#history

Eleusinian Mysteries

The Eleusinian Mysteries were annual initiations for the cult of Demeter and Persephone at Eleusis in ancient Greece, rooted in older agrarian cults and possibly Mycenaean practices, involving symbolic phases of loss, search, and ascent.

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Friendly societies privatised welfare

Friendly societies are mutual associations that provide insurance, pensions, savings, or cooperative banking services to their members, established before modern insurance and welfare systems.

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Vietnam loves free markets

Vietnam’s economic system is termed a socialist-oriented market economy; it’s a multi-sector market with state direction aimed at developing socialism ultimately, stemming from the Đổi Mới reforms of 1986.

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Khalid Sheldrake: The East Dulwich man who would be King

Bertie Sheldrake, originally from a South London pickle-making family, converted to Islam at 16, adopting the name Khalid, under the guidance of Abdullah Suhrawardy.

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The White Rajahs

The White Rajahs, the Brooke family, ruled Sarawak on Borneo from 1841 to 1946, after James Brooke received the territory for helping fight piracy and insurgency.

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Silpa Bhirasri, the father of modern art in Thailand

Silpa Bhirasri (born Corrado Feroci) was a pivotal figure in Thai modern art, founding Silpakorn University, and is often referred to as the father of modern art in Thailand.

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Earth’s deepest hole

The Soviet Union initiated the Kola Superdeep Borehole project in the 1960s to explore the Earth’s upper crust, aiming to reach the boundary between the crust and mantle.

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Two-thirds of Chinese POWs in the Korean War chose to be repatriated to Taiwan

At the end of the Korean War, only a third of Chinese POWs returned to Communist China; the majority went to Nationalist Taiwan, marking a propaganda achievement.

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Air Chief Marshal Fufu

Fufu was a Thai poodle owned by Vajiralongkorn, the then Crown Prince of Thailand.

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Lee Kuan Yew's pragmatism and the money illusion

Money illusion refers to people’s tendency to think in nominal rather than real terms, misunderstanding the economic reality. Fiscal illusion is a similar concept that occurs when tax structures or labeling disguise the real economic situation, as seen in Singapore’s Central Provident Fund (CPF) used for public services like housing and healthcare. CPF contributions, although not labeled as “taxes”, function similarly to tax-funded public programs found worldwide.

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Julius Caesar was captured by pirates

In 75 BCE, Cilician pirates captured the Roman nobleman Julius Caesar, demanding a ransom of 20 talents, which Caesar insisted be raised to 50 talents, recognising his own value.

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World War II R&D

The US government’s Office of Scientific Research and Development (OSRD) during World War II led to substantial public investment in applied R&D.

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Desmond Arthur, Irish aviator and ghost

Lieutenant Desmond Arthur of No. 2 Squadron, Royal Flying Corps, died in Scotland’s first fatal aircraft accident and was initially blamed for the crash, though later cleared of responsibility by a subsequent inquiry.

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Flower wars

Flower wars were ritualistic conflicts fought by the Aztec Triple Alliance against their enemies from the mid-1450s to 1519, detailed earliest by Texcocan nobleman Ixtlilxochitl.

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Immigrants were key to European development

The study analyses data on over 22,000 individuals born between 1000 and 2000 to understand the impact of famous immigrants, emigrants, and locals on European regions’ knowledge specializations.

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Tlaxcala

Tlaxcala was a pre-Columbian city-state in central Mexico, never conquered by the Aztec Empire despite being completely surrounded by it and in constant conflict.

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Gonzalo Guerrero, Spanish-Maya warrior

Gonzalo Guerrero, a sailor from Palos, Spain, was shipwrecked on the Yucatán Peninsula in 1511 and taken slave by the Maya. He eventually became a warrior and had three mestizo children.

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La Malinche's role in the conquest of Mexico

La Malinche, a Nahua woman, played a crucial role in the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire as Hernán Cortés’s interpreter, advisor, and intermediary.

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The US has consistently outgrown Europe since the 80s

This data is expressed in US dollars and is adjusted for inflation. This is the power of embracing new technology.

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Why God is cool again

Religion answers many questions:

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Notable figures of liberalism

Here’s an extremely concise timeline of liberalism, focused on key thinkers from each era.

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Marchetti's constant commute time

Marchetti’s constant is the typical daily commuting time, about one hour or 30 minutes one-way.

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When America tried to restrict cryptography

During the early Cold War, the U.S. and allies implemented export control regulations to prevent the transfer of Western technology to the Eastern bloc, including cryptography managed by CoCom (Coordinating Committee for Multilateral Export Controls).

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Two-billion-year-old natural nuclear reactor

Studies, including on-site examinations, indicated that uranium ore had undergone natural fission, with no alternative explanation, according to Ludovic Ferrière of Vienna’s Natural History Museum.

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The Founding of New Societies by Louis Hartz

Louis Hartz’s fragment thesis is the core argument of this book. Hartz posits that the culture of a colony is a fragment of the culture of the coloniser at the time of colonisation. While both the coloniser and the colonised nations will evolve, the culture of the colonised nation is likely to remain heavily derivative of the coloniser at the time of colonisation. This is because the philosophies of the day tend to be enshrined in the national identity and even constitutions for each new nation, whereas colonisers are less attached to each era of politics.

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