Infolitico
News for the Mind, Faith for the Soul

Beyond our newsroom

The Feed

Public conversations on faith, culture, and civic life—gathered in one calm, readable place.

Some listings unavailable

Curated communities

Choose up to 6. Inclusion is not editorial endorsement.

4 selected

Every returned set is displayed by current public upvotes. “Most upvoted” can be limited by time range.

External content disclosure: Posts and excerpts come from public Reddit feeds and remain the responsibility of their authors. Infolitico curates the community allowlist, not individual posts, and does not endorse their claims or viewpoints.
r/AskHistorians

805 upvotes

Jul 15, 2026, 7:08 PM UTC

Posted by /u/PneumaticFizz

If someone died in 1905 at 65 of 'exhaustion,' is that diagnosis likely accurate? Or is it potentially a euphemism or a misdiagnosis?

I have an ancestor who died under the title's circumstances and was curious if this was an antiquated term. There was a great deal of stress and generational trauma in his life, so it seems entirely plausible that he died from exhaustion, but was curious if there was any precede…

r/AskHistorians

585 upvotes

Jul 16, 2026, 9:56 AM UTC

Posted by /u/morbihann

Was "the beach" ever used recreationally i the middle ages?

So beaches obviously have always been useful for various activities scavange of washed out cargo, easy place to go in and with boats, etc.) but I got curious, is there any evidence of medieval people ever going to the beach for leisure. I cant imagine tanning was that needed, gi…

r/AskHistorians

200 upvotes

Jul 16, 2026, 3:33 PM UTC

Posted by /u/Reebok_MF_classics

Why are Māoris considered indigenous but Falklanders aren’t?

As I understand it, the Māori were originally a people from across the sea who sailed to New Zealand, an uninhabited island at the time, and then began settling it. They formed a bond with the land when it was empty, and, as such, are correctly and universally considered the ind…

r/AskHistorians

50 upvotes

Jul 15, 2026, 8:45 PM UTC

Posted by /u/NewMaleperduis

How did one-room schoolhouses work?

I know one-room schoolhouses (where one teacher taught multiple grades at once) were the norm in many rural areas for much of the 19th and early 20th centuries. But as a city slicker, I can't imagine how that would actually work since the teacher can only do one thing at a time.…

r/AskHistorians

23 upvotes

Jul 16, 2026, 11:54 AM UTC

Posted by /u/grzybeczek

Did peasants ever go away on holiday?

In today's day and age travelling abroad, or at least to a seaside town is more accessible than ever (at least in Europe where I'm posting from). While not absolutely everyone can afford it, a vast majority of the working class is able to travel away from home at least occasiona…

r/OrthodoxChristianity

23 upvotes

Jul 16, 2026, 9:01 AM UTC

Posted by /u/demureape

thinking of leaving islam for orthodoxy

for context i converted to islam April 2023. nothing really specifically has shaken my faith. it’s not like all of a sudden the religion or its history doesn’t make sense anymore, nor am i unhappy with any of the rules. it’s just that i don’t feel like i belong in islam and can…

r/AskHistorians

23 upvotes

Jul 16, 2026, 12:46 AM UTC

Posted by /u/LionTiger3

Did Chinese scholars come to any of the same conclusions as the Greeks on axioms of geometry? If they came to different conclusions, what was the reasoning?

I hear about the Greek development of geometry, but not Chinese geometry. Chinese scholars worked on geometry around the same time as the Greeks, but independently from the Greeks. Euclid developed basic ideas. Did Chinese scholars come to the same conclusions as the Greeks? If…