Bettany Hughes’ quotes celebrate history, culture, and the enduring influence of human curiosity. As a historian and storyteller, she highlights the power of knowledge to connect civilizations and shape identity. Her words inspire appreciation for the past, encourage lifelong learning, and reveal how stories illuminate wisdom, resilience, and human experience.
“Rumour, gossip, slander – single drops of poison can pollute an entire system.” — Bettany Hughes
“If I had my way there would be a philosopher sitting round the table on every committee and in every boardroom.” — Bettany Hughes
“I’m a Benedictine Nun in outlook; I divide my time evenly so one third is spent in academe, another third on writing and the final third on television and radio.” — Bettany Hughes
“One of the flashpoints of the grand war between Athens and Sparta, a millennium after Helen first caused trouble for the Mediterranean world, was nearby Thassos. Thassos – Greece’s northernmost island, is pine-rich, honey-sweet, gold-bearing and picture-postcard perfect.” — Bettany Hughes
“After I graduated, I carried on with my academic work, via grants but I often had a market stall on Camden Market selling hand-painted silk to make some cash.” — Bettany Hughes
“Economic, political and military intervention following the first world war is frequently blamed for current friction between east and west.” — Bettany Hughes
“People seek change not only when threats and opportunities appear, but when we get tired of the ways things are.” — Bettany Hughes
“The occasional motivational speech gig tends to pay better than the books and television.” — Bettany Hughes
“Even the picturesque prehistoric settlements at Akrotiri on the Greek island of Santorini were an exercise in problem-solving; white-washed homes and town halls built with an anti-earthquake technology still employed today, 3,500 years on.” — Bettany Hughes
“Ancient Egyptian women had rights under the law. They could own land. Many were literate.” — Bettany Hughes
“Venus, ancient goddess of love and beauty, is an apparently irrelevant, invented deity of the long dead. But Venus merits scrutiny. Chart her life story across 5,000 years and you chart the evolution of our conflicted relationship with sex and with the female body.” — Bettany Hughes
“Religion is an easy target for accusations of repression and misogyny, but achievement in the sacred and therefore socio-political sphere was often an option for women, thanks not to brawn, but to brain.” — Bettany Hughes
“History was invented as a tool, an engineered road down which human society could advance.” — Bettany Hughes
“A lot of the clothes I wear on telly are second-hand.” — Bettany Hughes
“The word ‘America’ probably didn’t appear in the Persian language until the end of the 18th century – but then with a documented past stretching back at least 5,000 years, the east had riches of its own.” — Bettany Hughes
“Forgiveness gives you a chance to be fulfilled rather than be eaten up with anger.” — Bettany Hughes
“I am irrationally irritated by those who cast the Mediterranean in a balmy, Augustan perma-glow.” — Bettany Hughes
“Istanbul in the snow is a wonder. The extravagant pleasures on show in the Topkapi Palace Museum – the sultan’s robes thickly lined with squirrel fur, mobile foot-braziers to keep out a cold that whips relentlessly off the Bosphorus – presage modern-day sultanic delights.” — Bettany Hughes
“Socrates was tried in a religious court. He was condemned for disregarding Athens’ gods. If you look at the way he speaks at his trial, according to Plato, there seems to be a moment when he realizes this isn’t just a game.” — Bettany Hughes
“People tend to have a knee-jerk response to the word ‘philosophy’. You imagine it’s abstract and inaccessible.” — Bettany Hughes
“Well Socrates is 70 when he dies. He’s been allowed to philosophise freely in the city for almost 50 years. He clearly was – genius is an overused word – but he clearly did have something of the genius about him.” — Bettany Hughes
“I do think that history lived, and a life lived, is as much to do with the birdsong you heard that morning as any great event.” — Bettany Hughes
“If the Halcyon days of a Mediterranean winter, god-blessed, were good enough for sublime kingfishers they should certainly have something to offer us all.” — Bettany Hughes
“I cannot write about the past unless I go where history happened. Some make very good armchair historians, I’m not one of them. If you’re going to inhabit someone else’s world, the very least you can do is to spend a little time in it.” — Bettany Hughes
“Slipping down into the bedrock 100m inside the partially excavated tomb of Pharaoh Senwosret at Abydos, I really thought I was going to die. Oxygen levels are dangerously low and, with over 90 per cent humidity, it was hard to breathe – we were all drenched with sweat.” — Bettany Hughes
“Cricket’s in the blood – my dad loves it and my brother Simon played for Middlesex before becoming a radio and TV cricket commentator.” — Bettany Hughes
“Socrates was a great walker. They say he was a fiend for exercise. He was absolutely not shut away in some ivory tower somewhere.” — Bettany Hughes
“A number of politicians have failed to recognise the consistent truth of history: that we’re both an emotional and a rational species, and that we make decisions very emotionally.” — Bettany Hughes
“Taught by actor parents never to leave an awkward gap in the conversation I gabble out unsolicited responses to fill the voids.” — Bettany Hughes
“Plants are so important to the ancients for medicine and in a religious aspect – and in hemlock!” — Bettany Hughes
“I wrote my first history book when I was four. I still have it so I can prove it.” — Bettany Hughes
“I think Socrates was fascinated by Alcibiades. It’s almost the opposite of hypocrisy. I think it’s like when you can see the potential in someone.” — Bettany Hughes
“Maybe it is not just social history – the belt buckles and soup ladles – that connects us to the past, but a grander idea, an idea that shared memory is essential to being human.” — Bettany Hughes
“As soon as men began to write, they made Helen of Troy their subject; for close on three thousand years she has been both the embodiment of absolute female beauty and a reminder of the terrible power that beauty can wield… But who was she?” — Bettany Hughes
“The presence of industrial quantities of Byzantine pottery dating from the sixth century AD on the headland at Tintagel, Chinese silk in the tombs around Mecca and ‘Arabic’ numerals in the 13th-century beams of Salisbury Cathedral tell us we have been interdependent not for decades but across millennia.” — Bettany Hughes
“Buttressed by an acceptance of female wisdom in the sacred sphere from the beginnings of organised religion 12,000 years ago to late antiquity and beyond, key women used wit and the power of the word to change the world around them.” — Bettany Hughes
“A journey through the Mediterranean is not only inspiring and stimulating, it is also humbling. The men and women who created antique treasures for us to marvel at had to deal with plague, genocide, a world without writing, iron tools, or penicillin – and yet they made something extraordinary of their life and times.” — Bettany Hughes
“Time and time again in history, it’s the emotional argument that wins. Probably since 70,000 BC we’ve been making decisions in a similar way.” — Bettany Hughes
“Hapy, the ancient god of the Nile, depicted at Dendera with Cleopatra, is typically shown with breasts – symbolism that demonstrated how the life-giving gifts of Egypt’s river artery come only when the power of both female and male was combined.” — Bettany Hughes
“The ‘Middle Ages/Dark Ages’ were of course no such thing. Achievement in the Arabian crescent was sensational then.” — Bettany Hughes
“I think it’s ironic when Plato makes the learned woman Aspasia Socrates’ teacher, but I think women crop up more in the Platonic dialogues than they do normally in texts of the period, and in an un-hysterical way.” — Bettany Hughes
“When she stepped out of that spumy sea Aphrodite was said to have brought fertility, flowers, life, light to a barren world. For centuries women and men went to her sanctuaries to seek her pity and protection. Her domain was originally not just lust, but lust for life.” — Bettany Hughes
“We’ve lived in our Victorian house for 20 years and the kitchen is the centre of family life – we don’t just eat here, we live here.” — Bettany Hughes
“The Nile has long nourished women and men alike. On the Nile and the magical, river-island Temple of Philae, Florence Nightingale was so inspired that she resolved to follow her calling in nursing.” — Bettany Hughes
“I love the Bronze Age – the age of the Trojan Wars and Helen of Troy. Contrary to what people think, Troy was a very sophisticated society and they used ostrich eggs – which have surprisingly tough shells – to store perfumed oils.” — Bettany Hughes
“The massive grassroots success of movies such as Zack Snyder’s Spartan gore-fest ‘300’ demonstrates there is a vast appetite among 15-25 year olds to share in the experience of the long-dead.” — Bettany Hughes
“We think the way we do partly because Socrates thought the way he did. His basic idea – that the unexamined life is not worth living – is what it means to live in the modern world, to develop ideas and ask questions.” — Bettany Hughes
“Both my parents were professional actors, so I grew up in a household that had no real financial stability.” — Bettany Hughes
“I cannot write history unless I travel to the places where it happened. I spent a lot of time walking around the Eastern Mediterranean, going to all the shrines that Socrates would have worshiped at, going to all the battlefields that he fought on.” — Bettany Hughes
“For some reason I have always lived my life trying to make things slightly harder for myself rather than slightly easier. I think that’s why I like the Spartans. I like the idea that you get much more satisfaction if you strive for it.” — Bettany Hughes
“To me that is what the Odyssey is all about, it’s about being in the world and unexpected challenges and dangers are thrown at you.” — Bettany Hughes
“Nefertiti is lovely, but we should use our wit and will to look beyond that beautiful face to discover and to enjoy a more satisfying narrative – the story of mankind, not just of man.” — Bettany Hughes
“We’ve become embarrassed about asking ourselves the straightforward, simple questions that are actually the most relevent: what is it to be human? How can we steer a course between self-indulgence and self-denial and be the very best version of ourselves that we can?” — Bettany Hughes
“The technological revolution is itself a direct descendant of the Ancient Greeks’ historia, and the web is populated by young people who want to dive into the past.” — Bettany Hughes
“Children hop around Phylakopi on sea-polished pebbles the size of bean bags and bask themselves, alongside the lizards, astride the sturdily built walls of Iron Age homes.” — Bettany Hughes
“By day I am a historian, by night a broadcaster.” — Bettany Hughes
“Europe’s leaders need to sit down with Socrates for a night; a life unexamined is not worth living. We have to remember that, as he says, the pursuit of wealth should never be at the expense of wisdom.” — Bettany Hughes
“It was this epic adventure and I had this mad idea that it would be interesting to follow the Greek hero Odysseus on his trail from what is modern day Turkey to the west of Greece. He took 10 years to do that and I took six months. I was on 27 different boats for 1,700 miles and I went to 13 different islands.” — Bettany Hughes
“I travel all over the world, but I’m never happier than when I’m walking up the hill to pick up my children from school.” — Bettany Hughes
“It’s become this sort of strange competition about who’s in the coolest place, who’s in the coolest street. Suddenly we’re having to engage with all those social pressures. It’s helpful, I find, as a mother and a teacher, to say you’ve always got a choice.” — Bettany Hughes
“You’re a good presenter if you know your subject and you can communicate it with passion. Period. That’s all that matters on telly.” — Bettany Hughes
“My guilty pleasure at the end of the day is an old thesaurus. I know that can lead to overwriting, but if words such as lambent, pyretic and boscy exist, how sad they should stay recondite.” — Bettany Hughes
“At the birth of society and civilisation I find a religious landscape littered with feisty female deities who make wisdom their business.” — Bettany Hughes
“Venus’s life story across 5,000 years reminds us not to trivialise the power of desire: the ancients were right to never underestimate its influence.” — Bettany Hughes
“Name the 10 most influential men in history and the debate can rage for hours; when it comes to women, after number six or seven many start to grope around for inspiration.” — Bettany Hughes
“Up until 1400BC, citadel settlements are stable. Goddesses – notably in charge of fertility and learning – have a crucial role to play. But as civilisation gets greedy and society more militaristic, these wise women are edged to the sidelines in favour of a thundering, male warrior god.” — Bettany Hughes
“Aphrodite-Venus had become not a subject of adoration, but an agent of exploitation. From the moment Christian society perceived sex not as a gift of the goddess but a crime against God himself, women were believed to be the vessels of love’s malign power.” — Bettany Hughes
“Of all the human figurines discovered so far from 30,000-3,000BC, 92% are of the female form. This is not to say there was any kind of matriarchy or worship of a mother goddess – far from it – but women are conspicuous by their presence.” — Bettany Hughes
“Once universities, rather than religious orders, were established as the key repositories of learning, women would find it ever harder to prove the pen as mighty as the sword.” — Bettany Hughes
“Territorial expansion demands warriors and, once population levels are stable, demotes the female role. Once religious empires have not just an idea but a territory to call their own, the soldiers of god are of more value than his handmaidens.” — Bettany Hughes
“It was drilled into me from an early age that nothing is certain and that you have to be incredibly careful and sensible with money. However, if you are lucky enough to have a little bit spare, you should also try to enjoy it.” — Bettany Hughes
“Almost everything I have read about Istanbul talks about it as the gateway to the east. We’re so programmed to think of it like that but for much of the world, it’s the gateway to the west, or even where north meets south.” — Bettany Hughes
“My father, who is now 94, was an actor. The prime thing he taught us as children was to walk through the world with our eyes open.” — Bettany Hughes
“The point of doing TV is not to prove how clever you are, but to make other people realise how clever they are; and I think it’s the same with books.” — Bettany Hughes
“I’m horrified at the idea of intimidating someone. I think that’s the opposite of what we should be doing.” — Bettany Hughes
“My best writing day starts with coffee from our local Cypriot cafe and a newspaper from the Tamil corner shop – they always ask what I’m up to, and why I haven’t brushed my hair – then a short, sharp walk. I think as I go.” — Bettany Hughes