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  • Socrates and the Art of Asking Questions
    Jan 23 2026

    What is courage? What is love? What is beauty?

    More than 2,400 years ago, Socrates was asking the same questions we still struggle with today. In this episode of Have To Know History, we explore Socrates, the Socratic Method, and why asking questions — instead of accepting easy answers — became one of the most powerful tools in Western thought.

    Socrates believed wisdom begins by admitting what you don’t know. That belief made him famous… and ultimately led to his execution.

    This is Have To Know History — history you just have to know.
    Thanks for being here.

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    6 Min.
  • Romance, Romans, and Love: Why Being Romantic Meant Being Roman
    Jan 16 2026

    What does it really mean to be romantic?

    Believe it or not, the word “romance” originally meant being Roman.

    In this episode of Have To Know History, we explore how the ancient Romans saw themselves as refined, polished, and civilized — and how that self-image shaped the meaning of romance, love, and even the Romance languages we still speak today.

    From Roman bathhouses and Latin poetry to the rise of Italian, French, Spanish, Portuguese, and Romanian, this episode connects everyday words to ancient history in a way that will completely change how you think about love and language.

    We also look at how Latin evolved after the fall of Rome, why “barbarian” languages got their name, and how modern English is changing in similar ways today.

    This is Have To Know History — history you just have to know.
    Thanks for being here.

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    3 Min.
  • Crossing the Rubicon: Caesar’s Point of No Return | Have To Know History
    Jan 7 2026

    Before he conquered Rome, before he became dictator, and long before his dramatic assassination, Julius Caesar made one decision that changed everything: he crossed the Rubicon.

    In 49 BC, Caesar stood on the edge of a small river that marked the legal boundary of his authority. Crossing it with his army was treason. Not crossing it meant losing everything — his power, his allies, his safety, and possibly his life.

    According to ancient writers, a mysterious “man of noble mien” appeared, grabbed a trumpet, and signaled the march forward… as if fate itself pushed Caesar across the line.

    In this episode, we explore:
    • what the Rubicon actually was
    • why crossing it was illegal under Roman law
    • how Caesar’s enemies backed him into a corner
    • the eerie story of the trumpet-blower
    • and how one river crossing ignited a civil war that ended the Roman Republic

    Once Caesar crossed that river, there truly was no turning back.
    For him — or for Rome.

    This is Have To Know History — history you just have to know.
    Thanks for being here.


    Julius Caesar, Crossing the Rubicon, Rubicon River, Roman Republic, ancient Rome, Caesar civil war, Caesar vs Pompey, Roman history, Caesar biography, world history podcast, Have To Know History, Jason Freewalt

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    4 Min.
  • Julius Caesar and the Cilician Pirates — The Pirates Who Captured the Wrong Guy | Have To Know History
    Dec 26 2025

    Before Julius Caesar became the most famous Roman in history, he was kidnapped by Cilician pirates — who had no idea who they were dealing with.

    In this episode, we explore the unbelievable true story of how young Caesar:
    • mocked the pirates holding him hostage
    • demanded they raise his ransom because he was “worth more”
    • treated the pirates like his employees
    • promised he’d come back to punish them
    • and then actually returned with a fleet to make good on his promise

    It’s bold, hilarious, and a little terrifying — and it reveals the early personality of the man who would reshape Rome.

    This is Have To Know History — history you just have to know.
    Thanks for being here.


    Julius Caesar, Cilician pirates, Caesar kidnapping, Roman Republic, ancient Rome, Caesar biography, Roman history podcast, Have To Know History, Jason Freewalt, pirates of the Mediterranean, Caesar ransom story, early life of Caesar

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    4 Min.
  • Julius Caesar & the End of the Roman Republic | Have To Know History
    Dec 12 2025

    Julius Caesar. Pompey. The Roman Senate. The Rubicon. The epic assassination.

    This is the dramatic story of how the Roman Republic collapsed — and how one ambitious general changed world history forever.

    In this episode of Have To Know History, we break down Caesar’s rise to power, his conquest of Gaul, his rivalry with Pompey the Great, and the fateful moment he crossed the Rubicon and plunged Rome into civil war. You’ll hear how political chaos, military ambition, corruption, and unstoppable popularity pushed the Republic to its breaking point and led to the fall of the Roman Republic.

    Perfect for listeners who love:
    • Roman history
    • Julius Caesar stories
    • Ancient civilizations
    • Myth-busting, fast-paced explanations
    • Short, engaging history podcasts

    If you’ve ever wondered how Rome transformed from a republic into an empire, this is the episode for you.

    This is Have To Know History — history you just have to know.
    Thanks for being here.

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    6 Min.
  • The Wonderful Allegory of Oz: Baum’s Fairy Tale of America
    Nov 28 2025

    The Wonderful Wizard of Oz isn’t just a fantasy story — it may also be a hidden allegory about America in the late 1800s.

    In this episode, we explore how L. Frank Baum’s 1900 novel reflects the Panic of 1893, the gold vs. silver debate, and the rise of the Populist movement.

    We break down the symbolic meaning behind:

    • Dorothy and ordinary Americans

    • The Scarecrow and farmers

    • The Tin Woodman and industrial workers

    • The Cowardly Lion and political power

    • The Wicked Witches of East and West

    • The Yellow Brick Road (gold standard)

    • Silver shoes (the silver standard)

    • Emerald City and illusion

    • The Wizard and leadership without real authority

    Whether Baum meant it or not, the timing is remarkable—and the parallels are eye-opening.

    This is Have To Know History — history you just have to know.
    Thanks for being here.

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    10 Min.
  • The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World — Monuments, Myths, and Humanity’s First Bucket List | Have To Know History
    Nov 21 2025

    Long before Instagram or travel blogs, the ancient Greeks made the world’s first bucket list — the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. From the Great Pyramid of Giza to the Lighthouse of Alexandria, these incredible creations showed what humans could build with imagination, ambition, and divine inspiration.

    In this episode, Mr. Freewalt takes you on a journey through the ancient Mediterranean to uncover the stories behind each Wonder — what they were, how they were built, and why most of them have vanished.

    This is Have To Know History — history you just have to know.

    🎙️ Hosted by Jason Freewalt

    #History #SevenWonders #HaveToKnowHistory #JasonFreewalt #AncientWorld

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    10 Min.
  • Romulus and Remus: The Wolf, the War God, and the Birth of Rome | Have To Know History
    Oct 31 2025

    This is Have To Know History — history you just have to know.

    Rome didn’t start with marble temples and mighty emperors. According to legend, it began with a jealous king, an abandoned pair of twins, a war god, and a wolf.

    In this episode, we dive into the myth of Romulus and Remus — and why the Romans needed this story.

    Here’s what we explore:

    • 🏛️ Rome’s not-so-glamorous real beginnings — a collection of rough shepherd tribes along the Tiber

    • ✍️ How the poet Virgil, under Emperor Augustus, invented a heroic origin linking Rome to the survivors of Troy

    • 👶 The twins Romulus and Remus — born of a Vestal Virgin and the god Mars

    • 🐺 The she-wolf who rescued and nursed them

    • ⚔️ The brothers’ return to overthrow a tyrant — and the deadly fight that followed

    • 👑 The founding of Rome, the Sabine Women, and Romulus’ rise as the first king

    • 🌩️ His mysterious death (or ascension) and transformation into the god Quirinus

    So… is any of it true? Maybe not.
    But it tells us how the Romans wanted to see themselves — fierce, chosen by the gods, born from struggle and ambition.

    This is Have To Know History — history you just have to know.
    Thanks for being here.

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    7 Min.