Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in History.
THE TREASURE IN THE FOREST
The canoe drifted quietly toward the island, where a wide bay opened beneath a blazing sky. A narrow gap in the white reef marked the mouth of a small river, its path visible by the darker green of thick forest spilling down the hillside. Beyond it, mountains rose like frozen waves. The sea was calm, almost unnaturally so.
By Faisal Khan3 days ago in History
Dust. AI-Generated.
It was dust. Dust had weight there. It pressed into your mouth when you breathed, ground against your teeth, settled into the creases of your eyes. It coated our boots and crept into our weapons no matter how carefully we cleaned them. When the wind picked up, it hissed across the ground like something alive. Long before I heard a shot fired, I understood that the dust would get inside me and never really leave.
By Gaofeng Wang3 days ago in History
Frozen Ground
Silence meant the guns were cooling. It meant men were waiting. It meant something was about to break. We were dug in along a frozen stretch of road near the Imjin River, the kind of place that didn’t look important until history decided otherwise. The cold wasn’t just uncomfortable—it was personal. It crept into your boots, your bones, your thoughts. At night, I dreamed of heat: radiators, kitchens, the smell of coffee. I woke up with frost on my helmet.
By Gaofeng Wang3 days ago in History
Making The Ethnic Qarsherskiyan Community: 1991 Ethnogenesis And 2019 Coming Out
The ethnic Qarsherskiyan community is a multigenerationally mixed race community with deep roots in colonial North America, mainly in the United States of America and in Canada. The homeland for the ethnic Qarsherskiyan people is a broad patchwork of land like a giant and expansive checkerboard, running through the Appalachian Mountain network from Happy Valley-Goose Bay in Labrador and the island of Newfoundland in Canada to the Roanoke Valley in the US state of Virginia, passing through the US states of Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, Ohio, North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, Kentucky, Missouri, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and the Canadian Provinces of Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, New Brunswick, Ontario, and Quebec. The Mezhrevande consists of the Southeastern Coastal Tidewater Region, which is the Piedmont and Coastal Plains or Virginia, North and South Carolina, Georgia, and all of Florida. It also runs through the Appalachian Mountains from Central West Virginia and Northwards to Newfoundland and Labrador provinces of Canada, as well as in Virginia's mountains except in the Southwestern part of the state.
By Tatiana Whitelowery News Agency3 days ago in History
Balloonfest 1986
Balloonfest 1986 was meant to be a joyful celebration. It was planned as a world record attempt and a symbol of hope, fun, and community spirit. Instead, it became one of the most famous examples of how a good idea can go wrong when nature is underestimated.
By shaoor afridi3 days ago in History
The Prophet of Mercy: How Compassion Transformed Enemies into Believers
In the heart of Arabia, in the ancient city of Makkah, society was built on tribal loyalty, power, and pride. Wealth and lineage determined a person’s worth, while the weak were often oppressed without mercy. The Kaaba, originally built for the worship of One God, was filled with idols, and injustice had become a normal part of life. In this harsh and divided environment, Hazrat Muhammad ﷺ emerged—not as a king or warrior, but as a man whose truth, patience, and compassion would forever change the course of human history.
By The best writer 4 days ago in History
Julius Caesar: The Rise and Fall of a Legend
The Rise and Fall of Julius Caesar In the first century BCE, the Roman Republic stood as one of the most powerful states in the ancient world. Its armies conquered vast territories, its laws shaped civilizations, and its Senate governed through a delicate balance of tradition and authority. Into this complex political world was born Gaius Julius Caesar in 100 BCE—a man whose ambition, brilliance, and fate would forever change Roman history.
By The best writer 4 days ago in History
Be Like Jesus... No - Don't!
My kids and I are Seventh Day Adventists. It is the closest organized religion that I resonate with... for the most part. A key thing is that Saturdays are our Sabbaths. So, today, Sabbath school lessons were not published on the website I use. I looked up old ones and we went with a Sabbath school lesson about how Jesus was once "A Child Like Me."
By The Schizophrenic Mom4 days ago in History
The Hard Ways Trump Could Try to Take Greenland. AI-Generated.
When Donald Trump was president of the United States, he shocked the world by saying he wanted to buy Greenland. Many people laughed, but others took the idea seriously. Greenland is a huge island in the Arctic. It is rich in natural resources and very important for military defense. Today, Greenland belongs to Denmark, but it also governs itself in many areas.
By sehzeen fatima4 days ago in History
Statue of Liberty: America’s Timeless Symbol of Freedom
The Statue of Liberty is one of the most iconic landmarks in the United States and a powerful symbol of freedom, democracy, and hope. Located on Liberty Island in New York Harbor, the statue has welcomed millions of immigrants and visitors since the late nineteenth century. Officially titled Liberty Enlightening the World, it represents the ideals upon which the United States was founded and continues to inspire people across the globe.
By Mukhtiar Ahmad4 days ago in History










