fateful collision with the Catholic Church. This episode unravels how astronomical discoveries made through a revolutionary new instrument—the telescope—became entangled with Counter-Reformation politics, theological debate, and one brilliant astronomer's confrontational personality. We begin by reviewing Galileo's rise to prominence as the "philosopher" to the Grand Duke of Tusc...
I Take History With My Coffee
On the night of January 1, 1492, Christian soldiers quietly entered Granada's Alhambra palace. By dawn, the banners of Castile and Aragon flew from the towers of Iberia's last Muslim kingdom. Royal heralds announced a glorious military conquest blessed by divine providence. The reality was much messier—Granada fell due to secret negotiations and betrayal, not battlefield heroics. However, this orchestrated victory marked a truly transformative moment: the end of a decade-long campaign that bu...