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8 votes
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Kim Bowes on the economic lives of Rome's ninety percent
10 votes -
Enormous' cave hidden under medieval Pembroke castle could rewrite prehistory, researchers say
23 votes -
New search engine reveals if ancestors were in Nazi party
23 votes -
Why Portuguese is the most underestimated global language on Earth
19 votes -
Born into slavery, Adolf Ludvig Couschi Badin became part of the Swedish royal court and left a legacy of books and letters
8 votes -
Wit, unker, git: The lost medieval pronouns of English intimacy
29 votes -
As an antidote to AI and online translation tools, a Cornell German professor gives her students a typewriter-only assignment once a semester
20 votes -
Over 200 years after being sunk by the British Royal Navy under Admiral Horatio Nelson, one of Denmark's most famous warships has been discovered at the bottom of Copenhagen Harbor
15 votes -
Enjoying reading in the age of LLMs
I used to really value the art of essay writing. There seemed to be such a richness in the different ways people would construct arguments, structure those arguments, then deliver those arguments...
I used to really value the art of essay writing. There seemed to be such a richness in the different ways people would construct arguments, structure those arguments, then deliver those arguments stylistically, not just from the perspective of being persuaded as a reader but also from the perspective of seeing how a given writer thinks, relates to the living tradition of language, and understands the world conceptually. But it's basically lost most of its meaning to me in this age of LLMs. The reality is, LLMs are capable of writing texts that, if you gave them to a seasoned reader 5 years ago, they'd say it was well written and indicative of a truly thoughtful mind. Even if there currently exist certain tells with LLMs, those styles certainly existed in different ways in real human writing beforehand. Now, those perfectly reasonable set of styles are verboten and we have to dedicate half our deep focus to figuring out whether, or to what extent, an essay or article was written by AI. It's difficult to enjoy, let alone care, about essay writing and the writers behind them now.
I can still find value in books, though, because they were written in the past and I don't mind never reading any non-scientific book published after 2022 if it comes down to it.
23 votes -
[Steyr] AUG
13 votes -
Landslide: a ghost story
8 votes -
Tattooing in the American Civil War was a hedge against anonymous death
18 votes -
Why Scotland succeeded
21 votes -
Pope Leo calls universal healthcare a 'moral imperative'
55 votes -
Commonly misspelled words quiz
36 votes -
Erling Haaland donated a rare 16th-Century book of Viking sagas, worth £100,000, to be displayed in the library in the Norwegian town of Bryne, where he grew up
15 votes -
George Orwell’s opposition to totalitarianism was rooted in his support for freeing workers from poverty and exploitation
24 votes -
The Candlemakers' Petition by Frédéric Bastiat (1845)
13 votes -
The (illegal) nuclear reactor buried under Greenland
10 votes -
Mazed is a collection of the traditional tales of Cornwall, each with a map showing the tale's location
16 votes -
Workers who love ‘synergizing paradigms’ might be bad at their jobs
24 votes -
How far back in time can you understand English?
67 votes -
Stone Age boy in Sweden was buried in deerskin and a woodpecker headdress, archaeologists discover
11 votes -
'Exceptionally rare' Roman lead blocks found on farmland in Wales
20 votes -
Here's to the polypropylene makers
13 votes -
First contact with America
5 votes -
17th century Swedish Navy shipwreck buried underwater in central Stockholm for 400 years has suddenly become visible due to unusually low Baltic Sea levels
14 votes -
The complicated origin of the expression ‘peanut gallery’
12 votes -
Special preschools are helping the Sámi people in Finland to bring their almost-lost language back from the brink of extinction
11 votes -
Those who can, teach history
8 votes -
Against the state – a primer on terrorism, insurgency and protest
17 votes -
The ten best and ten worst US foreign policy decisions
15 votes -
After 1,600 years underwater, remains of the Lighthouse of Alexandria emerge
35 votes -
Even when youre right, you lose
4 votes -
Wojaks, soyjaks, and you. | Bad art history
5 votes -
Economic ideas and policy implementation: Evidence from Malthusian training in British Indian bureaucracy
10 votes -
Buddhist monks speak at the National Cathedral in Washington
8 votes -
Roman industrial hub discovered on banks of River Wear
8 votes -
On ancient migrations
4 votes -
The Mangual, or two handed chain flail. Used extensively in Spain and Portugal from around 1400 -1650. | Weird Weapons
7 votes -
Runic inscriptions from the Viking Age still turn up in Sweden 1,000 years after they were written – revealing fascinating stories of love, loss and epic battles
15 votes -
C'mon, professors, assign the hard reading
32 votes -
Patterns of worldwide religious affiliation, participation, and belief
23 votes -
In the 1930s a radical conservative faction almost pushed Finland into full authoritarianism
8 votes -
Why academic competition >> athletic competition
5 votes -
What are your favourite historic anecdotes or stories?
Inspired by @Fiachra's question in this post, I wanted to asked the broader tildes community: What are some of your favourite historic anecdotes or stories? The original question is more narrow,...
Inspired by @Fiachra's question in this post, I wanted to asked the broader tildes community: What are some of your favourite historic anecdotes or stories? The original question is more narrow, but I'm honestly curious to hear any fun or intriguing ones from any period of history.
Re-posting what I responded there:
OH man, time to share my favourite example of how one person being an asshole changed history: Shah Muhammad II of Khwarazm. The Khwarazmian Empire was roughly the Persian/Iranian Empire from 1077–1231. A massive, rich, culturally leading Empire at the centre of the Silk Road.Genghis Khan, seeking to increase trade in preparation for his invasion of China, sent envoys to Khwarazm to ask to open trade. The Shah, in his supreme arrogance, decided these smelly Mongols insulted him by their very presence, and had them executed. Genghis, who very famously established the Imperial Mongol tradition of absolute protection for envoys, was furious. And yet, focused on his goal, he sent a SECOND group of envoys to demand an explanation and try to smooth things over. And the Shah executed them too. This pissed Genghis and his leadership off so much they paused the invasion of China, and launched a punitive expedition to conquer Persia/Khwarazm. I want to stress again that the records we have make it clear that the Mongols at this point had no interest in going further West. They were very focused on achieving victory over their arch-nemeses in China.
Within two years the entire Empire had fallen, the Shah was dead, and its fabulously rich cities torched and massacred. Following this, the Mongols realized they could continue to press on and ended up invading the rest of the Islamic world, famously including the destruction of Baghdad, the world's finest city of learning and culture at that point. The fall of Baghdad is widely considered to be the end of the Islamic Golden Age. Estimates of deaths in the Islamic World vary widely, but it is undeniable that many of the most populous and prosperous cities from the Mediterranean to the Caspian Sea were totally destroyed and depopulated. All because one jackass decided he couldn't be bothered to take some smelly Mongols seriously.
Also, I have no idea what to tag this, sorry lol.
20 votes -
A Norwegian rocket launched on 25th January 1995 to study the Northern Lights was mistaken by Russia for an incoming nuclear missile on a direct course to Moscow
10 votes -
Maritime archaeologists from the Viking Ship Museum in Denmark have announced the discovery of what they describe as the world’s largest cog
8 votes -
Hundreds of mysterious Victorian-era shoes are washing up on a beach in Wales
21 votes