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Category Archives: history
Brutal Reckoning
I live in a place named for people no longer present: the Alibamu[*], part of the Creek confederacy which was driven from the southeast after the Battle of Horseshoe Bend. I loved history even as a child, and it was … Continue reading
Lawless Republic
Oh, the times! Oh, the morals! Marcus Tullius Cicero began his legal practice and subsequent political career in tempestuous times: the Roman Republic was actively failing, critically hit during the civil wars between Marius and Sulla, attempting to salvage itself … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews
Tagged advanced review, Cicero, classical world, crime, history, law, Rome
6 Comments
American Phoenix: John Quincy Adams
John Quincy Adams was the eldest son of John Adams, who followed the elder’s irascible devotion to principle and found himself an exile for it — after his support for a general embargo against European powers for continuing to harass … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews
Tagged Early American Republic, history, John Quincy Adams, Russia, The Adams of America, The Napoleonic Wars
2 Comments
Recoding History
A few years ago I read Broad Band, a history of women in early computing, which blew my mind. I’d taken for granted that computers and the early internet were wholly the domain of socially awkward dudes with glasses wearing … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews
Tagged AI, audiobook, digital world, history, human space flight, Technology and Society, women
1 Comment
The Fall of Roman Britain
When we speak of the fall of the Roman empire, we’re usually engaging in hyperbole: Rome’s decline in Europe was more of a slow decay and transformation. In Britain, though, first Rome was there and then it wasn’t — and … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews, science
Tagged archaeology, Britain, climate change, history, Rome, science
3 Comments
The Club
I have an interest in men’s clubs dating back to reading Around the World in 80 Days and The Time Traveler as a kid, and I have no idea why. Boys like clubs and clubhouses as a rule, I think, … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews
Tagged Britain, history, literature, Of Boys and Men, social history
7 Comments
Elizabeth’s London
Let us travel to a city which, in great part, no longer exists: Tudor London, much of which has been erased by time, fire, and ‘progress’, which holds burying swimming pools under concrete as a capital idea. I first read … Continue reading
Life Below Stairs
If, like me, you became interested in the goings-on of English servants via Downton Abbey, Alison Maloney opens with a word of caution. Many servants didn’t work in small armies at places like Highclere Castle. Instead, they were thoroughly leavened … Continue reading
Summer of ’49
In the summer of 1949, young David Halberstam was fifteen years old, facing a father in declining health and thankful for the distraction that was baseball. The Boston Red Sox and the New York Yankees would provide it in spades, … Continue reading