Episode

Spellbreakers Ep. 166: The Myth of the Middle Ages

Podcast
Badlands Media
Published
May 16, 2026
Duration seconds
5350
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not_requested
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https://badlandsmedia.podbean.com/e/spellbreakers-ep-166-the-myth-of-the-middle-ages/
Audio
https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/g82z3zd8ihuxesxj/Spellbreakers_ep_166_1_8kvfb.mp3
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/v1/public/podcasts/badlands-media-5934327/episodes/spellbreakers-ep-166-the-myth-of-the-middle-ages
Markdown
/podcast/badlands-media-5934327/spellbreakers-ep-166-the-myth-of-the-middle-ages.md

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Summary

Were the Middle Ages really a thousand years of ignorance, brutality, and superstition? Host Matt Trump, a physicist, says no and has the receipts. Drawing on Johan Huizinga's classic "The Autumn of the Middle Ages" and a revelatory 1982 essay by mathematician James Franklin, Matt makes the case that the Middle Ages were actually a period of extraordinary advancement in philosophy, science, architecture, and literature, and that the Renaissance was the gap, not the golden age. Gothic cathedrals, Thomas Aquinas, Nicole Oresme's pre-Galilean mechanics, the myth of prima nocta, chastity belts, flat earth belief, and the Black Death all get their moment. A rich, wide-ranging episode that will make you rethink everything your history class told you.