History

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History
fromFuncheap
3 hours ago

Oral History Workshop w/ Guneeta Singh Bhalla (Los Altos)

Oral history workshop on recording and preserving family and community memories, led by Guneeta Singh Bhalla at Los Altos History Museum on January 21, 2026.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
3 hours ago

Mesopotamian city laments: a way to explain mass suffering

City laments portray urban destruction as divine decision resulting in abandonment by the city's tutelary god, suffering, and eventual restoration through the god's return.
#ancient-egypt
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
10 hours ago
History

Unveiling The Admonitions of Ipuwer: Literature or lost history?

The Admonitions of Ipuwer is a Middle Kingdom 'national disaster' didactic text contrasting order and chaos, urging a strong central government to restore order.
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
2 days ago
History

Ten Ancient Egypt Facts You Need to Know: Fun Trivia About Ancient Egypt

Ancient Egypt (circa 6000–30 BCE) developed a balanced, sophisticated civilization with advanced medicine, architecture, literature, religion, and a comforting vision of the afterlife.
History
fromMedievalists.net
21 hours ago

New Medieval Books: Ming-Dynasty China and the World Along the Silk Road - Medievalists.net

Ming China fostered expansive Silk Road networks, balancing land and maritime routes while pursuing a non-invasive foreign policy aimed at 'shared peace' with foreign powers.
#roman-archaeology
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
20 hours ago
History

Roman Panther pawing barbarian head found in Essex

Unique Roman copper-alloy vehicle fitting of a female feline with a human head found in Essex (43–200 A.D.) declared Treasure.
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 week ago
History

House of the Griffins opens with innovative livestreamed tours

The House of the Griffins on Rome's Palatine opens to the public via a livestreamed video tour revealing remarkably intact Republican frescoes and mosaic floors.
History
fromMedievalists.net
7 hours ago

When were the Middle Ages? - Medievalists.net

The Middle Ages lack a single, natural start or end; appropriate boundaries depend on whether political, religious, economic, or cultural changes are prioritized.
History
fromianVisits
7 hours ago

Not the good guys: Exhibition confronts Britain's colonial wars

Colonial Britain used counter-insurgency, population control, and covert tactics in Kenya, Malaysia, and Cyprus to retain control, causing civil wars and concealed abuses.
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 hours ago

Secret love letter shows softer side of Cambridge spy ring's alleged fifth man

It was a love letter written by one of the more important British spies of the cold war that made Tom Brass realise he had never fully known his mother. The spy in question was John Cairncross, the alleged fifth man in the Cambridge spy ring, whose spycraft also helped the Soviets win the Battle of Kursk and turn the tide of the second world war.
History
History
fromwww.london-unattached.com
9 hours ago

Hawai'i: A Kingdom Crossing Oceans

The British Museum exhibition showcases Hawai'i's vibrant material culture, revealing chiefs' regalia, gods' images, and historic ties with Britain including Kamehameha's diplomacy.
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 day ago

Remains of only building by Vitruvius found after centuries of searching

A basilica in Fano matching Vitruvius' De Architectura—columns, proportions, and layout—has been uncovered beneath Piazza Andrea Costa.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 day ago

Early Medieval Glass Study Rewrites Venice's Origins as a Glassmaking Hub - Medievalists.net

Early medieval Venice engaged in long-distance glass supply and sophisticated glassmaking techniques from the 6th–9th centuries, predating Renaissance glass prominence.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 day ago

Crusader Frontiers: Mapping the Medieval Holy Land - Medievalists.net

Medieval Crusader frontiers functioned as dynamic networks of castles, passes, ports, and strongpoints that require detailed geospatial mapping to accurately represent shifting landscapes.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 day ago

Did Uhtred of Bebbanburg Really Exist in Anglo-Saxon England?

The Last Kingdom dramatizes 9th–10th century Anglo-Saxon and Viking conflicts through Uhtred of Bebbanburg, blending historical events with fictionalized elements.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 day ago

Ur: the center of the Sumerian Renaissance

Ur was an influential Sumerian port city and ancient trade center in southern Mesopotamia with notable archaeological finds and contested biblical associations.
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 day ago

Today in History: January 20, FBI orchestrates massive Mafia takedown

January 20 is associated with multiple major historical events, including presidential inaugurations, the Iran hostage release, a major Mafia takedown, and several notable birthdays.
History
fromThe Cipher Brief
1 day ago

The Long Arc Of American Power

U.S. continental power emerged largely through territorial seizure, which enabled global military influence despite limited public recognition of that coercive origin.
History
fromianVisits
1 day ago

Hoard of coins buried on eve of the Battle of Hastings revealed in record-breaking treasure report

A 1066 hoard of 179 Harold II silver pennies was likely buried during the build-up to Hastings, illustrating late Anglo-Saxon turmoil and record PAS discoveries.
fromThe Nation
1 day ago

The Strange Story of the Famed Anti-Fascist Lament "First They Came..."

In the dire months since Donald Trump's return to power, you've no doubt read a version of the famous mea culpa "First They Came"-perhaps woven into the lines of an essay or op-ed, perhaps thumbed out on social media. Part warning, part exhortation, the short text (it's often mistaken for a poem) comes to us as tragically earned wisdom from the rise of the Nazis, alas grimly relevant to the America of today.
History
fromOpen Culture
1 day ago

Watch the Evolution of Paris Unfold in a Timelapse Video, from 300 BCE to 2025

Though it's eas­i­ly for­got­ten in our age of air trav­el and instan­ta­neous glob­al com­mu­ni­ca­tion, many a great city is locat­ed where it is because of a riv­er. That holds true every­where from Lon­don to Buenos Aires to Tokyo to New York - and even to Los Ange­les, despite its own once-uncon­trol­lable riv­er hav­ing long since been turned into a much-ridiculed con­crete drainage chan­nel.
History
History
fromConsequence
1 day ago

A Century of Stardust: How San Antonio's Majestic Theatre Escaped Demolition and Became a Cultural Beacon

San Antonio's Majestic Theatre opened in 1929, saved from demolition in 1987 and restored; first fully air-conditioned theater in Texas, approaching its centennial.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
2 days ago

Why did Uruk outshine Eridu to become Mesopotamia's powerhouse?

Uruk was a major ancient Mesopotamian city credited as the birthplace of writing and many early cultural and architectural innovations.
History
fromMedievalists.net
2 days ago

Medieval Maps of Britain - Medievalists.net

Medieval cartography depicted Britain variably, evolving from vague island outlines to clearer, labeled representations showing towns, provinces, and classical influences.
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
2 days ago

From Sherwood Forest to Texas, an andiron story

A pair of 19th century lacquered bronze and wrought iron andirons designed by architect Edward William Godwin and manufactured by Hart, Son, Peard & Co. have been acquired by the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston. This is the first time metalwork designed by Godwin has been bought by a museum. The dealer, Paul Shutler of Broadway, Worcestershire, UK, bought them from an antiques center in Connecticut last June. Before being placed on sale there they were in a private collection in the US.
History
History
fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

The Power of Private Museums

Belzoni, Mississippi, known as the 'Catfish Capital', was the site of a civil‑rights‑era lynching of Reverend George Lee after he registered Black voters.
#historical-events
fromianVisits
2 days ago

'Blimey, never knew that': the British Museum's Hawai'i exhibition surprises

Candidly, most people visiting the British Museum's Hawaii exhibition probably walk in with a lot of stereotypical preconceptions about the island nation. And will walk out with a totally different understanding of it. Understandably, we probably think of it as not much more than the Pacific island nation that's part of the USA, home to Pearl Harbour and the long-running TV show Hawaii 5.0.
History
fromESPN.com
2 days ago

Meet the 1894 Yale Bulldogs, the first college football team to go 16-0

The Bulldogs' squad was packed with talent -- seven of the 11 projected starters in an official "game souvenir" (something like a game program in the form of a bound flipbook) from the team's game against Harvard would earn All-American honors at some point in their careers -- but admittedly the sport they played was a far cry from what fans today might recognize.
History
History
fromOpen Culture
2 days ago

What Happens When Mortals Try to Drink Winston Churchill's Daily Intake of Alcohol

Winston Churchill drank and smoked heavily daily yet displayed remarkable longevity and high tolerance, with enormous recorded alcohol stores.
History
from24/7 Wall St.
2 days ago

Planes That Looked Like Total Failures, Until They Were Redeemed in Combat

Several military aircraft initially judged failures were later proven effective in real combat, revealing peacetime assessments often miss battlefield strengths.
fromNature
2 days ago

Forget formalism: mathematics was built on infighting and emotional turmoil

In the weeks leading up to September 1891, mathematician Georg Cantor prepared an ambush. For years he had sparred - philosophically, mathematically and emotionally - with his formidable rival Leopold Kronecker, one of Germany's most influential mathematicians. Kronecker thought that mathematics should deal only with whole numbers and proofs built from them and therefore rejected Cantor's study of infinity. "God made the integers," Kronecker once said. "All else is the work of man."
History
fromianVisits
2 days ago

London's Alleys: Ann's Place, Whitechapel, E1

This part of London sits just outside the historic City walls, so it attracted traders who wanted to avoid the strict rules binding City merchants. The land was later acquired by Thomas Wentworth, 1st Earl of Cleveland, who developed it, hence the main road being named Wentworth Street. If you're wondering about Ann's Place, that was probably after his wife, Anne Hopton.
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
3 days ago

Late Antique necropolis with deliberately broken pottery found in France

Adjacent to the masonry house is a burial ground in use from the 4th century through the first half of the 6th century. Approximately 60 individual inhumation burials have been unearthed, arranged in rows that are increasingly dense with graves as they approach the dwelling. The deceased were buried in cysts formed by reused tegulae (large clay roof tiles) or by rubble walls that supported wooden planks. They were placed in the graves in supine position facing west, north or south.
History
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Sweet thing: a personal look at a photographer's Cuban slavery heritage photo essay

Reconstructing ancestry disrupted by the transatlantic slave trade uses personal and archival materials and sugar as a motif to reclaim a fragmented family history.
History
from24/7 Wall St.
3 days ago

Aircraft That Forced Changes in U.S. Military Strategy

Certain aircraft forced doctrinal, organizational, and operational changes by introducing capabilities existing U.S. military doctrine could not absorb.
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
4 days ago

Previously unknown Hans Baldung Grien portrait emerges after 500 years in the sitter's family

A previously unknown drawing by the German Renaissance artist Hans Baldung Grien has been rediscovered in a wooden box belonging to the family of the woman who sat for the portrait 500 years ago. Drawings by Baldung are extremely rare, with only a handful known in private collections. One with a direct-line provenance by descent from the original sitter is an unprecedented find.
History
fromMedievalists.net
4 days ago

New Medieval Books: A Demon Spirit - Medievalists.net

Abū Nuwās's poetry is sheer joy: it never fails to delight, surprise, and excite. His diwan, his collected poems, encompasses the principal early Abbasid poetic genres: panegyrics ( madīḥ), renunciant poems ( zuhdiyyāt), lampoons ( hijāʾ), hunting poems ( ṭardiyyāt), wine poems ( khamriyyāt), love poems ( ghazaliyyāt) to males ( mudhakkarāt) and females ( muʾannathāt), and transgressive verse ( mujūn).
History
History
fromMedievalists.net
4 days ago

Ten Medieval Discoveries That Shaped How We Understand Sleep - Medievalists.net

Medieval Arabic and Persian physicians developed clinical observations and treatments of sleep, including recovery indicators, comparative treatment testing, and detailed descriptions like sleep paralysis.
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Racial quotas for immigration are back | Heba Gowayed

The visa suspension cites public-charge risk, but immigrants largely lack access to welfare, contribute net taxes, and the list echoes 1924 racial quotas.
History
fromenglish.elpais.com
4 days ago

The French Revolution that brewed amid gossip, pamphlets and popular ditties

The French Revolution remade society, advancing liberty, equality, citizenship, sovereignty, and modern institutions while uprooting ancien régime structures and inspiring contemporary political change.
History
fromemptywheel
3 days ago

Voiding International Agreements Can Have Awkward Consequences - emptywheel

The United States purchased the Danish West Indies in 1917 for $25 million; Denmark obtained tacit U.S. assent to extend interests in Greenland.
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
4 days ago

Today in History: January 17, Murderer Gary Gilmore executed by firing squad

January 17 marks numerous significant historical events, including executions, prohibition enforcement, major robberies, influential speeches, earthquake disasters, and notable music inductions.
History
fromTruthout
4 days ago

Coretta Scott King Publicly Opposed Vietnam Before MLK - and Urged Him to Follow

King's political legacy is being stripped while his national, structural critique of racism and Coretta Scott King's leadership are marginalized.
History
from24/7 Wall St.
4 days ago

Small Arms That Forced Changes in Military Doctrine

Several small arms forced militaries to rewrite doctrine, training standards, and unit roles when battlefield realities exposed doctrinal assumptions' failures.
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
5 days ago

3,000-year-old royal menagerie found in China

The excavation revealed 19 small and medium-sized pits containing bones of different animals, including: short-horned domesticated buffalo, deer, roe deer, wolves, leopards, foxes, serows, wild boars, porcupines, swans, cranes, geese, haws and eagles. What makes it clear that at least a portion of the animals were kept and likely raised in captivity rather than hunted for sacrifice is the discovery of bronze bells worn around several of the animals' necks. Twenty-nine bells were found in 13 of the 19 pits.
History
fromMedievalists.net
4 days ago

New Medieval Books: Chasing the Pearl-Manuscript - Medievalists.net

This is a book about a book: the small, cropped, somewhat ragged but brightly illustrated volume now known formally, and rather forbiddingly, as British Library MS Cotton Nero A.x/2. The fame and beauty of its four Middle English poems have given it sobriquets beyond the shelfmark, however, which are more familiar and intimate: it is also the Gawain-Manuscript or, as I will call it, the Pearl-Manuscript.
History
History
fromMedievalists.net
5 days ago

New Open-Access Book Maps a Medieval Kingdom of the Isles - Medievalists.net

Finlaggan served as the ceremonial, administrative, and judicial centre of the medieval Lordship of the Isles and contained a 12th–13th-century royal castle.
fromMedievalists.net
5 days ago

Online Course: Medieval Education: From Schools to Universities - Medievalists.net

Explore the history of education in the Middle Ages through the development of schools, curriculums, the growth of universities, and the diverse individuals who were involved in teaching and learning during this 1000 years of history. Class begins on Saturday, January 24th. This six-week course includes live 90-minute sessions with Ryder Patzuk-Russell each week from 12:00 to 1:30 pm EST.
History
History
fromMedievalists.net
5 days ago

Medieval Hebrew Prayerbook Could Fetch $7 Million at Auction - Medievalists.net

The 1415 Rothschild Vienna Mahzor, a richly illuminated Ashkenazi High Holiday prayerbook, will be auctioned at Sotheby's with an estimated $5–7 million.
fromSan Francisco Bay Times
5 days ago

Frederick Gotthold Enslin: 'Dismiss'd [From] the Service With Infamy' - San Francisco Bay Times

On March 10, 1778, Gotthold Frederick Enslin became the first soldier to be tried, convicted, and expelled from the Continental Army for "Infamous Crimes" with another serviceman. Commander in Chief George Washington personally approved the court-martial decision. Whether Washington signed the discharge order because Enslin had been found guilty of intimate relations with a private, or because Enslin had been discovered socializing with someone below his rank, which was equally forbidden and scandalous, or because Enslin had lied about the matter to a superior officer,
History
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
5 days ago

Today in History: January 16, Wayne Newton performs 25,000th Las Vegas show

January 16 marks diverse historical events including Sherman's 40-acre order, Wayne Newton's 25,000th Las Vegas show, major deaths, military actions, and notable births.
History
fromArs Technica
4 days ago

Archaeologists find a supersized medieval shipwreck in Denmark

A 1410 CE cog wreck off Denmark shows medieval merchant ships reached unprecedented sizes, reflecting rapid expansion of European maritime trade and cargo capacity.
fromianVisits
5 days ago

Pikes at the Palace: English civil war re-enactors to march through London

So, on Sunday 25th January, members of the reenactment society will converge on The Mall from all across the country, some arriving already dressed in buff coats and broad-brimmed hats, others changing into period clothing on arrival. There are pikes to be shouldered, muskets checked, and a few tentative practice swings as old drill is recalled, before the ranks are set and order restored.
History
History
fromwww.npr.org
5 days ago

If an Anne Boleyn portrait is really Elizabeth I, there's a good reason

A famous portrait identified as Anne Boleyn may actually depict Elizabeth I, with the likeness reused to strengthen Elizabeth's dynastic legitimacy.
from24/7 Wall St.
5 days ago

Military Aircraft That Only Succeeded Because of Their Skilled Crews

Some aircraft succeeded even though they made life harder for the people flying them. They demanded constant attention, punished mistakes, and left little margin for error. Instead of relying on forgiving design, these platforms forced crews to compensate through skill, planning, and coordination. Over time, combat proved that the human element was the decisive factor behind their success. Here, 24/7 Wall St. is taking a closer look at these aircraft that embodied the human factor.
History
fromMedievalists.net
6 days ago

The Survival of Esoteric Academic Fields, with Jana Matuszak and Petra Goedegebuure - Medievalists.net

A conversation with Jana Matuszak, a Sumerologist, and Petra Goedegebuure, a Hittitologist, about the prospects for the survival of smaller academic disciplines that require specialized language skills. What critical mass of experts is needed? How can these fields be combined with others?
History
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
6 days ago

Interview with Barry Strauss: Jews vs. Rome: The Latest Book by Barry Strauss

Ancient Judea resisted Roman rule across two centuries through recurrent rebellions driven by geopolitical rivalry, messianic beliefs, and internal social divisions.
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
6 days ago

Monumental Republican tombs found in Rome suburb

An monumental early Republican-era funerary complex has been discovered in a suburb of Rome. The excavation of the Via di Pietralata east of Rome also uncovered a stretch of an ancient road, a small cult building and two monumental basins dating back to the 3rd and 2nd centuries B.C. Remains from this early in the Republican era are scarce in the Eternal City, which make these finds very archaeologically significant.
History
fromDiscover the Best Podcasts | Discover Pods
6 days ago

The Best Hardcore History Episodes Teach Us About Patterns We're Repeating

Hit me like, as my high school English teacher liked to say, "like a MAC truck." The episode starts with the tale of Icarus. You know, the kid who flew too close to the sun with his wax wings and plummeted into the sea. Or the little cherub NES character. Either way. And I'm sitting there thinking: has anyone in Washington actually read this story? Played the game?
History
History
fromThe Atlantic
6 days ago

The Provocation That Helped Create America

Common Sense decisively shifted American public opinion toward independence by forcefully arguing for separation from Britain, catalyzing the Revolutionary movement.
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
6 days ago

Today in History: January 15, Great Molasses Flood' kills 21

January 15 marks varied historical events: Great Molasses Flood, Elizabeth I's coronation, Martin Luther King Jr.'s birth, Wikipedia's launch, Miracle on the Hudson.
History
fromwww.ianvisits.co.uk
6 days ago

Archaeologists uncover Victorian children's schoolwork in east London

Victorian East Londoners, including children, left material traces—school slates, marbles—and the dockside community accessed imported luxuries such as Chateau Margaux wine seals.
History
from24/7 Wall St.
6 days ago

Infantry Weapons That Changed Battlefield Tactics for Unexpected Reasons

Infantry tactics often changed as soldiers adapted to unreliable, dangerous, or awkward weapons rather than due to superior equipment.
History
fromArs Technica
6 days ago

A British redcoat's lost memoir resurfaces

Shadrack Byfield lost his left arm in the War of 1812 and experienced complicated, difficult postwar reintegration that challenges simple narratives of stoic perseverance.
History
fromSan Francisco Bay Times
6 days ago

Finding My Path: On Hemp, Hope, and Losing Your Way - San Francisco Bay Times

Hemp's resurgence exposes historical US suppression driven by industrial and political interests, while personal disillusionment with American identity intensifies amid 2025 turmoil.
fromMedievalists.net
6 days ago

New Medieval Books: Interconnected Traditions - Medievalists.net

This open-access book brings together more than thirty essays on languages and the ways they develop, interact, and influence one another. Its main focus is the Middle East, where Hebrew, Arabic, and Aramaic long existed side by side and often overlapped in everyday use, scholarship, and culture. In line with Geoffrey (Khan)'s commitment to the maximally accessible dissemination of research, this Festschrift has been published in both open-access digital editions and affordable printed formats.
History
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

Richard the Lionheart: New Study Rethinks His Capture After the Crusade - Medievalists.net

Richard I's capture becomes clearer when examined through regional political incentives and rival rulers' interests rather than legend and fate.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 week ago

Tamta's World: The Life and Encounters of a Medieval Noblewoman from the Middle East to Mongolia

Tamta's life across the 13th-century Caucasus reveals shifting gender roles, political change, and cultural interactions from Anatolia to Mongolia, illuminating medieval women's experiences.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

Urban and Rural Life in the Byzantine Empire - Medievalists.net

Byzantine daily life differed sharply between Constantinople's elite urban culture and the agrarian, obligation-bound rural majority.
History
fromwww.dw.com
1 week ago

From the Monroe Doctrine to the Donroe Doctrine

The Monroe Doctrine (1823) warned European powers against colonization in the Americas to protect US sovereignty and regional republican movements.
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 week ago

Today in History: January 14, Summer of Love' starts in San Francisco

Jan. 14 marks diverse historical events including the 1967 Human Be-In, the 1784 Treaty of Paris ratification, political milestones, cultural debuts, and notable personal events.
#claudette-colvin
History
from24/7 Wall St.
1 week ago

Weapons the U.S. Military Issued Despite Known Design Problems

Militaries often field weapons with known design flaws because urgency, cost, and limited alternatives make "good enough" preferable to perfect systems.
fromWashingtonian - The website that Washington lives by.
1 week ago

The Spy Museum's New Exhibit Explores the Hidden World of Camouflage - Washingtonian

The International Spy Museum will unveil its newest special exhibit, " Camouflage: Designed to Deceive," on March 1. The museum has previously featured artifacts that used elements of camouflage, like the Aston Martin V12 Vanquish with "adaptive camouflage" that appeared in the 2024 exhibit "Bond in Motion." For the first time, however, the Spy Museum will dedicate an all-new exhibit to exploring the history of camouflage, in an installation that will be on display for the next three years.
History
fromianVisits
1 week ago

Wellington Arch at 200: The monument that lost a statue and gained a tunnel

Originally called the Grand Triumphal Arch, it was built in part to commemorate Britain's victories in the Napoleonic Wars and as part of King George IV's remodelling of Hyde Park and Buckingham Palace. Announced in 1825, it would take a year of wrangling to settle on a design for the arch. The chosen architect, Decimus Burton, initially planned a triumphal arch modelled on the Arch of Titus in Rome,
History
History
fromianVisits
1 week ago

Tickets Alert: 2026 tours of privately owned Longford Castle

Longford Castle, a 16th-century private home on the River Avon, offers occasional National Gallery guided tours of its Old Master collection and grand interiors.
#ancient-mathematics
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 week ago

3,300-year-old faience mask found in Bahrain

A rare 3,300-year-old Dilmun faience female mask was found in a grave at Al-Hillah, Bahrain; only the second such mask discovered in Bahrain.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 week ago

Sumerian King List: Propaganda or History?

The Sumerian King List is a redacted, non-historical record used to legitimize rulers, listing implausibly long reigns and later political revisions.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

'Princely' Early Medieval Burial Discovered in England - Medievalists.net

A 7th-century elite Anglo-Saxon burial site in Suffolk includes a princely grave with a fully harnessed horse, weapons, and two individuals.
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 week ago

Victorian style secrets: the silhouettes that shaped a whole society

Striking silhouettes, sumptuous fabrics, bright colours, frills galore, and all manner of ornate accessories define the clothing of the Victorian period, that is, during the reign of Queen Victoria, which spanned seven decades of the 19th century. This was a time of dynamic change as the Industrial Revolution resulted in an expansion of the middle classes. Victorians were persuaded to part with their growing disposable income by mass advertising that ranged from gorgeous colour supplements in popular magazines to striking posters in railway stations.
History
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 week ago

Today in History: January 13, Plane crash into Potomac River in snowstorm kills 78

January 13 marks diverse historical events: air and sea disasters, political milestones, legal citizenship rulings, apologies, and notable cultural deaths.
History
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

Who Gets to Be Indian-And Who Decides?

Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance published a sensational 1928 memoir recounting Blackfeet childhood, Carlisle schooling, World War I service, and ascent into New York high society.
History
fromwww.eastbaytimes.com
1 week ago

Berkeley, a Look Back: Cutting down palm trees triggers a wail of protest'

Two 42-year-old palms were saved from a Berkeley construction site and moved to Ignacio Valley; their survival at age 142 is unknown.
from24/7 Wall St.
1 week ago

Firearms That Required Extensive Training to Use Effectively

Military history is filled with firearms that looked formidable on paper but proved far less impressive in the hands of average troops. In many cases, the issue was not flawed engineering, but unrealistic assumptions about training and doctrine. Some weapons were built with elite users in mind, soldiers who could manage the weapon and tactical nuance at a level most forces never reached.
History
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 week ago

Rare phallic ceramist stylus found in Sicily

A finely decorated 5th-century B.C. bone potter's stylus with a miniature herm and elaborate grooves suggests ceremonial or votive use beyond practical function.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 week ago

The Colony and the Company: Haiti after the Mississippi Bubble

France's Mississippi Bubble and company collapse reshaped Saint-Domingue, implanting enduring structures of debt, monopoly, coercion, and plantation violence before 1791.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 week ago

The Story of WWI in 50 Images

The First World War transformed warfare through global mechanised conflict, widespread civilian impact, and immense human suffering from Sarajevo's assassination to the Paris Peace Conference.
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

Clothing and Hair of Medieval Mongolian Women - Medievalists.net

While descriptions of the distinctive Mongolian nuqula hairstyle abound across both surviving written and visual sources (shaving the top of the head, leaving a rectangular lock on the forehead and twisting the remaining hair behind the ears in loops), rather less attention is given to how women wore their hair. In part, this is due to some of the clothing styles which obscured the hair from the view of travellers or in the paintings produced in the Mongol courts.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 week ago

From Fort Sumter to Juneteenth: how war remade the United States

The American Civil War (1861-1865) was the pivotal event in United States history and the largest armed conflict in the Western world following the end of the Napoleonic Wars (1815) and prior to the beginning of the First World War (1914). The central cause of the war was the institution of slavery, which had increasingly caused conflict between Southern states, which relied heavily on slave labor for their agrarian economy, and Northern states, which were heavily industrialized and had far less need for slaves.
History
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