
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


New Generation Thinker Edmund Richardson with the story of Alexander the Great’s lost city, buried beneath Bagram airbase, a CIA detention site and wrecked Soviet tanks. For centuries, it was a meeting point of East and West. Then it vanished. In 1832, it was discovered by the unlikeliest person imaginable: a ragged British con-man called Charles Masson, on the run from a death sentence. Today, Alexander’s lost civilization is lost again. And Masson? For his next trick, he accidentally started the most disastrous war of the nineteenth century.
Edmund Richardson’s Essay tells the story of the liar and the lost city, of how the unlikeliest people can change history.
Recorded in front of an audience as part of Radio 3's Free Thinking Festival at Sage Gateshead.
Producer: Jacqueline Smith
By BBC Radio 44.3
286286 ratings
New Generation Thinker Edmund Richardson with the story of Alexander the Great’s lost city, buried beneath Bagram airbase, a CIA detention site and wrecked Soviet tanks. For centuries, it was a meeting point of East and West. Then it vanished. In 1832, it was discovered by the unlikeliest person imaginable: a ragged British con-man called Charles Masson, on the run from a death sentence. Today, Alexander’s lost civilization is lost again. And Masson? For his next trick, he accidentally started the most disastrous war of the nineteenth century.
Edmund Richardson’s Essay tells the story of the liar and the lost city, of how the unlikeliest people can change history.
Recorded in front of an audience as part of Radio 3's Free Thinking Festival at Sage Gateshead.
Producer: Jacqueline Smith

7,911 Listeners

311 Listeners

1,089 Listeners

1,066 Listeners

5,572 Listeners

1,802 Listeners

620 Listeners

1,744 Listeners

1,029 Listeners

1,953 Listeners

489 Listeners

584 Listeners

130 Listeners

129 Listeners

160 Listeners

241 Listeners

181 Listeners

219 Listeners

3,234 Listeners

1,006 Listeners

148 Listeners

102 Listeners

93 Listeners

346 Listeners