Medieval
The Historical and Logical Case for Jesus Christ, the Son of God
The following is not an appeal to blind faith or emotion. It is a reasoned argument grounded in history, logic, and evidence. Whether one accepts the divinity of Jesus Christ or not, the data surrounding His life, death, and resurrection demand an intellectually honest examination. Truth, by nature, does not depend on belief to exist; it simply is.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast4 months ago in History
The Desperate Decree: How Hitler's October 1944 Order Mobilized the Volkssturm Against the Inevitable. AI-Generated.
The Desperate Decree: How Hitler's October 1944 Order Mobilized the Volkssturm Against the Inevitable October 1944 marked a dark turn in World War II. Allied forces pushed hard from the west, while Soviet troops crushed in from the east. Germany lost vast lands, cities lay in ruins from bombs, and the Wehrmacht bled dry. On October 18, Adolf Hitler issued a stark command: every man from 16 to 60 must join the Volkssturm, the people's storm or home guard. This wasn't a smart plan. It screamed panic as the Reich faced its end. What did this mean for ordinary Germans? It dragged the young and old into a fight they couldn't win, turning homes into battle zones.
By Story silver book 4 months ago in History
The Water and the Soul of the Stone
The Promise Under Iron and Cold Gothic The blizzard no longer whispered; it howled, biting into the cold buttresses of Hunyadi Castle. In the heart of the Gothic fortress, in the inner courtyard shrouded in the shadows of the 15th century, the echo had a harsh timbre, like untamed stone. Here, where the Neboisa Tower thrust its sharp peak into the Transylvanian sky, stood the well. It was not just a well; it was a circular wound in the pavement, a testimony inscribed in the depths of the earth.
By alin butuc4 months ago in History
Columbus Day
--- ## Columbus Day: An Overview and Key Questions Columbus Day is an American holiday observed on the second Monday in October to commemorate the arrival of Christopher Columbus in the Americas in 1492. It marks the moment when European exploration began an era of intense change, contact, colonization, and eventually global exchange. Over time, Columbus Day has evolved in meaning, significance, and controversy, becoming a flashpoint in debates over history, identity, and justice.
By America today 4 months ago in History
The Beginnings of the Ottoman Empire
The Ottoman Empire originated in the late 13th century in Anatolia (Asia Minor), where various Turkic emirates emerged after the decline of the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum. The tribe led by Osman I (hence the name "Ottoman") began to expand, taking advantage of the weakness of its Byzantine neighbors and the lack of cohesion among other Turkic tribes.Under successors like Orhan I and Murad I, the Ottomans crossed from Asia into Europe, conquering vast territories in the Balkans. They developed a formidable army, including the famous elite unit of the Janissaries, soldiers recruited from Christian children in conquered provinces, raised and trained to serve only the Sultan. This army was modern, well-disciplined, and effectively used artillery, long before many European armies.
By alin butuc4 months ago in History
Anarcha Westcott
In the dusty medical archives of the 19th century, the name Anarcha Westcott appears quietly, not in headlines, but buried in surgical reports and footnotes. She was not a doctor. She was not a nurse. She was a young enslaved Black woman on a plantation in Montgomery, Alabama. Her body became the unwilling stage for a series of surgical experiments that would transform the field of medicine, at a devastating human cost.
By Stories You Never Heard4 months ago in History
Aba Women's Riot
In the humid December of 1929, the dusty streets of southeastern Nigeria echoed, not with gunfire, but with the songs, chants, and defiant cries of thousands of women. They were not armed with weapons. They carried palm fronds, danced in circles, and raised their voices in a way the British colonial administration had never seen before.
By Stories You Never Heard4 months ago in History
Latest Developments: Government Shutdown 2025 — **Current Status & Outlook
# Latest Developments: Government Shutdown 2025 — **Current Status & Outlook** Since October 1, 2025, the U.S. federal government has been in a partial shutdown after Congress failed to pass appropriation bills to fund operations for fiscal year 2026. Below is a thorough, question-based update on the current state of affairs, the causes, and possible paths forward.
By America today 4 months ago in History
Rumors, Roses, and a Quiet Promise: The Legend of DiMaggio and Monroe
Rumors, Roses, and a Quiet Promise: The Legend of DiMaggio and Monroe When a public romance shined as bright as Marilyn Monroe’s glow on a Hollywood stage, the afterglow can outlive the headlines. Over the years, stories about Joe DiMaggio and Marilyn Monroe have settled into the realm of myth and memory—the kind of legends that fans retell with a knowing smile, even when every detail isn’t verifiably true. Among those tales, one persists with stubborn tenderness: the idea that DiMaggio, devastated by Monroe’s death, sent red roses to her crypt three times a week for two decades, never remarried, and allegedly uttered his final words, “I’ll finally get to see Marilyn.”
By Story silver book 4 months ago in History










