PodcastsHistoryQueens, Kings, and Dastardly Things

Queens, Kings, and Dastardly Things

Daily Mail
Queens, Kings, and Dastardly Things
Latest episode

116 episodes

  • Queens, Kings, and Dastardly Things

    Elizabeth II: The Inside Story (Part 1)

    05/04/2026 | 29 mins.
    Celebrating Queen Elizabeth II’s life - her character, the scary look she gave those who displeased her, and what President Trump really thought about her majesty. It’s a packed first episode of a mini series of exclusive revelations.

    Journalist and historian Robert Hardman opens up to Professor Kate Williams about his research and private recollections as a royal reporter, in celebration of her 100th anniversary. From the Queen’s unshowy political skill to her stoic sense of duty, this episode paints a vivid picture of a monarch who kept working to the very end. Along the way, there are striking glimpses of royal life that feel by turns funny, startling and deeply moving: the alarming account of Prince Andrew (as he then was) and his altercation with a senior member of the royal household; Donald Trump fussing over exactly where to hang a portrait of the Queen at Mar-a-Lago; and the extraordinary image of Elizabeth II still dealing with state papers and official business in the last days of her life.

    The conversation also ranges across her wartime years, her relationships with prime ministers, her ability to deflate overblown personalities with a single look, and the immense pressures she absorbed during the final years of her reign during the Harry & Megan debarkle. The result is a portrait not just of a symbol, but of a working sovereign: pragmatic, disciplined, funny, devout, and, in Robert’s telling, much more politically astute than she was ever given credit for.

    Hosts: Robert Hardman and Professor Kate Williams
    Series Producer: Ben Devlin
    Production Manager: Vittoria Cecchini
    Executive Producer: Bella Soames
    Hosts: Robert Hardman and Professor Kate Williams
    Series Producer: Ben Devlin
    Production Manager: Vittoria Cecchini
    Content Editor: Joseph Palmer
    Executive Producer: Bella Soames

    A Daily Mail production. Seriously Popular.

    Sign up to Palace Confidential, the FREE royals newsletter from the Mail's top experts. Delivered straight to your inbox every Thursday, it's the smartest way to stay in the royal inner circle. Just head to dailymail.co.uk/palaceconfidential to sign up today.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
  • Queens, Kings, and Dastardly Things

    Elizabeth I: Love & Death (Part 3)

    29/03/2026 | 30 mins.
    When you receive more than twenty-six proposals from Europe’s most powerful men, why should you refuse them all?

    In this final episode of our trilogy on Elizabeth I, we step into the most personal — and most politically dangerous — question of her reign: marriage. From the moment she becomes queen, Elizabeth is treated as a prize. Kings, princes and emperors line up to claim her, each proposal promising alliance and stability.

    At the centre of it all stands Robert Dudley: not a king, nor even a prince, but the man Elizabeth trusts most. Their closeness is undeniable. Yet when Dudley’s wife is found dead at the bottom of a staircase, everything changes. Suspicion, scandal and political fear close the door on the one match that might have been possible.

    From there, the suitors keep coming. Philip of Spain lingers in the background. Eric of Sweden writes devoted letters. Archduke Charles offers power and heirs. And finally, the Duke of Anjou arrives in person — young, charming, and bearing gifts, including the famous frog-shaped earrings that delight the queen. For a moment, it seems Elizabeth might finally choose.

    But every option carries risk. Marriage could mean losing control of her kingdom. A husband might claim authority. A child might replace her. Around her, advisors push, Parliament demands, and the shadow of Mary, Queen of Scots looms ever larger.

    As the years pass, the question shifts. It is no longer who Elizabeth will marry — but whether she ever intended to marry at all.

    And as we follow her story to its final days — her long decline, her refusal even to lie down, and the quiet gesture that signals her successor — we see the ultimate consequence of that decision.

    No husband. No heir. Just a legacy powerful enough to outlast them all.

    Hosts: Robert Hardman and Professor Kate Williams
    Series Producer: Ben Devlin
    Production Manager: Vittoria Cecchini
    Executive Producer: Bella Soames
    Hosts: Robert Hardman and Professor Kate Williams
    Series Producer: Ben Devlin
    Production Manager: Vittoria Cecchini
    Content Editor: Joseph Palmer
    Executive Producer: Bella Soames

    A Daily Mail production. Seriously Popular.

    Sign up to Palace Confidential, the FREE royals newsletter from the Mail's top experts. Delivered straight to your inbox every Thursday, it's the smartest way to stay in the royal inner circle. Just head to dailymail.co.uk/palaceconfidential to sign up today.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
  • Queens, Kings, and Dastardly Things

    Elizabeth I: Warrior (Part 2)

    23/03/2026 | 36 mins.
    When the most powerful empire in Europe sends an Armada to invade your country, what do you do?

    In this episode of our trilogy on Elizabeth I, we reach the moment everyone associates with England’s most famous queen: the looming threat of the Spanish Armada. But the great showdown of 1588 did not arrive out of nowhere. It was the result of years of political intrigue, espionage, religious tension — and a dangerous rivalry with Philip II of Spain.

    Along the way we meet the other woman whose shadow hung over Elizabeth’s reign: Mary, Queen of Scots. Was she a genuine threat to the English throne, or a prisoner whose existence fuelled a web of plots and paranoia? From the murky world of spies and codebreakers to the dramatic fallout of the Babington Plot, Elizabeth’s government was constantly balancing mercy, survival and ruthless political calculation.

    Then comes the crisis that would define the age. As Spain’s vast armada sails towards England, Elizabeth faces the greatest challenge of her reign — and delivers the famous rallying cry at Tilbury, declaring that though she has the body of a “weak and feeble woman”, she has the heart and stomach of a king.

    The defeat of the Armada would become one of the most powerful myths in English history. Yet as we discover, the reality was far messier — with further armadas, failed invasions, and an emerging English maritime power that would shape the world in ways both triumphant and troubling.

    Next time: the Virgin Queen’s most personal battlefield — her love life, her suitors, and the political game of marriage that defined the rest of her reign.

    Hosts: Robert Hardman and Professor Kate Williams
    Series Producer: Ben Devlin
    Production Manager: Vittoria Cecchini
    Executive Producer: Bella Soames
    Hosts: Robert Hardman and Professor Kate Williams
    Series Producer: Ben Devlin
    Production Manager: Vittoria Cecchini
    Content Editor: Joseph Palmer
    Executive Producer: Bella Soames

    A Daily Mail production. Seriously Popular.

    Sign up to Palace Confidential, the FREE royals newsletter from the Mail's top experts. Delivered straight to your inbox every Thursday, it's the smartest way to stay in the royal inner circle. Just head to dailymail.co.uk/palaceconfidential to sign up today.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
  • Queens, Kings, and Dastardly Things

    Elizabeth I: Survivor (Part 1)

    16/03/2026 | 28 mins.
    She was born a princess and declared a bastard before she could walk.

    In this episode, we go back to the beginning of Elizabeth I: a child of extraordinary promise, born into splendour, then cast into uncertainty by the fall of her mother, Anne Boleyn. Courtly favour turned to suspicion. Affection turned to danger. And survival became a skill learned early.

    From the shadow of Henry VIII’s volatile court to the careful education that shaped her formidable intellect, this is the story of a girl navigating power long before she wore a crown. Stepmothers rose and fell. Brothers and sisters shifted in rank and religion. Every alliance mattered. Every silence mattered more.

    This is the first of three deep dives into the Virgin Queen, beginning with the precarious childhood that forged one of history’s most enduring rulers.

    Robert Hardman and Professor Kate Williams explore the instability, calculation, and emotional discipline that defined Elizabeth’s early years and ask how a child declared illegitimate grew into a monarch who would outlast them all.

    Was her resilience instinct? Training? Or the necessary armour of a Tudor princess who learned, very young, that survival was everything?

    Hosts: Robert Hardman and Kate Williams
    Series Producer: Ben Devlin
    Production Manager: Vittoria Cecchini
    Executive Producer: Bella Soames
    Hosts: Robert Hardman and Professor Kate Williams
    Series Producer: Ben Devlin
    Production Manager: Vittoria Cecchini
    Content Editor: Joseph Palmer
    Executive Producer: Bella Soames

    A Daily Mail production. Seriously Popular.

    Sign up to Palace Confidential, the FREE royals newsletter from the Mail's top experts. Delivered straight to your inbox every Thursday, it's the smartest way to stay in the royal inner circle. Just head to dailymail.co.uk/palaceconfidential to sign up today.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
  • Queens, Kings, and Dastardly Things

    Hamnet: The Truth Behind The Oscar-Winner

    09/03/2026 | 33 mins.
    Shakespeare, Hollywood, the Oscars, the plague, and a little boy called Hamnet.

    In this episode of Queens, Kings and Dastardly Things, Robert Hardman and Professor Kate Williams are joined by historian Alice Loxton to explore the extraordinary new film Hamnet — the Oscar-tipped adaptation of Maggie O’Farrell’s bestselling novel.

    Set in late 16th-century Stratford-upon-Avon and plague-stricken London, the film imagines the private world of William Shakespeare, his wife Anne Hathaway — here called Agnes — and their three children. When their son Hamnet dies in 1596, the story asks a haunting question: did that loss shape the creation of the play Hamlet?

    We explore Tudor childbirth, superstition and healing, the realities of plague in Elizabethan England, and the fragile line between history and imagination. Who was Anne Hathaway really? A healer? A neglected wife? A woman left to manage home and grief while her husband built a theatrical empire?
    Hosts: Robert Hardman and Professor Kate Williams
    Series Producer: Ben Devlin
    Production Manager: Vittoria Cecchini
    Content Editor: Joseph Palmer
    Executive Producer: Bella Soames

    A Daily Mail production. Seriously Popular.

    Sign up to Palace Confidential, the FREE royals newsletter from the Mail's top experts. Delivered straight to your inbox every Thursday, it's the smartest way to stay in the royal inner circle. Just head to dailymail.co.uk/palaceconfidential to sign up today.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

More History podcasts

About Queens, Kings, and Dastardly Things

Expert history with a wicked twist: Queens, Kings and Dastardly Things is the podcast that goes behind palace doors and beyond the balcony smiles, to uncover the stories that the history books have politely skipped. Queens, Kings & Dastardly Things reveals the schemers, lovers, plotters and even the pets who’ve made the British monarchy the world’s longest-running reality show.Hosts, Royal biographers Robert Hardman and Professor Kate Williams trace how power, passion and paranoia have shaped every crown. There are queens who ruled better than their husbands, and princes who partied harder than their people. We meet saints, sinners and those hovering somewhere in between – from the man formerly known as Prince Andrew to the less-vilified Richard III.Sometimes we get reflective: how monarchy survives scandal, how image-making began long before Instagram, and why royal women have always been the best crisis managers in the room. Other times we’re just here for the gossip: who wore what, who slept where, and who accidentally started a war over breakfast.Think of it as history with its crown slightly askew. If you like your royal stories with equal parts grandeur and chaos, step into the world of Queens, Kings & Dastardly Things because behind every coronation lies a cover-up, behind every portrait a scandal, and behind every great monarch… a very patient servant wondering how to get the blood out of the carpet.New episodes out every MONDAY, wherever you get your podcasts. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Podcast website

Listen to Queens, Kings, and Dastardly Things, Short History Of... and many other podcasts from around the world with the radio.net app

Get the free radio.net app

  • Stations and podcasts to bookmark
  • Stream via Wi-Fi or Bluetooth
  • Supports Carplay & Android Auto
  • Many other app features

Queens, Kings, and Dastardly Things: Podcasts in Family