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7 votes
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The cost of free doughnuts: Seventy years of regret
9 votes -
What's so special about Viking ships? | Jan Bill
7 votes -
Norway's social-democratic compromise doesn't owe to some eternal national character – it was a product of the revolutionary struggles of the interwar period
7 votes -
The mysterious erdstall
7 votes -
A big little idea called legibility
10 votes -
Mark Blyth - A brief history of how we got here and why
7 votes -
How the Kent State massacre marked the start of America's polarization
11 votes -
Why were notched wood sticks so important in medieval times?
6 votes -
Explorer, navigator, coloniser: Revisit Captain Cook’s legacy with the click of a mouse
6 votes -
Today (29th April 2020) is the 250th anniversary of Captain Cook's landing at Botany Bay (Kamay)
250 years ago, Captain James Cook and his ship the HMS Endeavour landed at Kamay (Botany Bay) on the eastern coast of Australia. He was in the middle of a months-long exploration of the eastern...
250 years ago, Captain James Cook and his ship the HMS Endeavour landed at Kamay (Botany Bay) on the eastern coast of Australia. He was in the middle of a months-long exploration of the eastern coast. His crew first spotted the Australian mainland on 11th April 1770, and they left Australian waters after taking possession of the continent in the name of King George III on 22nd August.
This was not the first visitation of Australia by Europeans. That honour goes to Dutch sailor Willem Janszoon in his ship the Duyfken in 1606. Dutch & Portuguese sailors & traders continued to visit the north and west coasts for the next couple of centuries. They called the continent "New Holland".
But Cook represented the first European power to assume possession of the continent. 18 years later, the English sent their First Fleet of convict ships to the land of New South Wales.
250 years since Captain Cook arrived in Australia, his legacy remains fraught
What Australians often get wrong about our most (in)famous explorer, Captain Cook
For Indigenous people, Cook's voyage of 'discovery' was a ghostly visitation
10 votes -
"Old King Cole was a merry old soul" - and possibly a real king in post-Roman Britain
I'm reading a book called 'British Kings & Queens', and there's a mention of a king called Coelius, who may have been the inspiration for the nursery rhyme 'Old King Cole'. I've done some research...
I'm reading a book called 'British Kings & Queens', and there's a mention of a king called Coelius, who may have been the inspiration for the nursery rhyme 'Old King Cole'.
I've done some research and found this local history about "Coel Hen (the Old) aka Coelius (of Ayrshire)" (sadly, the accompanying pictures seem to have disappeared).
He seems to have been in power around the early 400s A.D. - about the time that the Romans exited Britain. His domain included Ayrshire in modern-day Scotland.
7 votes -
The search for DB Cooper
10 votes -
Pompeii ruins show that the Romans invented recycling
4 votes -
Political ships of Theseus | The American party switch
7 votes -
Johann Hari: You are being lied to about pirates
12 votes -
Scientists stage sword fights to study Bronze Age warfare
9 votes -
When monks went undercover to steal relics
6 votes -
Treasure trove of artifacts illustrates life in a lost Viking mountain pass – Lendbreen, in Norway, was an important route from the Roman era until the late Middle Ages
8 votes -
For eleven years, the Soviet Union had no weekends
14 votes -
The animated history of Iceland
5 votes -
Inhabiting the earth: A new history of raw earth architecture
10 votes -
The Pope just proposed a universal basic income. Is the United States ready for it?
16 votes -
America: 200 years of responding to epidemics from The Saturday Evening Post
4 votes -
Archaeologists discover paintings of goddess in 3,000-year-old mummy's coffin
8 votes -
Probable Roman shipwrecks unearthed at a Serbian coal mine
9 votes -
A profound ignorance of nature - Commentary on Neil deGrasse Tyson’s most recent expression of historical illiteracy
4 votes -
The history of Turkey until Atatürk
10 votes -
This isn't the first time a crisis has come during election year. So how have we dealt with things like this before?
8 votes -
Why Hitler lost the war: German strategic mistakes in WWII
7 votes -
The great toilet paper scare of 1973
6 votes -
The Taisho era and how the Japanese army put an end to it
4 votes -
How the 1957 flu pandemic was stopped early in its path
7 votes -
Caesar's Funeral (44 B.C.E.)
4 votes -
How Americans discussed democracy in the 1930's
10 votes -
Birgit Maixner: ‘Place names are like fossils in the landscape. They tell us stories about the past – if we know how to interpret them’
6 votes -
The US's foreign entanglements
3 votes -
Five people who were amazingly productive in quarantine
9 votes -
The flu killed forty million in 1918. Every flu season since is descended from it
9 votes -
Why didn't anyone copy the Roman army? - The imitation legions
3 votes -
The Highland clearances explained
5 votes -
The fragments of the Dead Sea Scrolls at the Museum of the Bible are all forgeries
11 votes -
The history of Spain’s ‘Insured for Fire’ building signs
7 votes -
Rum rations in the navy during the 18th century: Grog
7 votes -
How they wore their swords (from approx. 1150-1600)
6 votes -
When did France stop having peasants?
8 votes -
Vatican opens archives of World War II-era Pope Pius XII
6 votes -
The forgotten story of America's first EMT services
5 votes -
Social contagion: How China's rapid development created the conditions for an epidemic
9 votes -
Smithsonian Open Access - 2.8 million images and 3D models from the Institution's collections released into the public domain
14 votes