history (/c/history)
What were people's feelings about the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945?
What did people mean when they referred to "the grasping hands of the poors" around WW2
What was it like to live in the southern US in the 1960s?
What was the attitude towards suicide in the past?
What are some instances in history where people were literally thrown out of a country?
Did the (read: the) 9/11 attacks of 2001 embolden people to more freely speak out against U.S. foreign policy?
On this day in 1876, The Reciter by Siegfried Kapper is the first play performed in Yiddish in a public theater
What historical events from the 20th-21st century can be compared to what is happening in Ukraine?
What does the average person of 1776 think about the modern day USA?
The 9 year war in Ireland (1594) ended with the flight of the earls in 1607. Why did this lead to a Plantation of English and Scottish settlers in Ulster?
How did Napoleon become emperor of France?
How did the Mughals lose India to the British?
Michael Collins was the only person in US history to have witnessed both the first and final launch of the US space program. What are your feelings on NASA?
How accurate does Hollywood portray how people historically sounded and spoke, especially in the medieval period?
What are some misconception found in history textbooks about the history of your country?
Why did Christianity spread to Europe by violence & Bloodshed while Islam only spread through war only in the Middle East and never in Europe?
Who were the freed slaves and others who fought the British?
What caused the shift from the Sub-Saharan Africa being referred to as "Negroland" to now being referred to as "Sub-Saharan Africa"?
What was the story behind the constant references to George Washington and how did this influence the birth of our nation?
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