History

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History
fromMedievalists.net
4 hours 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.
#monroe-doctrine
fromwww.dw.com
1 hour ago
History

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.
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
7 hours ago
History

The Monroe Doctrine: How a 200-Year-Old US Foreign Policy Remains Relevant Today

The Monroe Doctrine asserted US opposition to European intervention in the Western Hemisphere and evolved into a justification for U.S. policing of Latin America.
fromWashingtonian - The website that Washington lives by.
2 hours 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
History
fromianVisits
2 hours 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.
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
17 hours ago

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
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
9 hours 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
16 hours 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.mercurynews.com
8 hours 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
fromianVisits
9 hours 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
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 day 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 day 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 day 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 day 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 day 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 day 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 day 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 day 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
#archaeology
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
2 days 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.
#first-world-war
fromMedievalists.net
2 days 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
2 days 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
fromHigh Country News
2 days ago

What does 'time immemorial' really mean? - High Country News

Natives have been told our whole lives - in classrooms, through academic research and in popular myth - that humans first migrated into North America around 12,000 years ago. Native histories consistently disagree, however, asserting that humans were here much earlier than that. Using the phrase time immemorial is a way to push back; it succinctly communicates longevity without quibbling over exact numbers and dates.
History
History
fromwww.aljazeera.com
1 day ago

Portuguese Empire: Ports and Profits

Portuguese global power relied on fortified ports, trade, and slavery, linking maritime control to modern economic systems and persistent patterns of inequality.
fromwww.mercurynews.com
2 days ago

Today in History: January 12, Joe Namath, New York Jets win Super Bowl III

On Jan. 12, 1969, the biggest upset in Super Bowl history occurred as the New York Jets of the American Football League defeated the Baltimore Colts of the National Football League 16-7 in Super Bowl III, played at the Orange Bowl in Miami. Also on this date: In 1915, the U.S. House of Representatives rejected a proposed constitutional amendment to give women nationwide the right to vote.
History
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

Switching water sources improved hygiene of Pompeii's public baths

There were variations in the chemical composition of the deposits, indicating the replacement of boilers for heating water and a renewal of water pipes in the infrastructure of Pompeii, particularly during the time period when modifications were being made to the Republican baths. The results for the Republican baths' heated pools, for instance, showed clear contamination from human activity, specifically human waste (sweat, sebum, urine, or bathing oil), which suggests the water wasn't changed regularly.
History
fromTheregister
2 days ago

How CP/M-86's delay handed Microsoft the keys to the kingdom

It's the story of why the 16-bit version of Digital Research CP/M was late, but the delayed arrival of this now-obscure OS is what catalyzed the development of a different, but source-level compatible, OS. That OS started Microsoft on its way to its current $3.5 trillion capitalization, and is also what led to the development of OS/2, Windows, and indirectly Linux.
History
History
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 days ago

AI helps identify Nazi killer in one of the Holocaust's most shocking photographs

AI and family collaboration identified Jakobus Onnen as the shooter in a 1941 Holocaust-by-Bullets photograph; the victim remains unidentified.
History
fromMedievalists.net
3 days ago

New Medieval Books: Impossible Recovery - Medievalists.net

Julian of Norwich's illness and visions show how sickness and revelation intertwine, shaping personal recovery and the subsequent expression and theorization of experience.
History
fromMedievalists.net
3 days ago

Victory in Death: The Templars at Cresson - Medievalists.net

Templar zeal led to reckless charges against vastly superior forces, turning battlefield defeats into celebrated martyrdom and precluding negotiated truces.
History
fromMedievalists.net
2 days ago

New Online Course: Medieval Europe 870 - 1300 - Medievalists.net

10-week course starting January 15 offers a panoramic overview of European history (9th–13th centuries), covering politics, economics, gender, technology, warfare, society, and external relations.
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
3 days ago

Rich graves of three elite warriors found in Hungary

Three elite 10th-century Hungarian Conquest cavalry graves in Akaszto contained elite weapons, gilded harness fittings, and an unprecedented intact silver belt with textile remains.
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
3 days ago

Today in History: January 11, Mark McGwire admits to steroids use

Jan. 11 is marked by multiple historical events, notable milestones, and celebrity birthdays spanning politics, exploration, public health, and culture.
History
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
3 days ago

'Basques of the American West': Richard W. Etulain summarizes Basque history and literature * Oregon ArtsWatch

Basque origins, migration to the American West, cultural distinctiveness, sheep-herding economic adaptation, major scholarship, proposed research areas, and challenges for researchers.
#temperance-movement
#late-roman-archaeology
History
fromMedievalists.net
4 days ago

Crossing Under Fire: River Operations in Early Medieval Warfare - Medievalists.net

Forcing a river crossing under enemy resistance demands extensive planning, deception, and logistics, a persistent and difficult military problem from antiquity through modern warfare.
fromMedievalists.net
4 days ago

Fimbulvetr: When the Medieval World Saw the Sun Go Dark - Medievalists.net

In the medieval world, strange signs in the sky were rarely ignored. In AD 536, when the sun seemed to lose its light and the climate turned harsh, that catastrophe may have been remembered in the terrifying Norse legend of Fimbulvetr. In our medieval past, the sky was thought to be tightly connected with the landscape. Historical sources show a deep sense of fear caused by celestial phenomena such as comets, meteors, bolides, and even the aurora borealis.
History
History
fromMedievalists.net
3 days ago

Is the Staffordshire Hoard 'Mystery Object' a Holy Warrior's Headpiece? - Medievalists.net

A unique Staffordshire Hoard object may be an ornamental mid-7th-century headdress worn by a priest, bishop, or holy warrior on the battlefield.
#historical-events
History
fromArchDaily
4 days ago

Taiping Elementary School, Keelung / KHAA (Kuo+Huang and Associates)

Taiping Elementary School on Keelung’s west harbor hill served dockworkers' children, flourished in the 1960s, and closed in 2017 from industrial change and population decline.
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
5 days ago

Organizing Workers in the Shadow of Slavery: Global Inequality, Racial Boundaries, and the Rise of Unions in American and British Capitalism, 1870-1929

Rudi Batzell offers a material account of how racial hierarchies formed in the United States, framing the history of racism in the labor movement as a question not of biases and prejudice but of access to property and land. Racism is often considered a question of thoughts, feelings, and beliefs. The accused racist will sometimes deploy the tired old defense that he or she "has black friends,"
History
History
fromMedievalists.net
5 days ago

10 Medieval Studies' Articles Published Last Month - Medievalists.net

Local populations in Anatolia used spolia to assert cultural continuity with the ancient and Byzantine past, challenging exclusive Western claims to that heritage.
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
5 days ago

Tang Dynasty noblewoman buried with gold hair ornaments and Persian coins

A richly furnished Tang Dynasty noblewoman's tomb in Shaanxi with Persian coins and hybrid metalwork reveals 7th-century Sino-foreign trade and cultural exchange.
History
fromMedievalists.net
4 days ago

Winchester Cathedral Reburies Medieval Remains Linked to Royals and Bishops - Medievalists.net

Winchester Cathedral has reinterred scientifically tested medieval human remains in six mortuary chests, grouping individuals by radiocarbon dates, aiming to identify occupants by 2026–2027.
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
5 days ago

Today in History: January 9, Americans arrive in Lingayen Gulf during World War II

Jan. 9 records significant historical events across centuries and notable celebrity birthdays, including wartime landings, political milestones, disasters, and public figures' birthdays.
History
fromThe Local France
5 days ago

Why does France want its leaders to 'channel De Gaulle' in dealings with USA?

Charles de Gaulle led a two-phase career: wartime resistance leader and later president who pursued independent French policy and had mixed relations with US presidents.
History
from24/7 Wall St.
5 days ago

Combat Aircraft That Were Designed for Wars That Never Happened

Many combat aircraft were designed for strategic, large-scale conflicts but proved poorly suited to regional, counterinsurgency, or modern airspace threats.
fromTravel + Leisure
5 days ago

Georgia May Get Its First National Park Soon-and It Offers More Than Just Scenic Hiking Trails

Taking its name from the word for "boiling waters," Ocmulgee Mounds National Historical Park in Georgia dates back more than 12,000 years and features Indigenous earthen mounds used for burials and ceremonies. Today, it's in talks to be designated a national park with expanded acreage. "This was a capital city for the Creek Confederacy," says Tracie Revis, a member of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation and director of advocacy for the Ocmulgee National Park and Preserve Initiative (ONPPI).
History
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
6 days ago

Complete carnyx, boar head standard found in Norfolk

A near-complete Iron Age carnyx and Britain’s first boar’s-head flag standard were found in a Thetford hoard dating to 50 B.C.–50 A.D.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
6 days ago

How did a single road save Verdun from falling in WWI?

The Battle of Verdun (Feb–Dec 1916) embodied German attrition strategy, inflicted massive casualties with little strategic gain; France held, leaving Germany too exhausted for major offensives until 1918.
History
fromThe Atlantic
5 days ago

The Early Days of American Imperialism

Mark Twain used a satirical rewrite of "Battle Hymn of the Republic" to expose American hypocrisy in overseas imperialism and the Philippines war.
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
6 days ago

Today in History: January 8, Lyndon Johnson declares war on poverty'

Jan. 8 marks historically significant U.S. and global events spanning political addresses, wartime battles, civil-rights gains, terrorist cases, and major criminal and military incidents.
History
fromArchDaily
6 days ago

National Museum of the United States Army / Skidmore, Owings & Merrill

The National Museum of the United States Army presents the Army's history through individual soldiers, serving as an educational, symbolic front door near Washington, D.C.
History
fromTasting Table
6 days ago

The Louisville Cemetery Where Several Bourbon Legends Are Buried - Tasting Table

Cave Hill Cemetery in Louisville is the burial site of several influential Kentucky bourbon pioneers, including Pappy VanWinkle, William Larue Weller, and George Garvin Brown.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 week ago

Empress of the Nile: The Daredevil Archaeologist Who Saved Egypt's Ancient Temples from Destruction

Christiane Desroches-Noblecourt, a pioneering Egyptologist, rescued and preserved Egypt's ancient temples through scholarship, advocacy, and decisive cultural stewardship.
History
fromMedievalists.net
6 days ago

New Medieval Books: More Swindles from the Late Ming - Medievalists.net

Late-Ming collection catalogs diverse scams, sexual exploitation, sorcery, and moral corruption, revealing pre-modern Chinese cons, social instability, and normative anxieties.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

Medieval Self-Portraits: Ten Artists Who Put Themselves in the Picture - Medievalists.net

Medieval self-portraits functioned as devotional, personal, and social statements revealing how individuals in the Middle Ages wanted to be seen.
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 week ago

Byzantine-era monastic compound unearthed in Upper Egypt

The foundations of several buildings made of mudbrick were unearthed, evidence of a self-sustaining residential community that sheds new light on early Christian monastic life in the region. Details of the architectural remains point to a well-planned complex. Mohamed Abdel-Badei, head of the Ancient Egyptian Antiquities Sector, said the mission uncovered rectangular mudbrick buildings oriented west to east, with dimensions ranging from about 8 by 7 metres to 14 by 8 metres.
History
fromMedievalists.net
6 days ago

Medieval gold ring discovered in Norway - Medievalists.net

A gold ring with a deep-blue, oval setting - decorated with fine spirals of filigree and tiny granulated beads - has been recovered from medieval deposits in Tønsberg, a historic town in southeastern Norway. The ring was found during an excavation in the modern town centre, where archaeologists have been investigating layers of urban life preserved beneath today's streets. The discovery was made within the protected archaeological area known as Tønsberg Medieval Town.
History
History
from24/7 Wall St.
1 week ago

The History of US Army Sidearms From Past to Present

U.S. Army sidearms evolved from 18th-century flintlock pistols to modern 9mm semi-automatic service pistols such as the Sig Sauer M17 and M18.
fromInfoWorld
1 week ago

What the loom tells us about AI and coding

In the early 19th century, the invention of the loom threatened to turn the labor market upside down. Until then, cloth was made by skilled artisans, but the loom enabled more cloth to be made more quickly by less-skilled workers. One could even argue that the Jacquard loom, a loom that allowed for complex weaving patterns via punch cards, was the first computer.
History
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Aldrich Ames, CIA agent who spied for Soviet Union and Russia, dies aged 84

Aldrich Ames, a CIA agent, spied for the Soviet Union and Russia for nearly a decade, causing one of the most damaging US intelligence breaches.
History
fromThe Mercury News
1 week ago

Local efforts to document Japanese American incarceration show history repeating

Executive Order 9066 forcibly removed over 120,000 people of Japanese descent into remote internment camps, driven by unfounded wartime fears.
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 week ago

Local efforts to document Japanese American incarceration show history repeating

Executive Order 9066 led to incarceration of over 120,000 Japanese Americans in remote camps; local activists revisited that history amid modern immigration policy threats.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 week ago

Who was Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederate States?

Jefferson Davis led the Confederate States as its only president, a former soldier and politician blamed for Confederate defeat and imprisoned after the Civil War.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

Early Medieval England Saw Continuous Migration, Study Finds - Medievalists.net

Migration in early medieval England was continuous from the end of Roman rule to the eve of the Norman Conquest, with regional and sex differences.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

New Online Course: Urban Europe: Towns and Cities in the Middle Ages - Medievalists.net

A four-week course examines the rise and management of medieval European cities, everyday town life, occupations, and religious and cultural influences.
History
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

The New History of Fighting Slavery

José Antonio Aponte compiled illustrated histories of Black resistance and global figures to inspire rebellion and assert the right to freedom.
fromThe Nation
1 week ago

Before There Was Nicolas Maduro, There Was Cipriano Castro

Debt, poverty, war, and death in early-20th-century Venezuela were direct consequences of the machinations of Johnny Mack, a Philadelphia contract man connected to the highest ranks of the Republican Party. Mack used Venezuela to stage a war against his US rivals to establish a monopoly on asphalt, gaining control of a sputtering tar pit, which has been compared by more than a few to the gates of hell, near which no trees could grow nor birds fly.
History
History
fromwww.nytimes.com
1 week ago

52 Places to Go in 2026

The Northeast offers extensive U.S. 250th birthday celebrations with parades, museum exhibitions, reenactments, concerts, themed events, and fireworks across historic sites.
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
1 week ago

A taster of the British Museum's Hawaii show in three objects

The accompanying catalogue for Hawai' i: a Kingdom Crossing Oceans features more than 150 works, from ancient Hawaiian treasures to important contemporary pieces, telling "a compelling story of movement, allyship and cultural exchange [between the UK and Hawaii]". An inventory of the entire collection of Native Hawaiian works housed at the British Museum, the largest collection outside of Hawaii, is included in the catalogue.
History
fromOpen Culture
1 week ago

The Greek Mythology Family Tree: A Visual Guide Shows How Zeus, Athena, and the Ancient Gods Are Related

It was long ago that poly­the­ism, as the sto­ry comes down to us, gave way to monothe­ism. Human­i­ty used to have many gods, and now almost every reli­gious believ­er acknowl­edges just one - though which god, exact­ly, does vary. Some pop­u­lar the­o­ries of "big his­to­ry" hold that, as the scale of a soci­ety grows larg­er, the num­ber of deities pro­posed by its faiths gets small­er.
History
fromwww.berkeleyside.org
1 week ago

Remembering Siegfried Brockmann, who escaped from East Germany in 1948 and became a VP at Cole Chemical Company

Siegfried's remarkable life was one of contrasts, new beginnings, and lasting friendships. Childhood on the Geyersberg in the town of Dobeln in Saxony, Germany, was magical; a loving family, school friends, and the innate charm of the town made it so. But this was also a time in Germany of regimentation and uncertainty. Siegfried was drafted into the German anti-aircraft when he was 15. What followed under the communist regime was equally unpleasant.
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 week ago

National Portrait Gallery acquires only known photographs of Ada Lovelace

Ada Lovelace is recognized today as the world's first computer programmer, thanks to her 1843 paper in which she wrote the first algorithm on punch cards to make calculations on Charles Babbage's Analytical Engine. That same year, she had daguerreotype portraits taken by photographer Antoine Claudet. Claudet had learned how to use the new technology from Louis Daguerre himself in the late 1830s.
History
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 week ago

Alexander von Humboldt: A Concise Biography

Alexander von Humboldt emerges as a historically situated scientific polymath whose explorations, networks, and contextual influences helped shape modern scientific and global thought.
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

There's this whole other story': inside the fight to end slavery in the Americas

Enslaved people across Spanish-, Portuguese-, and English-speaking Americas led a four-century, interconnected struggle of rebellion and resistance that ultimately produced abolition.
History
fromHarvard Gazette
1 week ago

When Cambridge was a 'tiny Cuba'- Harvard Gazette

In summer 1900, over 1,200 Cuban educators attended a six-week Harvard summer school, reshaping perceptions of race, gender, and national identity through cultural exchange.
History
fromwww.standard.co.uk
1 week ago

Historian Lucy Worsley believes team have solved Thames Torso murder mystery

Historians identify James Crick, a violent bargeman, as the likely Thames Torso Murderer who dismembered multiple women in late Victorian London.
History
from24/7 Wall St.
1 week ago

Temporary Military Gear and Assets That Became Permanent Fixtures

Temporary, emergency military gear often becomes permanent when battlefield performance, reliability, and adaptability outperform planned replacements, reshaping doctrine and procurement priorities.
History
fromBusiness Insider
1 week ago

I traced my genealogy to uncover a side of my family I never knew

Using online genealogy tools enabled reconstruction and discovery of a previously unknown paternal family history after estrangement and loss erased personal knowledge.
History
fromwww.theartnewspaper.com
1 week ago

The dark side of collecting: book reveals ugly history of art's great coveters

Collecting has oscillated between admired obsessive passion and febrile, morally ambiguous compulsion across historical epochs.
#free-admission
History
fromianVisits
1 week ago

London's Alleys: Gardener's Lane, City of London, EC4

Gardner's Lane in the City of London evolved from a rat-infested offal lane into a riverside wharf area later transformed into warehouses and office uses.
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Sega co-founder David Rosen dies aged 95

David Rosen co-founded Sega, pioneered Japan's arcade and console industry, and guided Sega's global expansion including the Mega Drive's major success.
History
fromLos Angeles Times
1 week ago

Contributor: California's place in enslaved people's struggle for freedom

California's past is deeply connected to slavery across the Americas, linking Mexican and U.S. practices of enslavement and long histories of resistance.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

What Languages Were Used in the Middle Ages? - Medievalists.net

A handful of major languages (Latin, Arabic, Persian, Sanskrit, Chinese) facilitated long-distance medieval communication while numerous local vernaculars continued to be used daily.
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