Podcasts permit a shift of listening time from a set appointment to virtually 
any convenient occasion.  I do it while “power walking” (most) every morning 
when weather permits.  Hence…Podding Along!

Some of the best radio comes from the public networks of the UK, Australia, 
Ireland, Canada, New Zealand and the U.S.  Apart from the originating program’s 
web site, most programs are made available through any number of other sources. 

This continuing series of small samplings in more or less 90 minute helpings 
are curated by me.  I attest to the fact that I have listened to every podcast 
listed here.  So admittedly these are thoroughly subjective recommendations.  
But my interests and tolerance for incompatible topics and views are pretty 
wide-ranging, even if I do say so myself. 

__ __


“Saint Cuthbert”
IN OUR TIME - BBC Radio 4
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the Northumbrian man who, for 500 years, was 
the pre-eminent English saint, to be matched only by Thomas Becket after his 
martyrdom in 1170. Now at Durham, Cuthbert was buried first on Lindisfarne in 
687AD, where monks shared vivid stories of his sanctifying miracles, his 
healing, and his power over nature, and his final tomb became a major site of 
pilgrimage. In his lifetime he was both hermit and kingmaker, bishop and 
travelling priest, and the many accounts we have of him, including two by Bede, 
tell us much of the values of those who venerated him so soon after his death. 
With: Jane Hawkes,
Professor of Medieval Art History at the University of York; Sarah Foot, The 
Regius Professor of Ecclesiastical History at the University of Oxford and 
Canon of Christ Church Cathedral; John Hines, Professor of Archaeology at 
Cardiff University. (56”)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000rll4

“The Plague of Justinian’”
IN OUR TIME - BBC Radio 4
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the plague that broke out in Constantinople 
541AD, in the reign of Emperor Justinian. According to the historian Procopius, 
writing in Byzantium at the time, this was a plague by which the whole human 
race came near to being destroyed, embracing the whole world, and blighting the 
lives of all mankind. The bacterium behind the Black Death has since been found 
on human remains from that time, and the symptoms described were the same, and 
evidence of this plague has since been traced around the Mediterranean and from 
Syria to Britain and Ireland. The question of how devastating it truly was, 
though, is yet to be resolved. With: John Haldon, Professor of Byzantine 
History and Hellenic Studies Emeritus at Princeton University; Rebecca 
Flemming, Senior Lecturer in Classics at the University of Cambridge; Greg 
Woolf, Director of the Institute of Classical Studies, University of London.  
(49”)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000rc43

__ __


A monthly (well, mostly monthly) compendium of these newsletters, plus on 
occasion additional pertinent material, is now published in The CIDX Messenger, 
the monthly e-newsletter of the Canadian International DX Club (CIDX).  For 
further information, go to www.cidx.ca

John Figliozzi
Editor, "The Worldwide Listening Guide”
Current 184 page 9th EDITION available from Universal Radio 
[universal-radio.com], Amazon [amazon.com], Ham Radio Outlet [hamradio.com]




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