
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Tom Holland and Iszi Lawrence follow history’s story-laden lines and linkages to uncover connections and compelling stories. This week, with food banks and the effects of austerity never far from the headlines, Tom and Iszi examine breadlines and hunger, from the Scottish clearances to the Rowntrees in York.
Archaeobotanist Professor Dorian Fuller talks about the significance of the recent discovery of the world’s oldest bread – which dates back 14,500 years to the time of hunter-gatherers before the beginning of farming.
Producer: Kim Normanton
By BBC Radio 44.2
4545 ratings
Tom Holland and Iszi Lawrence follow history’s story-laden lines and linkages to uncover connections and compelling stories. This week, with food banks and the effects of austerity never far from the headlines, Tom and Iszi examine breadlines and hunger, from the Scottish clearances to the Rowntrees in York.
Archaeobotanist Professor Dorian Fuller talks about the significance of the recent discovery of the world’s oldest bread – which dates back 14,500 years to the time of hunter-gatherers before the beginning of farming.
Producer: Kim Normanton

7,724 Listeners

469 Listeners

1,039 Listeners

5,541 Listeners

1,815 Listeners

3,188 Listeners

1,828 Listeners

1,062 Listeners

1,991 Listeners

352 Listeners

4,793 Listeners

3,167 Listeners

4,179 Listeners

755 Listeners

3,237 Listeners

14,671 Listeners

1,639 Listeners

1,832 Listeners

2,038 Listeners

3,074 Listeners