Anne with an “E” Recap: Episode 2
I am no bird and no net shall ensnare me directed by Helen Shaver
or: Anne canon? We don’t need no stinkin’ Anne canon!
by The History Chicks | May 19, 2017 | Minicast, Podcasts, Recap, Shownotes
I am no bird and no net shall ensnare me directed by Helen Shaver
or: Anne canon? We don’t need no stinkin’ Anne canon!
by The History Chicks | May 12, 2017 | Minicast, Podcasts, Recap, Shownotes
Over the next several weeks we’re going to be recapping the new Netflix series, Anne with an “E”. If you’re new here- hello! Glad you found us! We hope you’ll stick around and listen to our usual fare: conversations about historical women (logically, you could start with our last one about Anne of Green Gables author, Lucy Maud Montgomery.)
by The History Chicks | May 6, 2017 | Biography Episode, Episode, Podcasts, Shownotes

An abandoned little girl raised by elderly guardians during the Victorian era on Prince Edward Island, Canada. It sounds like the premise for a book, and it was, but it was also the early life of author Lucy Maud Montgomery.
(more…)by The History Chicks | Apr 17, 2017 | Biography Episode, Episode, Podcasts
Part one followed Eleanor’s life from her birth through to the big cliffhanger: after divorcing King Louis and heading back to Aquitaine she popped up only a few weeks later married again to 18 year-old, King in Training, Henry FitzEmpress of Anjou.
The newlyweds took the “it’s easier to get forgiveness than permission” strategy and didn’t ask their king (Louis) if they could marry but, really? Would he have given it? No, he would not. Henry’s star was rising and his parents were powerful and connected. His mother, Empress Matilda, needs her own episode, she was that powerful and after a lifetime of civil war over the crown of England (Matilda was beat to it by her cousin, Stephen) Henry’s military training was substantial and he was very good at it. But the biggie? When Eleanor’s lands combined with Henry’s they controlled more than half of modern day France.
Beckett Graham and Susan Vollenweider: Two women. Half the population. Several thousand years of history. About an hour.



