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31 votes
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Long barrows are Neolithic constructions that might have been churches, or graveyards, or landmarks. And some are being built again: for the first time in recorded history.
15 votes -
Huey P. Newton, the misunderstood visionary behind the Black Panther Party
9 votes -
The Pictish Problem - Genetics of Scotland
18 votes -
Escaping East Germany in a DIY aircraft wasn’t enough for Ivo Zdarsky, so he invented his own way of life in a Utah desert ghost town
15 votes -
Götterdämmerung in the East - The Eastern Front in WWII after Stalingrad
6 votes -
Mediocre Samurai describes real life in historical Japan
21 votes -
Capturing the spirit of ancient seafaring, the reconstructed Viking sailboat "Saga Farmann" has successfully completed an epic journey from Norway's Tønsberg to Istanbul
16 votes -
2,400-year-old baskets still filled with fruit found in submerged Egyptian city
26 votes -
Israeli proposal to move early Christian mosaic to US Museum of the Bible sparks controversy
17 votes -
Newly published transcripts show the work of early radio broadcaster Walter Benjamin and the details he observed about his time
7 votes -
Rome’s libraries were shrines to knowledge – and imperial power
15 votes -
How an English exile ended up at the court of Genghis Khan's grandson
16 votes -
It's a Baltic problem – objects are vanishing from historic wrecks as sport divers and criminal gangs loot well-preserved sunken ships
10 votes -
SS Baychimo: The unsinkable Arctic ghost ship
7 votes -
The history of the Comstock Act, the 150 year old law conservatives in the US are banking on to ban abortion
31 votes -
The post-WWI migrations that built Yugoslavia and Turkey have left a painful legacy
13 votes -
On successor states and websites
16 votes -
The psychedelic drug that conquered Europe
11 votes -
Archeologists uncover ruins believed to be Roman Emperor Nero's theatre near Vatican
13 votes -
True size of a Spartan army - The real source of its strength
9 votes -
When did people stop being drunk all the time?
32 votes -
What's the difference between medieval inns, taverns, and alehouses?
13 votes -
Hunting for the Lizard People: On the dangerous conspiracy theories that led to the Nashville bombing
10 votes -
What were those mysterious craft? (1979)
7 votes -
The Kennedy Assassination: Inside the book depository
11 votes -
How to Roman Republic 101, Part I: SPQR
19 votes -
The Marian reforms weren't a thing
15 votes -
"Abraham Lincoln" street in Nogales, Sonora
15 votes -
Why Oppenheimer deserves his own movie
14 votes -
Scenes from a fallen empire: Abandoned Russian bases dot Mongolia’s border
16 votes -
Strongly influenced by Quakers 175 years ago, the Seneca Falls Convention kicked off the fight for women’s suffrage in the USA
15 votes -
Medieval Myth Busting - Arrows vs Armour 2, using historically accurate reproductions from time of the Battle of Agincourt (1415)
ARROWS vs ARMOUR 2 - FULL MEDIEVAL ARMOUR TESTED Other extra videos in the series: ARROWS vs ARMOUR 2 - ARMOUR PLATE TESTS ARROWS vs ARMOUR 2 - MAIL TESTS ARROWS vs ARMOUR 2 - ARROWHEAD MATERIAL...
ARROWS vs ARMOUR 2 - FULL MEDIEVAL ARMOUR TESTED
Other extra videos in the series:
ARROWS vs ARMOUR 2 - ARMOUR PLATE TESTS
ARROWS vs ARMOUR 2 - MAIL TESTS
ARROWS vs ARMOUR 2 - ARROWHEAD MATERIAL TESTSAnd they have also created a website for the project now too:
https://todtodeschini.com/youtube-projects/arrows-v-armour-2/Previous series of tests from a few years ago:
https://tild.es/h3u6 votes -
The lost patients of Washington state's abandoned psychiatric hospital
21 votes -
Ocomtún: A long-lost Maya city that was just discovered
16 votes -
Why has Enlightenment, the Scientific and later the Industrial Revolution started out in the "Western" world?
Before all else, I want to point out that this is a sensible topic and it is easy to go off the well-meaning path — my motives are strictly curiosity and I believe this site can actually have a...
Before all else, I want to point out that this is a sensible topic and it is easy to go off the well-meaning path — my motives are strictly curiosity and I believe this site can actually have a fruitful discussion around it. I would also like to mention that I have a quite limited, and very Europe/West-centric history knowledge, so please acknowledge my bias/ignorance. I don’t even know enough about the Western part, let alone enough to compare it with other cultures’ respective systems at the time.
I have talked about this topic numerous times with friends and while we had some theories why it might have started there, none of them were particularly convincing. Nonetheless, here are a few reasons we could come up with (of course it is multi-faceted), please expand/argue about them if you feel, or write new ones as well (I try to be brief here, partially due to hitting the edges of my knowledge in many cases, but also to not bias people to any particular topic):
Religion, Philosophy
Christianity is/was the predominant religion of the region. Plenty of important discoveries/inventions came from monks “learning about God through the natural world”, and many branches of Christianity believed in sharing not only their religion, but knowledge as well - Jesuits being particularly famous for teaching, and collecting vast amounts of knowledge. (Obviously, the Catholic Church had plenty of wrongdoings as well, and was not opposed to keeping people in the dark)
Another notable religion which deserves a mention in this topic is Jewish. I am unfortunately even less knowledgeable about it, but the number of Jewish scientists and discoveries is staggeringly high. From what I gathered, they have a strong culture of arguments/discussions regarding the Torah, and blind acceptance is not the way (as opposed to the Bible), which might have some relevance.
The Arab world had an important relationship with Europe, but from this perspective it may not be as important.
With that said, I really can’t argue whether these are significantly different than, say, Eastern religions. Maybe the Abrahamic three are a bit more individualistic, which might have a bigger relevance here in the direction Western philosophy has gone.
Economic system
I know even less about this topic. One important point I do know a bit about is the question of loans, which were forbidden by the Christian Church (for a while) and Islam, but not for Jews (so loans could be obtained in Europe). Not sure if there is a difference between different parts of the world here that is of relevance.
Capitalism itself is also a result of these philosophical ideas, so there might be more to this financial aspect.
Society, societal norms
A prominent theory might be the existence of universities. While different kinds of school systems have existed earlier - to my ignorant knowledge - Europe was ahead in terms of education. This is quite self-explanatory, accumulating smart people and ideas together greatly improves their “productivity”.
Colonialism
Self-explanatory, but if this is the answer, I would also like to extend the question to why the Western world was the first at that at such an extent? That also required technological innovation and a motivation for it. Though it itself has plenty possible explanations like good geographic location.
Climate, geography
Europe has a generally mild climate, well-fit for efficient agriculture and animal husbandry. It also has numerous rivers. It is not the Biblical garden where you have fruits all year long, so you do have to rely on your own work to survive winters, but it is definitely not the desert neither. But that is not a convincing answer either, because plenty of regions are similar, and early scientific advancements come from the more desert-y Arab word, with perhaps harsher conditions.
Europe is also well-connected to other regions.War, Politics
I quite liked this answer one of my friends came up with (within our circles that is) — due to many, small political entities being so close to each other, there were lots of conflicts, many of which resulted in wars — which are significant drivers of “innovation” even today. Pardon my ignorance, but other regions were mostly ruled by huge empires, that later fall apart and were conquered again, or small settlements with little outside contact. This necessitated less novelty in those conquests.
But even non-war conflicts themselves could have had positive effects, the aristocracy of Europe had strong connections with shared events - besides the more “romantic”/formal aspects, it was also a hub for many intellectuals from different countries to engage in deep discussions. Add to it that most research/discovery/philosophy came initially from people of aristocratic backgrounds.
I could write many more, but I am afraid that would have even less substance. I would be very interested in your input on this, what unique context allowed this intellectual growth that resulted in many aspects of our modern lives we take for granted?
45 votes -
Inside the 1971 campaign to save Seattle's Pike Place Market
12 votes -
Why is north up? | Map Men
18 votes -
A History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps podcast: Patrick Gray on Shakespeare
6 votes -
The history behind Orkney's vote to ‘join Norway’
9 votes -
The status quo coalition
7 votes -
The Battle of Fishkill: When Domenic Broccoli set out to expand his restaurant empire in upstate New York, he didn’t expect to find a grave site — or start a war
6 votes -
How inflation ruined the Roman economy
13 votes -
Recent analysis shows Iberian Copper Age tomb of high-status person in Spain was built for a woman
“This study was undertaken as part of a broader research looking at the interplay between early social complexity and gender inequalities,” study co-author and University of Seville prehistorian...
“This study was undertaken as part of a broader research looking at the interplay between early social complexity and gender inequalities,” study co-author and University of Seville prehistorian Leonardo García Sanjuán tells PopSci. “As part of this research, it became obvious that there is a serious problem in the identification of biological sex in prehistoric skeletons, which are often found in a poor state of preservation.”
Now redubbed the “Ivory Lady,” this woman’s tomb was first discovered in 2008 in Valencia on Spain’s southeastern coast. The find dates back to the Copper Age, when the metal was used for construction, agriculture, and even creating engravings of owls that may have been toys. The grave is also a rare example of single occupancy burial at the time and the tomb was filled with the largest collection of valuable and rare items in the region. These treasures include high-quality flint, ostrich eggshell amber, a rock crystal dagger, and ivory tusks.
All of these trinkets and single tomb initially indicated that the remains must belong to a prominent male, but peptides and DNA don’t lie.
10 votes -
United States of America
7 votes -
Some historians say that the last US Revolutionary War battle was fought in India
14 votes -
A July Fourth collection of essays related to the US Independence Day
7 votes -
Illustrations of madness: James Tilly Matthews and the Air Loom
9 votes -
Hold the line - The short history of women switchboard operators
20 votes -
The misunderstood Roman empress who willed her way to the top
15 votes