
Light-Horse Harry Lee: A Founding Father's Journey From Glory to Ruin
The history of the American Revolution is written by and about the victors like Washington, Jefferson, and Adams. But separating the heroes from the villains is not so black and white.So how should we...
28 Mar 20191h 3min

Bad Puns and Dirty Jokes in Rome and Ancient Greece
"A student dunce went swimming and almost drowned. So now he swears he'll never get into water until he's really learned to swim." That was a decent dad joke to be sure. But it's not a joke your dad c...
26 Mar 201935min

Wright Brothers, Wrong Story? Why Some Say Wilbur—Not Orville—Discovered Manned Flight
How did two brothers who never left home, were high-school dropouts, and made a living as bicycle mechanics figure out the secret of manned flight? The story goes that Wilbur and Orville Wright were a...
21 Mar 201940min

When Danzig Became Gdańsk: What Happens to a City When Its Demographics Change Completely
What happens to a city when its demographics change completely in the space of a few years? To explore this question, we will take a look at the case of Danzig (modern-day Gdańsk) in northern Poland. ...
19 Mar 201940min

The Revolution Before the Revolution: How 1776 Happened
In the 1760s, the American colonies were completely incapable of organized resistance. One's loyalty was to their state, as the idea of being an “American” was nearly empty. Few clamored for democracy...
14 Mar 201951min

An Active Neutrality: The WW2 Experiences of Switzerland, Portugal, and Turkey
Neutrality is not the same thing as passivity. Just ask the many nations who had to walk an extremely thin tightrope during World War 2 to stay out of the war (in which they saw nothing for themselves...
12 Mar 201933min

Kangaroo Squadron: The Tip of the American Spear in the WW2 Pacific Theatre
In early 1942, while most of the American military was in disarray from the devastating attacks on Pearl Harbor and the Philippines, a single USAAF squadron advanced to the far side of the world to fa...
7 Mar 201949min

Common Knowledge About The Middle Ages That Is Incorrect, Part 5: Crusades In The Renaissance
The Crusades are typically bookended between Pope Urban II's call to reclaim the Holy Land in 1095 and the fall of Acre and the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem in 1291. But two of the most notable religiou...
5 Mar 201926min






















