The Lost King: An Ancient Scrap of Paper Rewrites African History
MAR 6, 202638 MIN
The Lost King: An Ancient Scrap of Paper Rewrites African History
MAR 6, 202638 MIN
Description
Send a text🎙️Available for Broadcast: https://exchange.prx.org/group_accounts/253118-heliox_where_evidence_meets_empathy 📖 Read: https://helioxpodcast.substack.com🎥 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCd5BbCEeC3Z6dp-nNjWRbBwWe found a king — in a trash heap.Picture a crumpled, irregularly shaped, discarded scrap of paper. A piece of trash. Literal trash. A piece of literal garbage that someone tossed away without a second thought centuries ago. Now hold that image in your mind and imagine finding out that this tiny, messy piece of ancient garbage actually proves that a legendary mythical king — a figure people honestly thought was just a folklore story — was a real, living, breathing person. And then the biggest, most paradigm-shifting revelation comes from the ancient equivalent of a crumpled-up grocery receipt found in a literal dumpster. It wasn't meticulously preserved in a grand stone royal archive to ensure the king's glorious legacy. It was tossed into a pit alongside broken leather shoes, spent lead musket balls, and discarded cattle horns. The trash protected the truth."Reference: The King of Nubia at work: archaeological context and text edition of a sixteenth/seventeenth-century Arabic document from Old DongolaThis is Heliox: Where Evidence Meets EmpathyIndependent, moderated, timely, deep, gentle, clinical, global, and community conversations about things that matter. Breathe Easy, we go deep and lightly surface the big ideas. Support the showDisclosure: This podcast uses AI-generated synthetic voices for a material portion of the audio content, in line with Apple Podcasts guidelines. We make rigorous science accessible, accurate, and unforgettable. Produced by Michelle Bruecker and Scott Bleackley, it features reviews of emerging research and ideas from leading thinkers, curated under our creative direction with AI assistance for voice, imagery, and composition. Systemic voices and illustrative images of people are representative tools, not depictions of specific individuals. We dive deep into peer-reviewed research, pre-prints, and major scientific works—then bring them to life through the stories of the researchers themselves. Complex ideas become clear. Obscure discoveries become conversation starters. And you walk away understanding not just what scientists discovered, but why it matters and how they got there.Independent, moderated, timely, deep, gentle, clinical, global, and community conversations about things that matter. Breathe Easy, we go deep and lightly surface the big ideas. Spoken word, short and sweet, with rhythm and a catchy beat.http://tinyurl.com/stonefolksongs