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Today, the Vatican announced the death of Pope Francis, head of the Roman Catholic Church, at age 88. The pope’s death comes just one day after he addressed a crowd of thousands in St. Peter’s Square following Easter Sunday Mass.   “At 7:35 this morning, the Bishop of Rome, Francis, returned to the home […]
21 hours ago

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Titus: The Roman Emperor Who Conquered Jerusalem

Titus Caesar Vespasianus ruled Rome for just two years from 79-81 CE after the death of his father Vespasian, the founder of the Flavian Dynasty. His younger brother and successor, Domitian, implied that Titus was just a historical footnote and that he was his father’s true successor. But Titus’s reign was eventful and his […]

20 hours ago 1 votes
What Do Pentecostals Believe?

The Pentecostal Movement exploded onto the ecclesiastical scene in 1906, and the growth of this movement has been remarkable. The origins of Pentecostalism can be traced to Topeka, Kansas, and the ministry of Charles Parham, but it was not until a student of Parham moved to Los Angeles and preached what he had learned […]

22 hours ago 2 votes
How Did the Seljuks Pave the Way for the Ottoman Empire?

In 1071, a small nomadic dynasty—named the Seljuks after their founder—fought a battle against Byzantine forces under the command of Emperor Romanos IV Diogenes. The Seljuk victory in this battle opened up Anatolia to nomadic Turkic settlers, including the likes of Osman, founder of the Ottoman Empire.   Nomads From the East   Nomadic […]

yesterday 1 votes
Painting vs. Sculpture: The Renaissance Battle for Supremacy in Art

It seems like humans always need to know who or what is the best in any category. Renaissance people were no different. A quest to find the superior art between painting and sculpture led to lengthy discussions about the purpose of art and the limits and qualities of each medium. The paragone, from the […]

yesterday 2 votes

More in history

A Closer Look at: Sahelanthropus

Sahelanthropus may be the earliest human ancestor that we know about, but it is mired in controversy. In the 1980s, French paleontologist Michel Brunet and his partner David Pilbeam were searching for hominin fossils in Cameroon, in deposits formed along an ancient shoreline when Lake Chad had been much larger than at present and was surrounded … Continue reading A Closer Look at: Sahelanthropus →

2 hours ago 2 votes
How Zaha Hadid Revolutionized Architecture & Drew Inspiration from Russian Avant-Garde Art

Zaha Hadid died in 2016, at the age of 65. She certainly wasn’t old, by the standards of our time, though in most professions, her best working years would already have been behind her. She was, however, an architect, and by age 65, most architects are still very much in their prime. Take Rem Koolhaas, […]

7 hours ago 2 votes
Adaptive Status Markers

As polls and asking LLMs didn’t give me much insight into which status markers are more adaptive, let me try to think the issue through myself.

20 hours ago 2 votes
What Do Pentecostals Believe?

The Pentecostal Movement exploded onto the ecclesiastical scene in 1906, and the growth of this movement has been remarkable. The origins of Pentecostalism can be traced to Topeka, Kansas, and the ministry of Charles Parham, but it was not until a student of Parham moved to Los Angeles and preached what he had learned […]

22 hours ago 2 votes