Historical Stuff

Watching History Unfold

Watching History Unfold Vampires get to watch history go by.  Just because they live for decades and centuries, they witness the unfolding of human affairs and can observe the changing of society over time.  There is a lot about a vampire’s life that would be utterly miserable, including watching humans you love wither and die […]

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Harvard — Real World Hogwarts

  Harvard College is one of the two colleges within the Harvard University.  It is the oldest tertiary institution in North America, and was founded today, in 1636. The Harvard dining hall (The Annenburg Hall) looks so spectacular…and eerily like the hall at Hogwarts, from the Harry Potter movies. You’d think that learning would be

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Vikings in Canada — 1013 years ago today.

Leif Ericson — or, more properly, Leifr Eiríksson (Old Norse version) — and his crew landed in Vinland in the year 1000.  Supposedly, that happened on October 9, but I always have to wonder how historians manage to pin down a date like that so precisely, when even the location of Vinland, or even if

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CATS is Thirty-One Today.

Cats, a musical by Andrew Lloyd Webber opened on Broadway at the Winter Garden Theater in New York City, 1982.  Thirty-one years ago today. Wow. I was fortunate enough to see Cats at the Sydney Opera House a year or so later. It ran at the Opera House for over a year.  (Of course, I

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Peanuts is 63 today.

The internationally adored “Peanuts” comic strip by Charles M. Schulz had its debut today, in 1950.  It ran until 2000 (wow!) and now is syndicated and re-runs the world-over. I can’t put any “Peanuts” images here with the post as the copyright is strongly upheld, which is a pity, because there is one strip in

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Trains!

  Passenger trains are nearly two hundred years old.  Today marks the 188 anniversary of the first passenger train in operation, in England, in 1825. Passenger trains, particularly the romantic steam train variety, have featured in much literature and the movies.  I always think of the heroine stepping through a cloud of steam and appearing

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Who Were King Arthur’s Enemies?

Good question. The answer varies wildly depending on who you’re reading…or watching.  Arthur has been depicted in hundreds of books and movies, TV and more and it seems that each variation has endowed a different enemy upon the hapless Arthur. The variety and shape of his enemies runs the gamut from himself, family in-fighting, magical

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The Grey Lady Blows Out The Candles

 The New York Times newspaper was first published and has been continuously in print since September 18, 1851.  That’s 162 years…not too shabby for a newspaper, especially in this age of Internet news. The NYT is the third largest newspaper in the United States, and in its 162 year history it has won 112 Pulitzer

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Step Further Back Into Ancient History

For the longest time, medieval historical periods have been the favourite playground for romance writers – lords and ladies, knights, kings and queens and all the derring-do and darling, don’t, along with some really frightening civil wars led by slightly crazy to downright deranged princes and military advisors. It’s the stuff of…oh, yeah.  Books. Personally,

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Marriage Modernization

Ninety-one years ago today, in 1922, the House of Bishops of the United States Protestant Episcopal Church voted 36-27 to delete the word ‘obey’ from the marriage service.  It was a major change to the marriage vows. Interestingly, the Anglican church gave, and still gives, couples a choice over their wording and the woman’s choice

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