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  • The Earliest Known Appearance of the F‑Word (1310)
    by OC on September 11, 2025 at 9:00 am

    Photo by Paul Booth You value decorum, propriety, eloquence, you treasure le mot juste and agonize over diction as you compose polite but strongly-worded letters to the editor. But alas, my literate friend, you have the misfortune of living in the age of Twitter, Tumblr, et al., where the favored means of communication consists of

  • The Technology That Brought Down Medieval Castles and Changed the Middle Ages
    by Colin Marshall on September 11, 2025 at 8:00 am

    Civilization moved past the use of castles long ago, but their imagery endures in popular culture. Even young children here in the twenty-twenties have an idea of what castles look like. But why do they look like that? Admittedly, that’s a bit of a trick question: the popular concept of castles tends to be inspired

  • How Erik Satie Invented Modern Music: A Visual Explanation
    by Colin Marshall on September 10, 2025 at 9:00 am

    Once you hear Erik Satie’s Gymnopédie No. 1, you never forget it. Not that popular culture would let you forget it: the piece has been, and continues to be, reinterpreted and sampled by musicians working in a variety of genres from pop to electronic to metal. In versions that sound close to what Satie would

  • Browse Thousands of Free Vintage Cocktail Recipes Online (1705–1951)
    by OC on September 10, 2025 at 8:00 am

    Where do the hipster mixologists of Tokyo, Mexico City and Brooklyn take their inspiration? If not from the Exposition Universelle des Vins et Spiritueux’ free collection of digitized vintage cocktail recipe books, perhaps they should start. An initiative of the Museum of Wine and Spirits on the Ile de Bendor in Southeastern France, the collection is a boon to anyone with an interest

  • The Advanced Technology of Ancient Rome: Automatic Doors, Water Clocks, Vending Machines & More
    by Colin Marshall on September 9, 2025 at 9:00 am

    Ancient Rome never had an industrial revolution. Granted, certain historians have objected now and again to that once-settled claim, gesturing toward large heaps of pottery discovered in garbage dumps and other such artifacts clearly produced in large numbers. Still, the fact remains that Ancient Rome never had an industrial revolution of the kind that fired

  • Discover the 100-Year-Old Self-Playing Violin, One of the Most Complex Music Players Ever Made
    by OC on September 9, 2025 at 8:00 am

    At the 1910 World’s Exhibition in Brussels, Ludwig Hupfeld unveiled the Phonoliszt-Violina, an instrument once dubbed “the eighth wonder of the world.” A leading maker of automated instruments in Germany, Hupfeld built a company that produced everything from phonola push-up players to player pianos. In 1907 he created his most famous invention, the Phonoliszt-Violina. It

  • What an 85-Year-Long Harvard Study Says Is the Real Key to Happiness
    by Colin Marshall on September 8, 2025 at 9:00 am

    We’ve long used the French word milieu in English, but not with quite the same range of meanings it has back in France. For example, French society (and especially the members of its older generations) explicitly recognizes the value of a milieu in the sense of the collected friends, acquaintances, and relations with whom one has

  • Why You Should Only Work 3–4 Hours a Day, Like Charles Darwin, Virginia Woolf & Adam Smith
    by Colin Marshall on September 8, 2025 at 8:00 am

    These days, we hear much said on social media — surely too much — in favor of the “hustle culture” and the “grind mindset” (or, abbreviated for maximum efficiency, the “grindset”). Dedication to your work is to be admired, provided that the work itself is of value, but the more of a day’s hours you

  • Explore an Online Archive of 12,700 Vintage Cookbooks
    by OC on September 5, 2025 at 5:43 am

    “Early cookbooks were fit for kings,” writes Henry Notaker at The Atlantic. “The oldest published recipe collections” in the 15th and 16th centuries in Western Europe “emanated from the palaces of monarchs, princes, and grand señores.” Cookbooks were more than recipe collections—they were guides to court etiquette and sumptuous records of luxurious living. In ancient

  • How Egon Schiele Made Enduring Art from His Troubled Life and Times
    by Colin Marshall on September 4, 2025 at 9:00 am

    “May you live in interesting times,” goes the apocryphal but nevertheless much-invoked “Chinese curse.” Egon Schiele, born in the Austria-Hungary of 1890, certainly did live in interesting times, and his work, as featured in the new Great Art Explained video above, can look like the creations of a cursed man. That’s especially true of those


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