History

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History
fromMedievalists.net
8 hours ago

New Medieval Books: The Forsaken 14th Century - Medievalists.net

Global overview of the 14th century gives roughly equal attention to all regions, introducing diverse states, cultures, and responses to sweeping change and major catastrophes.
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 day ago

Bronze Age tombs with luxury imported goods found in Cyprus

Two 14th-century BCE chamber tombs in Larnaca contained locally made and widely imported luxury goods, demonstrating extensive long-distance trade networks.
History
fromMedievalists.net
23 hours ago

Rules of a Medieval Library - Medievalists.net

Medieval university libraries had strict regulations, custodians with oath-bound responsibilities, controlled access, chained books, set hours, and penalties for infractions.
History
fromMedievalists.net
10 hours ago

Online Course: The Normans in Europe - Medievalists.net

Norman expansion from Normandy produced political and cultural influence across England, the British Isles, and the Mediterranean through conquest, dynastic ties, and family achievements.
fromwww.mercurynews.com
18 hours ago

Today in History: January 31, first Black quarterback plays and wins the Super Bowl

In 1863, during the Civil War, the First South Carolina Volunteers, an all-Black Union regiment composed of many who escaped from slavery, was mustered into federal service at Beaufort, South Carolina. In 1945, Pvt. Eddie Slovik, 24, became the first U.S. soldier since the Civil War to be executed for desertion as he was shot by an American firing squad in France.
History
History
fromMail Online
11 hours ago

Treasure hunter reveals exact location of America's El Dorado

A Lost Dutchman gold mine in Arizona's Superstition Mountains allegedly yielded vast wealth and clues; a modern treasure hunter traced its site.
History
fromDesign You Trust - Design Daily Since 2007
6 days ago

Harley-Davidson Motorcycles on a Milwaukee Beach, Photographed in 1933 for a Beautiful Promotional Shoot

Harley-Davidson released a one-year-only, acclaimed 1933 paint scheme and staged a Bradford Beach photo shoot to promote rare, low-production models.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 day ago

Festivals in Ancient Mesopotamia: Courting the Goodwill of the Gods

Akitu, a Sumerian New Year festival from circa 2900–2334 BCE, combined religious rites and political legitimization of kingship.
#greco-roman-magic
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
5 days ago
History

Alexander of Abunoteichos: Fraud or famed oracle of emperors?

Greco-Roman magicians faced persecution yet gained popular authority by mediating with gods, offering effective practical and psychological aid, and earning fame and income.
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
5 days ago
History

Alexander of Abunoteichos: Fraud or famed oracle of emperors?

Magicians in the Greco-Roman world were popular, economically successful intermediaries who combined ritual, psychology, and claimed access to otherworldly powers despite persecution.
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
2 days ago
History

Tiffany Garden Landscape window in new home at the Met

A Tiffany Studios triple landscape window by Agnes Northrop depicting a lush walled garden was installed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's American Wing.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 day ago

New Medieval Books: Twenty-Five Women Who Shaped the Italian Renaissance - Medievalists.net

Italian women between 1450 and 1650 played influential roles across politics, literature, art, music, science, and religion, leaving lasting cultural and intellectual legacies.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 day ago

From Holy War to Heritage: Places to Visit if You Want to Understand the Baltic Crusades - Medievalists.net

Baltic Crusades transformed the region through conquest, colonization and Christianization between the 12th and 15th centuries, leaving castles, churches and towns across the Baltic coast.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 day ago

Talking Templars: Assassins versus Templars - Medievalists.net

The Assassins and Knights Templar were distinct yet interconnected military-religious groups during the Crusades, with unexpected parallels in identity and conflict.
#old-high-german
#crisis-of-the-third-century
History
fromInverse
1 day ago

Uncanny Valley Forge! Here's Why One New AI Movie From A Great Director Looks Bizarre AF

Darren Aronofsky's AI-generated 1776 reenactments feel soulless, visually limited, and historically inaccurate due to current AI cinematic technology.
#historical-anniversaries
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
1 day ago

Florida coin hoard worth $1m resurfaces debate over treasure hunting

Divers uncovered more than 1,000 late 17th- and early 18th-century Spanish coins worth $1m off the coast of Florida last summer. The area, roughly 100 miles north of Miami, is known as the Treasure Coast-named for the cargo aboard the Spanish flotilla that sank there in 1715. Its 11 ships were filled to the brim with an estimated $400m in gold, silver and jewels. Treasure hunters have been on the prowl for their sunken riches ever since.
History
History
fromTechRepublic
1 day ago

National Archives Embraces AI to Modernize Its Museum - TechRepublic

The National Archives uses AI recommendation-style portals to tag, organize, and surface existing historical records for personalized museum visits without generating new content.
fromBrooklyn Eagle
1 day ago

January 30: ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY

No one denies the right of Edward Channing, professor of history in Harvard University, to make the statement to his class that George Washington had an unsurpassed temper, and did not have large brain power or education; that Benjamin Franklin dressed freakishly to be a social lion; that Alexander Hamilton became second in command through intrigues involving Washington and Adams, and that Patrick Henry, Jeremy Belknap and Noah Webster speculated on inside tips received from Congressmen.
History
History
fromianVisits
1 day ago

Samurai, but not as you know them: British Museum exhibition rewrites the warrior myth

Samurai were a shifting social class whose roles and image evolved from elite warriors to administrators, scholars and cultural symbols shaped by modern nostalgia.
History
fromHarvard Business Review
1 day ago

Is Your Workplace Set Up for AI Agents?

Replacing old components without redesigning systems limits technological gains; full benefits of new power sources required reconfiguring factory layouts and workflows.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
2 days ago

Octavia Minor: The Sister of Augustus Who Helped Birth the Roman Empire

Octavia Minor was a respected Roman noblewoman, sister of Augustus and wife of Mark Antony, who exemplified traditional Roman virtues and anchored the Julio-Claudian matriarchy.
fromMedievalists.net
2 days ago

A Medieval Bronze Cross Reunites with Its Lost Mould After 40 Years - Medievalists.net

An extraordinary archaeological discovery in eastern Germany has reunited a medieval bronze cross with the mould used to cast it-more than four decades after the mould itself was found. The object, a so-called wheel cross dating to the 10th or 11th century, offers rare and tangible evidence of early Christianisation among the Slavic populations of the region between the Elbe and Oder rivers.
History
History
fromMedievalists.net
3 days ago

Over 32,000 medieval manuscripts transcribed in four months using AI - Medievalists.net

Automated transcriptions of 32,763 medieval manuscripts were produced in four months using a standardized, machine-learning-trained corpus to enable large-scale searchable manuscript analysis.
History
fromSmithsonian Magazine
2 days ago

A Stunning Escape From Slavery Told on Tattered Pages

Thomas White escaped slavery in Maryland before the Civil War, traveled north with abolitionist assistance to Massachusetts, and his detailed, rare testimony survived for study.
fromMedievalists.net
2 days ago

The Classical Near East, with Kevin van Bladel - Medievalists.net

A conversation with Kevin van Bladel on his proposal regarding "The Classical Near East," a constellation of fields defined by the classical literary traditions of medieval Near Eastern cultures, including Byzantium.
History
#mongol-invasions
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
2 days ago

Mesopotamian Religion: Daily Life as a Form of Worship

Humans in Mesopotamia were created as co-laborers with gods to maintain cosmic order through daily worship, temple cults, and ritual labor.
#ancient-egypt
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

Women Beyond the Cross: Power, Myth, and Agency in the Viking World - Medievalists.net

Beyond the reach of medieval Christendom, Viking-age Scandinavia drew its ideas about gender less from scripture than from myth, law, and the practical demands of life in a raiding and trading world. Luke Daly explores how women could wield real authority-as estate managers, property holders, ritual figures, and, at times, political actors-within a society that was still hierarchical and often violent. Beyond the cathedrals and the long shadow cast by Rome lay societies whose moral and social assumptions were not governed by the cross.
History
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Unjust and inhuman': how royal family ignored a Black abolitionist's plea to end the slave trade

Quobna Ottobah Cugoano used his position as a Black domestic servant near royalty to petition the Prince of Wales against the transatlantic slave trade.
History
fromianVisits
2 days ago

Nine blue plaques, hanging on a wall - Nine blue plaques for London in 2026

Nine new London blue plaques in 2026 will honor figures across science, arts, activism, journalism and military history who shaped the city's cultural and intellectual life.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

The overlooked' saint: digitally recreated shrine marks 800th anniversary of William of York

The slab, found in a York drain in the 19th century, has gone on display at a new exhibition marking the 800th anniversary of Saint William a forgotten, once adored martyr said to be responsible for that miracle and others. At the centre of the exhibition is a cutting-edge, digital recreation of an imposing shrine to William that once stood in York Minster's nave but was broken up and buried to protect it from the ravages of Henry VIII's reformation.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
3 days ago

Sumerians: Inventors of Civilization

The semimythical Sumerian King List (composed circa 2112 to circa 2004 BCE) claims that, when kingship was established on earth by the gods, it descended from heaven to the city of Eridu, linking the concepts of law and order with that of the city, a paradigm that would continue throughout Sumerian civilization. Sumer was the southern counterpart to the northern region of Akkad,
History
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
3 days ago

Mesopotamian Government: Helping and Serving the Gods

Ancient Mesopotamian government treated rulers and officials as divinely chosen stewards modeled on family roles, with kings handling civic administration and priests overseeing temple affairs.
History
fromMedievalists.net
3 days ago

David Abulafia, historian of the medieval Mediterranean, passes away - Medievalists.net

David Abulafia, a leading medieval Mediterranean historian, has died aged 76; renowned for major works on the Mediterranean, oceans, and medieval Italy and Sicily.
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
4 days ago

Sealed bronze medieval reliquary found in Turkey

An intact sealed bronze reliquary cross from 9th–11th century Lystra was found containing shroud-like textile and designed to be worn as a pendant.
History
fromI Love Typography Ltd
2 months ago

Dumb Ways to Die: Printed Ephemera - I Love Typography Ltd

Seventeenth-century London printed weekly Bills of Mortality, sold widely for a penny, revealing profitable public demand for mortality statistics and morbid curiosity.
History
fromFuncheap
3 days ago

SF History Night | Pacific Heights

Monthly themed talks by local experts present diverse San Francisco history topics with slide shows at Newman Hall; $10 admission or free for SFHA members.
History
fromBusiness Insider
3 days ago

NASA's space shuttle Challenger exploded 40 years ago today, killing its 7-person crew. Photos reveal Challenger's legacy.

Space Shuttle Challenger broke apart during launch on January 28, 1986, killing seven crew members and prompting major safety and policy changes at NASA.
History
fromI Love Typography Ltd
3 weeks ago

Heart-shaped Books - I Love Typography Ltd

Cultures historically assigned varied meanings to the heart, shaping embalming practices, sacrificial rites, devotional symbolism, and the heart-shaped pictogram's development.
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

You'd be ashamed to bring someone here': The struggling billionaire-owned high street that shows Reform's road to No 10

Under blue skies and bunting, the whole of County Durham seemed to turn out for the young Queen Elizabeth II. They lined the streets in their thousands, waving flags and marvelling at the grand royal procession weaving past their newly built homes. It was 27 May 1960 and the recently crowned queen was officially opening the town of Newton Aycliffe on her first provincial tour after the birth of her third child, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, three months earlier.
History
History
fromMedievalists.net
4 days ago

New Medieval Books: The Florentine florin - Medievalists.net

The Florentine florin emerged as a mid-thirteenth-century gold currency whose political shaping and wide circulation made it a central medium for medieval trade and power.
History
fromSmithsonian Magazine
4 days ago

Archaeologists Discovered the 'Holy Grail' of Shipwrecks a Decade Ago. Now, They're Finally Beginning to Unravel the Secrets of the 'San Jose'

A priceless 1708 Spanish galleon, the San José, was discovered in 2015 but remains contested amid political and legal battles over ownership and treasure.
History
fromMedievalists.net
5 days ago

Reading in Byzantium: Literacy, Books, and a World of Texts - Medievalists.net

Byzantine reading was communal and performative, woven into religious, educational, and administrative life while preserving classical learning within a Christian intellectual framework.
fromwww.mercurynews.com
4 days ago

Today in History: January 27, Michael Jackson burned in filming accident

Today in history: On Jan. 27, 1984, singer Michael Jackson suffered serious burns to his scalp when pyrotechnics set his hair on fire during the filming of a Pepsi-Cola TV commercial at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles. Also on this date: In 1756, composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born in Salzburg, Austria. In 1880, Thomas Edison received a patent for his incandescent electric lamp.
History
fromTime Out London
4 days ago

A vast immersive Vikings experience is coming to London in March

You know the drill by now: large scale immersive exhibitions have gone from nowhere to ubiquity in London, with the last year alone bringing us big, tech-augmented, family-facing shows devoted to the likes of Tutankhamun, the Titanic, and the destruction of Pompeii.
History
History
fromianVisits
4 days ago

Trumpers Crossing Halte - the west London railway station that closed 100 years ago

Trumpers Crossing Halte was a tiny GWR 'Halte' on the Brentford Branch Line that opened in 1904 and closed after limited passenger use.
History
fromSlate Magazine
4 days ago

It's Long Been Considered One of the Most Mysterious Places in the World. The Answer Was Hiding in Plain Sight.

Easter Island's remote isolation and massive stone statues have prompted mystery and speculative theories, now challenged by an archaeological reinterpretation of the island's history.
History
fromABC7 Los Angeles
4 days ago

Woman born in concentration camp shares her story as world marks Holocaust Remembrance Day

Ilana Kantorowicz Shalem, born in Bergen-Belsen days before liberation, is among the youngest Holocaust survivors and now begins sharing her wartime experience as survivors dwindle.
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Access denied: why Muslims worldwide are being debanked' | Oliver Bullough

A Welsh farm project reconnects Somali diaspora with culture while exposing global banking unfairness that excludes marginalized communities and threatens their participation.
History
fromBig Think
4 days ago

The computing revolution that secretly began in 1776

Computing emerged during the Industrial Revolution as mechanized, systematized calculation to process vast data for astronomy, mapping, trade, and large-scale production.
History
fromSilicon Canals
4 days ago

People who grew up in the 60s and 70s usually have these 10 qualities that younger generations find remarkable - Silicon Canals

Adults raised in the 1960s-70s retain practical repair skills, strong memory, resourcefulness, and work approaches that often impress younger generations.
fromSmithsonian Magazine
5 days ago

History Remembered This Black Medal of Honor Recipient for the Two Worst Days of His Life. A New Book Dives Into the Vietnam Vet's Story

"These five soldiers, in their separate moments of supreme testing, summoned a degree of courage that stirs wonder and respect and an overpowering pride in all of us," he continued. "Through their spectacular courage, they set themselves apart in a very select company. They represent the contribution of more than half a million young Americans to a world of order and of peace."
History
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
6 days ago

First Roman marching camps discovered in Saxony-Anhalt

Four Roman marching camps found in Saxony-Anhalt prove Roman legions reached the Elbe in the 3rd century, the northeasternmost camps in Germania.
fromSmithsonian Magazine
5 days ago

Meet 13 People Who Survived on Deserted Islands, From a Real-Life Robinson Crusoe to a Noblewoman Marooned With Her Lover

Narratives about deserted islands often depict the ingenuity required to build shelter and acquire food and water, as well as the mental fortitude needed to patiently wait for rescue. Many of these story lines are exaggerated and sensationalized for dramatic effect. Still, the challenge of being pitted against nature, secluded from civilization and forced to live with only the barest essentials taps into themes of resilience and adventure that have always fascinated humans.
History
History
fromSmithsonian Magazine
5 days ago

Newly Digitized Records Reveal How Indigenous People Shared Their Knowledge of New Zealand's Plants With Captain Cook's Crew

Digitized 18th-century botanical records reveal detailed knowledge exchange between European botanists and Māori during Captain Cook's 1769 New Zealand expedition.
History
fromSmithsonian Magazine
5 days ago

The Driver's License Used to Say Who Can Drive. Now It Says a Lot About Who We Are

Driver's licenses evolved from simple paper permits into identity documents with personal data and security technology, supporting road safety and national security.
History
fromMedievalists.net
5 days ago

Medieval hall discovered in Northern England - Medievalists.net

Excavations at Sparrow Croft near Skipsea Castle reveal rare Anglo-Saxon high-status structures: a malthouse, timber tower foundation and large hall predating 1066.
fromSmithsonian Magazine
5 days ago

How a Sudden Winter Storm in 1617 Sparked the Deadliest Witchcraft Trials in Norwegian History

This freak storm eventually became the catalyst for Norway's most infamous witch trials-some of the most intense in Europe. Known as the Finnmark witchcraft trials, the proceedings continued throughout the 17th century. By 1692, 111 women and 24 men had been prosecuted for practicing witchcraft; 91 of these individuals, the vast majority of them women, were sentenced to death-a figure that represents around one-third of those condemned for the crime of witchcraft in the entirety of Norway's history.
History
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
5 days ago

Medicine in Ancient Mesopotamia: A Gift of the Gods to Their People

Gula, the Sumerian goddess of healing, guided Mesopotamian physicians whose specialized, long-trained practice combined divine attribution of illness with practical medical roles.
History
fromSmithsonian Magazine
5 days ago

Samuel Green Freed Himself and Others From Slavery. Then He Was Imprisoned Over Owning a Book

Samuel Green secretly aided Underground Railroad conductors; possession of Uncle Tom's Cabin resulted in his arrest and elevated his status as an abolitionist symbol.
fromSmithsonian Magazine
5 days ago

The British Crown Enslaved Thousands at the Height of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade. New Research Reveals Their Stories

On August 7, 1823, 19 enslaved people in Barbados became the property of the British crown after their enslavers died without legal heirs. These individuals had names, families and histories that stretched across years of shared survival under slavery. They included Quow and his son, Caesar; Orange and her son, October; and Abel and Lubbah and their children, Thomas, Kitty and Becky. There were also four sisters-Deborah, Sukey, Betsey and Polly-and their brother, Thomas, along with their children.
fromSmithsonian Magazine
5 days ago

Why the Computer Scientist Behind the World's First Chatbot Dedicated His Life to Publicizing the Threat Posed by A.I.

It could have been a heart-to-heart between friends. "Men are all alike," one participant said. "In what way?" the other prompted. The reply: "They're always bugging us about something or other." The exchange continued in this vein for some time, seemingly capturing an empathetic listener coaxing the speaker for details. But this mid-1960s conversation came with a catch: The listener wasn't human. Its name was Eliza, and it was a computer program that is now recognized as the first chatbot,
History
History
fromSmithsonian Magazine
5 days ago

The Time When New York City Seriously Considered Seceding From the United States

In 1860 New York City seriously considered secession under Mayor Fernando Wood, driven by cultural and financial divides and backed by elite financiers.
History
fromABC7 San Francisco
5 days ago

Japanese American soldiers once branded 'enemy aliens' to be promoted posthumously

Seven Japanese American ROTC cadets labeled 'enemy aliens' will be posthumously promoted to officer ranks for their World War II service in the 442nd.
#california-gold-rush
History
fromianVisits
5 days ago

From Tudor treason to coded classifieds: the National Archives puts love on trial

The National Archives displays historical love letters and related records revealing forbidden, risky, and legally consequential romances preserved as state documents.
History
fromOpen Culture
6 days ago

Hannah Arendt Explains How Propaganda Uses Lies to Erode All Truth & Morality: Insights from The Origins of Totalitarianism

Propaganda and media infrastructure enabled the Nazi minority to manipulate public opinion, break resistance, and facilitate mass participation in atrocities.
#holocaust
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
6 days ago

It's a new beginning at Oregon City's End of the Oregon Trail center * Oregon ArtsWatch

OREGON CITY - It'll be a long and arduous journey emblematic of the original 1840s Oregon Trail migration itself. But, in the end, some years from now, restoration of the End of the Oregon Trail Interpretive and Visitor Center in Oregon City should produce a beacon of history, education, and pride for the state and citizens of all backgrounds. An updated venue will include a new addition housing original wagons, a beautiful plank house, amphitheater events, and expanded programming.
History
fromThe New Yorker
5 days ago

Easter Island and the Allure of "Lost Civilizations"

Finding out what actually happened in the deep past can be a slog, so when ancient history is packaged as mystery-spine-tingling but solvable-it's hard to resist. Who doesn't want to know how a lost civilization got lost, or where it might be hiding? The trouble is that what gets touted as a lost civilization often turns out to have been there all along.
History
fromwww.bbc.com
5 days ago

'We can learn from the Battle of Cable Street'

A musical dramatizes the 1936 Battle of Cable Street where Jewish, Irish and communist Londoners blocked Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists.
History
fromMail Online
6 days ago

Father of alien archaeology says pyramids not built by human hands

Erich von Däniken claimed extraterrestrials aided ancient civilizations in building pyramids, but archaeological evidence attributes pyramid construction to organized human labor.
fromMail Online
5 days ago

Mystery of Egypt's pyramids deepens as hidden megastructure revealed

More than 200 scans from multiple satellites, including Italy's Cosmo-SkyMed and the US-based Capella Space, showed uniform results suggesting massive pillars about 65 feet in diameter wrapped in spirals and plunging nearly 4,000 feet deep. Those pillars appear to end in 260-foot cubic chambers beneath all three pyramids and the Sphinx, which Biondi described as 'huge chambers' measuring roughly 260 feet in length and width.
History
History
fromMedievalists.net
6 days ago

Montaillou to ICE: The Medieval Roots of Snitching - Medievalists.net

Denunciation by ordinary neighbors enabled persecution historically and continues today through formalized surveillance and reporting systems that rely on people informing on others.
History
fromwww.medievalists.net
6 days ago

Hattin and the Templars' Last Stand

The Templars' desperate rear-guard charge at the Horns of Hattin in July 1187 failed disastrously, marking a pivotal collapse of the Crusader army.
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 week ago

1,400-year-old Zapotec tomb found in southern Mexico

A 1,400-year-old Zapotec tomb with exceptionally preserved murals, reliefs, and ritual iconography was unearthed in Oaxaca, offering new insights into Zapotec ancestor worship and hierarchy.
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
6 days ago

Today in History: January 25, Charles Manson convicted of murder, conspiracy

January 25 marks historic events including Manson convictions, first Winter Olympics opening, end of the Battle of the Bulge, and NASA's Opportunity landing.
#partition-1947
fromSFGATE
6 days ago

'Renew your vim and vigor': When Disneyland had a private men's club

Ah, the Disneyland of old, when people really dressed the part. Men wore suits and hats in the theme park. Women wore dresses, stockings and high heels. If you know the exhaustion of a park day in athleisure wear and sneakers, imagine what it was like in 3-inch heels. And while those ornately outfitted women were running around chasing their kids in the scorching Anaheim heat, the men were ... enjoying the spa?
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

The Battle of Dupplin Moor (1332) - Medievalists.net

Scotland's in turmoil in the 1330s-and Edward III spots an opening. In this episode of Bow & Blade, Michael and Kelly break down the Battle of Dupplin Moor, where tactics, terrain, and timing turn chaos into catastrophe. The hosts of Bow & Blade: Kelly DeVries is a Professor at Loyola University in Maryland and Honorary Historical Consultant at the Royal Armouries. You can learn more about Kelly on his university webpage.
History
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

Women Beyond the Cross: Power, Myth, and Agency in the Viking World - Medievalists.net

Viking-age Scandinavian women could hold genuine authority as estate managers, property holders, ritual figures, and occasional political actors within hierarchical society.
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 week ago

Extraordinary find: 10th c. bronze wheel cross matches mold found 43 years ago

A 10th–11th century bronze wheel cross found in western Havelland precisely matches a 1983 Spandau casting mold, offering tangible evidence of early Christianization in Brandenburg.
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 week ago

Today in History: January 24, suicide bomber kills 37 at Moscow airport

January 24 is associated with diverse historical events including violent attacks, uprisings, discoveries, technological milestones, and notable deaths spanning the 19th–21st centuries.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

What links Wendy's burgers and Mercedes-Benz cars? The Saturday quiz

1 Lydia of Thyatira is claimed to be the first person in Europe to do what? 2 In what country do mountain lions eat penguins? 3 Single pot still is a style of what drink? 4 Violet, you're turning violet is a line in what book? 5 Whose Easter Sonata was originally attributed to her brother? 6 Which two small UK cities share a name? 7 Who spoke the pitmatic dialect? 8 Which football team won five NASL titles? What links:
History
History
fromsfist.com
1 week ago

New Book Explores the Bay Area's First Cult, Which Called Santa Rosa Home

Thomas Lake Harris founded the Brotherhood of the New Life, a utopian California commune marked by sexual coercion, authoritarian matchmaking, and financial scandal.
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