• Exhibit XII: The Skin That Walked Away
    Jun 24 2026

    The museum doors open once more, traveller, and tonight I invite you into a room filled with old warnings and older fears.

    Long before newspapers, police reports, and history books, stories were passed from one generation to the next beside flickering fires. They spoke of things that watched from the darkness. Things that wore the shapes of animals. Things that were once human.

    In Exhibit XII: The Skin That Walked Away, we journey into the high desert canyons of the American Southwest and uncover the tale of a young man named Thomas, whose curiosity led him into a hidden cave and towards a fate from which there may have been no return.

    What began as a forbidden discovery soon became a descent into transformation, isolation, and hunger. As the line between man and beast began to blur, Thomas learned that some ancient warnings exist for a reason.

    Was it folklore? A cautionary tale? Or the memory of something far older and far darker?

    Step carefully, traveller.

    Some stories are meant to explain the dark.

    Others are meant to keep you out of it.

    The Skin That Walked Away is waiting.

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    8 Min.
  • S5 E12 Albert Fish — The Boogeyman
    Jun 17 2026

    Albert Fish — The Boogeyman

    How does a human being become a monster?

    In this disturbing episode of The Dark History Podcast, Rob explores the life and crimes of Albert Fish, one of the most infamous serial killers in American history. Behind the appearance of a harmless old man was a predator responsible for some of the most horrifying crimes ever recorded.

    From a troubled childhood and a lifetime of mental illness to the murders that shocked America, we follow Fish's descent into darkness and the investigation that finally brought him to justice. Along the way, we examine the disappearances of Francis McDonnell, Billy Gaffney, and Grace Budd, whose tragic case would expose the true extent of Fish's depravity.

    This is not an easy listen. It is one of the darkest stories in modern criminal history.

    Join Rob as he uncovers the chilling story of the man newspapers called The Boogeyman.

    Because sometimes the monsters are real.

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    33 Min.
  • Exhibit XI: The Little People
    Jun 10 2026

    The museum doors creak open once more, traveller, and tonight I invite you into one of the strangest rooms in my collection.

    High above the city of Edinburgh, hidden within the slopes of Arthur's Seat, seventeen tiny coffins lay concealed for years behind carefully placed stones. Each contained a small wooden figure, dressed in handmade clothing and arranged with unsettling care. No names. No explanation. No clues.

    When five boys stumbled upon them in 1836, they uncovered a mystery that has endured for nearly two centuries.

    Were they memorials to the dead? Tools of witchcraft? Secret burials for souls lost at sea? Or something even stranger?

    In Exhibit XI: The Little People, we descend into the fog-covered streets of Victorian Edinburgh and examine one of Britain's most enduring unsolved mysteries. Together we will explore the discovery of the tiny coffins, the theories surrounding their creation, the disturbing links to death and folklore, and the unanswered questions that continue to haunt historians to this day.

    Step carefully, traveller. Some mysteries do not want to be solved.

    The Little People are waiting.

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    13 Min.
  • S5 E11: Gloomy Sunday — The Hungarian Suicide Song
    Jun 3 2026

    Gloomy Sunday — The Hungarian Suicide Song

    Could a song really drive people to take their own lives?

    In 1933, a struggling Hungarian pianist named Rezső Seress composed a melancholy melody that would become one of the most infamous songs in history. Known as Gloomy Sunday, the piece was soon linked to reports of suicide across Europe, earning it a chilling nickname: The Hungarian Suicide Song.

    As rumours spread, newspapers claimed listeners had taken their own lives after hearing it. Authorities grew concerned, radio stations stopped playing it, and the BBC would eventually ban the song for decades. Before long, Gloomy Sunday had become surrounded by stories of death, despair, censorship, and an alleged curse.

    But how much of the legend is actually true?

    In this episode of The Dark History Podcast, Rob explores the fascinating history behind one of the world's most controversial songs. From the cafés of 1930s Paris and Budapest to the dark years of the Second World War, we uncover the life of Rezső Seress, the origins of Gloomy Sunday, and the strange chain of events that transformed a simple piano composition into a global phenomenon.

    Along the way, we examine the reported suicides, the role of sensationalist newspapers, the BBC ban, Billie Holiday's famous recording, and the enduring mystery that continues to surround the song nearly a century later.

    Was Gloomy Sunday really cursed? Or did it simply become the soundtrack to a generation already struggling through heartbreak, poverty, depression, and war?

    Join Rob as he uncovers the truth behind one of history's most haunting musical legends.

    Because sometimes the most unsettling stories don't come from battlefields or murderers.

    Sometimes they come from a song.

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    23 Min.
  • Exhibit X: The Servants' Annihilation
    May 27 2026

    Step quietly, traveller, and enter one of the darkest chambers of the Dark's Travelling Emporium.

    Behind the glass of Exhibit X lies a single brass earring, recovered from the yard of Eula Phillips in Austin on Christmas Eve, 1885. It is a small and ordinary thing, cheap and tarnished, but it bears witness to one of the most chilling and overlooked murder mysteries in American history.

    In the winter of 1884, a killer began moving silently through the servant quarters of Austin. He slipped into homes under cover of darkness, struck sleeping victims with an axe, and vanished before dawn. Month after month, fear spread through the city as women and men were found with their skulls crushed and their lives brutally cut short.

    The newspapers gave him a name: the Servant Girl Annihilator murders. At least eight people were murdered. Hundreds of suspects were questioned. Rewards were offered. Vigilante groups patrolled the streets. Yet the killer was never identified, and as suddenly as the violence began, it stopped.

    In this episode of Dark Travelling Emporium, the Keeper opens the case file and guides you through the gaslit streets of nineteenth-century Austin, where whispered superstition, racial prejudice, and investigative failure allowed a murderer to disappear into history.

    Some monsters are remembered by name.

    Others leave behind only the objects they touched... and the silence of those they took.

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    11 Min.
  • S5 E10: Mysteries of the Sumerians — The Cradle of Civilization
    May 20 2026

    Mysteries of the Sumerians — The Cradle of Civilization

    Who were the Sumerians, and how did a people living more than 5,000 years ago create the foundations of the modern world?

    In this fascinating episode of The Dark History Podcast, we journey to ancient Mesopotamia, the land between the Tigris River and Euphrates River, where humanity first built cities, invented writing, developed mathematics, brewed beer, an

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    Support the Podcast
    • Patreon: Support Dark History on Patreon
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    • Email: darkhistory2021@outlook.com

    If you enjoy The Dark History Podcast, please consider leaving a rating and review on your podcast platform of choice. It is one of the best ways to help new listeners discover the show. Sharing episodes with friends, supporting on Patreon, or picking up something from the merchandise store all help keep the podcast going and allow us to continue exploring the darkest and most mysterious corners of history.

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    40 Min.
  • Exhibit IX: The Draugr’s Toll
    May 13 2026

    Ah… you’ve found it.

    Not all who pass through this place are meant to reach the shoreline. Fewer still are meant to look upon this.

    Do you feel it? That subtle pull… not on your hand, but somewhere deeper. As if the tide itself has taken notice of you. That is the nature of this object. It does not sit idly. It waits. It listens.

    A simple coin, you might think. Blackened. Worn smooth. Stripped of all identity by the patient violence of the sea. But nothing here is ever so innocent. This is not currency as you understand it. It does not buy. It binds.

    Every mark that should tell its story has been erased. That is deliberate. Names hold power. Origins offer comfort. This… offers neither. Only weight. Only obligation.

    It comes from waters that do not forgive.

    There are places in the world where the boundary between the living and the claimed is thin. Where wrecks do not rest, and the dead are not done with their counting. The North Atlantic is one such place. And in those depths, something ancient keeps a ledger.

    This coin is not a relic.

    It is a receipt.

    Look closer, traveller… but do not linger too long. Some things, once acknowledged, begin to acknowledge you in return. And the sea… has a long memory.

    Best to keep your hands to yourself.

    We would not want your name… added to the account.

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    11 Min.
  • S5 E9 The Plague of Justinian: The Pandemic That Nearly Ended the World
    May 6 2026

    Here’s a tight, SEO-focused, gripping episode description you can use:

    The Plague of Justinian: The First Pandemic That Nearly Ended the World

    What if the apocalypse already happened… and we just forgot?

    In this episode of The Dark History Podcast, you step into Constantinople, 542 CE—at the height of the Roman Empire’s last great resurgence. Emperor Justinian is rebuilding a fallen world. His empire is growing. His legacy seems untouchable.

    Then the plague arrives.

    It starts quietly. A fever. A swelling. Three days later, you're dead.

    This is the story of the Plague of Justinian—the first true pandemic in recorded history. A disease that spread from rat to flea to human, tearing through cities, collapsing economies, and killing millions across Europe, Africa, and Asia. Streets filled with bodies. Entire families wiped out. A civilisation brought to its knees.

    And this wasn’t the end.

    Because this same disease would return centuries later… as the Black Death.

    In this episode, you’ll hear:

    • What the plague actually looked like inside the human body

    • How it spread so fast through the ancient world

    • First-hand accounts from those who lived through it

    • Why the Byzantine Empire never truly recovered

    • And how this pandemic reshaped history in ways we still feel today

    This isn’t just a story about disease. It’s about fear, collapse, and what happens when the systems holding society together start to break.

    If you’re interested in dark history, pandemics, ancient Rome, or the real origins of the Black Death—this is one you won’t forget.

    Listen now… if you’ve got the stomach for it.

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    30 Min.