History

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fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
8 hours ago
History

Rare Mithraic altars found in Scotland go on display for the first time

Two exceptionally rare, early 2nd-century Mithraic altars from Inveresk, Scotland, represent unique Roman sculptures and are now displayed after conservation.
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 hours ago

Apocalypse no: how almost everything we thought we knew about the Maya is wrong

Classic Maya lowlands likely supported up to 16 million people during AD 600–900, implying unprecedented population density, complex agriculture, and advanced urban organization.
History
fromMedievalists.net
14 hours ago

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

Males in medieval Tuscany were breastfed for shorter periods and weaned earlier than females, with similar early-life diets and greater post-weaning dietary variability.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
15 hours ago

Antinomian Controversy: Inspiring the Separation of Church and State in the USA

The Antinomian Controversy split the Massachusetts Bay Colony over religious authority, produced banishments, and influenced later American separation of church and state.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
22 hours ago

German Spring Offensive: Ludendorff's Last Chance to Win WWI

The 1918 German Spring (Ludendorff) Offensive failed due to Allied resistance, tank use, superior reserves—including arriving US forces—and German logistical collapse, costing Germany 800,000 men.
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 day ago

Great hall from 4th c. bishop's palace complex found in Ostia

A richly decorated 4th-century episcopal palace hall and adjacent monumental church complex were discovered at Ostia Antica, revealing an unusually large Constantinian Christian complex.
fromwww.theguardian.com
14 hours ago

Hidden passage linked to Underground Railroad found in New York museum

The Merchant's House Museum's link to the Underground Railroad, a network of abolitionists who secured the safe passage of enslaved people to freedom, was discovered when archaeologists looked beneath the drawers of a built-in dresser in the wall of a hallway leading to bedrooms on the building's second floor. They found a small rectangular opening cut into the floorboards, an enclosed space about 2ft by 2ft, and a ladder leading to the ground floor.
History
History
fromwww.aljazeera.com
22 hours ago

Kenya's Mau Mau History

Colonial-era strategies erased Mau Mau history and are being reused to suppress and misrepresent contemporary protesters in Nairobi and worldwide.
History
fromwww.berkeleyside.org
18 hours ago

As the Black Panthers turn 60, a new exhibit spotlights their Berkeley ties

The Black Panther Party relocated its headquarters to 3106 Shattuck Ave., South Berkeley (1968–1970), establishing deep local ties and community programs documented in an archival exhibit.
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
16 hours ago

Letting the sound happen around you': powerful sonic memorial remembers the dead

Jacqueline Kiyomi Gork’s exhibition links Okinawan cave mass suicides and Japanese-American internment, exposing inherited shame, silenced trauma, and familial wartime survival.
History
fromNature
1 day ago

An ancient Roman game board's secrets are revealed - with AI's help

An ancient Roman object from the southern Netherlands most likely functioned as a blocking board game, indicating such games existed in Europe earlier than believed.
fromBuzzFeed
16 hours ago

49 Photos of Forgotten '70s Things That Will Make Any Boomer Feel Instantly Nostalgic

1. Soda and beer cans that came with pull tabs:
History
fromwww.dw.com
19 hours ago

Olympics T-shirt marking 1936 Berlin Games raises eyebrows

The shirt shows a man wearing a laurel wreath, the quadriga chariot drawn by four horses atop the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin and core details like the dates and location of the Summer Games in the capital. It's part of a collection of shirts for each of the modern-era Games, but, nonetheless, references probably the most politically contentious ones. There are no references to Hitler's government or its symbols and iconography on the shirt.
History
History
fromianVisits
20 hours ago

Visiting the Household Cavalry Museum

The Household Cavalry Museum combines accessible military-history exhibits with a live view into active stables where soldiers care for ceremonial horses.
#british-museum
fromMedievalists.net
1 day ago
History

British Museum raises 3.5 million to purchase Tudor Heart Pendant - Medievalists.net

The British Museum raised £3.5 million to permanently acquire the Tudor Heart Pendant linked to Henry VIII and Katherine of Aragon.
fromwww.bbc.com
2 days ago
History

British Museum to keep pendant linked to Henry VIII

The British Museum raised £3.5m to acquire and permanently display the Tudor Heart gold pendant linked to Henry VIII and Katherine of Aragon.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 day ago

The Barracks Emperors: Instability of Populist Rule

Army-chosen 'barracks emperors' dominated Rome during the Crisis of the Third Century, fueled by military power, inflation from currency debasement, plague, and barbarian invasions.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 day ago

Mesopotamian Science and Technology: Scientific Method in the Ancient Near East

Sumerians created foundational scientific and technological innovations—writing, mathematics, timekeeping, astronomy, engineering, and medicine—using observation and hypothesis-based problem solving.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 day ago

New Online Course: The Americas during the Middle Ages - Medievalists.net

An online six-week course examines indigenous peoples of North America and Mesoamerica (500–1500 CE), emphasizing diverse peoples, environments, lifestyles, and pre-contact historical trends.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 day ago

New Medieval Books: The Rose, the Bastard and the Saint King - Medievalists.net

The 1471 Lancastrian siege of London aimed to free captive Henry VI; a Kent rebellion prompted Edward IV to order Henry's execution to secure authority.
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

The Great Resistance by Carrie Gibson review a panoramic account of the fight to end slavery

Enslaved Africans and their descendants across the Americas mounted the largest, longest-running, and most diverse sustained insurrection for freedom from the 1500s to the 1800s.
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 day ago

Today in History: February 10, Chess champ loses against a computer

Notable events on Feb. 10 include Kasparov's 1996 loss to Deep Blue, the 1763 treaty ceding Canada, major disasters, and the 25th Amendment's ratification.
History
from99% Invisible
1 day ago

Artistic License - 99% Invisible

In 1928 Idaho added a potato slogan to license plates, initiating nationwide adoption of promotional, contested license-plate designs.
History
fromTime Out London
1 day ago

A new 'Cleopatra' immersive experience in London will be all about Ancient Egypt

Cleopatra: The Experience opens at Immerse LDN as a 3,000 square metre, nine-gallery immersive exhibition tracing the late Ptolemaic dynasty with artefacts, AR, VR and staged environments.
History
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Lost ancient Egyptian technology rewrites the dawn of civilization

Ancient Egyptians used a sophisticated rotary bow drill over 5,300 years ago, the earliest known metal drill, pushing back complex drilling technology by two millennia.
fromKqed
1 month ago

Thomas Lake Harris, the Cult Leader of Fountaingrove, Revisited in New Book | KQED

It's no secret that America is fascinated with cults and their scamming, grifting leaders. Viewers flock to TV series like Wild Wild Country, The Vow and Keep Sweet: Pray and Obey, and elevate con artists like the Tinder swindler and Elizabeth Holmes as antiheroes who've found loopholes in American society and business. Paddison tells Harris' story from its beginning in upstate New York, at the time a hotbed of self-proclaimed seers and prophets, including Joseph Smith, the founder of Mormonism.
History
fromThe Mercury News
1 day ago

Historic Bay Area shipyard hosts celebration as two of World War II's legendary 'Rosies' turn 100

"I didn't do anything great, but I participated in something great. I think that's how we all felt,"
History
History
fromOpen Culture
2 days ago

Were the Egyptian Pyramids Not Built Up, But Carved Down?: A Bold New Theory Explains Their Construction

A proposed construction theory posits Giza pyramids were built by sequentially overbuilding and cannibalizing massive trapezoidal structures rather than by large external ramps.
History
fromThe Nation
1 day ago

The Long Shadow of the "Jewish Question"

Yiddish was asserted as the national language of Eastern Europe’s Jewish masses, championed by Nathan Birnbaum as central to Jewish national identity.
fromTime Out London
1 day ago

This London icon that was once voted 'Britain's ugliest building' has just been protected for future generations

These days, brutalist buildings are among London's most celebrated works of architecture. But it hasn't always been this way. Back in 1967, the Southbank Centre, one of the city's most striking examples of the style, was voted Britain's ugliest building by readers of the Daily Mail. In the latest indicator of just how much times have changed, today (February 10) the Southbank Centre has been awarded listed status by the Department for Culture Media and Sport.
History
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
3 days ago

Phoenician scarab found at Nuragic site in Sardinia

A 2,700-year-old Phoenician steatite scarab seal from Lebanon was found at inland Nuragic Ruinas in Sardinia, indicating long-distance contacts and exchange.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
2 days ago

Scribes in Ancient Mesopotamia: The Beginning of History

Ancient Mesopotamian scribes mastered cuneiform and broad knowledge to record transactions, administer society, and preserve history across civilizations.
History
fromSmithsonian Magazine
2 days ago

One Was a Teenage Diplomat. Another Was a Nuclear Engineer. Here's How Eight Presidents Made Their Mark Outside of the White House

Several 19th- and 20th-century U.S. presidents achieved notable intellectual, academic, and technical accomplishments beyond politics, including inventions, mathematical proofs, languages, and diverse professional backgrounds.
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
2 days ago

What made Passchendaele WWI's most horrific mud trap?

The aim of the Allied commander in this part of the Western Front, Field Marshal Haig, was to break out of the Ypres salient and recapture key Belgian ports and a railway junction vital to the German Army. After unusually heavy and persistent rains, the battlefield turned into a horrific sea of mud and water-filled shell holes, which reduced the advance to just a few miles.
History
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
2 days ago

Today in History: February 9, Halley's Comet passes by Earth

Feb. 9 marks varied historical events across astronomy, politics, war, culture, and sports, including Halley's Comet, presidential selection, wartime victories, and major cultural moments.
History
fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

How America Got So Sick

The Antonine Plague, likely smallpox, killed over a million across the Roman Empire and contributed to systemic crises that hastened Rome's decline.
fromBrownstoner
2 days ago

If This House Could Talk: Life on Jefferson Avenue

Here I am, 76 years old, grandson of the late Bertram L. Baker, the political pioneer who in 1948 became the very first Black person elected to office in the history of Brooklyn. Many tens of thousands of Blacks had lived in Brooklyn through the 1800s and into the first half of the 20th century. But it was this immigrant, born on the then British colony of Nevis in 1898, who made Brooklyn history, as the Black political pioneer.
History
History
fromBig Think
2 days ago

What the rise and fall of Julius Caesar can teach us about EQ

Lack of emotional intelligence undermines leaders' trust and influence; failing to sense emotional currents can produce betrayal and catastrophic downfall.
History
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 days ago

The underground odyssey that led archaeologists to a Zapotec burial site

Looting revealed a hidden Zapotec Tomb of the Owl near La Cantera, which took six years to locate and links to the ancient Zapotec civilization.
fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

Today's Atlantic Trivia: Who Pioneered the Super Bowl Crotch Grab?

You won't find this in Cortina d'Ampezzo over the next few weeks, but for several decades of the Olympics' history, the contest awarded medals not just for sport but for art too. In the Summer Games from 1912 to 1948, musicians, painters, and plenty of other aesthetes went brain-to-brain in events such as lyric poetry and chamber music. "Town planning" was even contested one year under the umbrella of the architecture competition.
History
fromianVisits
3 days ago

London's Alleys: Alderman Stairs, Wapping, E1

The story of this corner of London runs deep. The roots of settlement here stretch back to the 10th century, when King Edgar granted 13 acres of riverside land to 13 knights (yes, an acre per knight), with permission to use it for trading along he river. By 1125, there was already a dock at St Katharine's. Over the centuries, the area grew into a small but busy community, complete with a hospital, a monastery, a school, almshouses and its own court.
History
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

How Many Days a Week?

We tend to think of the five-day workweek as a law of nature, as certain as the rising of the sun. But it's nothing of the sort. The five-day workweek is a human invention that was introduced just over a century ago to solve the specific problems of the industrial age. By now it's so ingrained in our lives that we've forgotten we created it in the first place-but we did create it and we can also un-create it.
History
fromThe New Yorker
2 days ago

The Race to Give Every Child a Toy

If you were an immigrant kid in New York at the turn of the twentieth century, the candy store was the center of your world. You went there to kibbitz and schmooze, to get away from the crush of tenement life and the glare of the beat cop, and, of course, to eat sweets-Tootsie Rolls and Chicken Feeds and as many chocolate pennies as a copper one could buy.
History
History
fromFuncheap
2 days ago

Nike Missile Site Open House & Storytelling | Marin Headlands

Restored Nike missile site SF-88L opens first Saturday monthly, 12:30–3:30 pm, offering up-close Cold War anti-aircraft missile exhibits and veteran-guided stories.
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
4 days ago

Terracotta head found at Magna Roman Fort

A rare terracotta female head, likely a locally made copy of an earlier imported model, was discovered at Magna Roman Fort and is now displayed.
History
fromMedievalists.net
3 days ago

25 Tips from the Middle Ages - Medievalists.net

Medieval practical literature provided specific everyday guidance on posture, hygiene, conversation, remedies, and social behavior, blending useful tips with odd, superstition-based methods.
fromThe Atlantic
3 days ago

Deadlier Than Gettysburg

But Brundage, who teaches at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, does more than expand our understanding of a neglected aspect of Civil War history. His study offers a window into larger questions-about the evolution of laws of war and the definition of war crimes, about the ethical responsibility of combatants, about the growth of the nation-state and its attendant bureaucracy, and about the defining presence of race in the morality play of American history.
History
#historical-anniversaries
fromFortune
3 days ago

America marks its 250th birthday with a fading dream-the first time that younger generations will make less than their parents | Fortune

Few ideas are as central to the nation's identity as that of the American Dream. With the 250th birthday of the United States coming up in July 2026, it's worth stepping back to examine a concept essential to the nation's self-image. The term "American Dream" was actually coined in the 1930s by historian James Truslow Adams. Ever since the establishment of the Colonies, however, America has been viewed as a land where individual and collective hopes and aspirations can be realized.
History
History
fromPitchfork
4 days ago

Tav Falco's Panther Burns: Behind the Magnolia Curtain

"Magnolia Curtain" came to symbolize Southern segregation and inspired both exposés and cultural reclamation, exemplified by Tav Falco reclaiming hidden Southern culture through music.
History
fromenglish.elpais.com
4 days ago

Japanese-Brazilians: the intimate relationship between two very different cultures

Japanese-Brazilians form a large, culturally blended community rooted in early 20th-century immigration, shaped by labor needs, racial policies, and wartime persecution.
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
5 days ago

Bronze Neptune from Lyon arrives in Rome

The Neptune of Lyon, one of the largest and most important bronze statues from Roman Gaul, has arrived in Rome for a one-time guest starring appearance at the Giovanni Barracco Museum of Ancient Sculpture. The statue is in the permanent collection of the Lugdunum Musee et Theatres Romains in Lyon, and is being loaned to the sculpture museum as part of an extraordinary exchange of ancient works between the two cities.
History
History
fromMedievalists.net
4 days ago

Why the Great Schism of 1054 is a Medieval Myth - Medievalists.net

The Great Schism of 1054 was a gradual, multifaceted separation rather than a single dramatic rupture caused solely by the 1054 excommunications.
fromwww.mercurynews.com
4 days ago

Today in History: February 7, Haiti inaugurates its first democratically elected president

Today is Saturday, Feb. 7, the 38th day of 2026. There are 327 days left in the year. Today in history: On Feb. 7, 1991, Jean-Bertrand Aristide was inaugurated as the first democratically elected president of Haiti. (He was overthrown by the military the following September.) Also on this date: In 1904, the Great Baltimore Fire began; one of the worst city fires in American history, it destroyed over 1,500 buildings in central Baltimore.
History
History
fromMedievalists.net
5 days ago

The Battle of Verneuil (1424) - Medievalists.net

The Battle of Verneuil saw English forces confront a Franco-Scottish army in Normandy after Henry V's death, becoming one of the war's bloodiest battles.
#anne-hutchinson
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
6 days ago

Victorian school slates, marbles found in London

An excavation in central London has uncovered the remains of a boys school complete with artifacts from the students' schoolwork and their playtime. The objects include a slate tablet used as an erasable notebook to practice handwriting, a slate pencil and several ceramic alleys marbles made of decorated white ceramic from the Victorian era. Artifacts related to children's lives are less frequently found than ones relating to adults, so these objects give us a special glimpse into the lives of schoolboys.
History
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
5 days ago

Brutus: A Defender of Liberty or a Villainous Traitor?

Marcus Junius Brutus assassinated Julius Caesar, opposed autocracy, raised forces with Cassius, lost at Philippi in 42 BCE, and committed suicide.
History
fromMedievalists.net
5 days ago

New Medieval Books: A Medieval Case for Islam's Superiority - Medievalists.net

An eighth-century Abbasid letter to the Byzantine emperor defends Islam, critiques Christian misunderstandings, and reflects Abbasid-Byzantine diplomacy and Baghdad's intellectual life.
fromMedievalists.net
5 days ago

Michelangelo drawing sells for $27.2 million - Medievalists.net

A rare red-chalk drawing by Michelangelo has sold for US $27.2 million at Christie's in New York, setting a new auction record for the Renaissance artist after around 45 minutes of intense bidding. The price far exceeded its estimate and surpassed Michelangelo's previous auction high of $24.3 million. Christie's identified the sheet as a previously unrecorded study connected to the Sistine Chapel ceiling—specifically, a preparatory drawing for the right foot of the Libyan Sibyl, one of the monumental seated figures painted along the ceiling's edges.
History
fromJezebel
5 days ago

Trump Admin Doesn't Want Us to Call the Klansman Who Murdered Medgar Evers a Racist

On Thursday, Mississippi Today reported that several officials, who requested anonymity out of fear of retribution, said NPS told them to remove visitor brochures from the Medgar & Myrlie Evers Home National Monument and edit out details about Beckwith. Among the details reportedly flagged for removal: that Evers was found lying in a pool of blood after he was shot. The brochures referred to Beckwith as "a member of the racist and segregationist White Citizens' Council."
History
fromMail Online
5 days ago

The bone that proves Hannibal really DID cross the Alps with elephants

While the bone was worn and poorly preserved, archaeologists managed to identify its origin by comparing it with modern elephant and mammoth bones. Despite there not being enough DNA to confirm the exact species, the researchers were able to carbon date a tiny sample of the bone. This places the elephant's death between the late fourth and early third centuries BC - right in the middle of the Second Punic War.
History
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
5 days ago

Today in History: February 6, Monopoly replaces iron piece with the cat

Feb. 6 historical milestones include U.S.-France Treaty of Alliance (1778), Fort Henry's fall (1862), U.S.-Spain peace ratification (1899), and King George VI's death (1952).
History
fromOpen Culture
6 days ago

Discover Khipu, the Ancient Incan Record & Writing System Made Entirely of Knots

Inca khipus encoded inventories, censuses, and historical narratives via knots, cord position, length, and fiber color, functioning as portable organic data systems.
History
fromBrownstoner
5 days ago

Explore Country House Life at Boscobel This Winter

Boscobel House and Gardens will host events marking Jane Austen's 250th anniversary, including an illustrated lecture on country house architecture and ongoing restoration tours.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

A Murder in Crusader Acre: The Assassination of Conrad of Montferrat - Medievalists.net

Conrad of Montferrat, newly elected king of Jerusalem, was assassinated in Acre in 1192 by attackers whose sponsors and identity remain disputed.
#mesopotamia
fromMedievalists.net
6 days ago

Yuval Noah Harari: From Medievalist to Global Cultural Prophet - Medievalists.net

Trained as a historian of medieval warfare, Yuval Noah Harari has become one of the most influential public intellectuals in the world, shaping global debates about artificial intelligence, human identity, and the future of society. Richard Utz traces how a medievalist moved from specialist scholarship to cultural prophecy-and why the habits of medieval history still matter for understanding his voice today.
History
History
fromMedievalists.net
6 days ago

New Medieval Books: Blessed Mary and the Monks of England - Medievalists.net

English Benedictine and Cistercian monks (1000–1215) shaped medieval Mariology by deepening Marian devotion, theological reflection, and using Mary as a model for Christian life.
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 week ago

Trepanned skull of giant found in Viking-era mass grave

A 9th-century mass grave near Cambridge contains up to ten young men, including an exceptionally tall trepanned individual likely surviving surgery, linked to Viking-era conflict.
fromMedievalists.net
6 days ago

Symposium "Mappa Mundi: Mapping the Mediaeval World" to Take Place in Toronto - Medievalists.net

St. Michael's College at the University of Toronto will host Mappa Mundi: Mapping the Mediaeval World, an in-person symposium exploring medieval cartography and how people in the Middle Ages visualized and interpreted their world. The event will take place Saturday, April 11, 2026. Hosted by Jacqueline Murray, the symposium examines mapping from two key angles: how medieval societies conceptualized the globe - including spherical representations of Europe, Asia and Africa, as well as mysterious regions beyond the known world -
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
6 days ago

When 600 Taxis Saved Paris in WWI

The First Battle of the Marne, fought between 6 and 10 September 1914, was a major and successful Allied counterattack against the German invasion of French territory the previous August. Often referred to as the 'Miracle of the Marne', the French and British armies rallied to exploit a split in the German lines and impose a strategic defeat on the enemy. Although it looked very likely at the end of August, France did not fall, and Paris was saved. The significance of the Battle of the Marne was that German hopes for a quick and decisive victory were shattered within six weeks of the conflict beginning.
History
History
fromBusiness Insider
6 days ago

See inside the USS Massachusetts, the battleship that fired the last shot of World War II

USS Massachusetts fired the first and last US 16-inch shells of WWII, earned 11 battle stars, and now serves as a museum and war memorial.
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
6 days ago

Today in History: February 5, White separatist convicted of murdering civil rights leader 31 years later

Feb. 5 marks historical events: a civil-rights murder conviction, immigration restriction, WWI and WWII losses, Apollo 14 moonwalk, FMLA signing, tornado outbreak, Super Bowl comeback.
from24/7 Wall St.
6 days ago

30 Standard-Issue Rifles That Outlasted Entire Conflicts

Across the 20th and 21st centuries, armies repeatedly tried to replace standard-issue rifles that simply refused to disappear. Designed for specific conflicts like World Wars, Cold War showdowns, or even regional wars, many of these weapons stayed in service for decades longer than intended. In most cases, it wasn't nostalgia that kept them around. It was reliability, logistics, and the uncomfortable reality that replacing a rifle on paper is far easier than doing it across an entire military.
History
fromLondon Unattached
6 days ago

Debate: Baldwin vs Buckley - Wilton's Music Hall - Review

In 1965, an electrifying debate took place at the Cambridge Union Society. The speakers were James Baldwin, an acclaimed American novelist and civil rights activist, and William F. Buckley Jr., a conservative intellectual. The motion debated was 'The American Dream is at the expense of the American Negro'. The overflowing hall was packed to the rafters. Baldwin won the debate by 544 votes to 164. 60 years have passed, yet it echoes down the decades with issues raised still relevant today.
History
History
from24/7 Wall St.
6 days ago

Why The U.S. Military Still Uses This 100-Year-Old Machine Gun

The Browning M2 machine gun has remained in U.S. service for a century because reliability, adaptability, and combat-proven performance outlast technological novelty.
History
fromColossal
6 days ago

A Major Survey in Paris Chronicles Leonora Carrington's Esoteric Surrealism

Leonora Carrington created dreamlike Surrealist imagery, defied upper-class expectations, engaged with Parisian Surrealism, and rejected being a muse while developing an independent artistic career.
fromThe Nation
6 days ago

Why We're Still Fighting Over Elgin's Marbles

Arguably the world's most famous Greek temple, the Parthenon was constructed in a flurry of building activity on the Acropolis of Athens, under the direction of the indefatigable statesman Pericles in the middle of the fifth century BC. It was a monument to recent tragedy in Athens as much as a celebration of the city's glory: The Acropolis had been leveled by Persian invaders in 480 BC, and its temples had been left in ruins for 30 years, a colossal absence reminding citizens how close they had come to annihilation.
History
fromMail Online
6 days ago

Mysterious symbols spanning the globe hint at a lost civilization

His investigation began after identifying recurring giant T-shapes, three-level indents, and step pyramids carved into ancient stones worldwide. 'These specific symbols that are built in different size proportions, and the symbols are found in ancient stones around the world, are not supposed to exist; no cultures are supposed to have any cross-platform,' LaCroix explained. The symbols appear in locations ranging from Turkey's Van region to South America and Cambodia.
History
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

"775 - Westphalia": Exhibition Explores the Origins of Charlemagne's Imperial Palace - Medievalists.net

Charlemagne established a fortified royal base at the Lippe River in 775, baptized many Saxons, and initially named it Karlsburg before the name vanished.
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

New Medieval Books: A Crusade Against the Turks as a Means of Reforming the Church - Medievalists.net

This project will focus on the Camaldolese hermits' proposal for achieving what they considered to be the most crucial task in the repair of the church, eliminating Islam and all Muslims. Our study will begin with an examination of the recipient of the Libellus, Giovanni de' Medici, who would become Pope Leo X. Next will be an exploration into the backgrounds of Paolo Giustiniani and Pietro Querini,
History
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 week ago

$40 estate sale find by early African-American silversmith sells for $24,000

A rare silver pap boat by Peter Bentzon was found at a Minnesota estate sale and sold to a prominent American institution for $24,000.
History
fromThe Washington Post
1 week ago

12 ways to celebrate Black History Month in the D.C. area

Washington area venues and institutions showcase Black history year-round, with Black History Month offering tours, exhibits, concerts, and living-history events highlighting Black excellence.
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

A small Africa in Colombia': the palenqueras of Cartagena

Cartagena's palenqueras symbolize the enduring, commodified legacy of enslavement, mixing cultural resilience with tourist-driven exploitation.
History
fromHarvard Gazette
1 week ago

Memorial Minute for Carter Joel Eckert, 79 - Harvard Gazette

Carter Joel Eckert redefined Korean economic history by analyzing capitalist-government relationships, revealing complexity beyond simple collaboration-resistance binaries.
History
fromThe Oaklandside
1 week ago

Great-granddaughter of Piedmont's first Black residents, who were forced out by a 'terror campaign,' sues city

A Black family in 1924 Piedmont endured organized mob violence, KKK threats, bombings, and municipal condemnation aimed at forcing them from their home.
History
from24/7 Wall St.
1 week ago

Why Some Flawed Military Aircraft Still Succeeded

Some military aircraft with notable design flaws achieved combat success through adaptation, doctrinal use, and exploitation of their operational strengths.
History
fromianVisits
1 week ago

The year Hyde Park was sold to propety developers for housing

Hyde Park was sold after Charles I's execution and nearly developed into housing, which would have removed the Serpentine and altered Kensington Palace's surroundings.
History
fromianVisits
1 week ago

From cassocks to coins: A brief history of Archbishops in Lambeth Palace's library

Lambeth Palace Library exhibits objects, documents, regalia, coins, and ceremonial items illustrating past Archbishops, their offices, privileges, and material culture.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 week ago

Battle of the Frontiers: The Chaotic First Two Weeks of World War I

German armies advanced through Belgium and defeated French, Belgian, and British forces, establishing the Western Front on French soil at great casualty cost.
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 week ago

Complete gilded Book of the Dead on display for the first time

A rare, nearly complete gilded Ptolemaic Book of the Dead is publicly displayed at the Brooklyn Museum, showcasing Egyptian funerary art and practices.
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