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History (General/Chat)

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  • Iran’s new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei is a no-show at own succession rally: ‘The charisma of a boiled potato’

    03/11/2026 5:57:18 PM PDT · by Libloather · 41 replies
    NY Post ^ | 3/11/26 | Ronny Reyes
    Iran’s newly appointed Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei was a no-show at his own succession rally in Tehran — and observers speculate that he’s either wounded or hiding out in fear. As thousands gathered on Monday to celebrate Khamenei’s appointment as the country’s new supreme leader, the nepo-baby mullah was represented by a mere portrait — one that was half the size of dad Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s. The portrait of the dead leader took up the center of the stage, according to state media footage of the event. “It’s either he’s out cold in a hospital, or he’s scared and hiding...
  • A Look Back at How Fear and False Beliefs Bolstered U.S. Public Support for War in Iraq

    03/11/2026 4:39:47 PM PDT · by DoodleBob · 28 replies
    Pew Research ^ | March 14, 2023 | BY CARROLL DOHERTY AND JOCELYN KILEY
    The war began March 19, 2003, with an overwhelming show of American military might, described by the unforgettable phrase “shock and awe.” Within weeks, the United States achieved the primary objective of Operation Iraqi Freedom, as the military operation was called, ousting the regime of dictator Saddam Hussein. Yet the military campaign that began so auspiciously ended up deeply dividing Americans and alienating key U.S. allies. As Americans looked back on the war four years ago, 62% said it was not worth fighting. … In a pivotal moment in the Iraq debate, Powell presented what he described as “facts and...
  • Computer Study Tracks Paleolithic Marks and Symbols

    03/11/2026 10:26:18 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 12 replies
    Archaeology Magazine ^ | February 27, 2026 | editors / unattributed
    According to a statement released by Saarland University, repeated lines, notches, dots, and crosses etched on Paleolithic artifacts some 40,000 years ago exhibit the same level of complexity and information density as proto-cuneiform script, which emerged around 3000 B.C. Linguist Christian Bentz of Saarland University and archaeologist Ewa Dutkiewicz of the Museum of Prehistory and Early History in Berlin used computers to analyze the statistical properties of more than 3,000 signs on 260 Paleolithic artifacts. “We hypothesized that the early proto-cuneiform script would be more similar to the writing systems of today, especially due to their relative proximity in time,”...
  • Bone Analysis Reveals 3,000 Years of Diet Changes in Prehistoric Poland

    03/11/2026 9:52:48 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 23 replies
    Archaeology Magazine ^ | March 3, 2026 | editors / unattributed
    According to a statement released by the University of Gdansk, evaluation of the remains of people who lived in what is now north-central Poland between 4100 and 1230 B.C. has revealed how their diets changed from the Neolithic period to the Bronze Age. Using radiocarbon dating, DNA analysis, and stable isotope measurements of carbon and nitrogen, a team led by Łukasz Pospieszny of the University of Gdansk suggests that Corded Ware communities of the late Neolithic period herded their animals in forests and wet river valleys. After several hundred years, however, their diet began to resemble that of nearby farmers,...
  • The Litmus Test for American Conservatism

    03/11/2026 8:25:32 AM PDT · by TBP · 83 replies
    Chrnicles ^ | January 2001 | Donald livingston
    Abraham Lincoln is thought of by many as not only the greatest American statesman but as a great conservative. He was neither. Understanding this is a necessary condition for any genuinely American conservatism. When Lincoln took office, the American polity was regarded as a compact between sovereign states which had created a central government as their agent, hedging it in by a doctrine of enumerated powers. Since the compact between the states was voluntary, secession was considered an option by public leaders in every section of the Union during Hie antebellum period. Given this tradition—deeply rooted in the Declaration of...
  • Roman Gold Mining Operation Identified in Spain

    03/10/2026 5:37:29 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 14 replies
    Archaeology Magazine ^ | March 5, 2026 | editors / unattributed
    According to a statement released by the Autonomous University of Barcelona (UAB), the Romans extracted gold from alluvial deposits in the Eastern Pyrenees. Using optically stimulated luminescence dating techniques, Oriol Olesti Vila of the UAB and Jorge Sanjurjo-Sánchez of the University of A Coruña dated two samples of fill from the remains of an ancient hydraulic structure on the Segre River to the third and fourth centuries A.D. The researchers explained that Roman miners would have eroded gold deposits from the riverbanks with water, and then washed them, either by channeling water through the sediments or flooding the sediments with...
  • Trump claims he’s brought prices down so much that Democrats don’t say ‘affordability’ anymore

    03/10/2026 2:35:24 PM PDT · by Libloather · 28 replies
    NY Post ^ | 3/09/26 | Victor Nava
    MIAMI — President Trump said Monday that he’s brought prices down so much that Democrats have stopped using the word “affordability.” “They also gave us very high prices and then they said the word, ‘affordability.’ That’s first time I ever heard it,” Trump said at the annual House Republican retreat in Miami. “My first day in office, they said, ‘affordability,’ They’re the ones that caused the problem,” he continued. “But we’re really bringing down prices big. “Do you notice you don’t hear that word anymore? … They don’t say it anymore because we brought down prices so much.” Trump said...
  • Star Spangled Banner As You've Never Heard It

    03/10/2026 2:30:42 PM PDT · by SaxxonWoods · 18 replies
    mona rose blog ^ | mona rose
    A story of how our national anthem came to be. I was asked by someone to put a video together for this audio and upload it, so here it is. I was never expecting it to get so many views. Yes, I'm aware some info isn't exactly right. Please stop sending complaints. Like I said before, I was asked to upload it here. You can look up the accurate story if want the precise info. Here's a link to one of many sources for info on the true story: https://tinyurl.com/yb6laets Hope you enjoy the message of this video though. God...
  • FBI searching Pa. storage facility in connection to probe into botched ISIS-inspired bombing in NYC

    03/10/2026 5:53:57 AM PDT · by Libloather · 10 replies
    NY Post ^ | 3/09/26 | Kenneth Garger, Victor Nava
    The FBI revealed on Monday that federal agents were searching a Pennsylvania storage facility in connection with their investigation into the ISIS-inspired botched bombing outside Gracie Mansion. The feds were “conducting a court authorized search” of the storage facility in Langhorne, the same borough where Emir Balat — one of the alleged bomb hurlers — lived with his parents. “The FBI New York Joint Terrorism Task Force, along with our partners at the NYPD, will continue pursuing all leads and tips,” the FBI’s New York office said in a Monday night X post announcing the search. Investigators reportedly found more...
  • Coin used to pay bus fare in Leeds was made by ancient civilisation more than 2,000 years ago

    03/10/2026 4:53:31 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 42 replies
    Daily Mail ^ | March 9, 2026 | Joe Rossiter, Reporter
    James Edwards, chief cashier for Leeds Transport Company in the 1950s, put aside any fake or foreign coins he found when gathering fares from the city's bus and tram drivers, before passing them to his grandson Peter.Peter, now 77, kept the coins safe for more than 70 years and has now discovered one of the collection is so old that Jesus hadn't even been born when it was minted.He found that the small coin was made in the 1st Century BC by the Carthaginians, an ancient Mediterranean civilisation with Phoenician roots, in Cádiz, Spain.On one side it bears the face...
  • Country Joe McDonald, Woodstock Star Who Found Counterculture Fame With ‘I-Feel-Like-I’m-Fixin’-to-Die Rag,’ Dies at 84

    03/09/2026 7:30:58 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 57 replies
    Variety ^ | Chris Willman
    “Country Joe” McDonald, who fronted the band Country Joe and the Fish and became an emblem of the 1960s antiwar counterculture through a prominent appearance at the Woodstock festival, died Saturday at age 84. The singer, born Joseph Allen McDonald, died of Parkinson’s in Berkeley, according to a statement on the group’s social media and reported sources close to his wife. McDonald’s best known song was “I-Feel-Like-I’m-Fixin’-to-Die Rag,” a Vietnam protest song he performed at the 1969 Woodstock Festival. The performance included the infamous call-and-response “Fish Cheer,” which had the audience spelling out the F-word at McDonald’s behest. Born on...
  • Islam as a uniting and dividing force in Chechen society

    03/09/2026 5:56:57 AM PDT · by Cronos · 6 replies
    Association for International Affairs ^ | 14. 3. 2016 | Emil Souleimanov
    Islam has traditionally played an important role in the life of Chechen society. It has been a part of its ethnic identity for more than two centuries, and at critical times of national history it was a powerful source of social mobilization.Islamization of ChechnyaThe religion of the Muslims started to spread in the region in the 14th and 15th centuries. It was promoted by missionaries from the neighboring Dagestan (especially Kumyks), as well as through contacts of lowland Chechens with neighboring Kabardinians, Nogays, and Crimean Tatars. In Ichkeria – the mountainous region in south-eastern Chechnya – and in Ingushetia (where...
  • My First Return to Belgium Since WWII

    03/09/2026 5:21:51 AM PDT · by Twotone · 14 replies
    YouTube.com ^ | unknown | Vincent J. Speranza
    A little over 2 minute video...very sweet.
  • Queen Charlotte really was black, Bridgerton star insists

    03/09/2026 4:22:26 AM PDT · by C19fan · 77 replies
    UK Daily Mail ^ | March 8, 2026 | Dolly Busby
    A Bridgerton star has reignited the controversy over whether George III's wife Queen Charlotte, who is depicted in the Regency-era drama, was black in real life. Adjoa Andoh said of the royal, played by fellow black actress Golda Rosheuvel: 'Queen Charlotte wasn't fictionalised as a woman of colour, she was a woman of colour. You just have to do your historical research.' The actress – who in 2023 said the Buckingham Palace line-up after King Charles' coronation was 'terribly white' – said the Netflix series gave viewers 'a more realistic version of history'.
  • William Shakespeare's Ancient Rome

    03/09/2026 2:08:47 AM PDT · by Adder · 12 replies
    Youtube ^ | 30/06/2026 | Garrett Ryan
    Chapters 0:00 Introduction 0:42 Shakespeare's classical education 1:45 Shakespeare's sources 3:13 Anachronisms 4:26 The character of Caesar 5:38 The character of Brutus 7:46 Political messages 8:52 Timeless language 0:10 Julius Caesar was the first Shakespeare play that I read. It’s still one of my 0:15 favorites. Along with some of the most stirring speeches ever written, it presents what might be 0:22 the first attempt in English literature to really recreate the world of ancient Rome. 0:28 In today’s video, we’ll explore the historical accuracy of Shakespeare’s 0:34 best-known Roman play – and consider how the greatest English playwright used...
  • The Deadliest Women of Ancient Greek Mythology

    03/08/2026 10:43:24 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 23 replies
    Greek Reporter ^ | March 8, 2026 | Ioanna Zikakou
    There are many strong and powerful women, or femme fatales, who became known for their ruthlessness and cunning ways in Greek mythology, such as Circe, Clytemnestra, and Medea. These women were powerful and often deadly forces despite the fact that Greek mythology is filled with references to strong men who conquered kingdoms, fought for their freedom, and did not hesitate to kill. Clytemnestra, one of the most ruthless figures in Greek mythology deadliest women greek mythology femme fatales clytemnestra “Clytemnestra Hesitates Before Killing Agamemnon,” by Pierre-Narcisse Guerin. Clytemnestra is one of the most notorious femme fatales in Greek mythology. Credit:...
  • 23-Million-Year-Old 'Frosty Rhino' Discovered in the High Arctic

    03/08/2026 9:52:46 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 37 replies
    EARTH ^ | Eric Ralls
    Deep within the frozen ground of Devon Island in Canada’s High Arctic, researchers found the nearly complete skeleton of a rhinoceros, Epiaceratherium itjilik, that lived there around 23 million years ago. The discovery, made by a team from the Canadian Museum of Nature, reveals that rhinos once roamed much farther north than anyone imagined. The fossils were found inside Haughton Crater, a 23-kilometer-wide impact site now locked in ice and silence. Millions of years ago, this same place held forests, lakes, and life. The team named the new species Epiaceratherium itjilik, or “frosty rhino,” combining Latin and Inuktitut to reflect...
  • The Catacombs and Ruins of Alexandria [10:46]

    03/08/2026 11:10:30 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 8 replies
    YouTube ^ | November 7, 2025 | Scenic Routes to the Past (Garrett Ryan, Ph.D)
    The Catacombs and Ruins of Alexandria | 10:46Scenic Routes to the Past | 57.8K subscribers | 177,574 views | November 7, 2025 Travels in Egypt | Playlist | 7 videos | 798 views
  • You have a 10 hour flight, which US president are you sitting next to?

    03/08/2026 10:31:48 AM PDT · by bitt · 173 replies
    You have a 10 hour flight, which US president are you sitting next to?
  • 127 Years Ago, a Coffin Fell From the Sky. Scientists Just Solved a Major Piece of Its Mystery.

    03/08/2026 8:15:15 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 15 replies
    Popular Mechanics ^ | March 05, 2026 | Elizabeth Rayne
    ...a coffin crashed down from a cliff near the Baltic Sea near the village of Bagicz, Poland, in 1899... Made from the hollowed trunk of an oak tree and exceptionally preserved, it protected the bones of a young woman from the ancient Wielbark culture who was thought at the time to have likely been a member of the social elite. She was buried with a bronze fibula, a necklace of glass and amber beads, a brooch, and bronze bar bracelets; was laying on a cowhide; and had a wooden stool at her feet....almost forgotten until the 1980s, when archaeologists rediscovered...