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A History of Iniquity

A History of Iniquity

By: Brevity Studios
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A History of Iniquity is a history-and-true-crime podcast about real crimes from the deep past — and the civilisations that produced them. Each episode, host Ryan Wolf takes a single documented crime from the ancient or pre-modern world — a murder, a conspiracy, a betrayal, a trial — and uses it as a doorway into the world it happened in: the politics, the daily life, the beliefs, and above all the law.


Because you can't understand the crime until you understand the world. A trained lawyer with a lifelong love of history, Ryan is fascinated by both halves — the world-building and the justice — and brings you along as he goes, with the genuine enthusiasm of someone learning alongside you.


Expect rigorously researched, immersive storytelling, and at least a few "I had no idea" moments every episode, in both directions. Season One travels the ancient world from oldest to newest — Egypt, Assyria, Rome, the Norse world, feudal Japan and beyond. One civilisation, one crime, at a time.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Brevity Studios
Episodes
  • Ancient Egypt - "Stir up the People!" | The Murder of Ramessess III
    Jun 23 2026

    Three thousand years ago, an Egyptian pharaoh was murdered in his own palace — and for three thousand years, no one could prove it happened.

    In the first episode of A History of Iniquity, Ryan Wolf travels to the twilight of Egypt's golden age to tell the story of the Harem Conspiracy: the secondary wife, Tiye, who plotted to assassinate Ramesses III and crown her own son, and the web of officials, magicians and even the king's own doctor drawn into the plot. But the world comes first. Before the crime, we build the kingdom around it — a civilisation already impossibly ancient, holding the line against the mysterious Sea Peoples, where the men who built the royal tombs staged the first recorded strike in history. Then comes the iniquity. And finally the reckoning: cursed names, mutilated judges, and a murder unsolved until, in our own century, a CT scanner found the wound beneath the bandages.

    Sources for this episode include: the Judicial Papyrus of Turin (and the related Rollin and Lee papyri); Z. Hawass, S. Saleem et al., "Revisiting the harem conspiracy and death of Ramesses III," BMJ (2012); S. Saleem & Z. Hawass, Scanning the Pharaohs (2016); records of the Deir el-Medina strike (the Turin Strike Papyrus); and reporting from National Geographic and the Museo Egizio, Turin.

    A note on how this show is made: I make A History of Iniquity because I love learning this history myself — I'm discovering right alongside you. Each episode is researched and drafted with the help of AI tools, then checked, shaped, fact-checked and narrated by me, Ryan Wolf. The history is real, the sources are cross-checked, and where the record is uncertain, we say so. For sources, further reading and more, visit brevityplus.com.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    43 mins
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