Ban on tomatoes
Once upon a time, in the grand halls of European aristocracy and the muddy farms…
The medieval recipe for flying
The medieval recipe for flying sounds like it should involve a bubbling cauldron, a witch’s…
The Belfry of Bruges
The Belfry of Bruges: just say the words and you can almost hear the bells…
The Time Switzerland Accidentally Invaded Liechtenstein: A Neutral Blunder with No Casualties but Plenty of Apologies
Some countries have wars. Some have border skirmishes. And then there's Switzerland and Liechtenstein—two nations…
Dutch Tulip Bubble: How a Flower Sparked the World’s First Financial Crash
The 17th century was a wild time in the Netherlands. Picture windmills spinning over flat…
Quinoa Stories
Once upon a time, quinoa was just a humble seed minding its business in the…
The Global Toothbrush Revolution: How One Man Changed Dental Hygiene Forever
Some revolutions begin with a bang. Others begin with bad breath. And in this case,…
History of the ice trade empire
In the age before humming refrigerators and supermarkets stocked with frosty tubs of Häagen-Dazs, keeping…
The Great Paris Flood of 1910 – When Parisians Traded Trains for Boats
If you think delayed trains and soggy croissants are the peak of Parisian inconvenience, allow…
The Victorian Obsession with Mummies: When Unwrapping a Corpse Was a Social Event
Victorians did many things with great enthusiasm—empire-building, tea-drinking, moustache-twirling—but few were quite as peculiar as…
When Cheese Was Currency
Before crypto, before contactless, before even coins jingled in the pockets of medieval merchants, there…
Bicycles and women’s rights: Two Wheels and Scandalous Ankles
Today, the bicycle is mostly a symbol of fitness or leisurely Sunday rides through the…
The Time America Attacked Itself
History doesn’t always make sense. Sometimes, it reads like a badly written sitcom script. One…
Why were pineapples so expensive in the 1700s
Forget Lamborghinis or Instagram yachts. In 18th century Europe, the real status symbol was rough,…
How the Mongol Postal System Became the Fastest Network of the Medieval World
When one thinks of Genghis Khan, the mind doesn’t exactly leap to the image of…
The Great Molasses Flood – When Boston Was Buried in Syrup
On a crisp January afternoon in 1919, the North End of Boston became the site…
How Chopsticks Changed Entire Civilisations – The Surprising Power of Two Little Sticks
They’re light, often disposable, and usually tucked into your takeaway bag without a second thought.…
The Egyptian Obelisk in New York (and London… and Paris): A Tale of Giant Pointy Rocks and Imperial One-Upmanship
There’s something inherently strange about stumbling across an ancient Egyptian obelisk in the middle of…
The Forgotten Finnish Tourism Boom of the 1800s: When Lapland Became a Health Resort for Europe’s Coughing Elite
Lapland: today it conjures images of Santa Claus villages, reindeer sleigh rides and Northern Lights…
Napoleon’s Accidental Bunny Attack – When the Emperor Was Outwitted by Rabbits
He conquered Europe, redrew borders, and left an empire in his wake. But Napoleon Bonaparte—military…
The Haunted Radios of Cold War Spies: Numbers Stations That Refuse to Die
Somewhere in the static between shortwave frequencies, strange voices echo across the globe. They recite…
Why Medieval People Slept Twice a Night: The Forgotten Habit of Biphasic Sleep
Absolutely nothing like a good midnight prayer followed by a snack and maybe a bit…
Toxic Fashion Through History: The Deadly Trend of Arsenic in Victorian Dresses and More
Absolutely lethal fashion—now there's a wardrobe malfunction worth talking about. Let’s unravel the ghastly history…
The Curious Origins of Fortnum & Mason
If you want to understand Britishness in edible, giftable, tea-sippable form, you could do a…
How British Tea is Actually Chinese, Indian, Dutch and Stolen
Once upon a teacup, the British Empire sat smugly with its pinky out, sipping what…
St George’s Day postponed
St George's Day, April 23rd, had arrived – or so you thought. There you were,…