1,552 upvotes
Jul 15, 2026, 8:10 PM UTC
Posted by /u/HumbleRestaurant790
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1,552 upvotes
Jul 15, 2026, 8:10 PM UTC
Posted by /u/HumbleRestaurant790
947 upvotes
Jul 16, 2026, 12:37 AM UTC
Posted by /u/Impressive_Jello_909
Who actually coined the term 'Space'? I find it weird to think that there was a time when people looked at the sky and would call it something other than space. I assume that in different cultures it was called different things, but when did it become more universally known as '…
804 upvotes
Jul 15, 2026, 7:08 PM UTC
Posted by /u/PneumaticFizz
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…
583 upvotes
Jul 16, 2026, 9:56 AM UTC
Posted by /u/morbihann
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…
222 upvotes
Jul 15, 2026, 5:37 PM UTC
Posted by /u/ShotFromGuns
As I'm sitting here during yet another 90°F+ heatwave, it occurs to me that if it sucks this much to be doing white-collar work in a dark room with fans, cold water, and the knowledge I can go somewhere air conditioned at any time, it must have been unimaginably worse for people…
198 upvotes
Jul 16, 2026, 3:33 PM UTC
Posted by /u/Reebok_MF_classics
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…
170 upvotes
Jul 15, 2026, 9:47 PM UTC
Posted by /u/screwyoushadowban
This is a period of time where the Papal States are being (or about to be) gobbled up by Italian Nationalism and Europe is hurtling into modernity. So a long ways away from the heydey of Papal influence it seems. How much did secular leaders of Catholic countries, especially if…
127 upvotes
Jul 15, 2026, 10:49 PM UTC
Posted by /u/DANIELLE_2027
86 upvotes
Jul 15, 2026, 6:18 PM UTC
Posted by /u/sciguy11
Common views are that the very poor remained (as they couldn't afford to make the journey), as well as some of the elite (who had land and other assets). Were there any other perspectives on staying in India?
81 upvotes
Jul 16, 2026, 3:44 AM UTC
Posted by /u/CalendarAncient4230
Do you think Trump has an heir apparent, or is it one of those things where no one in Washington dares talk about it for fear of reminding Trump of his mortality/term limits? I know the obvious answer is Vance, but Vance does not wield the same kind of fear and influence that Tr…
57 upvotes
Jul 16, 2026, 5:56 AM UTC
Posted by /u/Strelochka
It's spaceships, star sailors, fleets and so on, even though space is 3D for navigational purposes and the sea is effectively 2D for everything but submersibles, rockets obviously fly and have to go through the sky first to get to space, and the first astronauts were all trained…
56 upvotes
Jul 16, 2026, 2:38 PM UTC
Posted by /u/Bn_scarpia
What prompted this question was listening to the Scarecrow's song "If I Only Had a Brain" in 'The Wizard of Oz': "With the thoughts that you'll be thinkin' You could be another Lincoln If you only had a brain." It seems that Lincoln was used here as an example of extreme smarts.…
50 upvotes
Jul 15, 2026, 8:45 PM UTC
Posted by /u/NewMaleperduis
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.…