The Batavia Shipwreck: A Tale of Mutiny
When the Dutch ship Batavia wrecked off Australia in 1629, the survivors' ordeal had just begun. A charismatic but psychopathic mutineer, Jeronimus Cornelisz, seized control and unleashed a reign of…
Connecting the dots across time
When the Dutch ship Batavia wrecked off Australia in 1629, the survivors' ordeal had just begun. A charismatic but psychopathic mutineer, Jeronimus Cornelisz, seized control and unleashed a reign of…
Before Confucianism became the celebrated philosophy of China, a far more ruthless school of thought held sway. This was Legalism, the harsh and pragmatic ideology that empowered Qin Shi Huang…
Venture beyond the opulent halls of the Doge's Palace and into the shadowy corridors of Venetian power. The Secret Itineraries tour uncovers a hidden world of clandestine archives, unnerving interrogation…
The TaΓno people of the Caribbean played a ceremonial ball game called Batey, which was far more than a simple sport. Played on elaborate stone courts, the game served as…
Long before English Common Law came to its shores, Ireland was governed by the Brehon Laws, a remarkably sophisticated native legal system. This ancient code operated without prisons or capital…
Carved into a massive stone wall in ancient Crete, the Gortyn Code stands as Europe's oldest and most complete legal text, offering a unique window into a long-lost world. Its…
What began as a dispute over a bad pint of wine in a 14th-century Oxford tavern quickly erupted into a three-day armed conflict between university students and local townsfolk. This…
For centuries, the path to becoming a master craftsman was not through a classroom, but through a grueling apprenticeship that bound young boys and girls to a masterβs household for…
Imagine a government outsourcing its power to tax to the highest bidder, a practice known as tax farming. This system was a favorite tool of empires from Rome to the…
In 1991, hikers in the Alps discovered a frozen body they believed was a modern mountaineer. They were wrong by 5,300 years, uncovering not just an ancient mummy, but the…
The legend of the Cornish wrecker paints a sinister picture of villains luring ships to their doom with false lights on stormy nights. But was Cornwall's treacherous coast really home…
In the wake of Romeβs fall, the Visigoths in Spain forged one of the most advanced legal systems of the early Middle Ages. The Visigothic Code, or *Liber Iudiciorum*, blended…
Emperor Augustus created the Vigiles Urbani, a revolutionary corps of freedmen who served as Romeβs first dedicated firefighters and night watchmen. In a metropolis of flammable wooden tenements, these brave…
The first European universities weren't founded by kings or popes, but evolved from the bustling cathedral schools of the 12th century. Driven by a flood of rediscovered knowledge and the…
Long before European contact, the Mi'kmaq people developed a sophisticated democratic government known as the Sante Mawiomi, or Grand Council. This centuries-old institution masterfully balanced local community autonomy with the…
Before modern courts and juries, how did medieval society determine guilt when evidence was scarce? This post explores the fascinating world of trial by ordeal, a judicial system where fire,…
Long before GPS or paper maps, Australia's First Peoples navigated the vast continent using an intricate system of songs. These Aboriginal Songlines are not just melodies; they are living maps,…
While Hammurabi's "eye for an eye" is etched in history, he wasn't the first Mesopotamian king to lay down the law. Long before his famous code, a series of pioneering…
In one of history's most bizarre episodes, Pope Stephen VI had the nine-month-old corpse of his predecessor, Pope Formosus, exhumed, dressed in papal robes, and put on trial in 897…
Imagine a pig, dressed in human clothes, being led to the gallows for murder. This wasn't a fairy tale, but a real and surprisingly common practice in medieval Europe, where…