Fiction
Uncovering the Impossible: Giant Skeleton Stuns Archaeologists
When the first images appeared online—a massive, human-like skeleton partially buried beneath layers of ancient soil—most people assumed it was another internet illusion. But what happened next pushed the discovery far beyond the realm of fantasy. A team of independent researchers, accompanied by local workers and eyewitnesses, confirmed that something extraordinary had been found. The skeleton was not only enormous in size but disturbingly well-preserved, with bone structures that resembled humans in every way—except scale.
By Izhar Ullah2 months ago in History
🪙 The Buried Fortune of Rome: Inside the Discovery of 22,000 Ancient Coins
When history sleeps beneath the soil for more than a thousand years, it rarely returns quietly. Such was the case when a metal detectorist, wandering through an unremarkable patch of countryside, stumbled upon what would become one of the most extraordinary Roman hoards ever found. More than 22,000 coins, each carrying the face of emperors long gone, emerged from the earth—untouched for over 1,500 years.
By Izhar Ullah2 months ago in History
Old School Tech: Five Ancient Inventions We Still Can't Figure Out
When we picture our ancestors, it’s easy to imagine them living a simple life, free from the complexity of modern technology. Some of us might even think that anything they invented back then could be easily replicated, or even improved upon, with today's knowledge. But hold that thought. As it turns out, there are several ancient inventions that we are still genuinely struggling to understand or fully replicate today. It really makes you wonder how "advanced" we truly are. Here are five incredible inventions from the past that prove history might be much more complex than we think:
By Areeba Umair2 months ago in History
The Wall and the Worm. AI-Generated.
They call us the Emperor’s worms. We burrow into the mountains, we are crushed by falling rock, and our bodies are left to fertilize the stone. I am Liang, and I have been a worm for three years. My hands, once skilled at shaping wood into ploughs, are now torn and calloused, fit only for lifting stone.
By The 9x Fawdi2 months ago in History
Shadows of the Thought Police
The city was gray and silent, except for the occasional hum of surveillance drones hovering like ominous birds above the streets. Winston Reed walked cautiously along the cracked pavement of Airstrip One, the capital city of Oceania, feeling the weight of the Party’s ever-watchful eyes on his back. Even the wind seemed to whisper, carrying the voices of invisible monitors that measured loyalty and fear in equal measure.
By Abubakar khan 2 months ago in History
The Whispering Footprints
London’s fog hung low over Baker Street, weaving like a pale serpent between carriages and lamplight. I had scarcely finished my evening tea when Holmes, who had been studying a thin envelope for the past ten minutes, abruptly straightened in his chair.
By Abubakar khan 2 months ago in History
Let's Talk About Today’s Effects of Colonial Racism and Superiority Complex on an Ordinary Joe in SADC. Content Warning. AI-Generated.
Colonial borders and centuries of imposed hierarchies did not just shape maps; they shaped lives. Over 110 years ago, the line between Namibia and Southern Angola was drawn, scattering communities, breaking lineages, and uprooting people from their ancestral heartlands. For ordinary people across the SADC region, these historical wounds are not distant memories. They echo in daily life, in lost opportunities, in social exclusion, and in the subtle but persistent superiority complexes that still linger in workplaces, schools, and social spaces.
By Mr. Abraham Pahangwashimwe - BEYOND NORTH INVESTMENT CC2 months ago in History












