History
fromMail Online
2 hours agoWorld's oldest BEER tab is discovered on a 4,000-year-old clay tablet
Beer has been used as a form of payment for workers for over 4,000 years, highlighting its significance in ancient societies.
Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben, a Prussian nobleman, emigrated to the US and became a key figure in the military during the American Revolutionary War, despite facing accusations of homosexuality.
Elizabeth Roboz Einstein's journey began on May 15, 1940, when she boarded the Conte di Savoia, an Italian steamliner, leaving behind her family in Hungary as World War II escalated. This voyage was not a luxury cruise but a desperate evacuation for many, including 600 Central European refugees fleeing the advancing German troops.
The Viking Mississippi calls at three of the state's ports as it covers 600 miles of the Lower Mississippi on its Mississippi Delta Explorer itinerary. The trio of destinations—Natchez, Vicksburg, and Greenville—might not have the global renown of other ports of call on the eight-day journey like New Orleans, Louisiana, or Memphis, Tennessee, but they each have a story to tell in the history of the state and its role in building the United States.
Pastor Josh Howerton, leading Lakepointe Church, stated, 'The gospels tell us Jesus was taken outside the city walls to be crucified. This fits. It's within walking distance.' He emphasized the geographical context of the crucifixion.
Gunness was born in Selbu, Norway, in 1859, as Brynhild Paulsdatter Strseth. She moved to Chicago, Illinois, in 1881 in search of a wealthier life, and married fellow Norwegian Mads Albert Sorenson three years later.
In November 1910, a princess marched on Parliament in a bid to secure women's right to vote in the United Kingdom. Sophia Duleep Singh, the daughter of the Sikh Empire's last maharaja, was 'as close to an international celebrity as it was possible to be' in that era.
Cameron was best known for her work on late antiquity, early Byzantium, and the cultural and religious transformations of the eastern Roman Empire. Her books, including Procopius and the Sixth Century, Byzantine Matters, and Byzantine Christianity: A Very Brief History, were widely read both within academia and beyond.
The Byzantine Empire was renowned for its dazzling court rituals and intricate etiquette, a complex system that could bewilder even the most seasoned diplomats. These rituals transcended mere formalities; they were central to the exercise of imperial power, transforming the court into a stage where politics was performed as theatre.
The Long Man may be Anglo-Saxon in origin; the shape is similar to the design on a buckle discovered in Kent in 1964 by the archaeologist Sonia Chadwick Hawkes, which probably represents the god Odin (or Woden).
The pioneering partial accounts of the first half of the 19th century were by explorers or travelers such as Lewis and Clark, Ross Cox, and Daniel Lee and Joseph Frost.
The Matabele people, known as the Ndebele, were a Nguni-speaking tribe that established their own state after separating from the Zulu Kingdom around 1822, expanding their territory significantly.
"The ruins from the Middle Ages are part of our common history. With these grants, we are strengthening the work that makes it possible to preserve them, not only as historical traces, but also as living sources of knowledge for both researchers, craftsmen and local communities."
Taybeh, a small hilltop town in the heart of the West Bank, is one of the oldest Christian communities in the world, now feeling under siege and fighting for its existence.
"Games have long brought people together across cultures and centuries, creating shared experiences that connect us beyond borders, languages, and differences. Whether played on boards, performed through physical skill, explored via the spoken or written word, or navigated in digital worlds, games carry educational, symbolic, and social roles that shape how we learn, connect, and make meaning through play."