At the southern edge of Sweden,not far from the picturesque town of Ronneby, lies a tiny island called Stora Ekon. Sprinkled with pine trees, sheep and a few deserted holiday cottages, the low-lying island is one of hundreds that shelter the coast from the storms of the Baltic Sea. For centuries, the spot was a popular anchorage point, but the waters are now mostly quiet; the most prominent visitors, apart from the occasional pleasure boat, are migrating swans.
For a few weeks in May, however, a new island intruded on this peaceful scene: A square wood raft topped with two converted shipping containers just a few hundred feet from Stora Ekons shoreward coast. The floating platform was busy with divers and archaeologists, here to explore what lies beneath the waves: the wreck of a ship called Gribshunden, a spectacular floating castle that served as the royal flagship of King Hans of Denmark more than 500 years ago. Historical sources record how the ship sank in the summer of 1495, along with a large contingent of soldiers and Danish noblemen, although not the king himself, who was ashore at the time.
Shipwrecks from this period are exceedingly rare. Unless a ship is buried quickly by sediment, the wood is eaten away over the centuries by shipworm, actually a type of saltwater clam. But these organisms dont survive in the fresher waters of the Baltic, and archaeologists believe that much of Hans vessel and its contents are preserved. That promises them an unprecedented look at the life of a medieval king who was said to travel with an abundance of royal possessions, not only food and clothing but weapons, tools, textiles, documents and precious treasures. More than that, the relic provides a unique opportunity to examine a state-of-the-art warship from a little-understood period, when a revolution in shipbuilding and naval warfare was reshaping geopolitics and transforming civilization. What Gribshunden represents, researchers think, is nothing less than the end of the Middle Ages and the birth of the modern world.
At the edge of the raft, Brendan Foley, an archaeologist from Lund University in Sweden, and his chief safety officer, Phil Short, are getting ready to dive. Despite the springtime sun, a cold wind blows. Because the water temperature is below 50 degrees, the divers are wearing drysuits and heated underwear that will allow them to work for two hours or more. After extensive planning and a long pandemic delay, Foley is visibly eager to enter the water. Ive been waiting for this moment for two years, he says. He steps off the deck with a splash and makes an OK sign before disappearing from view.
The story of Gribshunden is preserved in several Chronicles, narrative histories written in northern Europe in the 16th century, and in an eyewitness account by a young nobleman who survived the disaster. The accounts describe how King Hans, who reigned over Denmark and Norway from 1481 to 1513, sailed east from Copenhagen in the summer of 1495 toward Kalmar, Sweden, to attend a political summit. Europe was then emerging from the Middle Ages into the Renaissance. Dukes and kings ruled from giant castles, and every noblemans wardrobe included a suit of armor. In Italy, Leonardo da Vinci was starting work on The Last Supper. In Poland, Nicolaus Copernicus was beginning his studies in astronomy.
Across the Baltic Sea, Denmark, Norway and Sweden had been ruled together under an agreement called the Kalmar Union for close to 100 years, but Sweden had broken away, and rebels there, led by a nobleman named Sten Sture, sought independence. Hans was on a mission to quell the dissent and revive the union by becoming king of Sweden, too. According to the accounts, Hans took a suitably regal fleet of 18 ships, led by Gribshunden, which carried his courtiers, noblemen, soldiers, even a royal astronomer.
But many of them never arrived: Hans flagship sank while anchored just north of Stora Ekon. A 16th-century account of Hans life, only recently translated from Latin, suggests the ships store of gunpowder accidentally ignited, causing a fire that consumed the ship so quickly that many on board perished in the smoke and flames. Others threw themselves into the water and drowned. The source adds that the fire occurred while the king was attending a meeting of supporters, probably on Stora Ekon. Other sources record the treasures that sank with the ship: clothes, precious things, seals and letters, and silver, gold, charters and the kings best stores.
Local divers came across the wrecks protruding timbers in the summer of 1971, unaware of its historical significance, and they collected the curious lead balls they found nearby as souvenirs. One of the divers finally alerted local archaeologists to the wreck in 2001, after he found strange, hollowed-out logs resting on the seafloor: carriages, researchers realized, that once held cannons. This was no fishing boat or trading vessel, it turned out. It was a centuries-old warship of a type never before seen.
In northern Europe, boats were long built by riveting together overlapping planks to make a waterproof shell. Viking longships, with their rounded hulls and single, square sails, used this clinker construction method. In southern Europe, by contrast, there was a tradition of carvel construction, in which hull planks were placed edge to edge. In the 15th century, carvel planking spread north, becoming the design of choice for kings and noblemen throughout Europe. Carvel-built hulls gained their strength from the internal ribs, or skeleton, which also made it easier to build larger ships that could carry extensive cargo, crew and stores. And crucially, in contrast to clinker vessels, they could accommodate gun ports, which meant that heavy guns could be carried deep inside the hull without toppling a ship. Scandinavian ships were beautiful and elegant and sailed to Iceland and Greenland, says Filipe Castro, a nautical archaeologist previously based at Texas A&M University. But when the opportunity to put guns on them came along, he continued, they proved inadequate.
By the end of the 15th century, shipwrights in Portugal and Spain were combining northern and southern features to build heavily armed, uniquely large vessels that could cross oceans, spend months or even years at sea, and extend awesome military force. These were the space shuttles, as Castro calls them, that carried the explorers of the Age of Discovery: Christopher Columbus on his Spanish-sponsored voyage across the Atlantic in 1492; the Portuguese admiral Vasco da Gama, who sailed 12,000 miles around Africa, arriving in India in May 1498; and Ferdinand Magellan, who embarked on the first circumnavigation of the Earth (completed after his death in 1522). They allowed for a new globalization through colonization and exploitation, writes Johan Rnnby, a maritime archaeologist at Swedens Sodertorn University. The looting and transportation of gold, spices, sugar and many other goods across the oceans changed the world forever. Or, as Foley, puts it: This was the enabling technology for European domination of the planet.
But no example of these carvel-built ships of discovery, Iberian or otherwise, had ever been found intact, a deficit Castro describes as one of the big holes in our puzzle. Specialists have had to infer their design from artist interpretations and a few surviving miniature models, and had only the murkiest understanding of how this revolutionary technology spread through Europe.
That was about to change. In 2013, Niklas Eriksson, an archaeologist and expert in medieval ships at Stockholm University, inspected the wreck off Stora Ekon. The Swedish historian Ingvar Sjblom had speculated that the wreck was Gribshunden, based on its age and location, but others, including Eriksson, were skeptical. I thought it cant be, he told me.
But when he saw the wreck himself he was amazed. The hull was larger than reportednearly 100 feet longand there were remains of elevated, built-up areas, known as castles, that protruded out at the bow and stern. Moreover, the construction of the hull suggested the ship could only have belonged to the king. A chronicle of the life of Sten Sture, the Swedish rebel, described the long-lost Gribshunden as a rare kraffweel, or carvel, and what Eriksson realized during his dive was that the wrecks hull planks were laid edge to edge. It really was Hans royal ship: one of these pioneering vessels had been hiding in the shallow green waters of Sweden all along.
When Foley first learned about the wreck, he didnt believe it either. I thought if it was important, Id have heard of it already, he says, sitting in a makeshift office on the dive platform. On the table is an espresso machine he proudly tells me is the same model featured in The Life Aquatic, Wes Andersons irreverent homage to the marine explorer Jacques Cousteau.
Foley is a 52-year-old American with a genial manner and a sense for the dramatic. He trained with the oceanographer Bob Ballard, who discovered the Titanic, and he now specializes in exploring underwater vessels of all types, from planes to submarines. He spent several years excavating a first-century B.C. cargo ship near the Greek island of Antikythera that sank with clay vessels, coins, bronze and marble artworks, and, most famously, a sophisticated mechanical device described as the worlds oldest computer. Before he came to Stora Ekon, he had been working for the U.S. military, recovering the remains of servicemen from crashed World War II bombers, one off Croatia and another off Sweden.
His journey to Stora Ekon began in 2017, after he joined his wife, Maria Hansson, a Swedish geneticist based in Lund, from Massachusetts, where Foley had worked at MIT and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. When his new colleagues told him about Gribshunden, he assumed they were hyping a local attraction. Then he attended a meeting with Rnnby, Eriksson and colleagues from the National Museum of Denmark in Copenhagen. They were telling me about the wreck, and I said, Are you kidding me? The only known example of a ship of discovery, the first example of a purpose-built warshipand its sitting in just nine meters of water?!
The site had already been mapped, and a few artifacts salvaged, including a giant, fearsome figurehead, carved to resemble a monster swallowing a screaming man. But, partly because of the cost, only limited excavations had been carried out. Foley formed a consortium of Swedish and Danish institutions and secured funding from the Crafoord Foundation, founded by the entrepreneur behind Tetra Pak, a multinational food packaging conglomerate, to explore further. In 2019, Foley conducted an initial excavation with Rnnby, who had led several previous studies of the wreck. Foley has been trying to return ever since. Days before work was set to begin this spring, two members of the research team informed Foley they couldnt join (one was recovering from Covid, another had his visa rejected). Then Foley found himself in the hospital facing emergency surgery for gallstones. I almost called it off, he says.
Instead, with his doctors approval and orders to follow a strict diet, he went ahead. The international group of experts hes assembled has set up a white scaffold on the seabed to define their excavation trench, choosing a site near the sternan educated guess about where the royal quarters were located.
Down on the seabed, Foley and the other divers work in pairsan archaeologist with a dive specialist. They sift through layers of debris, including firewood and smashed barrels. Farther down, everything is encased in a fine black sediment that jiggles like jello, Foley says. To remove it, the archaeologists use trowels or paintbrushes and suck up the resulting debris clouds into the hose of a dredge pumplike a giant vacuum cleanerto keep the water clear. (Later, they sift through the dredge pile to make sure they dont overlook any items of interest.) They also record every stage of the excavations by taking hundreds of photographs and videos that Paola Derudas, a data specialist from Lund University, builds into 3-D virtual maps of the site. At the ships stern, ghostly timbers, covered in marine growth, jut upward out of the silt. Elsewhere, the hull has split open and fallen outward, resulting in a jumble of planks that lie scattered in the green light. Its a beautiful mess! says Mikael Bjrk, an archaeologist from Swedens Blekinge Museum. But once you get to know it, you get a sense of the ship, he says. You can feel the story.
Artifacts recovered in 2019 hinted at the ships luxurious cargo: a concreted lump of silver coins, high-quality chain mail, and a fine alder wood tankard incised with a crown symbol. Now, over the course of three weeks, the divers unearth a panoply of additional items. A louse comb, plainly made from wood, attests to everyday life on a cramped ship that probably housed more than 150 souls. But there are signs of riches as well: more silver coins, a delicately stitched red-and-black suede slipper, and stores of exotic spices, including peppercorns, cloves and an enormous stash of saffron that when first uncovered dyed the water red, says archaeologist Marie Jonsson, of Denmarks Viking Ship Museum, who found it.
Even more unexpected is the discovery of several panels of elaborately decorated birch bark. One is embossed with a detailed peacock design; another shows an enigmatic beast that resembles a unicorn and still holds traces of gold paint. Eriksson suggests that the king, who received audiences on board during his travels, would have made sure his chambers were sumptuously decorated with textiles and tapestries. I think it was very fancy on board this ship.
These extravagances were not only for Hans personal comfort. The king amassed on his flagship everything and everyone to impress the Swedish noblemen waiting in Kalmar, Foley says. Of course, Hans didnt rely on soft power alone. The riches on display were backed up by the threat of violence.
Two hours after Foley and Short enter the water they emerge with a small collection of new artifacts. Foley holds up what looks like a giant wooden fork. Nice back scratcher! jokes Bjrk. The oversized item is soon identified as a linstock, used in naval warfare to hold the burning fuse when lighting a cannon. A carved symbol on the handletwo vertical strokes and a slanted horizontalmay be an owners mark. The prongs are charred from use.
It is one of several items that attest to Gribshundens military might. The iron cannons themselves have mostly rusted away, but nine wooden gun carriages have previously been recovered, and Foleys team soon adds a tenth. These range from five to nine feet long and would have held swivel guns in the ships bow and stern castles, as well as along both sides of the deck. The archaeologists also discover a 13.5-foot-long gun carriage that is far larger than any other previously found. For the time, says Foley, it was enormoustoo large to have been positioned across the ship without blocking the deck. He suggests it may be an early example of whats known from later warships as a stern chaser, used to fire off the back.
One historical source suggests that Gribshunden sailed with 68 guns, and based on the finds so far this could be accurate. That means the ship represented a revolution not just in ship design but in naval warfare. Medieval sea battles were essentially land battles carried out on a shipthe aim was to board an enemy vessel and fight hand to hand with swords and spears. But the wide-scale transition to larger, carvel-plank ships, combined with the invention of explosive artillery, enabled purpose-built warships fitted with huge cannons and ports that could support massive guns. That led, during the 16th century, to ships that could destroy enemy vessels and battled almost exclusively from a distance, with a design that persisted with few changes until the 19th century.
But the early history of these purpose-built warships is surprisingly poorly understood, says Kay Smith, an independent expert who previously worked at the Royal Armories at Englands Tower of London. To discover Gribshunden is absolutely amazing, she says. The guns on board were essentially wrought-iron tubes, built from hoops and staves like a barrel, which sat in wooden beds and were lit via powder chambers at the rear. Despite the enormous stern chaser, no gun ports have yet been found, and Smith notes that the other guns are still relatively small: for shooting combatants rather than sinking ships. Its a key find for our understanding of how ships and armaments were developing.
The next day, Foley emerges from his dive with a broad smile. We found something that has never been recovered before, he calls from the water. A few minutes later, relaxing on deck with a mug of steaming coffee, he explains that deep in the trench, just above the ships hull, he uncovered an intact crossbow, more than three feet long. Showroom quality, he gushes. I mean, its still got the bow string! Its got all the decorations. Ive never seen anything like it. He puts down his coffee, runs to the edge of the deck and does a victory somersault into the sea.
Weapons experts are similarly thrilled. Guy Wilson, of the Royal Armories, who specializes in early hand weapons, says that dated examples of crossbows from this period are practically nonexistent. The new find appears to be of a relatively advanced design and will be crucial for understanding the development of this quintessential medieval weapon. In fact, the team seems to have stumbled across what Foley describes as a small arms locker. By June, they recover no fewer than four complete crossbows, as well as components from several others, plus numerous wooden arrows, known as quarrels, with their wood, leather or feathered flights intact. The team also recovers the wooden stock from an arquebus, or early handgun, as well as the suggestively carved handle of a bollock dagger, popular among sailors and used for penetrating an opponents armor. To have another dated example of European arms technology, 50 years before the Mary Rosea warship belonging to Henry VIII that sank in 1545is very exciting, says Wilson. Its going to be amazingly important.
The items will take years to study. Wilson points out that it took three decades to complete the analyses of the artifacts recovered from the Mary Rose. Already, though, Gribshunden is providing a glimpse of warfare on the cusp of transition, as hand weapons gave way to powerful artillery and, with that, the capacity to wage war from a distancea distinctly modern power that still shapes conflict today.
The sun sparkles on the water, and two swans make a synchronized landing on the waves outside the floating office. Foley opens up his laptop and focuses on detailed scans and graphs on his screen. Its here, as much as on the seabed, that the science gets done, he says. In addition to the excavation, Foley is collaborating with material scientists, chemists, geologists and others to analyze artifacts he recovers as well as those previously salvaged from Gribshunden but never studied. CT scans of silver coins found in 2019 reveal they are Danish. Intriguingly, however, little else is. Scans of chain mail uncovered the name of a 15th-century metalworker from Nuremberg, Germany. Isotope analysis shows the lead cannonballs are also German. Meanwhile, dendrochronology, the analysis of tree rings in wood, shows that storage barrels came from ports across the Baltic, from Sweden to Poland to Latvia. Combined with the exotic spices, the findings show that Hans was a surprisingly cosmopolitan king, Foley says. Eriksson agrees. Gribshunden shows just how global medieval Denmark was during this time, he says.
Perhaps most surprising is an analysis, published this summer, of oak timbers from the ship itself, showing that it wasnt Danish either. The trees were felled in the early 1480s, matching the ships presumed date of construction. (The ship was first mentioned in a 1486 letter written by Hans while on board.) But its timbers evidently came from hundreds of miles away, along the river Meuse, and it was likely built where the Meuse meets the sea, in whats now the Netherlands. The implication is that after Hans came to power he wanted a pioneering, world-beating ship, but he didnt yet have the resources or know-how to build it himself, so he ordered it from specialists abroad.
Despite its likely origin in a Dutch shipyard, however, a new analysis has revealed surprising details about the ships construction. The broader switch to carvel planking happened in different ways in different regions: Dutch shipbuilders, for example, built the hull first and added the internal ribs later, whereas the Iberians constructed the frames first using specialized gauges and molds. The Iberian methodwhich was itself borrowed from the Italians, who learned it from the Byzantinesrequired sophisticated mathematical knowledge, but it was ultimately more efficient, giving ship designers greater control over the shape of the finished vessel; it was no accident that these vessels came to dominate global exploration.
This year, Rnnby and his colleague Jon Adams, a maritime archaeologist at Englands University of Southampton, examined detailed measurements of the hulls timbers, and the early results suggest the hull was built according to the frame-first Iberian stylesomething no scholar expected. Castro, who was not involved in the study, says that seeing this ship design so far north at this time would be exciting and important, evidence of a porous world where knowledge was traveling a lot faster and residing in more places than we previously thought. And it means that shipbuilding in the Baltic was not that far behind, if it was behind at all. Like the famous explorers and conquerors of the Iberian peninsula, northern Europe was ready to build ships that could carry guns and sail into the horizon.
This shipbuilding effort underscores Hans ambitions as king, says Per Seesko, a researcher at the Danish National Archives. Records show that, before it sank, Hans had sent Gribshunden as far as England, to negotiate fishing rights, and possibly farther afield. When he sailed to Kalmar with Gribshunden, it was the equivalent, Foley says, of bringing a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier: a projection of political and military might and, Hans hoped, proof that he was Swedens rightful king. For audiences used to smaller, traditional longboats, the sight of it must have been jaw-dropping. And when it sank, it was more than an embarrassment, or an economic blow, or a tragedy for the lives lost on boardit was a military setback.
Afterward, Hans continued on to Kalmar without his flagship, but his rival, the Swedish leader Sture, was delayed, and Hans, perhaps nervous about the comparison between Stures military resources and his own now-depleted fleet, didnt wait for him. He returned home without the Swedish crown. Two years later, he conquered Stockholm by force, but he soon lost the country again. He spent the rest of his reign fighting to get it back. In 1523, Sweden won outright independence from Hans son, Christian II.
Scholars such as Seesko and Foley like to play a parlor game about what might have happened if Gribshunden hadnt sunk. It was a turning point in history, says Foley. You might have had this Danish Nordic state emerge as a great power, a united Scandinavia to rival England under Henry VIII. Theres no telling how the map of Europe would have come to look. Even today the European Union might be balanced by a separate northern force.
There are also hints that Hans had bigger ambitions than control of the Baltic. A 16th-century letter reveals that Hans father, Christian I, dispatched his own northern voyage of discovery, financed by the Portuguese, that may have followed a route past Greenland into the North Atlantic that we know the Vikings traveled centuries earlier when they temporarily settled in North America. Some historians read the evidence as showing that, 20 years before Columbus arrived in the Americas, Christians ship reached cod country: Newfoundland.
Seesko says that Hans would have been aware of his fathers explorations, and Foley believes that Hans may well have had ambitions to cross the Atlantic. We have this dynamic, forward-looking, ambitious king, he says. If Hans had conquered Sweden in 1495, perhaps he might have pushed even farther. Hans was trying to do something new, Foley says. He was trying to empire-build. Rather than being built like a ship of discovery, then, meant to project power among his rivals in the region, perhaps Hans intended for Gribshunden to be a ship of discovery itself, with a mission to reach across the northern Atlantic toward an unknown world.
Its another day on the temporary island. The cold wind has gone and the water is as calm as a mirror. Its time for another dive, and Foleys head is full of what else might be hidden in the sediment. King Hans writing desk? The earliest known gun port? Human bones, from crew or noblemen trapped on board as Gribshunden sank? The joy of this wreck is that we never know whats going to come up, Foley once told me. Every day there is something new. He adjusts his mask and steps into the water. Bubbles rise as he descends half a millennium back in time.
See the original post here:
- US GAO - About GAO - 100 Years of GAO - Government Accountability Office [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2021]
- Oklahoma football: Baker Mayfield making OU history in the NFL - Stormin' in Norman [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2021]
- Here are the 5 biggest HRs in Padres history - MLB.com [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2021]
- Corey Crawford retires as one of the best in Chicago Blackhawks history - Da Windy City [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2021]
- Cardinal Koch: History of separation can be part of history of reconciliation - Vatican News [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2021]
- The Local Take Talks Health, History and African Americans - WCLK [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2021]
- In Depth: What history tell us about the US Capitol riots - RADIO.COM [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2021]
- Brighton Women's History Roll Of Honor Accepting Nominations For 2021 Inductees - WHMI [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2021]
- Who Has the Most Rushing Yards and Touchdowns in NFL Playoff History? - Sportscasting [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2021]
- Denver's cataloguing its Latino and Chicano history through places and buildings - Denverite [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2021]
- The Apple Car would wreck Apple, and Tesla's incredibly volatile history shows why - Business Insider [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2021]
- America Is Not Exceptional. It Has a History of Violence. - The Intercept [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2021]
- A brief history of the headscarf - CNN [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2021]
- On this date in history: -60 temperature reported in Cameron, WI - WQOW TV News 18 [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2021]
- Morning Flurries: WHL announcement and the Toronto Marlies make history - Mile High Hockey [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2021]
- How Warnock and Ossoff's victories evoked the history of the Black freedom struggle - CNN [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2021]
- Presidential Pours: A History of Wine in the White House - The Wall Street Journal [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2021]
- Today in History - MyMotherLode.com [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2021]
- Today in History: George Washington approved adding two stars, two stripes to the American flag - Lompoc Record [Last Updated On: January 13th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 13th, 2021]
- More inclusive: Local principal, teacher to help review history education in Virginia - WYDaily [Last Updated On: January 13th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 13th, 2021]
- Here's a salute to one of Ohio women's suffrage pioneers - Richland Source [Last Updated On: January 13th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 13th, 2021]
- Police Commissioners brother, an SFPD sergeant, has a history of shootings and excessive force complaints - Mission Local [Last Updated On: January 13th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 13th, 2021]
- On January 13 in NYR history: The longest unbeaten streak ever in the NHL - Blue Line Station [Last Updated On: January 13th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 13th, 2021]
- Democratic Party history from the year you were born - Buffalo News [Last Updated On: January 13th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 13th, 2021]
- A US history teacher tries to explain attacks - The Hechinger Report [Last Updated On: January 13th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 13th, 2021]
- Ron Rivera Embraced History To Find Success In His First Season In Washington - Forbes [Last Updated On: January 13th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 13th, 2021]
- The Mother Lode: This is history in the making - again - for kids - CT Insider [Last Updated On: January 13th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 13th, 2021]
- The History Behind 'Mob' Mentality - The New York Times [Last Updated On: January 13th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 13th, 2021]
- 'I saw my life flash before my eyes': An oral history of the Capitol attack | TheHill - The Hill [Last Updated On: January 13th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 13th, 2021]
- The US Capitol attack fits into the history of White backlash - CNN [Last Updated On: January 13th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 13th, 2021]
- Bylaws of the Department of History - Nevada Today [Last Updated On: January 13th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 13th, 2021]
- Subversive Capital Acquisition Corp. Closes The Largest Cannabis SPAC In History And Announces The Launch Of The Parent Company With Shawn... [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- Out of the Attic: The Moss Kendrix Collection at the Black History Museum - Alexandria Times [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- How Does the Nets' Big Three Compare to Other Big Threes in NBA History? - InsideHook [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- The Ku Klux Klans history is a warning about the Capitol riot - Vox.com [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- New Phillies reliever made postseason history vs. Pat Neshek - That Balls Outta Here [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- Lionel Gossman, specialist in French literature and history and 'one of the great humanists and scholar-teachers of his generation,' dies at 91 -... [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- 'Southern Charm': Leva Bonaparte Is on The Right Side Of History. Are You? - Decider [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- This Place in History: Warren Austin - Local 22/44 News [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- Here's how Tom Brady and the Buccaneers could make NFL history if they win their next two playoff games - CBS Sports [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- A History of the Trump Era Through Stories About Toilets - New York Magazine [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- 'Alarmingly Similar.' What the Chaos Around Lincoln's First Inauguration Can Tell Us About Today, According to Historians - TIME [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- A Brief Cultural History of Work Sucking - The New Republic [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- Naples Underground Featured on the History Channel - PRNewswire [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- Derby history is not kind to the Lecomte - VSiN [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- Gandhi, History, and the Lessons of the Events at the Capitol - The New Yorker [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- Will Donald Trump go down as the worst president in history? - CNN [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- View and delete your browsing history in Internet Explorer [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- View and delete browser history in Microsoft Edge [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- This Day in History - What Happened Today - HISTORY [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- History | discipline | Britannica [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- History - Wikipedia [Last Updated On: January 15th, 2021] [Originally Added On: January 15th, 2021]
- The most memorable walkoff wins in Cubs history, Part 2: Original NL teams - Bleed Cubbie Blue [Last Updated On: February 2nd, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 2nd, 2021]
- Dustin Pedroia will always have a place in Red Sox history; what about the Hall of Fame? - CBS Sports [Last Updated On: February 2nd, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 2nd, 2021]
- Sundance: 'Judas and the Black Messiah' introduces 'a history thats been buried in this country' - USA TODAY [Last Updated On: February 2nd, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 2nd, 2021]
- Virginia teacher uses bowties to share history and teach life lessons - WAVY.com [Last Updated On: February 2nd, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 2nd, 2021]
- Kremlin critic Navalny tells court that Putin will go down in history as nothing but an 'underpants poisoner' - Yahoo News [Last Updated On: February 2nd, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 2nd, 2021]
- Trump's impeachment lawyers have a history of being involved in controversial legal matters - KCTV Kansas City [Last Updated On: February 2nd, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 2nd, 2021]
- 'Black History is a Verb': A young poet's message about Black history in America - KARE11.com [Last Updated On: February 2nd, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 2nd, 2021]
- February is Black History Month and Heart Month. Why one cardiologist says thats a good coincidence. - ABC27 [Last Updated On: February 2nd, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 2nd, 2021]
- Thanks to the Internet Archive, the history of American newspapers is more searchable than ever - Nieman Journalism Lab at Harvard [Last Updated On: February 2nd, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 2nd, 2021]
- Creativity Is the Focus of Black History Month 2021 | | SBU News - Stony Brook News [Last Updated On: February 2nd, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 2nd, 2021]
- This Black History Month, remember: History isnt here to make you feel good - Chicago Sun-Times [Last Updated On: February 2nd, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 2nd, 2021]
- Black History Month: How did it start, and why February? - 11Alive.com WXIA [Last Updated On: February 2nd, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 2nd, 2021]
- Comparing COVID-19 to other deadly diseases in U.S. history - CBS News 8 [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2021]
- Talk of the Times: Touring the rich history of Cape Ann - Gloucester Daily Times [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2021]
- Vice President Harris inspiring Black women and girls everywhere during Black History Month - Wink News [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2021]
- Brookshire Grocery Company publishes book to share 92-year history - Weatherford Democrat [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2021]
- Black History Month: Wyoming County was active on the Underground Railroad - The Daily News Online [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2021]
- Suspect in NMSP officers death had an extensive criminal history - KTSM 9 News [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2021]
- This week in history: Historical Society votes to move forward with fundraising for museum - Albert Lea Tribune - Albert Lea Tribune [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2021]
- The topsy-turvy history of the Nissan Pathfinder - Autoblog [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2021]
- God and government linked in history | Religion And Values | messenger-inquirer.com - messenger-inquirer [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2021]
- Black History and Heritage - The San Diego Union-Tribune [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2021]
- Behringer Crawford's NKY History Hour will feature Travis Brown and Locks and Dams of Ohio River - User-generated content [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2021]
- History and Hope: A conversation with Seaside's John Nash - KSBW Monterey [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2021]
- Today in History | National News - Tulsa World [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2021]
- NFL: Protesting players 'on the right side of history,' union says - Reuters [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2021]
- The True History Behind Netflix's 'The Dig' and Sutton Hoo - Smithsonian Magazine [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2021]
- A look at the top rotations in Dodgers history - Los Angeles Times [Last Updated On: February 6th, 2021] [Originally Added On: February 6th, 2021]