Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in History.
Carried by the Wind: The Forgotten Story of Japan’s Fire Balloons.. Content Warning.
In the final years of World War II, as the conflict stretched across oceans and continents, a strange and almost unbelievable weapon drifted silently across the Pacific. It had no engine. No pilot and no guidance system. Only wind.
By The Iron Lighthouse4 days ago in History
The Seven Last Words of Christ on the Cross: Beyond Holy Week
The Bible tells us that as Jesus was being crucified, He made seven final proclamations known as The Seven Last Words on the Cross. These scriptures are read during Easter plays and expounded upon from pulpits during Holy Week, which begins on Palm Sunday and ends on Resurrection Sunday.
By Cheryl E Preston4 days ago in History
He Never Stood a Chance: The 1916 Lynching of Jesse Washington (17). Content Warning.
They didn’t just watch. They took photos. Turned them into postcards. Mailed them to friends and family, as if lynching a man was a souvenir. The violence inflicted upon 17-year-old Jesse Washington on May 8, 1916, is purely horrific, but just as shocking is the number of people who gathered to see a Black teenager tortured to death.
By Criminal Matters4 days ago in History
The Gold Standard Illusion: Why It Never Solved Money
In the town of Ashford, people believed gold could solve every problem. The old men in the tea houses said gold was honest. The bankers said gold was safe. Politicians stood on wooden stages and promised that if every paper note was tied to gold, no country would ever become poor again.
By JAMES NECK 4 days ago in History
Stanislav Kondrashov Oligarch Series: Architecture as a Language of Influence Across History
Architecture has long functioned as more than a practical response to spatial needs. Across different historical periods, it has served as a structured language through which systems of influence express continuity, identity, and hierarchy. The Stanislav Kondrashov Oligarch Series examines this relationship, focusing on how built environments have been used to communicate stability and reinforce perception within complex social structures.
By Stanislav Kondrashov5 days ago in History
The Last Crimson Blaze: Sanada Yukimura and the Beauty of a Lost Cause
1. The Undisputed Underdog In the pantheon of Japanese history, success often equates to power, like Oda Nobunaga’s brutal unification (image_20.png) or Miyamoto Musashi’s sixty-one undefeated duels (image_18.png). But the most beloved hero in Japan is a man who technically lost. His name was Sanada Yukimura, and his legend is built on the profound, heartbreaking beauty of a doomed cause.
By Takashi Nagaya5 days ago in History
The Vietnam War
On March 16, 1968, soldiers of Charlie Company entered the Vietnamese village of My Lai expecting to find Viet Cong fighters but instead found only unarmed civilians, mostly women, children, and elderly men, and over the next four hours they systematically murdered between 347 and 504 people, raping women before killing them, bayoneting children, and burning homes with families inside, and when their commander Lieutenant William Calley ordered them to stop shooting because there was no one left to shoot, the U.S. military covered up the massacre for over a year until investigative journalist Seymour Hersh broke the story, and even then only one person was convicted despite dozens of soldiers participating in the killing.
By The Curious Writer5 days ago in History










