Rearview Mirror Chronicles
Keith Hockton, FRAS, is a writer, publisher, and award-winning podcaster based in Penang, Malaysia, with a deep passion for uncovering the stories that shaped our world. As the Southeast Asia Editor for International Living magazine, Keith explores the intersections of history, culture, and modern life across the region.
A dynamic lecturer and storyteller, he speaks internationally on Southeast Asian politics, economics, and history—bringing the past to life with clarity, wit, and insight. Keith is also a proud Fellow of The Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland and is on a mission to make history not only accessible but genuinely entertaining for everyone.
His published books include:
• Atlas of Australian Dive Sites - Travellers Edition (Harper Collins Australia, 2003).
• Penang - An inside guide to its historic homes, buildings, monuments and parks (MPH Publishing, 2012; 2nd Edition 2014; 3rd Edition 2017).
• Festivals of Malaysia (Trafalgar Publishing, 2015).
• The Habitat Penang Hill: A pocket history (Entrepot Publishing, 2018)
• Alana and the Secret Life of Trees at Night (Entrepot Publishing, 2018)
• Penang Then & Now: A Century of Change in Pictures (Entrepot Publishing, 2019; 2nd Edition 2021
• Bersama Lima - Five Together (Entrepot Publishing, 2022)
www.entrepotpublishing.com
Rearview Mirror Chronicles
Greenwich - The Home of Time
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For most of human history, time was a local affair. Noon was when the sun sat highest in the sky, and every town lived by its own clock. Then, quietly and decisively, one place changed everything.
In this episode of Rearview Mirror Chronicles, we travel to Royal Observatory Greenwich, the unlikely hilltop that became the centre of global time. We explore how astronomers, clockmakers, sailors, and empire builders wrestled with the problem of longitude, why a single line drawn across a courtyard came to rule the world’s clocks, and how Greenwich Mean Time emerged not as a law of nature, but as a human agreement, fragile, contested, and revolutionary.
This is the story of precision and power, of pendulums and stars, of railways, navies, and modern life falling into sync. From sun dials to atomic seconds, from local noon to global coordination, Greenwich became the place where time itself was standardised.
Stand with one foot in the east and one in the west, and listen in, because this is the moment the world decided what time it really was.
For books written and published by Keith Hocton