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The Merrie Tales of Jacques Tournebroche, 1923

22 hours ago
from Flashbak in history
The Merrie Tales of Jacques Tournebroche And Child Life in Town and Country (1909) is a collection of short stories set in the 1400s by French writer...

Collections: Life, Work, Death and the Peasant, Part IIIb: Children and Childrearing

2 hours ago
from A Collection of Unmitigated Pedantry in history
This is the back half of the third part of our series (I, II, IIIa) discussing the patterns of life for the pre-modern peasants who made up the great...

Greece's Greatest Naval Battle?

3 hours ago
from Classical Wisdom in history
Athens Vs Sparta

How Did Hadrian’s Wall Shape British History?

7 hours ago
from TheCollector in history
The Roman Empire stretched throughout Europe, expanding into the British Isles and establishing a significant presence that helped bring civilization...

How Important was the French Revolution?

yesterday
from History Today Feed in history
How Important was the French Revolution? JamesHoare Thu, 08/07/2025 - 08:38

Taoism, the Philosophy of Flow & Embracing Effortlessness

yesterday
from TheCollector in history
The struggle for control over every aspect of life is common in modern Western society. However, this approach can be juxtaposed with the ancient...

Logan Airport Versus Neptune Road, Photographing Boston’s ‘War’ of 1973

2 days ago
from Flashbak in history
“I look at these photographs and feel the overwhelming sensation of the noise of these low-flying aircraft. Yet I could leave what seemed like a war...

The Art of Deception: How WWII Was Won With Trickery

2 days ago
from TheCollector in history
In 1939, World War II erupted in Europe. This war, mechanized with tanks, trucks, and fighter planes, was faster and more mobile than any previous...

Rome’s Forgotten Exile

2 days ago
from Classical Wisdom in history
Power, betrayal, and the twenty-year silence of Julia the Younger.

The Age-Old Art Historical Debate of Colorito vs Disegno

2 days ago
from TheCollector in history
The Renaissance was a period of innovations and intellectualism, where artists and patrons of the art world both shared and debated new ideas and...

It Gets Worse.

2 days ago
from Trying to Understand the World in history
This time, there will be consequences.

What Was the Phoenician Trade Network?

2 days ago
from TheCollector in history
The Phoenicians’ success from the late Bronze Age on sat astride an already strong foundation. This base in what’s now Lebanon consisted of three...

What’s in a Pope’s Name?

2 days ago
from History Today Feed in history
What’s in a Pope’s Name? JamesHoare Wed, 08/06/2025 - 09:03

What Is the Book of Ezekiel About?

2 days ago
from TheCollector in history
From the first chapter, the Book of Ezekiel is packed with vivid imagery and colorful descriptions of God’s warnings to his people about the impending...

The Islamic Ethics of the Wine Tax

3 days ago
from History Today Feed in history
The Islamic Ethics of the Wine Tax JamesHoare Tue, 08/05/2025 - 09:06

The Statue of Athena Parthenos: Everything You Need to Know

3 days ago
from TheCollector in history
The statue of Athena Parthenos was a large-scale ivory and gold statue created in the 5th century BCE and dedicated to the goddess in the Parthenon on...

The Greek Hostage Who Wrote the Rise of Rome

4 days ago
from Classical Wisdom in history
The Talented Mr. Polybius

Can God Make You Act Immorally? Kierkegaard’s Fear and Trembling

4 days ago
from TheCollector in history
Fear and Trembling has become required reading for anyone interested in existentialism or Biblical exegesis. In this short text, Kierkegaard poses...

‘The Colonialist’ by William Kelleher Storey review

4 days ago
from History Today Feed in history
‘The Colonialist’ by William Kelleher Storey review JamesHoare Mon, 08/04/2025 - 09:08

What Is the Book of Daniel About?

4 days ago
from TheCollector in history
The Book of Daniel contains some of the most iconic scenes from the Bible. Children’s Bibles often depict Daniel in the lion’s den, or his friends in...

Weekly Wisdom Quiz

5 days ago
from Classical Wisdom in history
Sisyphus, Sophists, and Stoics

Is the Ghent Altarpiece a Work of Realism or Idealism?

5 days ago
from TheCollector in history
While conventionally hailed as a work of precise realism, the Ghent Altarpiece at Saint Bavo (otherwise known as The Adoration of the Mystic Lamb) is...

Merry Mouse and His Trip to the Moon (1953)

a week ago
from Dreams of Space - Books and Ephemera in history
My next 4 posts are celebrating children's illustrated fiction about going to the Moon. Even though I have been collecting these children's book for...

I Am a Stranger in This Country: An Outsider Photographs Britain and Ireland’s Travellers

a week ago
from Flashbak in history
In I Am a Stranger in This Country Berlin-based photograph Frederik Rüegger shows us pictures from the two years he spent visiting the Roma and...

How the Hospitallers Lost the Holy Land but Survived the Ages

a week ago
from TheCollector in history
During the Crusades, warriors devoted themselves to protecting the Holy Land from attack, dedicating themselves to God, the Church, and their mission....

Collections: Life, Work, Death and the Peasant, Part IIIa: Family Formation

a week ago
from A Collection of Unmitigated Pedantry in history
This is the first part of the third part of our series (I, II) discussing the patterns of life of the pre-modern peasants who made up the great...

The Musket Wars That Changed Māori Society Forever

a week ago
from TheCollector in history
The Musket Wars, which occurred from the early 1800s to the 1840s, brought about a significant transformation in Māori society and warfare. This...

Secrets of the Sophists

a week ago
from Classical Wisdom in history
Man is the Measure of All Things...

The Lost People Who Built Babylon and Vanished

a week ago
from TheCollector in history
The Amorites were a Bronze Age people who were prevalent in the Levant and Near East. But for over a century, historians and archaeologists have...

Immigration and crime in the Nordics

a week ago
from Patterns in Humanity in history
A collection, description and visualization of data from the Nordic countries

The Tumultuous Ottoman Interregnum (Bayezid’s Fall & Civil War)

a week ago
from TheCollector in history
Under Sultan Bayezid, “The Thunderbolt,” the Ottoman Empire had a series of stunning military victories in the Balkans and Western Asia. However,...

OpenAI's "Study Mode" and the risks of flattery

a week ago
from Res Obscura in history
Serious learning requires friction, frustration... and other humans

How the Crusades Reshaped Medieval Europe

a week ago
from TheCollector in history
From 1096 to about 1300 CE, during the Middle Ages in Europe, European monarchs and other royals sent armies to the Holy Land in the Middle East to...

Teenagers in Their Bedrooms in the 1990s

a week ago
from Flashbak in history
“Our bedrooms tell stories about us. They become the repository for memories, desire and self-image” – American photographer Adrienne Salinger   When...

5 Alluring Female Portraits Painted by Gustav Klimt

a week ago
from TheCollector in history
Gustav Klimt redefined the modern female portrait. He introduced elements that were previously reserved for decorative arts or medieval icons. Klimt...

Mental Health and the 17th-Century Ship’s Doctor

a week ago
from History Today Feed in history
Mental Health and the 17th-Century Ship’s Doctor JamesHoare Thu, 07/31/2025 - 08:19

What Did Sargon of Akkad and Sargon of Assyria Have in Common?

a week ago
from TheCollector in history
Sargon of Akkad (ruled c. 2334-2279 BCE) and Sargon II of Assyria (ruled 721-705 BCE) were two of the greatest rulers in ancient Near Eastern history....

Living With Russia.

a week ago
from Trying to Understand the World in history
The alternative is what, exactly?

7 Unusual Saints of the Middle Ages

a week ago
from TheCollector in history
During the Middle Ages, devout Christians venerated holy people known as saints. As everyday Christians made it through the struggles of life, they...

The Ancient Art of Doing the Right Thing

a week ago
from Classical Wisdom in history
How Seneca’s Stoic Wisdom Can Help Us Live More Fairly

4 Major Monastic Reform Orders in Medieval Europee

a week ago
from TheCollector in history
Although the tradition of Christian monasticism had its origins in 3rd-century Egypt and the Levant, its medieval form was firmly established by St....

Charles de Gaulle is Sentenced to Death

a week ago
from History Today Feed in history
Charles de Gaulle is Sentenced to Death JamesHoare Wed, 07/30/2025 - 09:02

What the Book of Nahum Says About the Fall of Nineveh

a week ago
from TheCollector in history
Nahum prophesied about the imminent destruction of Nineveh and, by extension, the Assyrian Empire, though he did not prophesy directly to them....

Reduce and Seduce at the Teenage Beauty Farm

a week ago
from History Today Feed in history
Reduce and Seduce at the Teenage Beauty Farm JamesHoare Tue, 07/29/2025 - 08:43

The Forgotten Irish Kingdom in Dark Age Britain

a week ago
from TheCollector in history
It is well known that large numbers of Irish settlers migrated to western Britain, especially western Wales, during the early Dark Ages. This was...

Saving Jesus: An Interview with Broadcasting Legend Melvyn Bragg, 1984

a week ago
from Flashbak in history
“I wear suits now basically because it’s easier if you are doing a television programme to wear the same thing all the time. You don’t want to go in...

What Lao Tzu Believed and How It Shaped Taoism

a week ago
from TheCollector in history
Lao Tzu (Laozi) is a complex figure, which makes capturing his essence through words difficult. This is not only because of the minimal information we...

The Absurd Truth Behind Our Daily Grind

a week ago
from Classical Wisdom in history
The Myth Of Sisyphus And Lessons In Absurdity

The Game of Kings – The Intriguing History of Tamerlane Chess

a week ago
from TheCollector in history
Tamerlane Chess is a medieval chess variant attributed to the 14th-century conqueror Timur, also known as Tamerlane. A complex and richly symbolic...

‘José Martí Reader: Writings on the Americas’ review

a week ago
from History Today Feed in history
‘José Martí Reader: Writings on the Americas’ review JamesHoare Mon, 07/28/2025 - 09:00
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