News
Jolyon Jenkins meets the women of Verona who answer letters sent to Shakespeare's Juliet
BBC Radio 4 Extra
A dangerous game is played in the 80s as the Cold War brings two superpowers to the brink.
BBC Two
Stella Rimington uncovers startling new evidence about the executed British heroine.
BBC Radio 4
The story of peatlands around the world, from excavation to restoration.
BBC Two Northern Ireland
The US military in the Sahara desert
BBC World Service
The extraordinary story of a phone used by three British men who ed ISIS in Syria.
BBC Three
The giant bodies of humpback whales reveal how the Antarctic environment is changing.
BBC News
A contemporary author takes a classic text to shine light on the craft of writing fiction.
Liz Bonnin s a team of palaeontologists as they investigate a dinosaur graveyard.
Ellie Flynn goes undercover to investigate a multibillion-pound online selling industry.
A whale wearing a harness triggers speculation of Russian spying activity.
How the oldest people on the planet are helping scientists to unlock the secrets of ageing
Behind the scenes of the security operation at the Olympic Games.
Sharp insight into the world's ongoing global conflicts, with Mikey Kay.
Assaults, racism & sexual harassment - life working as a door supervisor in the UK.
Magazine for the deaf community highlighting the latest issues.
The shocking story of the fertility doctor who used his own sperm to impregnate women.
BBC Four
The impact of the two conflicts on American society and politics
Astronomy news, what's happening in the night sky and interviews with astronomers
The stories that lie behind parents labelled abs by society and the courts.
Stories of science, history and the natural world woven together around a theme of light.
Mathew Horne and Daniel May star in the Essex job centre comedy by Steven Burge.
Documentary series filmed over the course of one year at a high school in South Carolina.
Traditional music performances
BBC ALBA
Coverage of select committee proceedings at the Palace of Westminster.
BBC Parliament
Will Self goes on a long road trip.
Will Self goes on the trail of Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell
Steve Lamacq welcomes Self Esteem to Maida Vale studios for a special live performance.
BBC Radio 6 Music
Will Self embarks on a 50-kilometre walking tour of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN.
Who are the self-employed and why does it matter for policy makers?
Ian Marchant explores the rise of self-service. Who benefits - consumers or big business?
Sitcom about a man who moves into a storage unit after the break-up of his marriage
Will Self asks some of Britain's key opinion-makers about the nature of our existence.
90-year-old Barbara Smith tracks down the charities that have bought and sold her data.
Was the sale of East German citizens to West a slave trade or the cost of freedom?
Coverage of Welsh Parliament proceedings from the Senedd, Cardiff.
Jane Austen's classic tale of two sisters with very different approaches to love.
Adaptation of Jane Austen's classic novel about the Dashwood family
BBC One
What happens when music meets the animal mind?
Does a second feel the same for a fly, a bird, or a swordfish, as it does for me?
Neurologist Guy Leschziner explores the surprisingly strange world of our senses.
Ùisdean and Roddy use locally sourced produce to create mouth-watering meals.
The creation and unexpected afterlife of WH Auden's poem September 1, 1939.
Cyfres newydd i ddod o hyd i Seren Steilio gorau Cymru. A brand new series to find Wale...
S4C
A piece of art, an email from a stranger and a friendship born out of a bloody past.
Capturing the high drama of the Serengeti’s distinctive wildlife up close.
Arnold Schoenberg's 12-tone system redefined music, so why are his works rarely performed?
Seriously is home to the world’s best audio documentaries. Introduced by Vanessa Kisuule.
Coverage of services celebrating Commonwealth Day
Rhai o gerddorion Cymru'n cydweithio i greu EP dros nos.
BBC Radio Cymru
Cerys Matthews yn dewis ei hoff sesiynau o 40 mlynedd o Sesiynau BBC Radio Cymru.
Seth Lakeman attends the Newport Folk Festival to explore its history and influence.
An exploration of death from 1985 by Piers Plowright and Malcolm Clarke.
Mark Lawson explores the cultural retellings of the story of Rudolf Kastner.
Professor Anthony Clare talks to public figures about the process of ageing.
A history of science in Britain from the Restoration to the present day
Exploring the voice - how it works and how it changes throughout our lifetime
The science and psychology behind each of the seven deadly sins.
Peter White meets some of the youngsters who played a key role in the 2012 Olympics.
Extraordinary wildlife stories and unseen wilderness of our seven unique continents.
In the UK we can be tight-lipped when it comes to talking about sex. Until now.
Chris Ledgard asks if gender testing will mean a level playing field for female athletes.
This podcast hears about the drama, indignity, tragedy and comedy of infertility.
BBC Radio Humberside
Vonny Leclerc explores how women have been represented in art and media.
BBC Radio Scotland
When sleepwalking claims shatter a rape case, one woman fights back. Can Jade win justice?
Adam Rutherford explores the deep history of sex
The story of William Brodie and his colourful double life.
Pêl-droed o Gymru - gemau byw ac uchafbwyntiau. Football series with live Welsh Premier...
Noson hamddenol yn yr ardd a chyfle arbennig am sgwrs dan y sêr yng nghwmni Elin Fflur ...
A conservationist brings the story of Ernest Shackleton to life through one of his relics.
Exploring the religious connections of Asia's martial arts
A female pilot officer on a secret WWII mission discovers the real threat isn't the enemy.
Stories from 's troubled history with Algeria and why they still matter today.
Professor Julian Swann marks the 300th anniversary of the death of Louis XIV of .
Why is the brain of a Scottish soldier in a German archive, 80 years after his death?
Edward Stourton explores the tensions caused by the presence of two popes in the Vatican.
How did a former British soldier become an international people smuggler?
A darkly comic and brilliantly original series for Radio 4 from the acclaimed Naomi Wood.
Comedy drama about private detectives who investigate crime in Stratford-upon-Avon
Robert McCrum journeys across Obama's America in search of Shakespeare.
A look at how the writer is celebrated around the world.
A celebration of the life of William Shakespeare on the 400th anniversary of his death.
Shakespeare’s plays inspire a collection of stories by leading children’s writers.
School Radio
Your one-stop shop for all things Shakespeare.
BBC Radio 3
Yasmin Alibhai-Brown explores five Shakespeare plays that cross the racial divide.
Edith Hall, Nandini Das and Beatrice Groves on the books which inspired Shakespeare.
Writer Iain Sinclair seeks out echoes of Shakespeare's city in the London of today.
Neil MacGregor uncovers the stories 20 objects tell us about Shakespeare's world.
How did a single starling mentioned in Shakespeare cause ecological disaster in the USA?
How Britain created £435billion out of nowhere - and where the money went.
Venture down the Shame Well to hear the most toe curling stories ever told.
BBC Radio 5 Live
An investigation into the story of Shamima Begum, who left London to Islamic State.
The Shamrock Tenors perform live in concert on St Patrick’s Night.
How cricket's biggest rockstar transformed a small English county cricket club.
BBC Radio Solent
A portrait of the artist on the river, George Parsonage.
The language and meaning of symbols