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History Unplugged Podcast

The Most Powerful Women in the Middle Ages, Part 2: Catherine of Sienna and Isabella of Castile

History Unplugged Podcast

History Unplugged

Society & Culture, History

4.23.7K Ratings

🗓️ 23 August 2018

⏱️ 49 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Female rulers dominated the Middle Ages. But it wasn't just the queens or empresses who wielded enormous power. This episode is the second of a three-part series at the lives of the most powerful women in the Middle Ages, and we will first look at the life of Catherine of Siena, the Catholic Mystic who almost single-handedly restored the papacy to Rome in the 1300s and navigated the brutal and male-dominated world of Italian politics. Then we will explore the life of

Catherine was the 23th child of a poor family and unable to write until three years before her death at 33. She spent years as a low-ranking member of a religious order and primarily spent her days in solitude and prayer. However, by the end of her life Catherine had travelled throughout the Italian peninsula as a diplomat and negotiated peace between princes.

She wrote dozens of letters to Pope Gregory and convinced him to restore the papacy in Rome. She authored “The Dialogue,” a treatise on a fictional conversation between a saint and God, which influenced theologians and the lay religious for centuries. She was named a joint Patron Saint of Italy along with Francis of Assisi in 1939 and a Doctor of the Church by Pope Paul VI in 1970.

In addition to Catherine, we will also explore the life of Queen Isabella I of Castile and Leon (1451-1504), the reformer, Catholic monarch, and inquisitor. Isabella became Queen of Castile as a politically inexperienced 23-year-old caught in a political tug-of-war between her half-brother and the Spanish nobles. Upon her death in 1504, she had successfully united Spain's kingdoms, completed the Reconquista, stabilized the economy, and commissioned an idealistic Genoese sailor to find a shorter sea route to India by crossing the Atlantic in 1492.

Funding such trips to the New World was a significant reason that Spain became a global power in the next century. These brighter moments are contrasted by the darker ones in her 28-year reign. She and her husband Ferdinand compelled all Jews and Muslims to convert to Christianity, expelling those who refused. This policy laid the legal infrastructure for the horrors of the Spanish Inquisition in the coming century.

Transcript

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0:00.0

War has played a key role in the history of the United States, from the nation's founding right down to the present.

0:06.2

Wars made the United States independent, kept it together, increased its size, and established it as a global superpower.

0:13.2

Hi, I'm James Early, host of the Key Battles of American History Podcast.

0:17.6

In each episode, I discuss American history through the lens of the most important battles of America's Wars.

0:23.2

To start listening now, go to pathanonpodcast.com or search Key Battles of American History on your favorite podcast platform.

0:31.8

What was it like to watch the Twin Towers collapse on 9-11?

0:35.6

How about to be sent to Auschwitz during the Holocaust?

0:38.4

Our past is a collection of stories that bring us to where we are and shape our perspectives.

0:43.1

Hi, I'm Josh Cohen, host of the Eyewitness History Podcast.

0:46.7

On my show, I interviewed guests who watched the events that shaped our world.

0:50.6

From heartbreaking war stories to hilarious memories from the SNL writers room,

0:54.8

no recollection is off limits.

0:57.0

To start listening now for free, go to pathanonpodcast.com or search Eyewitness History on the podcast player of your choice.

1:07.8

Welcome to the History Unplugged Podcast.

1:10.8

The unscripted show that celebrates unsung heroes,

1:14.3

Mythbust's historical lies and rediscoveres the forgotten stories that change our world.

1:20.9

I'm your host, Scott Rink.

1:29.3

Catherine of Sienna did not have a typical upbringing for a theologian, mystic,

1:33.9

and Italian diplomat. She was the 23rd child of a poor family and unable to write until three

1:41.0

years before death at 33. She spent years as a low-ranking member of a religious order

1:47.1

and primarily spent her days in solitude and prayer.

1:50.6

One of her few responsibilities was to tend to the sick as a black death ravaged Europe.

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