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More from weird medieval guys

My favourite etymologies: clue

A word for worms, string, romance, and advice

6 days ago 7 votes
Huge announcement: there’s a Weird Medieval Guys BOOK coming out soon!

oh my god!!! oh my god!!!! oh my god!!!!!

a year ago 20 votes
The Medieval Monks Who Lived on Top of Giant Pillars

A history of the monastic high life

a year ago 67 votes
An 800 year prayer book that's decorated with puns

Plus a little history of manuscript illustration

a year ago 69 votes

More in history

When Salvador Dalí Created a Chilling Anti-Venereal Disease Poster During World War II

As a New York City subway rider, I am constantly exposed to public health posters. More often than not these feature a photo of a wholesome-looking teen whose sober expression is meant to convey hindsight regret at having taken up drugs, dropped out of school, or forgone condoms. They’re well-intended, but boring. I can’t imagine […]

23 hours ago 2 votes
'We live in an age where illness and deformity are commonplace'

The Year of the Plague #5

20 hours ago 2 votes
The Real Magna Carta

The Real Magna Carta JamesHoare Thu, 03/13/2025 - 09:17

18 hours ago 2 votes
Watch the Only Time Charlie Chaplin & Buster Keaton Performed Together On-Screen (1952)

Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton were the two biggest comedy stars of the silent era, but as it happened, they never shared the screen until well into the reign of sound. In fact, their collaboration didn’t come about until 1952, the same year that Singin’ in the Rain dramatized the already distant-feeling advent of talking […]

19 hours ago 1 votes
Man Ray’s Mathematics Objects (1934-36)

The collection of 19th-century three-dimensional models of algebraic and differential equations at the Institut Henri Poincaré in Paris made a great impression on Surrealist artists.     When German artist Max Ernst (2 April 1891 – 1 April 1976) saw a series of 19th Century wood, metal, wire, and plaster forms at the Institut Henri … Continue reading "Man Ray’s Mathematics Objects (1934-36)" The post Man Ray’s Mathematics Objects (1934-36) appeared first on Flashbak.

18 hours ago 1 votes