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9 votes
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A 100,000-year-old burial site in Israel is changing what we know about early humans
13 votes -
Scandinavia has its own dark history of assimilating Indigenous people, and churches played a role – but are apologizing
12 votes -
Vatican sent Italian children born out of wedlock to America as orphans; new book uncovers program
25 votes -
The last SS guard
13 votes -
Russian Civil War, Winter 1917-1918
4 votes -
We found French underwear in an ancient Sumerian city | Girsu Project | Curator's Corner S10 Ep4
12 votes -
The cure for scurvy, forgotten
51 votes -
ITA was a 1960s schools experiment that created a whole new alphabet – and left thousands of UK children unable to spell
32 votes -
Scientists built a canoe using only prehistoric tools. Then they sailed the dangerous 140-mile route early humans traveled 30,000 years ago.
32 votes -
The deportation campaigns of the Great Depression
24 votes -
The American civil-military relationship
13 votes -
Why forty-two languages have the same word for "pineapple"
18 votes -
The Faroe Islands are the only country that celebrates their World War II occupation
8 votes -
Why did the UK government nationalise this pub?
10 votes -
The shipwrecks from John Franklin’s doomed arctic expedition were exactly where the Inuit said they would be
15 votes -
How the US built 5,000 ships in World War II
10 votes -
Re-enacting the 1492 papal conclave for college credit
14 votes -
English is not normal. No, English isn’t uniquely vibrant or mighty or adaptable. But it really is weirder than pretty much every other language.
27 votes -
How the 'Shetland Bus' helped Norway resist Nazi Germany – innocent-looking fishing boats delivered valuable cargo and special agents
8 votes -
In April 1945 the Swedish Red Cross launched the largest rescue operation of World War II – the mission, involving the now-iconic “White Buses”, ultimately saved 15,000 prisoners
12 votes -
Did the United States almost support Nazi Germany in World War II? (No)
10 votes -
On the Resistance in Belgium platform, anyone can research resistance activities in Belgium during World War II
13 votes -
Remembering Betty Webb: Bletchley Park and Pentagon code breaker
5 votes -
Why the island of Bornholm is Danish and not German, Swedish or Polish
7 votes -
Book review of Robert Ferguson's fascinating history of the experiences of the Norwegians during the five years of German occupation
6 votes -
Europe's undeciphered prehistoric tablets
9 votes -
US President John F. Kennedy files expose family secrets: Their relatives were CIA assets
21 votes -
The hidden history of hand talk
2 votes -
Popping the bag: What happens when a group, once powerful, is suppressed or disbanded? Where do its members go?
12 votes -
Former Lenin Museum in Tampere, which opened in 1946 as a symbol of Finnish-Russian friendship, has rebranded amid Ukraine war
12 votes -
Stonehenge-like circle unearthed in Denmark – archaeologists suggest ‘woodhenge’ was built between 2600 and 1600BC on similar axis to English stone circle
14 votes -
Restitution project genealogists track down rightful heirs of Nazi-looted books
9 votes -
How World War II was 'practiced' in Spain (1936-1939)
7 votes -
Archaeologists discover stash of 1,500-year-old weapons – includes the only known Roman helmet ever found in Denmark
11 votes -
How France uncovered the mystery of the forbidden photos of Nazi-occupied Paris
41 votes -
The lost towers of the Guelph-Ghibelline wars
17 votes -
How elite backlash to the populist reforms of the Gracchi brothers presaged the violent collapse of the Roman Republic
18 votes -
Building the worst World War II air force - terrible aircraft and how to sell them (feat. @AnimarchyHistory)
17 votes -
Are we all capable of being slaveowners or nazis?
for some time now, this is a question I have pondered alot. I was not unfamiliar with the slave history of the U.S. and knew it was a big reason for the Civil War, I became more aware of the...
for some time now, this is a question I have pondered alot.
I was not unfamiliar with the slave history of the U.S. and knew it was a big reason for the Civil War, I became more aware of the current racial issues in America courtesy of The Daily Show and the George Floyd riots (along with binging Watchmen) turbo-charged my desire to know more about it.
and I read Night by Elie Wiesel when I was in high school and recently read Maus, neither of which are shy to fully express the horrors the Jews went through in the Holocaust.
And the recent discovery of unmarked graves of Indigenous children from Residential school in Canada have sent me down that rabbit-hole of learning exactly what the catholic church was up to in these parts.
But I think where I get stuck is I believe that everyone is capable of empathy for a fellow human being. besides the psychopaths and sociopaths, I think we all have an innate capability to care when we see someone crying or in a bad place.
And yet, those atrocities suggest that we can be condition to turn off our ability for empathy to quite an extreme degree? Is that something that can happen to all of us?
Not sure if this thread will be taken down as I don't know the potential for this to start a good discussion, just wasn't sure where else to post it.
29 votes -
Dowding: Man behind 'The Few' | Great British Battle Commanders
3 votes -
Conversational English in 1586
5 votes -
Nationalism, explained
9 votes -
Navajo code talker who helped allies win World War II dies aged 107
30 votes -
Investigating the most extreme ancient village in the United States
9 votes -
Advanced technology discovered under Neolithic dwelling in Denmark – a stone paved root cellar, which could represent a remarkable technological leap in resource preservation
14 votes -
German Navy Enigma machine systems were different to the Army, making them tougher to crack. In this video, James Grime discusses the differences and what Alan Turing achieved in breaking the code.
8 votes -
Where does punctuation come from?!
15 votes -
A brief history of the end of the world
9 votes -
We may be close to rediscovering thousands of texts that had been lost for millennia. Their contents may reshape how we understand the Ancient World.
41 votes