Malbork Castle: The Brick Marvel

Jul 22, 2020

The Malbork Castle in northern Poland wears two feathers in its cap. Not only it is the largest castle in the world measured by land area, i...

Miss Subways: The Tube Beauty Contest

Jul 21, 2020

For thirty five years, between 1941 and 1976, a company called New York Subways Advertising ran a city-wide beauty contest. Any New Yorker a...

Colorado Springs: A City Built Upon Tuberculosis

Jul 17, 2020

One of the leading causes of death in Europe and in the United States during the 19th century was tuberculosis, a disease that has plagued h...

The Bad Beer Brawl: St. Scholastica Day Riot

Jul 15, 2020

On the south-west corner of Carfax, in Oxford, a small, inconspicuous inscription on the side of an old building marks the site of one of th...

The Great Colonnade at Apamea

Jul 14, 2020

One of the main characteristics of the most important cities of Antiquity in the Hellenistic kingdoms, first, and in the Roman territories o...

Thagomizer: Why Stegosaurus’ Spiky Tail Was Named After A Cartoon

Jul 13, 2020

Humans and stegosaurus missed each other by more than 150 million years, but people have always wondered how difficult or terrifying life wo...

The Balloon Satellites of Project Echo

Jul 11, 2020

The world’s first communication satellite was remarkably unsophisticated—a big silvery plastic balloon coated with aluminum, soaring roughly...

A Hidden Memorial to Lenin in a Forest

Jul 9, 2020

Vladimir Lenin was a controversial Russian revolutionary leader who has been idolized and demonized in equal proportions since his death in ...

The Soviet Bomber That Was Reverse Engineered From Stolen American B-29s

Jul 9, 2020

Ask anyone, what won the war against Japan during the Second World War, and the answer would invariably be the ‘atomic bomb’, but truth be...

The Vajont Dam Disaster

Jul 7, 2020

In the valley of the Vajont River, about a hundred kilometers north of Venice, stands an old, disused dam. The vast wall of white, wedged hi...