
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In 1720, Britain experienced one of the first great financial disasters of the modern world. Promoted as a patriotic solution to national debt, the South Sea Company promised vast profits from overseas trade that barely existed. Share prices soared from just over £100 to more than £1,000, drawing in politicians, aristocrats, and ordinary citizens alike. When confidence collapsed, fortunes vanished almost overnight, leaving ruin, scandal, and public outrage in its wake. In this episode of Compact Disasters, we examine how speculation replaced substance, why Parliament itself was implicated, and how the South Sea Bubble became a permanent warning about finance, power, and belief.
Visit our website: Compact Disasters
Find us on our social media sites:
#SouthSeaBubble #FinancialCrash #EconomicHistory #Speculation #CompactDisasters #HistoryPodcast
By Compact Disasters5
22 ratings
In 1720, Britain experienced one of the first great financial disasters of the modern world. Promoted as a patriotic solution to national debt, the South Sea Company promised vast profits from overseas trade that barely existed. Share prices soared from just over £100 to more than £1,000, drawing in politicians, aristocrats, and ordinary citizens alike. When confidence collapsed, fortunes vanished almost overnight, leaving ruin, scandal, and public outrage in its wake. In this episode of Compact Disasters, we examine how speculation replaced substance, why Parliament itself was implicated, and how the South Sea Bubble became a permanent warning about finance, power, and belief.
Visit our website: Compact Disasters
Find us on our social media sites:
#SouthSeaBubble #FinancialCrash #EconomicHistory #Speculation #CompactDisasters #HistoryPodcast

78,733 Listeners

206 Listeners

66 Listeners

47,440 Listeners

2,220 Listeners

2,862 Listeners

2,170 Listeners

2 Listeners

3 Listeners

0 Listeners