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9 votes
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Swedish prosecutors have named Stig Engström as the man who killed former Swedish prime minister Olof Palme in 1986, ending years of mystery
5 votes -
Entire Roman city revealed using ground penetrating radar
11 votes -
Modern Marvels: The Manhattan Project
4 votes -
Sweden to present findings on Olof Palme assassination – sources say South Africa handed over dossier, but not everyone is hopeful mystery will be solved
5 votes -
Black Death, COVID, and why we keep telling the myth of a Renaissance Golden Age and bad Middle Ages
11 votes -
Last person to receive an American Civil War pension dies
17 votes -
The case for reparations: We've had 250 years of slavery, 90 years of Jim Crow, 60 years of separate but equal and 35 years of racist housing policy. Without addressing this, the US can't move on
32 votes -
Oldest and largest Maya structure discovered in southern Mexico
9 votes -
President? Why not? Says a man at the top.
1 vote -
Report reveals Rio Tinto knew the significance of 46,000-year-old rock caves six years before it blasted them
10 votes -
Zettelkasten — How one German scholar was so freakishly productive
17 votes -
John Titor
11 votes -
How 1960s black protests moved elites, public opinion and voting
@owasow: For 15 years, I've been studying 1960s civil rights protests with particular attention to how nonviolent and violent actions by activists & police influence media, elites, public opinion & voters. I'm thrilled some of that work was published last week. 1/ https://t.co/zzvvPTcgoP
5 votes -
How conspiracy theories fueled the US civil war
6 votes -
Underwater aircraft carriers: Imperial Japan’s secret weapon
6 votes -
"[R]iots do not develop out of thin air. [...] in the final analysis, a riot is the language of the unheard." MLK, Jr., 1967
9 votes -
Subutai: Genghis Khan’s demon dog of war
5 votes -
Early warnings: How American journalists reported the rise of Hitler
5 votes -
The insane engineering of the A-10 Warthog
4 votes -
Pandemic escape: Volunteers transcribe Sally Ride’s papers, Rosa Parks’s recipes, Walt Whitman’s poems
7 votes -
How white backlash controls American progress: Backlash dynamics are one of the defining patterns of the country’s history
8 votes -
The Kentucky miner who scammed Americans by claiming he was Hitler and plotting a ‘revolt’ with ‘spaceships’
9 votes -
Oceania explained
3 votes -
Huey Long, the dictator of Louisiana
3 votes -
The Hongerwinter: How famine under the Nazis revealed the cause of celiac disease
6 votes -
In defense of hellfire: The rhetoric of damnation has been lost. But how else can we adequately condemn injustice?
8 votes -
The mysterious religion of Carthage
5 votes -
World War Two animated: Western Front 1940
10 votes -
Cicero's Finest Hour (44 to 43 B.C.E.)
8 votes -
Why did GE Moore disappear from history?
9 votes -
An Oxford professor, an evangelical collector, and a missing gospel of Mark: A scholar claimed that he discovered a first-century gospel fragment, now faces allegations of theft, cover-up, and fraud
11 votes -
The Swiss at war: Bellicose Swiss and an ambitious Duke - The Burgundian Wars Pt. 1
8 votes -
Did the Foederati end the Roman Empire?
8 votes -
The real Lord of the Flies: What happened when six boys were shipwrecked for fifteen months
32 votes -
The hunt for the German battleship Tirpitz, '42-44
4 votes -
Confronting the colonial legacies of museum collections
8 votes -
Rare 200-year-old clay pipe depicting thylacine dubbed the 'holy grail' of Tasmanian archaeology
Key points: A clay pipe found in a bottle dump in Launceston appears to show one of the earliest recorded European depictions of a Tasmanian tiger It is believed to be at least 190 years old and...
Key points:
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A clay pipe found in a bottle dump in Launceston appears to show one of the earliest recorded European depictions of a Tasmanian tiger
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It is believed to be at least 190 years old and handcrafted out of river clay by a local
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Adding to the mystery of the pipe is the depiction of a kookaburra, which were were not introduced to Tasmania until 1902
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-05-08/rare-clay-pipe-depicts-tasmanian-tiger/12215284
7 votes -
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Charles Coughlin, the 'Radio Priest' who brought fascism to America in the 1930s (1979)
7 votes -
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