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Speeches That Changed History

Speeches That Changed History

Written by: Speeches That Changed History
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The purpose of this channel is to reanimate historic speeches by reading and performing them aloud, giving a voice once again to the words that changed our world.

To truly appreciate these speeches, we must understand the world they were spoken in. That is why we dive deep into the high stakes and complex backgrounds of each moment, ensuring that when the speech begins, you aren’t just listening to a text, you are experiencing it as if you were there.

Together, we investigate the history behind them, the arguments within them, and the consequences that followed.

For contact and feedback: speechesthatchangedhistory@gmail.com

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Episodes
  • 3. Corinth's Ultimatum - The Speech That Cornered Sparta
    May 26 2026

    Episode 3 in the Speeches of the Peloponnesian War series.

    Corinth had lost Epidamnus. Failed at Sybota. Watched its volunteers trapped inside the walls of Potidaea while Sparta did nothing. Its patience was gone.

    So Corinth called a meeting. And the invitation went wide — any city with a grievance against Athens was welcome. They came from across the Greek world, one by one, each with their own account of Athenian pressure applied quietly, carefully, never quite crossing a line that could be called a line.

    Then Corinth rose to speak.

    What followed was one of the most devastating pieces of political rhetoric to survive from the ancient world.

    Then they turned on Sparta directly. Your caution, they said, has become a strategic liability. Your inaction is the problem. And if you will not lead, we will find allies who will.

    It was a speech designed to leave Sparta no exit. And it worked.

    In this episode we hear the Corinthian ultimatum, analyse what made it so rhetorically devastating, and ask the question that Thucydides himself never quite answers — by the time Corinth sat down, was there anyone left in that room who genuinely wanted peace.

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    30 mins
  • 2. The Warning - Did Athens Make the Right Choice?
    May 19 2026

    Episode 2 in the Speeches of the Peloponnesian War series.

    Athens had heard Corcyra's case. A powerful fleet. A strategic alliance. A warning that war with Sparta was coming regardless. It was a compelling argument but Corinth had been sitting there listening to every word, and now it was their turn to speak.

    In this episode we hear the Corinthian reply: A careful, methodical dismantling of everything Corcyra had just argued. A case built on law, on history, and on a debt of gratitude Athens owed but had not yet repaid.

    Both sides had made serious arguments. Both were legally defensible. And when the first day of debate ended,

    On the second day, Athens voted, but for a compromise. Not a full alliance, that would be too provocative. Instead a defensive pact. Ten ships.

    It was a careful decision. A cautious one. And according to Thucydides, it changed nothing — because the real cause of what was coming was never legal or diplomatic. It was fear. The fear that a rising power inevitably inspires in those who watch it grow.

    Music by Kevin McLoed, songs include: "Trio for Violin and Viola", "Teller of Tales", and "Devastation and Revenge".

    All Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License.

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    21 mins
  • 1. The Spark - The Epidamnian Affair and the Double Embassy
    May 12 2026

    Episode 1 in the Speeches of the Peloponnesian War series.

    In the autumn of 433 BC, two delegations arrived in Athens uninvited, unexpected, and desperate. One came to ask for an alliance. The other came to prevent it.

    What the Athenian assembly decided that day would set in motion a war that killed hundreds of thousands, erased cities from the map, and ended the Greek golden age.

    But to understand that decision, we first need to understand the world it shattered. A world of proud, independent city-states. A world that had once stood united against the Persian Empire and then turned on itself. A world held together by a fragile treaty, a drawn line across the Greek world.

    This is where the Peloponnesian War begins. Not in Athens or Sparta, but in a small, obscure city on the edge of the Ionian Sea that most Greeks couldn't place on a map. A city called Epidamnus.

    In this first episode we follow the chain of events, a civil war, an oracle's instruction, a naval battle, and a desperate embassy to Athens. that forced the most powerful city in Greece to make a choice it could not take back.

    The series on the speeches of the Peloponnesian War begins here.

    Music by Kevin McLoed, songs include: "Trio for Violin and Viola", "Desert City", "Tabuk", Hero Down" and "Devastation and Revenge"

    All Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License.

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    30 mins
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