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More from Res Obscura

Why were Belle Époque cities beautiful?

It's not because they were "traditional" or "classical" — in fact it's just the opposite

a month ago 25 votes
AI makes the humanities more important, but also a lot weirder

Historians are finally having their AI debate

2 months ago 27 votes
Onfim's world

Child artists in history

3 months ago 39 votes
When Jorge Luis Borges met one of the founders of AI

One reason I became a historian is the joy of encountering moments in the past that are foreign, yet also oddly familiar.

3 months ago 43 votes
AI legibility, physical archives, and the future of research

A followup to "The leading AI models are now good historians"

4 months ago 39 votes

More in history

Collections: Life, Work, Death and the Peasant, Part II: Starting at the End

This is the second part of our series (I) discussing the basic contours of life – birth, marriage, labor, subsistence, death – of pre-modern peasants and their families. As we’ve discussed, pre-modern peasant farmers make up the vast majority of human beings in in the past. Last week we started by looking at the basic … Continue reading Collections: Life, Work, Death and the Peasant, Part II: Starting at the End →

20 hours ago 5 votes
When Was Homer’s Iliad Written? Unraveling the Controversy

Homer’s Iliad tells the story of the Trojan War. Traditionally, that war has been dated to the late Bronze Age, approximately c. 1200 BCE. However, the Iliad itself was not written that early in history. There is wide agreement that Homer—or whoever the true author of the Iliad was—lived much, much later than this. […]

21 hours ago 2 votes
The World's First Female Serial Killer?

Ancient Roman True Crime

yesterday 3 votes
Was “Bad” King John Really That Bad?

Among the kings of England there have been eight Henrys, eight Edwards, and six Georges but there has only ever been one John. His successors did not want to be associated with the stain the name had in the minds of the English people. Considering what the monk Matthew Paris penned (writing decades after […]

yesterday 2 votes
Photographing The Black Panthers: All Power To The People (1967 – 1973)

“I wanted to show the whole picture of the Black Panther Party. Most of the media focused on the rallies and looked for controversy. I wanted to show what it was like behind the scenes and portray a more complete, complicated portrait of the Panthers.” – Stephen Shames photographs The Black Panthers, 1967 – 1973 … Continue reading "Photographing The Black Panthers: All Power To The People (1967 – 1973)" The post Photographing The Black Panthers: All Power To The People (1967 – 1973) appeared first on Flashbak.

yesterday 3 votes