(Lucy) In the 16th century, high taxes and fears of apocalypse went hand in hand, and from the fairly common practice of calling for church reform emerged a series of movements which have become known as the capital-R Reformation. This week we’ll be discussing insults to the Pope, the problem of identifying Lutherans, and how civic and ecclesiastical leaders accidentally created an agreement that was called the most important event in the history of the world.
Easter Rising, Part II: Aftermath
Easter Rising, Part I: Origins
Disney and the Space Race
Evelyn Nesbit and the Crime of the Century
The Eleven Lost Days
After Napoleon: Josephine Divorced
Medieval Animal Trials
Sherlock Holmes in Popular Culture
The Great Medieval Canon Law Forgery
The Origins of "I Am A Man"
Apples in America
Hospitals in the Victorian City
Papal Residences: The Lateran, The Vatican, and Castel Gandolfo
The Royal Teeth of Louis XIV
The Execution of Mary, Queen of Scots
The Invention of Canning
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Comic Books and Thrill-Killers? An Interview with Mariah Adin
Independence from Whom? The American Revolution and Europe
Nuts: James Mulligan, Anthony McAuliffe, and the Notion of Surrender
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History Obscura
Historycal: Words that Shaped the World
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