If you already like my work here on "Visuals of the Ancients," lend me your ears as I discuss history and economics.
Tune in to listen to Episode 01 - What is the Cobra Effect⦠and a Brazilian polka?
And don't forget to Subscribe and Share with family and friends! Cheers.
29.09.2025 22:20
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The Cobra Effect Podcast
Well-meaning plans can easily backfire, leading to revolt, failure, and shocking events. From ancient Mesopotamia to current world events, The Cobra Effect podcast explores the unintended consequences...
You can also find it listed on platforms such as Amazon Music, Podchaser, Overcast, Castro, Deezer, Pocket Casts, and others of your preference!
For more information, such as transcripts, sources, future episodes, etc., you can visit my website:
www.thecobraeffectpodcast.com
29.09.2025 22:20
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For the rest of the platforms:
iHeartRadio: www.iheart.com/podcast/269-...
Podcast Index: podcastindex.org/podcast/7500...
Castbox: castbox.fm/channel/id67...
Poscast Addict: podcastaddict.com/podcast/the-...
29.09.2025 22:20
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Episode 01 - What is the Cobra Effect... and a Brazilian Polka?
YouTube video by The Cobra Effect Podcast
Available on YouTube:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=v5rC...
29.09.2025 22:20
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Spotify β Web Player
Available on Spotify:
open.spotify.com/show/5GNgw3J...
29.09.2025 22:20
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The Cobra Effect Podcast
History Podcast Β· Well-meaning plans can easily backfire, leading to revolt, failure, and shocking events. From ancient Mesopotamia to current world events, The Cobra Effect podcast explores the unint...
Four millennia of history on all continents demonstrate that we repeat the mistakes of the past when judging ideas by intentions rather than results.
Where can you listen to it? See all platforms below. π
Available on Apple Podcasts:
podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/t...
29.09.2025 22:20
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... to current world events, The Cobra Effect Podcast explores the unintended consequences of government policies, including taxation, wage and price controls, foreign aid, collectivization, environmental impacts, and more.
29.09.2025 22:20
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π¨ ANNOUNCEMENTπ¨
My personal project, "The Cobra Effect Podcast," is out! Below is a soundbite of Episode 01 with its Intro.
What are the topics covered? Well-meaning plans can easily backfire, leading to revolt, failure, and shocking events. From ancient Mesopotamia...
29.09.2025 22:20
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7/7 You can see and appreciate this piece at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Asian Art.
πΈ by me. I hope you enjoyed this π§΅. If so, please share and follow for more of this content. Cheers!
09.07.2025 14:52
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6/7 Despite the fall of Nineveh and the Mongol conquest, the local people are resilient, just as Christianity there resisted and outlived the terror of ISIS barely a decade ago.
09.07.2025 14:52
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5/7 Today, Mosul is the second-largest city in Iraq, after Baghdad. However, Mosul was once Nineveh, the capital of the mighty Neo-Assyrian Empire, and for around 50 years, it was the largest city in the world until its violent demise in 612 BC.
09.07.2025 14:52
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4/7 Mosul was a vibrant city where Muslims, Christians, and Jewish artists created marvelous architecture and art such as this one.
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3/7 As the description reads, this canteen "probably held precious oils at a local church." Although its geometric designs evoke Islamic art, its themes are distinctly Christian: the Virgin and Child, scenes from the life of Christ, and saints and knights.
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2/7 This canteen is made of brass (an alloy of copper and zinc) with silver inlay.
Modern scholars date this piece to c. 1240, and although there is debate, the museum's description indicates that it is from the city of Mosul, in northern modern Iraq.
09.07.2025 14:52
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1/7 In Feb. 1258, the Mongols of Hulagu Khan destroyed Baghdad, just a few centuries before, one of the largest cities in the world under the Abbasid Caliphate at its peak. Four years later, Mosul shared the same fate.
This piece of art was made in Mosul around that time. π§΅ofπΈ!
09.07.2025 14:52
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It appears to be a simple relief... but it is not. Made of Pentelic marble between the 1st and 2nd century AD, this piece may have been part of the great altar of Athena on the Acropolis. Here you can see Athena's symbols: the owl, the olive tree, and the snake.
πΈ by me at the Acropolis Museum.
05.07.2025 16:55
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1/3 Let's see in detail eight amazing colorful glasses from ancient Egypt. New Kingdom, Dynasty 18, c. 1550 - 1295 BC.
πΈ By me at the Smithsonian Asian Art.
Top row first and always from left to right:
Lentoid flask. Jar. Two-handled vessel. Four-handled vessel.
05.06.2025 15:05
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Emperor Lucius Verus (AD 161 β 169) holds a winged Victoria. The head was added to the body of an athlete, a Roman copy of an original statue by Myron of Eleutherae (480β440 BC). Myron's most famous work is the Discobolus.
πΈ By me at the Vatican Museums.
03.06.2025 18:50
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View of the Colosseum from the hypogeum. In Roman amphitheaters, this was a subterranean network of tunnels and chambers beneath the arena that served as a backstage section for gladiators, animals, and stage props. From here, they would make dramatic entrances into the arena.
πΈ By me.
02.06.2025 16:52
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5/5 In shamanism, a rattleβs sound clears negative energies, purifies spaces, or protects against harmful spirits during rituals or healing ceremonies.
Even further north, as far as Mongolia, a Makara protects.
πΈ By me.
31.05.2025 16:47
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4/5 It surprised me to see this one as a shamanβs rattle as far north as Mongolia!
31.05.2025 16:47
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