Best Historical Documentaries About Europe (2025) — What to Watch in the U.S. & U.K. (Plus VPN Tips)

Short, bingeable, and very un-boring. If you’re a fan of historical documentaries, here are the heavyweight European history docs worth your time—with current U.S. and U.K. streaming options, plus honorable-mention podcasts and books for deeper dives. (Platforms shift often; I’ve cited reliable listings.)

Heads-up: Streaming catalogs change like borders in 1914. Always double-check your service. I cite JustWatch/PBS/official pages below.


Quick Picks (1-night standouts)

  • The World at War (1973) – Definitive WWII series.
    US: History Vault, IndieFlix. UK: UKTV Play (free, ads). JustWatch+1
  • Auschwitz: The Nazis and the ‘Final Solution’ (2005) – Meticulous, essential.
    US: (often purchase-only; streaming rotates). UK: UKTV Play (free, ads). JustWatch
  • World War II in Colour (2009) – Clear, colorized overview.
    US: Paramount+ / Prime Video (availability rotates). UK: Paramount+ / Prime Video / My5 (ads). JustWatch
  • Rise of the Nazis (2019– ) – Forensic look at democratic backsliding.
    US: BritBox, PBS, BBC Select. UK: UKTV Play / BBC iPlayer. JustWatch+1
  • Turning Point: The Bomb & the Cold War (2024) – Modern, sweeping Cold War primer.
    US & UK: Netflix. Financial Times+1

The List (with where to stream)

1) The World at War (1973)

Why watch: Still the gold standard—veteran interviews, vast archives, sober narration.
US: History Vault; IndieFlix (incl. Amazon/Channels). UK: UKTV Play (free, ads). JustWatch+1

2) Auschwitz: The Nazis and the ‘Final Solution’ (2005)

Why watch: Step-by-step account of how Auschwitz became the engine of genocide.
US: Often purchase-only; check retailer apps if not streaming. UK: UKTV Play (free, ads). JustWatch

Auschwitz gate with the phrase 'Arbeit Macht Frei' above, leading to the surrounding buildings.

3) World War II in Colour (2009)

Why watch: Colorized/restored footage + tight narration—great for students and first-timers.
US: Paramount+ and frequently on Prime Video (rotates). UK: Paramount+ / Prime Video; free with ads on My5 at times. JustWatch

4) Rise of the Nazis (2019– )

Why watch: Anatomy of a democracy’s collapse; timely and clear.
US: BritBox, PBS streaming, BBC Select (Apple TV Channel). UK: UKTV Play / BBC iPlayer. JustWatch

5) The Death of Yugoslavia (1995)

Why watch: Oral history from the people who made decisions—astonishing access.
US: Official streaming is sporadic; often purchase-only; check major storefronts. UK: Apple TV (episodes), BBC platforms intermittently. Apple TV+1

Map illustrating the front lines of the former Yugoslavia during the war in 1993, with neighboring countries labeled.

6) Apocalypse: The Second World War (2009)

Why watch: Concise six-parter built from colorized archives—easy to binge.
US: No current streamer listed; typically rotates—set alerts. UK: NOW (Sky) / Apple TV (buy). JustWatch+1

7) Civilisations (2018)

Why watch: Europe’s story through its art—context you’ll feel in every museum.
US: PBS / PBS Documentaries (Amazon Channel). UK: BBC iPlayer; also to buy on Apple/Amazon. JustWatch+1

8) The Nazis: A Warning from History (1997)

Why watch: How Nazism actually functioned—lucid, chilling, necessary.
US: BritBox; BBC Select (Apple TV Channel). UK: Availability rotates; appears on BBC/UKTV at intervals. JustWatch

9) The Spanish Civil War (1983)

Why watch: Still the clearest single-series treatment of the conflict that prefigured WWII.
US: Usually purchase-only (Amazon). UK: discovery+ (via Amazon Channel). JustWatch+1

10) Turning Point: The Bomb & the Cold War (2024)

Why watch: 9-part, interview-rich series linking 1945 to today’s tensions.
US & UK: Netflix (incl. ad tier). Financial Times+1

Pro tip: Love colorized combat footage? WWII Battles in Color sits on Paramount+ in the U.S. and is a nice add-on series. JustWatch


Honorable Mentions (Harder to find, but elite)

  • Cold War (1998, CNN/BBC) – Superb 24-part series; U.S. streaming pops up irregularly (check retailer apps & library services).
  • People’s Century (1995–97, BBC/PBS WGBH) – The 20th century from ordinary people’s perspectives; resurfaces on public-media platforms. Wikipedia

Strong Podcasts on European History

  • The Rest Is History – Frequent Europe arcs; witty and accessible.
  • BBC Radio 4 – In Our Time (History) – Expert panels (Thirty Years’ War to Black Death).
  • Hardcore History – Blueprint for Armageddon (WWI) is a rite of passage.
  • Revolutions – French & Russian Revolutions in deft, chronological depth.

Essential Books (authoritative & readable)

  • Postwar — Tony Judt – The master narrative of Europe since 1945.
  • Bloodlands — Timothy Snyder – The terror belt between Hitler and Stalin.
  • Iron Curtain — Anne Applebaum – How Eastern Europe was remade after 1945.
  • The Sleepwalkers — Christopher Clark – The road to 1914, with nuance.
  • The Pursuit of Power — Richard J. Evans – Europe 1815–1914 in one volume.
  • The Balkans — Misha Glenny – Crisp survey of a complicated region.

How to Handle Region Locks (VPN notes you can actually use)

  • VPNs can help access your home library while traveling or check a foreign catalog to see what’s available. But: most platforms’ Terms of Service prohibit using VPNs to circumvent geo-blocks, and availability/licensing differs by country. If you try one, pick reputable providers, test on multiple servers, and always follow the streaming service’s TOS and local laws. (Privacy perk: VPNs can also reduce ISP throttling.)
  • Practical workflow:
    1. Search a title on JustWatch for your country to see legit options.
    2. If it’s only in the other region, decide whether to buy/rent digitally (cleanest) or wait for rotation.
    3. Libraries/education: check PBS, Kanopy, or Hoopla in the U.S. (many public libraries include these).

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