It’s one of the most memorable plays in Super Bowl history. It remains one of the most baffling decisions in the history of professional... Read More
There is nothing more important to NFL football fans and lovers than the Super Bowl, but certain matchups have a little more history, as they... Read More
NFL’s championship game owes its name to an unlikely source. Read More
The 93rd Infantry Division (Colored) fought discrimination at home and captured the highest ranking Japanese officer in the Pacific. Read More
It’s Kennedy, not Keynes Read More
As Alex Karp, the CEO of Palantir, says outright, the only lasting future for the United States is the merging of tech and the state. He... Read More
Whether the American Dream is centered in economic mobility or personal freedom, many citizens believe its achievement has grown more elusive. Read More
In 1869, Swiss scientist Friedrich Miescher isolated a mysterious substance from cell nuclei—an overlooked finding that would later reshape... Read More
Alexander the Great conquered the region around 329 B.C.E., leaving behind Greek and Macedonian settlers who intermarried with locals. Their... Read More
The cult of personality: a quippy term to describe how a strongman cultivates his followers to see him as powerful, knowledgeable, and... Read More
Ancient Rome’s reputation for bad emperors partly rests on hostile sources written after the fact – and Domitian may be the clearest case... Read More
A fossil jaw found in Ethiopia shows Paranthropus ranged far north, challenging long-held ideas about early human relatives and their diets. Read More
Anne Hutchinson (1591-1643) was a religious dissident who was brought to trial by John Winthrop (1588-1649) and the other magistrates of the... Read More
Early modern cancer experiments such as that undertaken by English surgeon Samuel Smith privileged the senses, but the effects could be fatal. Read More
The highs and the lows on the way to modern America. Read More
Ancient sources claim that pigs were sometimes used as weapons against war elephants. Murray examines the origins of this idea, whether it... Read More
In 1871, Ku Klux Klan violence in South Carolina got so bad that the governor sent a telegram to President Ulysses S. Grant warning that he... Read More
In 1985, scientists discovered poisonous anti-freeze in bottles of fine Austrian wine Read More
When we think of the American Revolution, it’s easy to focus on famous battles like Saratoga or Yorktown, iconic leaders like George... Read More
Frank Serpico was shot on 3 February 1971, after exposing corruption in the NYPD. The following year, the BBC reported on the "widespread"... Read More
The scholar’s picks include “Turn: Washington’s Spies,” “John Adams” and “Franklin" Read More
Shirley Chisholm’s groundbreaking career as the first Black woman in Congress included an unlikely alliance that revealed her bold,... Read More
From classics to hidden gems Read More
The Constitution had its original skeptics, and their reservations echo through American history. Read More
By late 1967, the M50 Ontos was just about phased out of military service. The Army had rejected it back in 1953, calling it too cramped, too... Read More
Three crucial years go missing Read More
Fourteen black soldiers received the Medal of Honor for feats of valor at Chaffin’s Farm on the outskirts of Richmond, Va. Read More
Facing dissolution and defeat, Washington simplified his plan—and boldly struck first. Read More
A Space Force base in Greenland allows the U.S. military to track Russian land- and submarine-based ballistic missiles. Read More
Before the founding of Israel, the Galilee, stretching from the Litani River in the North to the Jezreel Valley in the South, was a quiet... Read More
The eccentric life of Marquis de Morès, anti-Semitic rabble-rouser Read More
Ronald Reagan is remembered for many great speeches — from A Time for Choosing to his address at the Berlin Wall. In those... Read More
Japan has had a vexed relationship with Jesus ever since Christian missionaries arrived on its shores. Banned until 1873, successive leaders... Read More
These Olympic stadiums and sites continue to draw crowds. Read More
The ancient Olympic Games were a sporting event held every four years at the sacred site of Olympia, in the western Peloponnese, in honour of... Read More
A new analysis of “il Principe,” an ancient, decorated skeleton found in northwest Italy, confirms that the child died up to... Read More
Muckraking journalists and money-hungry editors have been publishing sensational stories since newspapers first began. Hilary Mitchell flicks... Read More
The highs and the lows on the way to modern America. Read More
A new analysis of “il Principe,” an ancient, decorated skeleton found in northwest Italy, confirms that the child died up to three days after being brutally attacked... Read More
By late 1967, the M50 Ontos was just about phased out of military service. The Army had rejected it back in 1953, calling it too cramped, too lightly armored and too awkward to reload. Only the Marine Corps wanted it. Initially, they had no idea what to call the ugly machine.... Read More
The highs and the lows on the way to modern America.... Read More