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History & Classics

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  • 14 Mar 2025
    Adolfo Polo y La Borda

    Moving along the First Global Empire

    We live now in a time in which more and more people vouch for building up walls and barriers to deter the movement of people as it is seen with suspicion; as if mobility were the cause of all contemporary problems, a harmful activity that would break up societies and transform them away from their […]

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  • 27 Feb 2025
    James Andrew Whitaker

    The Shamanism of Eco-Tourism

    How did Indigenous people in the New World understand their encounters with Europeans during the colonial era? This question is at the centre of ongoing debates among anthropologists and historians and its answers vary as much as the differences between the groups involved in these historical encounters. The topic can be expanded to include questions […]

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  • 25 Feb 2025
    Peter J. Bowler

    Defining Darwinism

    In late 2024 Cambridge University Press published two surveys of the history of evolutionism, Michael Ruse’s Charles Darwin: No Revel, Great Revolutionary and my own Darwin for the People. Michael passed away more or less as his book was hitting the shops, so this is his last contribution – unless he has another in press […]

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  • 24 Feb 2025
    Jeremy DeWaal

    The struggle against a German word…and why Germans have never stopped saying it

    Scholars have often looked at cultures through the lens of their “keywords”– terms allegedly so unique as to be untranslatable. In German-speaking countries, one six-letter word has particularly generated controversy: “Heimat.” According to one professional poll, over 90% of Germans view “Heimat” positively. Activists on the political left, however, have been deeply divided between those […]

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  • 4 Feb 2025
    Joshua K. Leon

    The Extraordinary History of World Cities

    This is an urban age. The concept of “world cities” and the cross-border networks that animate them inspired a wave of interdisciplinary research. Megaregions like New York, Lagos, Mexico City, and Mumbai captivate the world by their scale and reach. Obscured by this shock of the new are the untold stories of past city networks […]

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  • 31 Jan 2025
    James L. Zainaldin

    Recovering an ancient scientific culture: The case of the Roman artes

    One of the most significant legacies of Greek and Roman antiquity is the vast body of scientific and technical writings which, copied and transmitted across the centuries, has exerted a profound influence on the development of the modern world. Certain centuries, certain places, have often captured the modern imagination as particularly significant for this tradition: […]

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  • 30 Jan 2025
    Fikret Yegül, Diane Favro

    THE TEMPLE OF ARTEMIS AT SARDIS.  Hellenistic Temple Traditions in Asia Minor

    Nestled beneath the “pointed peaks” of the legendary Tmolos Mountains in Turkey, the Temple and Sanctuary of Artemis at Sardis is one of the most impressive monuments of classical antiquity. Dating to the Hellenistic period, it was undertaken, not by a king, but, we believe, by Stratonike, a“fiery” Hellenistic queen, and redesigned under the Roman […]

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  • 21 Jan 2025
    Lawrence A. Peskin

    Nationalism from the Outside In

    Most historians of the formative generations of the United States have focused (and still do) on a story of nation building that is centered on the creation of domestic institutions, identity, and westward expansion.  Events outside the United States – usually the Barbary Wars and, later, the Mexican War, are relegated to diplomatic historians, a […]

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