History
- Collections: Why Roman Egypt Was Such a Strange Provinceacoup.blog Collections: Why Roman Egypt Was Such a Strange Province
Welcome back! We are back from our November hiatus and thus back to regular weekly posts! This week we’re going to answer the runner-up question in the last ACOUP Senate poll (polls in which …
- Spartans Were Losersforeignpolicy.com Spartans Were Losers
The U.S. military’s admiration of a proto-fascist city-state is based on bad history.
- Why were steppe nomads so OP in medieval Eurasia?
Maybe the classical era too, I don't know where the start year should be. It ends in the early modern period when bordering agriculturalists like the Russians start expanding.
In other places and times agriculturalists tend to displace nomads on arable land, probably because crop farming can support a lot more people (and therefore fighters) per area.
Any explanation needs to be valid across the whole period and rely on things the nomads had that the farmers didn't. Horse archery was not new by this period.
- 👉 [#Historia](https://mastodon.social/tags/Historia) 🇦🇫 [#AFGANISTÁN](https://mastodon.social/tags/AFGANIST%C3%81N), 50 AÑOS DE UNA [#MUERTE](https://mastodon.social/tags/MUERTE) NO ANUNCIADA [https:/
👉 #Historia 🇦🇫 #AFGANISTÁN, 50 AÑOS DE UNA #MUERTE NO ANUNCIADA https://elmonarquico.com/afganistan-50-anos-de-una-muerte-no-anunciada @bloguers\_net @history
- Charles R. Jenkins - one of seven U.S. soldiers to defect after the Korean War
I heard a good bit about defections from North Korea but today was the first time I read about people decring to North Korea. Here is an interesting read about the life of one of seven U.S. soldiers to defect after the Korean War. Jenkins deserted in 1965 by crossing the DMZ expecting to the fairly quickly handed over to the Soviets and then included in a prisoner exchange back to the US. Instead, the North Koreans kept him, tortured him, turned him into a movie star (playing evil Americans) and married him to an abducted Japanese nurse. In 2005, he left (or was allowed to leave) to Japan and lived there until his death in 2017.
The articles about the other defectors are also a decent read. I found the life of James Desnok particularly interesting who seems to have quickly become a convinced regime supporter (and whose two sons are serving in the North Korean army).
- Ancient Ife and its masterpieces of African art: transforming glass, copper and terracotta into sculptural symbols of power and ritualwww.africanhistoryextra.com Ancient Ife and its masterpieces of African art: transforming glass, copper and terracotta into sculptural symbols of power and ritual
Towards an understanding of naturalist (realistic) art in the African context
- When Africans Wrote Their Own History; A Catalogue Of African Historiography Written By African Scribes From Antiquity Until The Eve Of Colonialismwww.africanhistoryextra.com WHEN AFRICANS WROTE THEIR OWN HISTORY; A CATALOGUE OF AFRICAN HISTORIOGRAPHY WRITTEN BY AFRICAN SCRIBES FROM ANTIQUITY UNTIL THE EVE OF COLONIALSIM
Far from being a continent without history, Africa is simply a continent whose written history has not been studied
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/1443411
> Part 2 is here > > An in-depth look at Historiography across the African continent.
- How Third-Century China Saw Rome, a Land Ruled by “Minor Kings”www.smithsonianmag.com How Third-Century China Saw Rome, a Land Ruled by “Minor Kings”
Translations of a 3rd century Chinese text describe Roman life
alt link if it doesn't work.
- Soviet Judgment at Nuremberg: A New History of the International Military Tribunal after WWII
YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
- Greetings from !Middleageslemmy.ml History of the Middle Ages - Lemmy
I hope to make a fantastic community who shares their knowledge and passion about the Middle Ages. Posts about history from V-XV century from regions other than Europe are most welcome too! Please be reasonable and civil about topics that touches religion (considering the historic period). Other his...
Hi!
I would like to invite you to a community I moderate about the Middle Ages. I try to post every day interesting articles that I find about this historical period (so far only me 🥲).
I would be honored if you participate in that community too! I’m sure there are some medieval maniacs here :)
If that post is considered spam, feel free to remove it.
- How did the Iceberg Sink the Titanic?yewtu.be How did the Iceberg Sink the Titanic?
When Titanic struck the iceberg in April 1912, Captain Edward Smith received concerning reports from various forward parts of his ship. This all added up to pain a disturbing picture; that his ship was sinking and was a certain loss. In this history documentary we explore how Titanic was designed to...
- Pompeii archaeologists discover 'pizza' paintingwww.bbc.com Pompeii archaeologists discover 'pizza' painting
Experts say the flatbread depicted in the 2,000 year-old fresco may be a precursor to the Italian dish.
- The successful 70-year campaign to convince people the USA and not the USSR beat Hitlerwww.vox.com France is wrong about who defeated the Nazis
There are a lot of reasons Hitler lost. A big one was that the Red Army demolished the German Army.
- The Problematic Myth of Florence Nightingale
This was interesting. Her real innovation was structuring the hospitals she managed hierarchically. She made the nurses fully subservient to the doctors, which was not the case before. This was maybe or maybe not good for medicine, but certainly good for the people at the tops of the hierarchies, who celebrated her. Other people who did more valuable work were ignored by the history-writers.
- The 60th anniversary of the flight of the first woman into space!
On this day on the 16th of June 1963 the spaceship Vostok-6 was launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome, piloted by the first female cosmonaut in the world - Valentina Tereshkova.
The "Seagull" (that was the call sign invented by Sergei Korolev) began its journey to the stars with the phrase "Hey! Sky, take off your hat".
The legendary flight lasted just under three days, during which time the ship made 48 rotations around the Earth. On board, twenty-six year old Valentina kept an in-flight magazine and took photographs of the horizon - later they were used to detect aerosol layers in the atmosphere.
Valentina Tereshkova is still the only woman on our planet to have made a solo space flight. She proved that cosmonautics is not just a vocation for men.
- Archaeologists find a 3,000-year-old bronze sword in Germanyarkeonews.net Archaeologists find a 3,000-year-old bronze sword in Germany
Archaeologists discovered a bronze sword more than 3,000 years old during excavations in the town of Nördlingen in Bavaria, Germany....
- Deputy Haase, Chairman of the Peoples' Commissaries, addressing the crowd on Tempelhofer Feld (1918) [600 x 514]
Haase speaking at funeral of revolutionary victims, Berlin, November 1918. In this photograph, Hugo Haase (1863-1919) is standing on a platform addressing a crowd at the funeral of the victims of the Berlin Revolution of 9 November 1918. Unlike the other photographs of the funeral, the crowd at this point appears almost exclusively male and military. Haase, a co-founder of the Independent Social Democratic Party, was a joint chairman of the Council of People's Commissioners which was set up by the revolution.
Taken from the National Library of Scotland: https://digital.nls.uk/74549648
- How long until there's an r/AskHistorians equivalent?
If ever. I don't know, are they part of the blackout? I thought they were.
- Closing Speech of Clarence Darrow in People v. Henry Sweet
Clarence Darrow was a famous American civil rights attorney of the 19th and 20th century. His most famous case with the "Scopes Monkey Trial", but he was involved in other high profile trials. This case was for a black family that moved into a white neighborhood and were attacked by a white mob. Henry Sweet of the family fired back in self-defense, killing a member of the mob. Partially on Darrow's closing arguments, Henry Sweet was acquitted under self-defense. Charges against the rest of the family were also dropped.
Darrow's speech is well ahead of its time, especially for a white man. He doesn't shy away from things like asking the all white jury to consider its own prejudice. In the hundred years since this speech, many Americans still are resistant to confronting their own prejudices.
- The KGB Taught Putin Him How to Lie, Think Like a Terroristwww.businessinsider.com Putin's KGB past is key to grasping what he might do next in his failing Ukraine war, ex-spies say
The KGB morphed Putin into a master manipulator and played a key role in his rise to power and his approach to the war in Ukraine.
- How the KGB Silenced Dissent During the Soviet Erawww.history.com How the KGB Silenced Dissent During the Soviet Era | HISTORY
From the Bolsheviks' Red Terror and Stalin's Great Purge to forced hospital 'treatments,' the secret police agency—and its earlier incarnations—used consistently brutal tactics.
- CIA, MKULTRA and the Cover-up of U.S. Germ Warfare in the Korean Warjeff-kaye.medium.com CIA, MKULTRA and the Cover-up of U.S. Germ Warfare in the Korean War
CIA & Army Counterintelligence involved in secret “processing” of U.S. POWs who confessed to using biological weapons against China, No…
- Complex supply chains may have appeared more than 3,000 years agowww.sciencenews.org Complex supply chains may have appeared more than 3,000 years ago
Finds from one of the world’s oldest shipwrecks hint that miners in Central Asia and Turkey provided a crucial metal to Mediterranean rulers.
- Color Photos of Soviet Union Taken by a US Diplomat in 1950srarehistoricalphotos.com Color Photos of Stalin-Era Soviet Union Taken by a US Diplomat Who Got Deported for Espionage, 1950s
During the tumultuous years of the Cold War, when political tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union reached their zenith, one man found himself at the center of this ideological bat…
- Da Vinci understood key aspect of gravity centuries before Einstein, lost sketches revealwww.livescience.com Da Vinci understood key aspect of gravity centuries before Einstein, lost sketches reveal
Sketches found inside Leonardo da Vinci's sketchbooks, show that he had already grasped the essence of Einstein’s 1907 ‘Equivalence Principle’ centuries before the physicist.
Da Vinci's sketches, which were forgotten for decades, show triangles formed by sand-like particles pouring from a jar. These falling grains depicted experiments to show that gravity was a form of acceleration more than 400 years before Einstein did, a new study argues.
- Study of 2,500-year-old latrines from the biblical Kingdom of Judah shows the ancient faeces within contain Giardia – a parasite that can cause dysentery.www.cam.ac.uk Early toilets reveal dysentery in Old Testament Jerusalem
Study of 2,500-year-old latrines from the biblical Kingdom of Judah shows the ancient faeces within contain Giardia – a parasite that can cause dysentery.
>“The fact that these parasites were present in sediment from two Iron Age Jerusalem cesspits suggests that dysentery was endemic in the Kingdom of Judah,” said study lead author Dr Piers Mitchell from Cambridge’s Department of Archaeology.