Discoveries
The World After Alexander: The Hellenistic Age and the Struggle for Power
When Alexander the Great died in 323 BCE at the young age of 32, he left behind the largest empire the ancient world had ever seen. Stretching from Greece and Egypt to Persia and the edges of India, his empire united diverse lands under a single ruler. Yet Alexander’s sudden death created a massive power vacuum. He had no clear heir, no formal system of succession, and no time to consolidate his rule. What followed was a turbulent period of wars, political intrigue, and cultural transformation known as the Hellenistic Age.
By Say the truth 2 months ago in History
The story of the turbines that transformed aviation forever.. AI-Generated.
There are moments in history when progress doesn’t arrive quietly it roars. For aviation, that roar came from turbines. Every time I read about early flight, I’m reminded that before turbines, humanity was already flying but not freely. Propellers had taken us far, yet they carried clear limits. Speed had a ceiling. Altitude came with risk. Distance demanded patience.
By Beckett Dowhan2 months ago in History
The Mysterious Death of Alexander the Great: What Really Happened in Babylon?
Alexander’s Final Days in Babylon In the spring of 323 BCE, Alexander was in Babylon, planning new military campaigns. He intended to expand his empire further into Arabia and possibly the western Mediterranean. Despite years of relentless warfare, Alexander remained ambitious and energetic.
By Say the truth 2 months ago in History
The Life History of Alexander the Great: The Rise of a Legendary Conqueror
Early Life and Family Background Alexander was born in Pella, the capital of the Kingdom of Macedonia. His father, King Philip II, was a powerful ruler who transformed Macedonia into a dominant military force. His mother, Olympias, was a princess from Epirus and a deeply religious woman who strongly believed her son was destined for greatness.
By Say the truth 2 months ago in History
Dolly: The Life of a Miracle Sheep
For most of history, life had one simple, unbreakable rule: you are born from a mother and a father. Every animal, from a blue whale to a tiny ant, started from a single cell created when its parents' cells joined. That's just how it worked. Until a quiet sheep in Scotland changed everything.
By LegacyWords2 months ago in History
The Vredefort Impact Crater: Earth’s Oldest and Most Valuable Cosmic Scar
Origins of a Cataclysmic Event Approximately 2.02 billion years ago, a massive asteroid—estimated to be 10 to 15 kilometers in diameter—collided with Earth at an unimaginable speed of around 20 kilometers per second. The energy released by this impact exceeded 10 billion Hiroshima-sized atomic bombs, making it one of the most violent events ever recorded in Earth’s geological history.
By Say the truth 2 months ago in History
The Things We Still Won’t Do
I noticed it first in myself... A cracked mirror in a motel bathroom somewhere off a two-lane highway. The glass had split cleanly from corner to corner, a thin lightning bolt frozen in silver. I stood there longer than I meant to, toothbrush in hand, doing the quiet math everyone pretends not to do. Seven years. That was the number, wasn’t it?
By Veil of Shadows2 months ago in History










