History

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History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 day ago

Egyptian vase found in Pompeii fast food kitchen

An Alexandrian blue-glazed faience situla was found in a Pompeii thermopolium kitchen, showing cross‑Mediterranean trade and a well-preserved street‑food establishment.
History
fromMedievalists.net
22 hours ago

The Assassination of Duke Bela of Macso: Forensic Science Reveals a Medieval Murder - Medievalists.net

Forensic analysis confirms skeletal remains found on Budapest's Margaret Island belong to Duke Béla of Macsó, revealing gruesome mutilation and a politically motivated murder in 1272.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
9 hours ago

How did a single severed ear spark a global colonial war?

Britain provoked the War of Jenkins' Ear (1739–1748) against Spain over colonial trade disputes and the alleged mutilation of Captain Robert Jenkins, fighting mainly in the Caribbean.
History
fromThe Walrus
14 hours ago

My Family's 240-Year Journey Shows Why Canada Will Never Bow to Trump | The Walrus

Ancestral Loyalist and refugee families found refuge and interwoven lives in Nova Scotia, leading to prosperity and cross-sectarian marriages.
#historical-events
fromThe Nation
8 hours ago

Rethinking Nuremberg for the 21st Century

Vanderbilt'svision of the trial for 22 of the surviving Nazi leaders-21 were in fact in the dock-by the United Sates, the USSR, Britain, and France telegraphs its anxieties across the 80 years from the trial's opening to today. At Nuremberg's first public session, on November 20, 1945, journalists heralded the opening of "the trial of the century." Nuremberg's message to the law and politics of the previous century was the way claiming to be "just following orders" shouldn't cancel individual responsibility for widespread atrocities.
History
History
fromianVisits
20 hours ago

Restoration of Burton's Mausoleum starts with aim to reopen the tomb for visits

Conservation has begun on the Grade II* Bedouin tent–shaped mausoleum of Sir Richard and Lady Isabel Burton to prevent further disrepair.
History
fromDodger Blue
9 hours ago

Everything To Know About MLB's World Series Trophy: History, Design & More Details

The World Series began in 1903 by agreement between NL and AL teams and evolved into MLB's annual championship, with the Yankees winning 27 titles.
fromwww.theguardian.com
19 hours ago

A new start after 60: I found my feet in midlife, became a park ranger at 85 and retired happily at 100

Betty Reid Soskin was 92 when she first went viral and became, in effect, a rock star of the National Park Service. She was the oldest full-time national park ranger in the US this was back in 2013; she'd become a ranger at 85 but she had been furloughed along with 800,000 other federal employees during the government shutdown. News channels flocked to interview her. She was aggrieved not to be working, she told them; she had a job to do.
History
fromTasting Table
13 hours ago

The US President Who Grew The First American Apple Variety In His Orchard - Tasting Table

Developed in Roxbury, Massachusetts in the early 17th century, the Roxbury Russet is considered the first distinctly American apple variety. Featuring a green skin prone to russets (rough, brown patches), it has a firm flesh with a tart taste and a high sugar content that makes it ideal for cider, in addition to eating and cooking. Harvested in the fall, the Roxbury Russet stores well throughout winter as its flavor continues to develop.
History
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
2 days ago

Poignant mourning necklace from Titanic goes on display

A black glass French jet mourning necklace salvaged from a Titanic wreckage concretion recovered in 2000 was identified through micro-excavation and is now on display.
History
fromwww.ocregister.com
1 day ago

Marine Corps birthday: Why it was celebrated in July from 1778 to 1921

The United States Marine Corps traces its origins to November 10, 1775, when the Continental Congress authorized two battalions, later recreated in 1798.
#declaration-of-independence
fromBusiness Insider
5 days ago
History

I visited the Museum of the American Revolution ahead of America's 250th birthday. Here are the coolest things I saw.

fromBusiness Insider
5 days ago
History

I visited the Museum of the American Revolution ahead of America's 250th birthday. Here are the coolest things I saw.

History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 day ago

Today in History: November 9, Holocaust begins with looting of Jewish stores, homes

Significant historical events on November 9 include Kristallnacht, the fall of the Berlin Wall, the 1965 Northeast blackout, and the world's first whole-eye transplant announcement.
History
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 day ago

Credit Suisse, on the trail of the Nazi ratlines' in Argentina

Fritz Mandl became Austria's richest man by building an arms conglomerate while cultivating a distinctive branded personal style and international client network.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

British Asian families urged to share stories of greatest generation' who fought for Britain

British Asian families are being urged to record the experiences of relatives who fought for Britain for future generations as data reveals half the British public don't know that Indian members of the armed forces served in the second world war. The My Family Legacy project, backed by the Royal British Legion, is building an online archive of Asian veterans' experiences to raise awareness of the shared histories and sacrifices of Britain's diverse communities.
History
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Bad Bridgets podcast about crime among Irish women in US inspires film

Impoverished 19th-century Irish emigrant women labeled 'Bad Bridgets'—sex workers, thieves and drunks—are being portrayed in a book, podcast and an upcoming Hollywood film.
fromTasting Table
1 day ago

The First-Ever Vending Machine Was Created In This Ancient Country - Tasting Table

The coin would fall inside and land on a lever. Under the weight of the coin, the lever went down, pulling a string. The string was attached to a plug that opened a valve, allowing the container to dispense holy water. So Hero's invention was not a snack machine - it was designed to prevent people from taking more than their fair share of holy water, which had apparently been a problem in temples up to that point.
History
History
fromMedievalists.net
3 days ago

Robin Hood and the Frog: A First Look at the 2025 MGM+ Series - Medievalists.net

Robin Hood returns in an MGM+ series reimagining his origins amid Norman oppression, featuring new cast members, familiar antagonists, and surprising tonal touches.
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
3 days ago

Rare furry sealskin manuscript may be Norway's oldest book

An eight-page sealskin-bound book of religious songs, dating at least to the 13th century, may be the oldest known book in Norway.
History
fromMedievalists.net
2 days ago

How a Medieval Sect Built a Mountain Stronghold in Syria - Medievalists.net

The Assassins created a durable Nizari mountain principality in Syria by seizing remote castles and combining fortification, negotiation, money, and targeted violence.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
3 days ago

What secrets did a 9th-century peasant's daily life hold?

Bodo and his family were tenant peasants on a monastery-owned manor in early ninth-century Francia who owed rent and labour to their monastic lord.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
3 days ago

The 12 books that unlock Aztec culture and colonial encounter

The Florentine Codex documents 16th-century Aztec culture, language, beliefs, and Spanish–Indigenous exchanges across twelve illustrated, bilingual books compiled to preserve a censored civilization.
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
4 days ago

CT scan reveals name on 16th c. sword

CT scans of a 16th century sword from Jena in Germany have revealed a name engraved on the blade, hidden by a thick encrustation of rust. The inscription reads Clemes Stam, the name of the Solingen swordsmith who made it. The blade was one of four surviving swords interred in the graves of the Collegiate Church in Jena where faculty, students and their families were buried in crypts between the late 16th and early 19th centuries.
History
fromFortune
3 days ago

Abraham Lincoln wrote a job reference for a Black friend in 1861. It's on view at the Presidential Library and Museum | Fortune

Abraham Lincoln penned the entreaty on behalf of his young friend, William Johnson, because ironically, his dark complexion caused freed Black White House staffers with lighter skin to shun him. "The difference of color between him and the other servants is the cause of our separation," Lincoln wrote in the March 16, 1861, letter that private collector Peter Tuite donated in August to the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, where it is now on public display.
History
History
fromwww.bbc.com
3 days ago

WW1 letters reveal how social club lifted morale

A London social club's attic letters revealed that secretary Ralph Manley provided moral and material support to members serving in World War One.
#roman-roads
fromOpen Culture
4 days ago
History

The Roman Empire's Vast Road Network-186,000 Miles of It-Has Just Been Mapped in a New Digital Atlas

fromOpen Culture
4 days ago
History

The Roman Empire's Vast Road Network-186,000 Miles of It-Has Just Been Mapped in a New Digital Atlas

History
fromIrish Independent
3 days ago

Infant remains recovered during Tuam mother and baby home excavation

Seven of nine recovered skeletal remains are initially assessed as infants; radiocarbon and other analyses will take at least three months to determine their era of origin.
fromTheregister
3 days ago

52 year old data tape could contain Unix history

A tape-based piece of unique Unix history may have been lying quietly in storage at the University of Utah for 50+ years. The question is whether researchers will be able to take this piece of middle-aged media and rewind it back to the 1970s to get the data off. The news was posted to Mastodon by Professor Robert Ricci of the University of Utah's Kahlert School of Computing.
History
History
fromIrish Independent
3 days ago

The home of a skilled and crafty generation in the Silicon Docks

Early residents of Albert Place East falsified ages to qualify for pensions earlier, shown by Osborne family age discrepancies in the 1901 and 1911 censuses.
History
fromVulture
3 days ago

No One Does Delusional American Strivers Like Matthew Macfadyen

Death by Lightning portrays Charles Guiteau's obsessive, delusional pursuit of patronage culminating in two meetings with President Garfield, one ominous handshake and one pleading audience.
History
fromianVisits
3 days ago

Tickets Alert: Banqueting House is reopening to the public

Whitehall's Banqueting House reopens for limited public days after restoration, with heritage-led repairs, improved step-free access, removal of 1973 throne canopy, full reopening summer 2026.
History
fromMedievalists.net
5 days ago

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

The term comitatus in the Ottonian-Salian kingdom had multiple meanings, sometimes transferring the royal judicial bannum to bishops and sometimes representing other, non-territorial forms of authority.
fromMedievalists.net
4 days ago

Balthild of Francia with Isabel Moreira - Medievalists.net

This year, we've spent some good quality time with early medieval queens, digging into their mysterious and spectacular lives and reigns. And when it comes to the spectacular, it's hard to compete with the star of this week's episode, a woman who arrived in Francia a slave, rose to become a queen, and then ascended to the heavens as a saint. This week, Danièle speaks with Isabel Moreira about Queen Balthild of Francia, her influence, and her lasting legacy.
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
5 days ago

Rediscovered 14th century fresco cycle opens to public

The frescoes had been whitewashed over centuries ago. The first signs that there was surviving painting underneath the whitewash emerged in 1999 restoration. Two years later, the removal of a false ceiling revealed large intact portions of the frescoes, albeit mostly covered in layers of whitewash. It took another 20 years for the complete uncovering and restoration of the surviving frescoes to begin.
History
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
4 days ago

What did soldiers truly endure in the trenches of WWI?

World War I was the first global, fully mechanised war, creating trench warfare, multiple world fronts, mass mobilisation, and intense early patriotic enthusiasm.
History
fromMedievalists.net
4 days ago

Viking Age Artefacts Discovered in Sweden - Medievalists.net

Archaeological excavations along Sweden's E18 uncovered Viking Age high-status burials, weapons, horse gear, and layered monuments revealing social hierarchy and changing funerary practices over generations.
History
fromSlate Magazine
4 days ago

He's the President Remembered for Having Food Shoved Up His Butt. But What if He Was More?

James A. Garfield is chiefly remembered for a prolonged, infection-driven death after an 1881 assassination attempt, overshadowing his life and achievements.
fromOpen Culture
5 days ago

Leonardo da Vinci's Visionary Inventions Rendered in 3D Animation: Helicopters, Robotic Knights, The First Ever Diving Suit & More

To imag­ine our­selves into the time of Leonar­do da Vin­ci, we must first imag­ine a world with­out such things as heli­copters, para­chutes, tanks, div­ing suits, robots. Yet those all exist­ed for Leonar­do him­self - or rather, they exist­ed in his imag­i­na­tion. What he did­n't build in real life, he doc­u­ment­ed in his note­books, leav­ing behind mate­r­i­al for appre­ci­a­tions of his genius that would con­tin­ue half a mil­len­ni­um lat­er.
History
History
fromBusiness Insider
4 days ago

Photos show what it was like to be a servant during the Gilded Age

Gilded Age mansions displayed extreme wealth while servants worked long hours to sustain luxurious households; mansion photos reveal staff working conditions.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
5 days ago

How did Victory help crush Napoleon's invasion dream?

HMS Victory, a heavily armed 18th-century first-rate ship built of oak and elm, served in multiple wars, remained commissioned, and became a famous British warship.
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
6 days ago

The History Blog

Then the wind changed and the great pillar of ash and smoke collapsed, unleashing a pyroclastic surge of boiling gases and ash at temperatures exceeding 800F that engulfed the town. Everyone there was killed instantly and wood was carbonized on the spot. Herculaneum was then hit by six floods of volcanic mud, one after the other, burying under 70 feet of sludge. The mud quickly cooled and hardened into solid rock,
History
fromMedievalists.net
5 days ago

Medieval Torre dei Conti Collapses in Rome, Killing One Worker - Medievalists.net

The Torre dei Conti once stood as a medieval castle in the centre of Rome throughout the Middle Ages. It was built in the 13th century by the Conti family after a civil conflict broke out between two powerful families at the time-the Conti and the Orsini-over control of the city. Commissioned by Pope Innocent III, who was a member of the Conti family, it was constructed in remembrance of the conflict that had once divided Rome.
History
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
5 days ago

What lasting impact did the 1918 flu have on medicine and society?

The 1918–1919 Spanish flu infected nearly 500 million and caused 50–100 million deaths, driven by wartime conditions, overcrowding, and poor hygiene.
History
fromPortland Mercury
5 days ago

Book Review: Let My Country Awake Puts the Pacific Northwest at the Center of an Anti-Colonial Struggle

Indian immigrants in the U.S. formed the Ghadar movement during World War I to overthrow the British Raj, allying with German and Irish anti-British forces.
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Archaeologists discover how oldest American civilisation survived a climate catastrophe

The Caral civilization relocated around 4,200 years ago due to severe drought, preserving famine imagery and architectural traditions in new coastal and river valley settlements.
fromWashingtonian - The website that Washington lives by.
5 days ago

3 DC Homes With Fascinating Histories Are for Sale

Built around 1811 for William Marbury-the Federalist whose Marbury v. Madison case established judicial review-Marbury House is at 3307 N Street in Georgetown. It was home to John and Jacqueline Kennedy from 1957 until they moved into the White House.
History
History
fromOpen Culture
6 days ago

Discover the Oldest Book of the Americas: A Close Look at the Astronomical Maya Codex of Mexico

The Maya Codex of Mexico (1021–1152) is the sole pre-Columbian Maya book, an astronomical text detailing Venus cycles and long questioned for authenticity.
History
fromHarvard Gazette
5 days ago

Memorial Minute for Roger Owen , 83- Harvard Gazette

Roger Owen reshaped modern Middle Eastern history through prolific, pioneering scholarship and transformative teaching.
History
fromTasting Table
5 days ago

The Popular Midwest Grocery Chain That Fizzled Out In The '80s - Tasting Table

Hinky Dinky was a pioneering Midwest grocery chain founded in 1925 that peaked in the 1960s but gradually closed after being sold, disappearing by 1999.
fromBig Think
5 days ago

How the world's first business bestseller transformed the world

He had the journalistic gift of making the strange seem commonplace and the tangential seem relevant. By posing real-life examples of conundrums faced by traders, Fibonacci brought maths to life. Had he written in the language of the academy, the book would have had limited relevance. But because he wrote it for the merchants, Fibonacci revealed the true genius of the great teacher: an ability to escape from the tyranny of his peer group.
History
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

Medieval Sugar Mill Complex Discovered in Israel - Medievalists.net

Medieval engineers carved subterranean tufa tunnels in northern Israel to channel brackish spring water, powering Mamluk-era sugar mills in the 15th–16th centuries.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
6 days ago

Alfred the Great's bold stand at Ashdown reshaped England's future

The Battle of Ashdown proved the Viking Great Heathen Army could be defeated and showcased Alfred's decisive military leadership, influencing West Saxon succession.
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 week ago

Getty acquires Hellenistic rock crystal garden ring

The J. Paul Getty Museum has acquired a masterpiece of Hellenistic jewelry: an elaborate gold ring with a miniature gold and enamel garden scene in a box-shaped bezel under a domed rock crystal cover. Created around 150 B.C., the ring is in impeccable condition, and one of the finest surviving examples of late Hellenistic box bezel rings. The bezel is oval and outlined around the crystal cabochon with beads of gold granulation.
History
History
fromHarvard Gazette
6 days ago

Cold War arms-control pioneers perhaps weren't peacemakers we thought they were - Harvard Gazette

Cold War science advisers promoted strategic stability and large arsenals, reinforcing the military‑industrial complex and constraining more radical disarmament and structural change.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

Logistics and "Paperwork" in Early Medieval Warfare - Medievalists.net

Early medieval warfare relied on sophisticated logistical planning, administration, and information systems to sustain large siege armies rather than mere living off the land.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 week ago

Chinampas: 1,000 years of sustainable farming in action

Chinampas are engineered, plant-framed artificial islands in shallow lakebeds that created fertile, sustainable agricultural plots used in Mesoamerica, still practiced in Xochimilco today.
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 week ago

Complete Sleeping Cupid statue found in Croatia

A rare, nearly complete 2nd-century A.D. white-marble sleeping Cupid statue was unearthed in a collapsed domus in Pula, Croatia and will enter the Archaeological Museum of Istria.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 week ago

Why was the Potsdam Declaration a turning point in ending WWII?

Allied leaders at Potsdam determined postwar occupation of Germany, issued a surrender ultimatum to Japan, and coordinated war crimes trials.
History
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

Today's Atlantic Trivia

The 37-volume Naturalis Historia is the earliest surviving encyclopedia, spanning diverse topics and showing a pronounced focus on elephants.
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 week ago

Today in History: November 3, KKK and neo-Nazis kill five in Greensboro massacre

Nov. 3 marks multiple historical events including the 1979 Greensboro massacre, major U.S. presidential elections, Sputnik 2 launch, and One World Trade Center opening.
from24/7 Wall St.
1 week ago

The Backbone of U.S. Armored Forces - America's Most-Built Tanks

The first war to use combat tanks was World War I. About 15 Ford 3-Ton M1918 prototypes were built near the end of World War I, but they did not see combat before the Armistice. By WWII the tanks were more versatile and speedier, with weapons upgrades, and were used extensively during the war. Today's modern tanks have changed a lot since the early days. The future of tanks will likely be unmanned vehicles controlled remotely.
History
History
fromSlate Magazine
1 week ago

Your Town's Local History Books Have a Very Secret and Powerful New Buyer

Arcadia Publishing offered its extensive catalog of local-history image-heavy books for use by a major AI company, notifying authors with a short opt-out deadline.
History
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Solving the Riddle of Jack the Ripper

Investigating Jack the Ripper encourages critical thinking by examining evidence, theories, and widespread cultural fascination surrounding the unsolved murders.
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

The Lonely New Vices of American Life

One minor but arresting fact of U.S. history is the huge amount of alcohol the average American consumed in 1830: 7.1 undiluted gallons a year, the equivalent of four shots of 80-proof whiskey every day. Assuming some children wimped out after the first drink, this statistic suggests that large numbers of Jacksonian-era adults were rolling eight belts deep seven days a week, with all the attendant implications for social and political life.
History
fromianVisits
1 week ago

London's Alleys: Greystoke Place (redux), EC4

The alley is one of the ancient alignments, appearing in the middle of the 1600s, and although the area changed a lot over the centuries, it remained very much a cluster of smaller buildings surrounding the alley. Until WWII, when a bomb flattened the entire site. It turns out that the alley was culverted for a couple of decades as a large 1950s building, known as Oyez House, which housed the printing works, storage, and offices for the Solicitors' Law Stationery Society.
History
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

New Medieval Books: The Secret Middle Ages - Medievalists.net

Medieval art and artifacts reveal societal values, fears, folklore, and everyday life through motifs of religion, monsters, love, sex, and popular belief.
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 week ago

Jacobite projectiles at found at Culloden

We've only had time to make a rapid assessment of our results, but musket balls fired by Jacobite and government troops, including pistol balls fired by government dragoons, likely relate to one of the last actions in the battle. This fight took place between the initial battle lines, at a location where boggy ground slowed the Highland charge, and this, in combination with heavy fire from Cumberland's line, helped to seal the fate of the Jacobite cause.
History
History
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 week ago

Today in History: November 2, Howard Hughes takes Spruce Goose' on its only flight

Nov. 2 features landmark events across aviation, early U.S. history, presidential upsets, Cold War-era scandals, space station habitation, wartime losses, and high-profile criminal cases.
History
fromSan Francisco Bay Times
2 weeks ago

Edward De Lacy Evans: The Woman With Three Wives - San Francisco Bay Times

Edward De Lacy Evans lived as a man for 20 years, married three women, and was exposed as biologically female after a forced bath.
History
fromSFGATE
2 weeks ago

Rare Bay Area Victorian mansion might need to 'get rid of everything'

Oakland's Camron-Stanford House preservation group faces lease non-renewal, threatening restoration and public access after decades of stewardship.
History
fromianVisits
1 week ago

A rare medieval scroll to protect mothers during chilldbirth has gone on display

A 500-year-old birthing girdle, a medieval parchment of prayers and charms to protect mother and child, is on display at the Wellcome Collection.
fromwww.ocregister.com
1 week ago

Day of the Dead: Here are some facts about death in the U.S.

The origins of Day of the Dead, or Dia de los Muertos, can be traced back hundreds of years to an Aztec festival that honored the goddess of the dead, Mictecacihuatl. The party lasted a month. With the arrival of European colonists, the Catholic Church shrank it to a couple of days, coinciding with All Saints' Day and All Souls' Day, usually the first two days of November. Family and friends decorate altars with offerings such as candles, flowers, photos and meaningful memorabilia.
History
History
fromianVisits
1 week ago

London's Alleys: French Place, E1

French Place is a historic Shoreditch passage of former warehouses turned offices/residences, with layered name changes, surviving original frontages, WWII damage, and a listed bollard.
fromNon Profit News | Nonprofit Quarterly
1 week ago

How Nonprofits Can Resist the AI Efficiency Trap - Non Profit News | Nonprofit Quarterly

In 1974, economist and metalworker Harry Braverman wrote Labor and Monopoly Capital, which showed how technology under capitalism shifts knowledge from workers to management-not because automation demands it but because control-seeking managers and capitalists do. Just over a half century later, his insight remains urgent: An invention offers options, but power often determines which are pursued.
History
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

New Medieval Books: The Formidable Women Who Shaped Medieval Europe - Medievalists.net

Over forty Burgundian royal and noblewomen wielded political, religious, and cultural power through governance, negotiation, patronage, estate management, and ecclesiastical appointments (14th–16th centuries).
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

Medieval Musical Notations Discovered in 9th-Century Manuscript - Medievalists.net

A 9th-century vellum leaf with early musical neumes, possibly among Western Europe's earliest written music, has been identified and is for sale for $80,000.
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

Ten Medieval Phrases That Deserve a Comeback - Medievalists.net

Language is always changing - words fall out of use, phrases fade, and new slang takes their place. But every now and then, it's worth looking back at what we've lost. The Middle Ages gave us an extraordinary range of expressions: oaths that could shake heaven, blessings that upheld kings, and sayings so sharp they still ring true today. Some of these phrases have vanished entirely, while others quietly survive in our speech without us even noticing. Here are ten medieval phrases that we think deserve a comeback.
History
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 week ago

Unique medieval helmet found in Georgia

A unique 9th–10th century iron helmet with detachable muzzle and chain-mail shirt were found at Rustavi fortress, evidencing advanced local medieval Georgian armour production.
fromMedievalists.net
1 week ago

The Mysterious Tombs of the Knights of the Round Table - Medievalists.net

In the mid-thirteenth century, the Dominican preacher Étienne de Bourbon compiled his vast Tractatus de diversis materiis predicabilibus at the convent of Lyon (c. 1250-1261). Structured around the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit-though death prevented him from completing more than five-it was a storehouse of exempla designed to enliven sermons. One of its most striking passages appears in the first book, under the gift of Fear ( de dono timoris), in the seventh section devoted to the fear of particular judgement.
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 week ago

What desperate pleas did William B. Travis send from the Alamo in 1836?

Prior to the siege, Bowie and Travis had agreed to co-command the garrison. A letter alleged to have been jointly issued by them on 23 February 1836 to Colonel James W. Fannin at Goliad is included among the Travis letters, although scholar Bill Groneman notes that the letter first appeared in an 1841 work, Texas and the Texians, by Henry Stuart Foote who provided no information on its origin (3).
History
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
1 week ago

Discover how Halloween transformed from ancient Celtic rites to today's celebrations.

Halloween ranks second to Christmas in global popularity and is increasingly lucrative, with Americans projected to spend $13.1 billion on Halloween in 2025.
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