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Welcome to the Newsmast History Channel. A curated feed of posts from the Fediverse, handmade by @newsmast, and broadcasting to Bluesky (if you've opted-in via […]

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so there's this controversy over slavery related displays in Philadelphia that were taken down by the NPS.
i'm somewhat familiar with the long, convoluted story of George Washington's slaves. it's a very complex story, and reaches from Washington's live long past his death, even to the #civilwar […]
Original post on en.osm.town
en.osm.town
February 19, 2026 at 6:03 PM
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Interesting report on the meaning of 'open research' in the humanities and social sciences. Great to see things like 'accessible communication of research' to both academic and non-academic audiences included. https://doi.org/10.17613/h10rz-qk035 #digitalhumanities #histodons
February 19, 2026 at 6:11 AM
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Luther Sage "Yellowstone" Kelly:
The Frontier Scout Who Shaped Montana's Transition from Wilderness to Settlement
Introduction
In the pantheon of American frontier figures, few individuals embodied the complexities and contradictions of westward expansion as […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]
February 19, 2026 at 12:58 AM
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Ancient bone found in #Spain 🇪🇸 could be from Hannibal's war elephants. Via @bbc #archeology #History #Anthropology #sociology
Ancient bone found in Spain could be from Hannibal's war elephants
It would be the first hard evidence that elephants were used in battle by General Hannibal.
www.bbc.com
February 18, 2026 at 11:01 PM
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Interesting ethical conundrum. Is it OK to buy decontextualised Scandinavian-made Viking Period coins online and write scholarly journal notes about them? The editors of the very solidly established journal Nordisk Numismatisk Unions Medlemsblad think it's OK […]

[Original post on archaeo.social]
February 18, 2026 at 2:16 PM
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Hyakumonogatari Kaidankai was a Japanese storytelling game popular during the Edo period. These gatherings were held on summer nights and to begin 100 candles or lamps were lit. Participants then took turns to tell 100 ghost stories (kaidan). After each story, a candle was...
#MythologyMonday
1/3
August 4, 2025 at 10:58 AM
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As requested by @joergi some nerdy stuff ;)

The Tokyo Polytechnic University Suginami Animation Museum is small but great.
From the history of animation to light tables for drawing to trying out synchronization, everything is there.
Even a library and a […]

[Original post on mastodon.social]
February 18, 2026 at 10:17 AM
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**An almost unknown painter**

Venice in the 1700s had its fair share of great and famous painters, but just as in any other craft or art, only a few became famous.

There were painters, even in the 1700s, of whom we don't even know the names, and many […]

[Original post on venetianstories.com]
February 18, 2026 at 6:17 AM
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**Gabriel Bella — an unknown painter**

In its art collection, the _Fondazione Querini-Stampalia_ in Venice has more than sixty paintings by the Venetian painter Gabriel Bella.

Those paintings are almost all we know about Gabriel Bella.

He lived in […]

[Original post on historywalksvenice.com]
February 18, 2026 at 6:17 AM
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Her groundbreaking sea floor discovery was dismissed as 'girl talk.' But science proved her right.
Most of us learn about the Earth's shifting tectonic plates in middle school. But in Marie Tharp's time, this fact we now take for granted was a groundbreaking, radical concept—and one that had to overcome gender bias. In 1957, Tharp, a geologist and oceanographic cartographer, and her colleague Bruce Heezen published the first bathymetric map of the Atlantic Ocean. Tharp faced considerable challenges due to sexism. For one thing, women were not allowed on the ships that collected the seafloor data used to create the maps. So, Tharp spent hours at a desk translating thousands of sonar readings from ships that would not allow her aboard. Her hand-drawn maps eventually revealed that the seafloor was covered in canyons, ridges, and mountains, all of which suggested that at some point, pieces of the Earth had moved. > See on Instagram This was important because the prevailing view at the time was that the ocean floor was flat and motionless. However, Tharp's findings supported Alfred Wegener's highly controversial continental drift theory, which proposed in 1912 that today's continents once fit together as a single supercontinent, known as Pangea. Of course, we now know Pangea to be real, but not long ago, the idea was considered heresy. When Tharp reintroduced it through her findings, Heezen dismissed it as "girl talk," or an "old wives' tale," depending on the account. Either way, the context is clear. - YouTube www.youtube.com Heezen would come around in time, but the duo still had to persuade the rest of the scientific community. At that point, the supposed peaks and valleys were only conjecture. However, in 1959, when Jacques Cousteau, determined to prove Tharp wrong, lowered his underwater camera with 16-millimeter film into the middle of the ocean and a valley appeared on the footage, it became clear that she was right. Though it was primarily Tharp's groundbreaking findings that paved the way for a new understanding of the seafloor, she was still viewed as "merely a technician." As a result, Heezen received the lion's share of the credit as they continued working together, eventually mapping all of the world's oceans. Tharp would not be allowed to set foot on a research ship until 1968. But proving her tenacity, Tharp was nevertheless able to make a life-changing scientific contribution in spite of it all, because she was resourceful and believed deeply in the importance of her work. As she herself said, "I had a blank canvas to fill with extraordinary possibilities, a fascinating jigsaw puzzle to piece together. It was a once-in-a-lifetime — a once-in-the-history-of-the-world-opportunity for anyone, but especially for a woman in the 1940s." In time, Tharp did receive recognition. In 1978, the National Geographic Society awarded Tharp and Heezen (posthumously) the highly prestigious Hubbard Medal. And, in 1997, the Library of Congress named her one of the greatest cartographers of the 20th century. - YouTube www.youtube.com And, of course, every time we look at a map, we witness a bit of her signature. Still, one can't help but wonder about the other women from history who secretly shaped the way we view the world today, and the pains they took to do so.
www.upworthy.com
February 18, 2026 at 3:57 AM
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Hand dance has been the official dance of Washington, D.C., for decades. @51stNews takes a look at its history and how the community is keeping it alive.

https://flip.it/vs9-PN

#culture #ushistory #washingtondc #blackhistory
After 75 years, hand dance is still bringing Washingtonians together
The history of D.C.'s official dance.
51st.news
February 18, 2026 at 12:55 AM
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Now free for all to read... From Mildura I visited Mungo National Park in outback New South Wales. It's famous for the discovery of Mungo Man, a set of human remains which date from 40,000 years ago: some of the oldest human remains ever discovered.

#australia #firstnations #archeology […]
Original post on aus.social
aus.social
February 17, 2026 at 10:29 PM
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THE HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF GLACIER NATIONAL PARK IN MONTANA HISTORY

The establishment of Glacier National Park in 1910 represented a watershed moment in Montana history, marking the intersection of indigenous dispossession, conservation ideology, railroad […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]
February 17, 2026 at 10:16 PM
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Oh, and these early #Neolithic stone #masks come - you guessed it - in all sizes as well. We pondered those finds from #Göbeklitepe (and a couple other related sites) e.g. here:

www.dainst.blog/the-tepe-tel...
February 17, 2026 at 5:58 PM
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Faces from the Getty Villa Museum yesterday. #la #gettyvilla #museum

From the outdoor fountain in the East Garden.
February 17, 2026 at 5:04 PM
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Last week in the #pleiadesgazetteer (9-16 February 2026): Over the past week the Pleiades editorial college published 16 new and 393 updated place resources, reflecting the work of Jeffrey Becker, Anika Campbell, Tom Elliott, Maxime Guénette, Greta Hawes […]

[Original post on hcommons.social]
February 17, 2026 at 3:02 PM
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Judy Martz: Montana's First Female Governor and Her Complex Legacy in State History

Judith Helen Morstein Martz emerged from the ranching communities of Big Timber, Montana, to shatter the most prominent glass ceiling in state politics, becoming Montana's […]

[Original post on mastodon.world]
February 17, 2026 at 2:59 AM
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New at my Patreon... No one could ever describe German history as uneventful. So on my recent visit to Berlin, I was keen to visit the new Deutschlandmuseum, or 'Germany Museum', to see the nation's history presented in a contemporary immersive style:

#germany #history #museum #berlin #travel […]
Original post on aus.social
aus.social
February 16, 2026 at 10:34 PM
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Once, the Devil was imprisoned within a tree in the form of a spider.

#mythologymonday
https://wiki.sunkencastles.com/wiki/Doctor_Paracelsus_and_the_Devil
Doctor Paracelsus and the Devil
wiki.sunkencastles.com
February 16, 2026 at 8:01 PM
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#mythologymonday #celtic: `Be-mannair, daughter of Ainceol, was the woman-messenger of the Tuatha de Danaan. She changed herself into all shapes, she even took the shape of a fly.`
Source: Gods and Fighting Men by Lady Gregory - Project Gutenberg eBook
February 16, 2026 at 7:08 PM