History
Anything to do with History
Raoul @Raoul - over 4 years ago
The State of the Nation
‘Societies, all societies, are constituted in a certain way, and this way is their constitution’, said the US public intellectual Philip Bobbitt in 2003. The connection between the life of a society and its constitution has only become more pronounced in the years since. ...continued
1 minute read
Izaiah @Izaiah - almost 5 years ago
Shampoo Empire | History Today
Shampooing is part of everyday hygiene. But where did it come from? In the 19th century, the art of shampooing travelled from British India to the Empire’s heart, Britain. It did so thanks, in part, to one Indian immigrant, Sake Dean Mahomed (also spelled as Mahomet or Mo...continued
2 minutes read
Maida @Maida - over 5 years ago
Memories of a Massacre | History Today
On Monday 16 August 1819, 60,000 men, women and children gathered for a mass rally in Manchester. They had progressed to St Peter’s Field on the southern edge of the town from the city’s working-class districts and the surrounding textile weaving regions, including Rochda...continued
1 minute read
Jaydon @Jaydon - over 5 years ago
Apocalypse Then: When The World Didn’t End
In 1624, the poet and cleric John Donne declared in a sermon that ‘creatures of an inferiour nature, are possest with the present; Man is a future Creature’. With this remark, Donne managed to encapsulate the apocalypse fever that had been steadily overwhelming European ...continued
2 minutes read
George @George - almost 5 years ago
That Terrible Thing Called Jealousy
The setting is Italy, soon after the end of the Second World War. Three sisters are about to marry and, in order to assure themselves of their future husbands’ love, they ask the men what they would do if the sisters were to betray them. Two of the sisters receive answers...continued
1 minute read
Emmie @Emmie - almost 5 years ago
Slaves and Indians | History Today
In his autobiography, My Bondage and My Freedom (1855), the American abolitionist Frederick Douglass wrote: The slave finds more of the milk of human kindness in the bosom of the savage Indian, than in the heart of his Christian master. He leaves the man of the bible, and...continued
1 minute read
Ryleigh @Ryleigh - over 4 years ago
Death and Sacrifice in the Franco-Prussian War
The Franco-Prussian War was the most significant European conflict between the Napoleonic Wars and the First World War, involving around two million soldiers and resulting in the deaths of more than 180,000 men. Triggered by a dispute over the candidacy of the Prussian Ho...continued
1 minute read
Alvah @Alvah - almost 5 years ago
The Inca's Last Stand | History Today
We rode up a dried river bed near Salta, north-west Argentina, under a fast-rising sun. Above a shadowy bend, a rock face was printed with a cryptic series of red, white and black dots. Trains of llamas and alpacas wove among thunderbolts of earthen pigment. They were at ...continued
1 minute read
George @George - 6 months ago
‘The Damascus Events’ and ‘Sea of Troubles’ review
In July 1860 Dr Mikhayil Mishaqa narrowly escaped death when an angry mob tried to lynch him in the backstreets of Damascus. A successful silk merchant and adviser to Lebanese princes, Mishaqa left his Levantine village for the city in 1834, where he trained as a doctor b...continued
9 minutes read
Liliane @Liliane - 8 months ago
‘Deterring Armageddon’ by Peter Apps and ‘NATO’ by Sten Rynning review
‘Semisesquicentennial’ does not roll off the tongue, nor would such an occasion normally be marked by publishers. But the North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s 75th anniversary, which arrives on 4 April 2024, has already led to the publication of a brace of new books about...continued
8 minutes read
Marjory @Marjory - 11 months ago
The Scandalous Success of the Daily Mail
Proponents of the idea of the press as a ‘Fourth Estate’ have long championed the notion that democracy can only work when the media shines a light on the darkest corners of government (in 2017 the Washington Post went as far as to adopt it as a tagline: ‘Democracy Dies i...continued
8 minutes read
Immanuel @Immanuel - almost 5 years ago
Solving a Renaissance Murder Mystery
It was a chilly winter morning on 26 February 1548, a day like any other. Florentine nobleman Lorenzino de’ Medici had just left the church of San Polo in Venice with his uncle. He was strolling along unsuspectingly when suddenly two hired killers wielding daggers stepped...continued
1 minute read
Dayton @Dayton - about 4 years ago
Distortions and Omissions | History Today
‘A unique, comprehensive account of people beheading one another’ was Liang Qichao’s pithy dismissal of Chinese history writing before 1900. It was only useful to instruct an emperor or a minister, he complained, and had no relevance to the people. Instead, Liang demanded...continued
9 minutes read
Jessika @Jessika - over 3 years ago
Yemen’s Endless Wars | History Today
Mountainous and dry, with a tendency to anarchy in the ample spaces between its cities, Yemen has long been hospitable to insurgency. Yet in ancient times it was home to the Sabaeans and had claims to be the biblical land of the Queen of Sheba. Its fertility and beauty we...continued
9 minutes read
Kari @Kari - over 4 years ago
The Early Life of Gibberish
For as long as the English language has been spoken, we have entertained the possibility of talking gibberish. While nonsense uses real words to make sentences that make no sense, gibberish is made of sounds and syllables which cannot be decoded. It may seem the most stup...continued
1 minute read
Alexie @Alexie - 4 months ago
How Do Europe’s Cold War Divisions Persist?
‘The mistake is to assume that problems originate with communism’Thomas Lorman is Associate Professor in Hungarian History at UCL School of Slavonic and East European StudiesIt is tempting to trace Europe’s economic and political divisions back to the Cold War. Certainly,...continued
8 minutes read
Rahsaan @Rahsaan - 3 months ago
Why Do Civil Wars Happen?
‘The Romans got it right: civil war breeds civil war’David Armitage is Lloyd C. Blankfein Professor of History at Harvard University and author of Civil Wars: A History in Ideas (Yale University Press, 2018)Scheming plotters and foreign ideas; class conflict and moral dec...continued
8 minutes read
Elian @Elian - about 3 years ago
Governing Goliath | History Today
In October 2020 a 16-month investigation into ‘Big Tech’ by Democrats in the US House of Representatives reached unambiguous conclusions. The sector’s leading companies – Amazon, Apple, Google and Facebook – originally thought of as Davids, have emerged as the Goliaths of...continued
9 minutes read
Elaina @Elaina - 10 months ago
Pasternak and Stalin: What Was Said?
On 13 June 1934 Boris Pasternak was at home in Moscow when the telephone rang. As one of Russia’s most famous poets, he was used to being interrupted; but what he heard when he picked up made his blood run cold. ‘I have Comrade Stalin on the line for you’, said the voice....continued
9 minutes read
Pablo @Pablo - almost 4 years ago
Dissonant Horn | History Today
The recent escalation in the dispute between the Ethiopian government and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) is an alarming development. Fighting between federal forces and Tigrayan militias is the result of a collapse in the relationship between Prime Minister A...continued
9 minutes read
Anderson @Anderson - over 3 years ago
Revolution in the air | History Today
This is a time of battles between international media organisations and national governments. Think of the decision by the BBC’s China correspondent, John Sudworth, to move to Taiwan after ‘threats’ and ‘increased surveillance and harassment’ because of his reporting of B...continued
9 minutes read
Jimmy @Jimmy - about 5 years ago
The Velvet Revolution In The Regions
In the words of the British historian Timothy Garton Ash, Czechoslovakia’s Velvet Revolution was ‘swift, entirely non-violent, joyful and funny’. Garton Ash witnessed the Velvet Revolution – so called because of the gentle manner of its passing – in Prague and his descrip...continued
1 minute read
Roger @Roger - over 4 years ago
The Colonels’ Failed PR Coup
In the modern era, relations between states have usually been conducted through diplomatic envoys. Since public opinion has become more important to policy makers, however, governments have increasingly resorted to outsourcing. Regimes with an image problem tend to hire p...continued
1 minute read
Myles @Myles - about 1 month ago
Euripides’ Lost Plays | History Today
Surprises aren’t something you normally associate with the study of ancient Greek drama. Yet in September 2024 scholars meeting at the University of Colorado Boulder were treated to just that. Two academics based at the university presented what they believe to be portion...continued
9 minutes read
Ariel @Ariel - over 3 years ago
The Mighty Fallen | History Today
The victory of the former academic and lawyer, Alberto Fernández, in Argentina’s 2019 general election was met with enthusiasm by many at home and abroad. The neo-liberal toolkit employed by the previous administration of Mauricio Macri had clearly failed, resulting in hy...continued
9 minutes read