Research
The Loneliest Man in History
The Silent Orbit On July 20, 1969, as Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin prepared to make their historic descent to the surface of the Moon, one man remained behind in lunar orbit, circling endlessly above the gray wasteland. His name was Michael Collins, the command module pilot of Apollo 11. While his crewmates prepared to take mankind’s first steps on another world, Collins drifted alone in the Columbia module, 60 miles above the Moon’s surface.
By Be The Best4 months ago in History
How fearless African American women broke barriers, tamed the frontier, and rewrote Western history
Shattering Myths of the Wild West When most people picture the Wild West, they imagine sheriffs with shiny badges, white cowboys driving herds of cattle, and saloon girls dancing under dim lantern light. Hollywood movies and television created that image and repeated it until it became accepted as fact. But the real West was far more diverse. Among its most overlooked pioneers were Black cowgirls—women who rode, roped, herded cattle, and owned stables at a time when both their race and gender were considered barriers.
By Be The Best4 months ago in History
The 1975 Airlift of Orphaned Babies: Vietnam War's Heartbreaking Evacuation to US Adoption. AI-Generated.
The 1975 Airlift of Orphaned Babies: Vietnam War's Heartbreaking Evacuation to US Adoption Picture this: Smoke rises over Saigon as helicopters whirl above. Crowds push at gates, desperate to escape. In the chaos of April 1975, tiny hands reach out from orphanage cribs. These were the babies orphaned by the Vietnam War, airlifted to the United States for adoption in a race against time.
By Story silver book 4 months ago in History
Gender Parity in U.S. Administrations: A Historical Timeline
The United States has a history of inequality for women, as with most countries. It has a development towards fuller equal rights in law and in practice, as with many other countries. Arguments continue in the US over representation, particularly around the current Administration. Lies or falsehoods have been spread. What is the representation of women in American administrations since the vote?
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen4 months ago in History
Sacred and profane in Mircea Eliade's theory - Alexis karpouzos
In Mircea Eliade’s thought, religion is seen as a universal and fundamental aspect of human existence, characterized by the experience of the sacred and the profane. Eliade believed that religion originates from an irreducible experience of the sacred, which is common to most human beings. This experience seeks outward cultural expression in myths and rituals. He emphasized that religious phenomena must be understood as uniquely and irreducibly religious, expressing meaning on a religious plane of reference.
By alexis karpouzos4 months ago in History
Bahlool Sits on Haroun Rashid’s Throne – A Lesson on Power and Responsibility
In the annals of Islamic history, there are stories of individuals whose wisdom and insight shone brighter than their outward appearances might suggest. Among these remarkable figures, Bahlool ibn Amr, famously known as Bahlool Dana, stands out as a man whose apparent madness often concealed profound truths. Bahlool’s life was a tapestry of cleverness, wit, and moral lessons, often delivered with humor or audacity, challenging the powerful and comforting the humble.
By Amir Husen4 months ago in History
Bahlool and the Khalifa’s Food – A Lesson in Wisdom
The history of Islamic civilization is full of wise men, saints, and mystics whose words and actions carried lessons that went far beyond their time. Among these remarkable figures stands Bahlool ibn Amr, more commonly remembered as Bahlool Dana—a man who outwardly appeared eccentric and mad, but whose intelligence, insight, and wit often left scholars, rulers, and ordinary people stunned.
By Amir Husen4 months ago in History
The Strange Yet Fascinating Nature of the Pakistani Nation
There is something truly unusual about the temperament of the Pakistani nation. Their behavior is unpredictable, their reactions are surprising, and their courage is often mixed with humor in a way that the rest of the world finds hard to understand. This story reflects that very nature, showing how ordinary villagers and ordinary citizens turn into something extraordinary when the time demands it.
By Izhar Ullah4 months ago in History
A Human Statue Hidden in Göbekli Tepe’s Walls: The Oldest Temple Just Changed Again
When archaeologists first uncovered Göbekli Tepe in the 1990s, the world’s oldest known ritual site, it instantly rewrote history. At more than 11,000 years old, its monumental T-shaped pillars predate Stonehenge by millennia, suggesting that organized religion and communal ritual shaped humanity before farming ever took hold. Now, a new discovery pushes the mystery even further.
By The Secret History Of The World4 months ago in History
A Lost Pharaoh’s Tomb? New Clues to Thutmose II’s Resting Place
For centuries, the Valley of the Kings has kept its secrets. Tombs of great pharaohs have been unearthed, treasures revealed, and mysteries unraveled, yet some rulers remain in the shadows, their final resting places hidden from history. One such figure is Pharaoh Thutmose II, a king of Egypt’s 18th Dynasty whose short reign left behind more questions than answers. Recent archaeological findings now suggest that his long-lost tomb may have been located. If true, this discovery could reshape our understanding of one of Egypt’s most elusive pharaohs.
By The Secret History Of The World4 months ago in History










