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    Unearthed in 2013, Part 2

    The second part of 2013's historical finds includes items unearthed ...

    The second part of 2013's historical finds includes items unearthed by animals, amateurs and ultra-modern science. Lead coffins, rare torpedoes and mass graves are featured. And of course, there's discussion of everyone's favorite topic: exhumations.

    Jan 1, 2014 Read more
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    Unearthed in 2013, Part 1

    What historical revelations revealed themselves in 2013? So many, we ...

    What historical revelations revealed themselves in 2013? So many, we need two episodes to cover them all. From Viking jewelry to lost Doctor Who episodes and -- of course -- bodies in car parks, history showed up in some surprising places this year.

    Dec 30, 2013 Read more
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    The Long Winter

    During the terrible winter of 1880 and 1881, which was ...

    During the terrible winter of 1880 and 1881, which was immortalized in Laura Ingalls Wilder’s “The Long Winter.” Laura, both real and fictional, was going on fourteen. And the winter she wrote about was a real event.

    Dec 25, 2013 Read more
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    Laura Ingalls Wilder

    For many people, Laura Ingalls Wilder is the primary source ...

    For many people, Laura Ingalls Wilder is the primary source of information of what life was like for white people on the American frontier. But she had a whole life as a novelist beyond the youth that unfolded in the books.

    Dec 23, 2013 Read more
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    The Lions of Tsavo, Pt. 2

    Why did lions in the Tsavo region start to attack ...

    Why did lions in the Tsavo region start to attack humans in the first place? Modern behavioral and scientific research has given us some surprising insights into the causes of the 1898 attacks as well as modern lion attacks in the same area.

    Dec 18, 2013 Read more
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    The Lions of Tsavo, Pt. 1

    In 1898, two male lions killed and ate dozens of ...

    In 1898, two male lions killed and ate dozens of people in Tsavo and shut down construction of the Uganda Railroad. Lt. Col. John H. Patterson, a civil engineer working on the project, made it his personal mission to stop the feline scourge.

    Dec 16, 2013 Read more
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    The Axman of New Orleans, Part 2

    The second half of the Axman story involves his famous ...

    The second half of the Axman story involves his famous letter to the New Orleans Times-Picayune warning that he would descend on the city, but would spare anyone with a live jazz band playing in their house. But had the Axman been murdering before 1918?

    Dec 11, 2013 Read more
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    The Axman of New Orleans, Part 1

    In 1918 and 1919, a rash of attacks had all ...

    In 1918 and 1919, a rash of attacks had all of New Orleans on edge. While the Axman has turned up in modern storytelling, no fiction could top the real story of late-night break-ins and assaults by a mystery assailant who was never caught.

    Dec 9, 2013 Read more
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    Sei Shonagon and the Heian Court

    Thanks to the pillow book of lady-in-waiting Sei Shonagon, we ...

    Thanks to the pillow book of lady-in-waiting Sei Shonagon, we have a first-person account of court life in Heian Japan. It’s part diary, part commonplace book, part essay collection, and thoroughly fascinating.

    Dec 4, 2013 Read more
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    The Boston Massacre

    The name ""Boston Massacre"" sounds as though it was the ...

    The name ""Boston Massacre"" sounds as though it was the slaughter of a bunch of innocents in colonial Boston. The reality is much smaller – and not nearly so one-sided. But there’s a reason why we call it a massacre. And that reason is propaganda.

    Dec 2, 2013 Read more
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