Historical
Meeting History
I always have had a love affair with history, but not just the generic history we were taught in school when I was younger; the real history that could only be found with loads of research. I am talking about old fashioned, go to the library, search through codexes and microfiche, reading dusty encyclopedias, and getting permission to look at even dustier newspapers. Real research! The only other real history that can be found is, if you are lucky enough to find someone who actually lived it and willing to share it with you!
By Phyllis L Phillips-Clower 5 years ago in FYI
Hatshepsut: Egypt's Greatest Pharaoh
In Libya, a man named Herodotus recorded the tales of tribes dotting the desert. Among the Bedouin campfires drinking spicy mint tea, he learned their stories and customs. After desert winds blew into every fold of his garments and his inkpot grew thick with sand, he ventured into the land of the ancient river. This river was a wide ribbon of water, cutting through the desert. The language was like a distant song he dreamed but could not speak. Herodotus was easily distracted. A long journey, the desert, and determination can do that to a man.
By Nikole Lynn5 years ago in FYI
The 'Secrets' of Mount Rushmore
1. George Washington has a piece of metal longer than your arm stuck in his eyeball. A drill bit got stuck there during the carving. No one knows why the sculptor, Gutzon Borglum, decided to leave it there. It is likely the sculptor was worried the eye would crumble if he tried to hard to pull it out.
By Reed Clark5 years ago in FYI
Anglo-Saxon Architecture
Modern knowledge of Anglo-Saxon architecture is limited by a number of factors. One is that many of their buildings, particularly domestic dwellings, were wooden, and so have not survived. Another is that people of later ages built over the top of earlier foundations, thus obliterating or confusing the evidence of what was there before.
By John Welford5 years ago in FYI
That One Time That the Dutch People Ate Their Prime Minister
AtAtthe end of the evening on the 20th of August 1672, the brothers De Witt were brutally murdered and even eaten by the Dutch people. This double murder is one of the most memorable murders in Dutch history.
By Bryan Dijkhuizen5 years ago in FYI
I Am Obsessed with Reading Dead People's Diaries
I've been interested in diaries as a literary genre for almost as long as I can remember. Fake ones (the Dear America series of children's books; Catherine, Called Birdy; Don't You Dare Read This, Mrs. Dunphrey), real ones (Anne Frank, Samuel Pepys, Sylvia Plath, Anne Lister, Virginia Woolf), blogs, vlogs, and more! I want the juicy, mundane details of the everyday lives of strangers. Unpublished private diaries particularly appeal to me because of their lack of self-consciousness. These writers aren't trying to impress any audience at all, which sometimes makes for extremely boring minutia (which is interesting in its own way) and other times reveals unconventional and charming sincerity you won't find in an Instagram post. The diaries as physical objects are also fascinating. Each person's handwriting takes me a few pages to get used to before I can consistently read it. Some, I have never fully cracked. Most of them are pre-dated diaries for a particular year, so the writers only had a specific amount of space to write in for each day. I hesitate to even share this niche hobby for fear that new interest will make for more competitive bidding and the prices will go up. Maybe I need to make it a little harder to indulge my addiction though. Here's a rundown of some of the most interesting and most boring diaries I've read over the last 6 months.
By Chuck Hoff5 years ago in FYI
Metaphysics
Peace In, Everyone. I know your time may be limited so let’s get right into it! To have a good understanding of the subject of metaphysics, we need to first understand the basic, root meaning of this compound word. This article will be mainly exploring a little of what the more ancient meaning of metaphysics is about. Let us examine now:
By Shakeenah K Fentis5 years ago in FYI
The origins of the Cape Colony (South Africa)
The Cape of Good Hope, at the southern tip of Africa, was always going to be an important place for a European nation that was interested in establishing colonies anywhere further east. Before the Suez Canal opened in 1869, the Cape had to be rounded by any ship bound in that direction. Seeing that several countries besides Britain, most notably the Netherlands, France and Portugal, had imperial ambitions to the east of the Cape, it is hardly surprising that competition for control of the Cape was fierce.
By John Welford5 years ago in FYI







