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[[File:Spartacus - 1960 - poster.png|thumbnail|200px|left]]
====[[How accurate is Stanley Kubrick's 'Spartacus'?]]====
The historical epic Spartacus (1960) is one of the best-known movies in cinema history. It caused a sensation on its release and was one of the most successful pictures of the 1960s. The movie was not only a commercial success it was a critical success and it received several Academy Awards. Spartacus was directed by the cinematic genius Stanley Kubrick. {{Read more|How accurate is Stanley Kubrick's 'Spartacus'?}}
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====[[How Historically Accurate is Season 2 of Last Kingdom?]]====
Season 2 is divided into two novels from the Saxon Tales series written by Bernard Cornwell, namely books 3 and 4 (Season 1 was books 1-2). The novels span roughly between 878-886 (Figure 1). The main focus for Season 2 in the first four episodes is Uhtred's quest to go north from Wessex into Northumbria, a less tamed area of England that is ruled more by Danes but their hold is somewhat less clear. Uhtred seeks his ancestral home in Bebbanburg (Bamburgh Castle) and also wants revenge against Kjartan, who killed is adopted Danish father. {{Read more|How Historically Accurate is Season 2 of Last Kingdom?}}
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[[File:Confederate_monument_Elmira_NY.jpg|thumbnail|200px|left]]
====[[Why are there so many Monuments to the Confederacy across the United States?]]====
As one travels across the southern United States, it is not unusual to find monuments and memorials to the Confederate dead in many small towns. In fact, these sculptural pieces, often composed of the same statues and plinths from the Monumental Bronze Co. of Bridgeport, Conn., can be found as far north as Pennsylvania and New York. A study in 2016 found some 1,500 monuments still standing. While in recent years these monuments have become a new source of political conversation their very erection was a movement by Confederate women. {{Read more|Why are there so many Monuments to the Confederacy across the United States?}}
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====[[What was lynching?]]====
Lynching is often described as a form of extralegal, vigilante violence or justice; however, its meaning has evolved over time—from the tarring and feathering of individuals in the Colonial period to the lethal, racial violence that proliferated in the South. According to Digital History, "Lynching received its name from Judge Charles Lynch, a Virginia farmer who punished outlaws and Tories with "rough" justice during the American Revolution." The United States has a long history of vigilance committees whose purposes were to protect the community. According to Linda Gordon, “vigilantism generally means bypassing the legal procedures of the state and substituting direct, usually punitive and coercive action by self-appointed groups of citizens".{{Read more|What was lynching?}}
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[[File:Tomb_of_Nakht.jpg|thumbnail|200px|left]]
====[[What Was the Importance of Alcohol Consumption in Ancient Egypt?]]====
There is a common misconception today that life in ancient Egypt was a dreary one for anyone not in the nobility. This image is probably at least partially derived from pop culture where scenes are common in movies that depict Egyptian peasants being worked to the death to make tombs and temples for their gods and kings. The reality is that although the ancient Egyptian social system was quite different from that of the modern world, and they had few of today’s modern conveniences, Egyptians from all social classes enjoyed a leisure culture that was not much different than today’s. {{Read more|What Was the Importance of Alcohol Consumption in Ancient Egypt?}}
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====[[How Did Public Aquariums Develop?]]====
Large public aquariums have become fixtures in most major urban regions. In some places, they have become among the leading attractions for city tourism, where many aquariums have also expanded into conservation efforts and applied research along with being tourist destinations. The history of such aquariums is not completely modern, although the form in which we know aquariums today is mostly a recent development. {{Read more|How Did Public Aquariums Develop?}}
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[[File:Karl XII i Ystad 1715, målning av Johan Heinrich Wedekindt från 1719.jpg|thumbnail|200px|left]]
====[[Why did Charles XII of Sweden fail to conquer Russia in 1708?]]====
The failed invasion of Russia by Hitler and Napoleon are well known. Less well-known is invasion of Russia by the Swedes under their most famous king, Charles XII. Sweden in 1700 was the greatest Northern European power and this provoked the jealousy of its neighbors. This led to the Great Northern War. The culmination of this war was the Swedish monarch’s invasion of Russia and his subsequent defeat by Tsar Peter the Great at Poltava (1709).{{Read more|Why did Charles XII of Sweden fail to conquer Russia in 1708?}}
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====[[How have Historians's perceptions of Native Americans changed?]]====
In 1997, Kerwin Lee Klein, among others, observed that a wholesale change had occurred in how historians portrayed Native American history. Previously, historians and ethnographers had focused on “the tragedy of the vanishing Indian.”[1] Many Americans, even those sympathetic to Native Americans, argued that Indians ultimately faced extinction. Even though this argument was undermined by the continued survival of Native Americans, scholars were slow to reject it. The Native American rights movement of the 1960s and 1970s emphasized the persistence of Native Americans. {{Read more|How have Historians's perceptions of Native Americans changed?}}
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====[[The Abraham Lincoln Brigade: the Historiography of the American soldiers in the Spanish American War]]====
During the Spanish Civil War, approximately 2,800 American men and women answered the call from the Communist party to defend the Spanish republic from fascist aggression. These men and women served in the Fifteenth International Brigade and formed the Abraham Lincoln, Washington and MacKenzie-Papineau Battalions. These soldiers’ stories have been controversial, because 80 percent of these volunteers were Communists. {{Read more|The Abraham Lincoln Brigade: the Historiography of the American soldiers in the Spanish American War}}
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====[[American Girls in Red Russia: Interview with Julia Mickenberg]]====
Julia L. Mickenberg's new book American Girls in Russia: Chasing the Soviet Dream published by the University of Chicago Press explores the history of the American women who went to Russia looking for adventure, freedom, revolution, work and new life. After they moved to Russia they found challenges and hardships. Many were disturbed by both the conditions of the country and the treatment of people by the new government. {{Read more|American Girls in Red Russia: Interview with Julia Mickenberg}}
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====[[What Were the Causes of Germany's Hyperinflation of 1921-1923?]]====
Among the defining features of early twentieth century Europe and one of the contributing factors to World War II, was the economic maelstrom known as “hyperinflation” that ravaged Germany from 1921 until 1923. Although the short period is often overlooked in popular histories of the period, there is no denying the impacts that the process had on Germany, Europe, and the world. {{Read more|What Were the Causes of Germany's Hyperinflation of 1921-1923?}}
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====[[When did abortion become legal in the United States?]]====
In colonial America, abortion was dealt with in a manner according to English common law. Abortion was typically only frowned upon, or penalized, when it occurred after “quickening,”—when a woman felt fetal movement—because it suggested that the fetus had manifested into its own separate being. Quickening could vary from women to woman, and sometimes as late as four months. {{Read more|When did abortion become legal in the United States?}}
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====[[What Was the Importance of Ziggurats in Ancient Mesopotamia?]]====
The people of ancient Mesopotamia practiced a religion that modern scholars are only just now beginning to understand and the physical focal point of their religion were the monumental, triangular structures known as ziggurats. {{Read more|What Was the Importance of Ziggurats in Ancient Mesopotamia?}}
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====[[Working Toward Whiteness by David Roediger]]====
Spartacus was a Thracian and he had once fought with David Roediger’s book <i>Working Toward Whiteness: How America’s Immigrants Became White: The Strange Journey from Ellis Island to the Romans. According to Plutarch, he was enslaved Suburbs</i> continues his provocative exploration of whiteness studies by them after he had deserted. Due to his strength examining how southern and military skills he was trained as a gladiatoreastern European immigrants became white during the first half of the twentieth century. In 73BC, he plotted to escape from his gladiatorial schoolRoediger argues that “the long, near Capua in southern Italy and was joined in the conspiracy circuitous process by up to 100 other gladiatorswhich ‘new immigrants’ became ‘white ethnics’” matters.{{Read more|Working Toward Whiteness by David Roediger}}
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====[[What Is the History of Ice Cream?]]====
Ice cream has been a popular treat that many see today as having developed relatively recently, as ice cream usually requires a form of refrigeration. While the modern form of ice cream is relatively more recent, the idea of ice cream has been present for millennia. Ice treats, which eventually gave us ice cream, were refreshing snacks usually reserved for elites or those who can obtain ice in times of warm or hot weather. {{Read more|What Is the History of Ice Cream?}}
====[[What was the dominant medical sect in the United States during the 19th Century?]]====
Nineteenth-century medicine was characterized by constant competition among three major medical sects: Regulars, Eclectics, and Homeopaths.[1] Each of these medical sects not only meaningfully disagreed on how to treat illnesses and diseases, but sought to portray their type of practice as the most effective and scientific.{{Read more|What was the dominant medical sect in the United States during the 19th Century?}}
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[[File:Confederate_monument_Elmira_NY.jpg|thumbnail|200px|left]]
====[[Why are there so many Monuments to the Confederacy across the United States?]]====
As one travels across the southern United States, it is not unusual to find monuments and memorials to the Confederate dead in many small towns. In fact, these sculptural pieces, often composed of the same statues and plinths from the Monumental Bronze Co. of Bridgeport, Conn., can be found as far north as Pennsylvania and New York. A study in 2016 found some 1,500 monuments still standing. While in recent years these monuments have become a new source of political conversation their very erection was a movement by Confederate women. {{Read more|Why are there so many Monuments to the Confederacy across the United States?}}
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[[File:Gettysburg.jpeg|thumbnail|left|200px]]
====[[Civil War Battles Top Ten Booklist]]====
A DailyHistory.org top ten booklist focusing on best book on the battles of the American Civil War. The books on this list explore the battles of Antietam, Gettysburg, Chancellorsville, and many others. Take a look at our list.{{Read more|Civil War Battles Top Ten Booklist}}
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====[[Why did Germany lose the Battle of Stalingrad?]]====
Hitler saw the war in terms of his personal rivalry with Stalin and he decided to attack the city, because of its symbolic value. However, the original aim of the offensive in Southern Russian was to secure the oil fields in the Caucasus. The oil was essential for the German war machine. Hitler knew this – instead of opting for concentrating all his forces on the conquest of the oil fields, he made perhaps a fateful mistake.{{Read more|Why did Germany lose the Battle of Stalingrad?}}
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====History of Religion====
*[[{{#dpl:category=Religious History of God Top Ten Booklist]]*[[How did Christian Church Architecture evolve in the West?]]*[[What was Plato's academy and why did it influence Western thought?]]*[[How did Monotheism Develop?]]*[[How did the concept of paradise develop?]]*[[How did Akhenaten Radically Change Egyptian Religion and Culture?]]*[[Why was the worship of Mithra so popular?]]|ordermethod=firstedit|order=descending|count=8}}
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====Ancient Greek History====
*[[Did the Trojan War really happen?]]*[[How did the marathon emerge?]]*[[What was Plato's academy and why did it influence Western thought?]]*[[Why was Alexander the Great So Successful In His Conquests?]]*[[Why was Epicurus and his philosophy so important?]]{{#dpl:category=Ancient Greek History|ordermethod=firstedit|order=descending|count=8}}
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====American Civil War====
*[[Was the Destruction Perpetrated by Lincoln, Grant, and Sherman Necessary to End the {{#dpl:category=Civil War?]]*[[What Were the Circumstances Surrounding the Death of "Stonewall" Jackson?]]*[[Why Was the Battle of Antietam a Pivotal event in the American Civil War?]]*[[American Civil War Biographies Top Ten Booklist]]*[[Why Was Vicksburg “The Gibraltar of the Confederacy?”]]|ordermethod=firstedit|order=descending|count=8}}
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====19th Century History====
*[[Did the Congress of Berlin create a more unstable Europe?]]*[[What did Prussia’s victory in the Franco-Prussian War mean for Europe?]]*[[What was the dominant medical sect in the United States during the {{#dpl:category=19th Century?]]*[[How did the Boxer Rebellion unite Imperial Powers and create Chinese Nationalism?]]*[[19th Century Overview of United States History Top Ten Booklist]]|ordermethod=firstedit|order=descending|count=8}}
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====Renaissance History====
*[[Why did the Italian Renaissance End?]]*[[What were the causes of the Northern Renaissance?]]*[[How did the Bubonic Plague make the Italian Renaissance possible?]]*[[How did the de Medici contribute to the Renaissance?]]*[[Did the Sack of Rome in 1527 end the Renaissance in Italy?]]*[[What was the role of the Popes in the Renaissance?]]*[[Top 10 Books on the origins of the Italian Renaissance]]</div> <div class="portal" style="font-size{{#dpl:90%">===category=Renaissance History of Early US Republic|ordermethod=firstedit|order=descending|count==*[[Thomas Jefferson, the Founding Fathers and Christianity: Interview with Sam Haselby]]*[[The Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798: Interview with Terri Halperin]]*[[Fate of the Revolution: Interview with Lorri Glover]]*[[American Revolution Top Ten Booklist]]*[[What was George Washington's military experience before the American Revolution?]]*[[Hodges' Scout: Interview with Len Travers]]8}}
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====World War I====
*[[What started {{#dpl:category=World War One?]]*[[Why did Germany not achieve victory at Verdun in 1916?]]*[[Why did the Battle of the Somme largely fail to achieve its objectives?]]*[[Why did the Gallipoli Landings fail in WWI?]]*[[Why did the German Spring Offensive of 1918 fail?]]*[[Why did the Germans win the Battle of Tannenberg in 1914?]]*[[Origins of World War One - Top Ten Booklist]]*[[Why did the Russian Romanov Dynasty collapse in 1917?]]History|ordermethod=firstedit|order=descending|count=8}}
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====European Interwar Political History====
*[[How did Vladimir Lenin Rise To Power?]]
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====World War Two====
*[[How Did the German Military Develop Blitzkrieg?]]*[[How did Joseph Stalin react to the German invasion during WWII?]]*[[How Was Hitler Responsible for the German Defeat in World War II?]]*[[D-Day{{#dpl: What Factors Were Considered When Planning Operation Overlord?]]*[[What were the goals of the Axis powers and the Soviet Union during category=World War Two?]]*[[Why was France defeated in 1940?]]*[[Why was Rommel defeated at El Alamein?]]*[[Why did the Germans suffer a defeat at Kursk in 1943?]]*[[Why did Operation Market Garden in 1944 fail?]]History|ordermethod=firstedit|order=descending|count=8}}
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====British History====
{{#dpl:category=British History|ordermethod=firstedit|order=descending|count=8}}
{{#dpl:category=Roman History|ordermethod=firstedit|order=descending|count=8}}
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====Historically Accurate====
{{#dpl:category=Historically Accurate|ordermethod=firstedit|order=descending|count=8}}
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====Interviews====
*[[American Surveillance{{#dpl: Interview with Anthony Gregory]]*[[Inventing the Pinkertons: Interview with Paul O'Hara]]*[[How Was Hitler Responsible for the German Defeat in World War II?]]*[[Fate of the Revolution: Interview with Lorri Glover]]*[[Engineering Victory during the Civil War: Interview with Thomas F. Army, Jr.]]*[[Angels of the Underground: Interview with Theresa Kaminski]]*[[Why was Rommel defeated at El Alamein?]]*[[Angels of the Underground: Interview with Theresa Kaminski]]*[[Hodges' Scout: Interview with Len Travers]]category=Interviews|ordermethod=firstedit|order=descending|count=8}}
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====Booklists====
*[[19th Century American Intellectual History Top Ten Booklist]]*[[Alexander the Great Top Ten Booklist]]*[[American Civil War Biographies Top Ten Booklist]]*[[American Legal History Top Ten Booklist]]*[[American Revolution Top Ten Booklist]]*[[Origins of the World War One - Top Ten Booklist]]*[[Social History of American Medicine Top Ten Booklist]]*[[The Best Historians and Books According to James McPherson]]*[[Top 10 Books on the origins of the Italian Renaissance]]{{#dpl:category=Booklists|ordermethod=firstedit|order=descending|count=8}}
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