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Lost in the Kennedy Files

  • historytoday.com language
  • 2025-09-06 22:06 event
  • 1 day ago schedule
Lost in the Kennedy Files JamesHoare Sat, 09/06/2025 - 16:06

549. Lear Green

  • 5 months ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

Lear Green (circa 1839-1860) was an enslaved African American woman in Baltimore, Maryland, who had herself shipped in a chest to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to escape slavery. Her story is frequently

550. German-Soviet War

  • 5 months ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

The German-Soviet War, known in the USSR and today's Russia as the Great Patriotic War or, in Western Europe, as the Eastern Front of the Second World War (1939-45), began in June 1941 with Operation

551. Futures after Progress: Hope and Doubt in Late Industrial Baltimore

  • 5 months ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

Chloe Ahmanns Futures After Progress offers a delightful journey into South Baltimores environment and ecology. South Baltimore, due to frequent factory fires, chemical explosions, and aerial pollutan

552. Underground Railroad

  • 5 months ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

The Underground Railroad was a decentralized network of White abolitionists, free Blacks, former slaves, Mexicans, Native Americans, and others opposing slavery in the United States who established se

553. Battle of Smolensk in 1943

  • 5 months ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

The Battle of Smolensk in August to September 1943 was the second time the Soviet Union and the Third Reich fought over the city on the Dnieper during the Second World War (1939-45). By the summer of

554. The Poems of Christopher Marlowe

  • 5 months ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

Christopher Marlowe (1564-1593), also known as Kit Marlowe, was one of the most influential dramatists of Elizabethan theatre. Though he is best known for his plays, his poems were very popular in the

555. Battle of Kursk

  • 5 months ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

The Battle of Kursk (Jul-Aug 1943), which involved nearly 6,000 tanks, was the largest tank battle in history and ended in a decisive victory for the Red Army in WWII (1939-45). Two Axis armies had at

556. This Barking Dog

  • 5 months ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

On 5 May 1593, a series of anti-Protestant bills were posted throughout the city of London. One of the bills was written in iambic pentameter and included several references to the works of celebrated

1. Complete helmet from First Punic War found

  • 13 hours ago schedule
  • thehistoryblog.com language

A helmet from the mid-3rd century B.C. in exceptional condition has been recovered from the waters of the Egadi Islands off the western coast of Sicily. The bronze helmet is complete and undamaged with both cheekpieces, an extremely rare survival. It is one of the most complete ever recovered. Montefortino type helmets were semicircular at … Read the full post →"Complete helmet from First Punic War found"

2. Lost in the Kennedy Files

  • 1 day ago schedule
  • historytoday.com language

Lost in the Kennedy Files JamesHoare Sat, 09/06/2025 - 16:06

3. Unique copper alloy ingot found in Sweden

  • 1 day ago schedule
  • thehistoryblog.com language

A copper alloy ingot from the from the Scandinavian pre-Roman Iron Age that emerged from Särdal on the west coast of Sweden, in 2022 is the first of its kind ever found in Sweden. An analysis of its composition has found it is also a metallurgic twin to metal hoards from the same period found … Read the full post →"Unique copper alloy ingot found in Sweden"

4. Ancient DNA Pinpoints Culprit Responsible for World's First Pandemic

  • 2 days ago schedule
  • archaeology.org language

JERASH, JORDAN—The world’s first pandemic, known as the Plague of Justinian after the sitting Byzantine […] The post Ancient DNA Pinpoints Culprit Responsible for World's First Pandemic appeared first on Archaeology Magazine. News, Ancient DNA, Black Death, Jerash, Jordan, pandemic, Plague of Justinian, Yersinia pestis

5. Etruscan Urn with Carved Medusa Head Puzzles Experts

  • 2 days ago schedule
  • archaeology.org language

PERUGIA, ITALY—During routine restoration work at the ancient Palazzone Necropolis in Perugia, Italy workers found […] The post Etruscan Urn with Carved Medusa Head Puzzles Experts appeared first on Archaeology Magazine. News, Etruscan, funerary urns, Hypogeum, Italy, Medusa, necropolis, Perugia

6. Earliest Evidence of Indigo Processing Identified on Paleolithic Tools

  • 2 days ago schedule
  • archaeology.org language

IMERETI, GEORGIA—Ca’ Foscari University of Venice announced that when an international team of researchers first […] The post Earliest Evidence of Indigo Processing Identified on Paleolithic Tools appeared first on Archaeology Magazine. News, Dzudzuana Cave, Georgia, indigo, Paleolithic, plant processing, stone tools

7. Penny Black

  • 2 days ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

People have been sending letters to each other ever since paper and pen were invented, but it was not until 1840 that a new idea was introduced where people could prepay the cost of delivering their letter to their chosen destination using a Penny Black postage stamp. This was the Universal Penny Post. No longer did the recipient have to give money to the person who delivered the letter or pay a...

8. Roman tomb with bilingual inscription found in Albania

  • 2 days ago schedule
  • thehistoryblog.com language

A Roman-era tomb with a rare bilingual funerary inscription has been discovered in Strikçan, northern Albania. It dates to the 3rd or 4th century A.D. Measuring 9 by 6 meters (30 by 20 feet) with a burial chamber 2.4 meters (8 feet) high, it is the first monumental tomb from the Roman period discovered in … Read the full post →"Roman tomb with bilingual inscription found in Albania"

9. Rare Figurine Illuminates Viking Hairstyles

  • 3 days ago schedule
  • archaeology.org language

COPENHAGEN, DENMARK—According to a statement released by The National Museum of Denmark, a small figurine […] The post Rare Figurine Illuminates Viking Hairstyles appeared first on Archaeology Magazine. News, chess piece, figurine, hairstyles, Harald Bluetooth, National Museum of Denmark, Viken, Viking, walrus ivory

10. Neolithic Structures Found at Site Near Göbeklitepe

  • 3 days ago schedule
  • archaeology.org language

SAYBURC, TURKEY—Over the past two decades, archaeological work in southeastern Turkey’s Taş Tepeler, or Stone […] The post Neolithic Structures Found at Site Near Göbeklitepe appeared first on Archaeology Magazine. News, Gobeklitepe, Karahantepe, Neolithic, Sayburc, T-column, Tas Tepeler, Turkey

11. New Investigation of Aristotle's Ancient School

  • 3 days ago schedule
  • archaeology.org language

MIEZA, GREECE—Greek City Times reports that archaeologists renewed excavations at Mieza in northern Greece, a […] The post New Investigation of Aristotle's Ancient School appeared first on Archaeology Magazine. News, Alexander the Great, Aristotle, Greece, gymnasium, Macedonia, Mieza, Philip II, stylus

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