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President Barack Obama.
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Virginia, we are counting on you.
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Republicans want to steal enough seats in Congress
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to raid the next election and wield unchecked power
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But you can stop them by voting yes by April 21st.
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Help put our elections back on a level playing field
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and let voters decide not politicians.
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Vote yes by April 21st.
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Paid for by Virginians for fair elections.
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And Doug, there's nowhere I wouldn't go to help
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someone customize and save on car insurance
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with Liberty Mutual.
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Even if it means sitting front row at a comedy show.
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Hey everyone, check out this guy and his bird.
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What is this, your first date?
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with Liberty Mutual together.
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Need a human, him to a bird.
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Yeah, the bird looks out of your league anyways.
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Only pay for what you need at Liberty Mutual.com.
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Okay, man, let's talk shop.
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And okay, hopefully they got the mom to tune out.
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Dear listener, if we are going to tell this story properly,
1:18
then we need to move beyond the idea of spices
1:21
as luxury items and step fully into the uncomfortable truth
1:25
that in the 1600s something as small as a seed
1:29
could justify conquest, reshape borders,
1:33
and lead to decisions so extreme
1:35
that they still echo through history today
1:38
because the spice trade was not just about flavor.
1:41
It was about control over life,
1:43
death and wealth on a global scale.
1:46
And the people involved were not simply merchants,
1:49
but rulers, soldiers, and opportunists,
1:53
willing to do whatever was necessary
1:55
to secure their place in a system
1:57
that rewarded dominance above all else.
2:00
Let's begin with nutmeg
2:02
because no spice carries a stranger story
2:05
and no place was more central to that story
2:07
than the Banda Islands in present-day Indonesia
2:11
where nutmeg trees grew naturally
2:13
and nowhere else on earth,
2:14
making these islands disproportionately valuable.
2:18
And when European traders first arrived
2:22
they encountered the Banda knees people
2:24
who had been trading freely
2:26
with multiple partners for generations,
2:28
including merchants from Java, India, and the Arab world,
2:32
operating within a system that valued balance
2:35
and exchange rather than monopoly,
2:38
which made them fundamentally incompatible
2:40
with the goals of the Dutch.
2:42
And nutmeg was so valuable in Europe
2:45
that people were willing to cross oceans, start wars,
2:49
and completely upend entire societies just to control it,
2:53
which really does put your overpriced pumpkin spice latte
2:59
When Jan Peterson Cohen arrived
3:01
as Governor-General of the Dutch East India Company,
3:04
he brought with him a vision that was not based
3:07
on cooperation, but on total control.
3:10
And in 1621, after failed negotiations
3:13
and growing resistance from the Banda knees,
3:16
Cohen launched a campaign that would become
3:19
one of the most brutal episodes
3:21
in the history of the spice trade,
3:23
systematically attacking villages,
3:26
executing local leaders,
3:28
and forcibly removing large portions of the population,
3:32
with estimates suggesting that out of roughly 15,000 inhabitants,
3:37
only a small fraction remained after the violence,
3:40
while others were enslaved or driven into exile,
3:44
and what followed was not just conquest, but transformation,
3:48
as the Dutch divided the land into plantations called Perkin,
3:52
and enforced a monopoly so strict it bordered on obsession,
3:56
because this wasn't just a spice trade anymore,
3:59
it was a full-blown seasoning crisis.
4:02
What makes this even more unsettling
4:05
is how carefully the system was controlled,
4:07
because the Dutch feared competition so much
4:10
that they would destroy excess nutmeg trees
4:12
to keep supply limited and prices high,
4:15
enforcing rules with harsh punishments and constant oversight,
4:19
turning an entire island chain
4:21
into a single-purpose machine built around one crop,
4:24
and the level of control they exerted over the spice trade
4:27
was so intense that it wasn't just about owning the market,
4:31
it was about dominating it completely,
4:33
seasoning it, if you will,
4:35
with a level of aggression that was, frankly,
4:38
a little hard to digest.
4:40
But the Dutch were not alone in this obsession,
4:43
because the English East India company had its own ambitions,
4:46
and nowhere was this rivalry more clear than on Run Island,
4:50
a tiny piece of land in the Banda Archipelago
4:53
that became one of the most valuable islands in the world,
4:56
simply because of the nutmeg trees growing on it,
4:59
leading to years of conflict, tension, and shifting control,
5:03
until 1667, when the Treaty of Breeda
5:06
brought a resolution that feels almost unbelievable today,
5:10
as the English agreed to give up Run Island to the Dutch
5:13
in exchange for New Amsterdam,
5:15
a colony in North America that would later become New York,
5:19
a trade that might be the only time in history
5:21
someone looked at Manhattan and said,
5:23
you know what this deal needs?
5:26
Meanwhile, clothes from the islands of Turnate and Tidori
5:30
created their own web of alliances and betrayals,
5:34
as local rulers navigated relationships
5:36
with the Portuguese, Spanish, and Dutch,
5:39
attempting to maintain control
5:41
while foreign powers pushed deeper into the region,
5:44
and in Sri Lanka, cinnamon became another prize,
5:47
controlled first by the Portuguese and later by the Dutch,
5:50
who enforced strict harvesting systems
5:52
that relied heavily on local labor,
5:55
further illustrating how the spice trade was built
5:57
not just on geography, but on systems of control
6:01
that extended into every aspect of production.
6:04
And then there were the beliefs,
6:05
the strange and powerful ideas that gave spices
6:09
even more value, because in Europe,
6:12
they were not just used for flavor, but for medicine,
6:15
believed to cure digestive issues,
6:18
balance the body, and even protect against the plague,
6:21
leading people to carry nutmeg and small containers
6:24
called pomenters, as a form of protection,
6:27
trusting that this small, fragrant object
6:30
could shield them from disease, which is impressive,
6:33
because today, the most cinnamon is curing is your boredom.
6:38
As demand grew, so did the risks people were willing
6:41
to take, leading to smuggling operations.
6:44
Secret cultivation attempts and individuals
6:47
willing to risk everything to break monopolies,
6:50
turning spices into one of the earliest forms of contraband,
6:54
because long before modern black markets existed,
6:58
people were already risking their lives
7:00
to move these small, valuable goods across borders,
7:04
making nutmeg one of the original underground commodities.
7:08
And then there are the smaller, stranger details,
7:11
like merchants mixing inferior materials into spices
7:15
to stretch their supply, or packaging them in ways
7:18
that made them appear more valuable than they actually were,
7:21
revealing a marketplace driven as much by perception
7:27
Because at some point, this stopped being about taste
7:30
and started being about control, about status,
7:34
about the ability to demonstrate wealth
7:36
through something as simple as seasoning your food,
7:39
because nothing says power quite like aggressively seasoning
7:43
And speaking of things that carry more meaning
7:45
than they probably should, let's take a moment
7:48
to consider something that might feel just a little too
7:52
Are you tired of your spice rack lacking historical drama?
7:55
Do you wish every pinch of seasoning
7:57
came with a backstory involving betrayal, smuggling,
8:00
and at least one questionable treaty
8:03
than you may be ready for black market pantry?
8:06
The only spice subscription that delivers ethically
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sourced ingredients with wildly unethical stories
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attached, complete with detailed accounts
8:14
of who fought over them, who smuggled them,
8:16
and who definitely should not have been trusted.
8:19
Black market pantry exists because flavor is fleeting,
8:22
but intrigue is forever.
8:25
Dear listener, as we step back from the chaos,
8:28
the conquest, and the strange details
8:30
that define the spice trade, it becomes clear
8:33
that this is not just a story about food,
8:35
but about the extremes of human ambition,
8:38
about what happens when value is concentrated
8:41
in something small, rare, and difficult to obtain,
8:45
and about the lengths people will go to secure it,
8:49
because the spices sitting quietly in your kitchen today
8:52
were once at the center of global conflict,
8:55
economic transformation, and human behavior
8:58
at its most intense.
9:00
So the next time you reach for nutmeg, cinnamon, or pepper,
9:04
take a moment to consider the journey they represent
9:07
from the band of islands to your kitchen,
9:10
from contested territories to everyday convenience,
9:13
and remember that behind every flavor lies a story far richer
9:18
and far stranger than it might first appear.
9:21
Sleep well, dear listener, and taste carefully,
9:25
because history has a way of lingering long
9:27
after the flavor fades.
11:08
And Doug, there's nowhere I wouldn't go to help someone
11:14
customize and save on car insurance with Liberty Mutual,
11:16
even if it means sitting front row at a comedy show.
11:20
Hey, everyone, check out this guy and his bird.
11:22
What is this, your first date?
11:24
Oh, no, we help people customize and save
11:26
on car insurance with Liberty Mutual together.
11:29
Me too, a human, him to a bird.
11:30
Yeah, the bird looks out of your league anyways.
11:32
Only pay for what you need at LibertyMutual.com.
11:35
Liberty, Liberty, Liberty, Liberty.
11:38
President Barack Obama.
11:40
Virginia, we are counting on you.
11:42
Republicans want to steal enough seats in Congress
11:45
to raid the next election and wield unchecked power
11:48
for two more years.
11:49
But you can stop them by voting yes by April 21st.
11:55
Help put our elections back on a level playing field
11:58
and let voters decide not politicians.
12:01
Vote yes by April 21st.
12:05
Paid for by Virginians for fair elections.
12:08
History says the mystery was solved.
12:11
History is very confident about that.
12:15
Welcome to Unsolved-ish, a strange history podcast,
12:19
where we examine crimes, disasters, and scientific weirdness
12:23
that were wrapped up with the historical equivalent of met,
12:27
probably vanished ships, Victorian murderers,
12:32
glowing lights, scientists keep siding.
12:34
If the explanation feels rushed, overly tidy,
12:38
or suspiciously convenient, we're already recording
12:41
an episode about it, no shouting, no wild theories.
12:45
Just a calm voice asking, are we sure about this?
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Unsolved-ish, a brand new podcast brought to you
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by Strange History Studios, because history loves closure,
12:57
even when it didn't earn it.
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Listen wherever you get your podcasts.
13:01
Unsolved-ish, a strange history podcast.