SS Baychimo: The Unsinkable Ghost Ship

Dec 16, 2020

Ships aren’t meant to sink, but sometimes you have to wonder what miraculous forces kept a vessel afloat. The SS Baychimo was such a ship. ...

Franz Reichelt’s Fatal Jump

Dec 15, 2020

The British Pathé film archive has a chilling video of a man jumping to his death from the Eiffel Tower. The man in the short video is shown...

The Fighter Plane That Shot Itself Down

Dec 14, 2020

Fighter aviation has come a long way from the crude old days when pilots shot down their own planes as often as the enemy’s. In those early ...

The Buried Village of Te Wairoa

Dec 10, 2020

Until the late 19th century, the shores of Rotomahana, in northern New Zealand, were adorned by one of the most spectacular travertine terra...

The Fake Dome of The Church of St. Ignatius

Dec 10, 2020

One of Rome’s lesser-known attractions, the Church of St. Ignatius of Loyola ( Chiesa di Sant'Ignazio di Loyola in Italian), lies just ...

Henley-On-Todd: The Waterless Regatta

Dec 8, 2020

Every August, Alice Springs, a large town in the heart of Australia’s Northern Territory, holds an unusual boat race on Todd River, a river ...

Saint Guinefort: The Holy Greyhound

Dec 8, 2020

Around the second half of the 13th century, a Dominican friar known as Stephen of Bourbon, began travelling the width and breadth of souther...

Gara Medouar: The ‘Spectre’ Crater

Dec 3, 2020

The 1999 Hollywood movie The Mummy is set in Egypt, but was filmed largely in Morocco. Marrakech became the Cairo of 1926, the year the sto...

Sunomata Castle: The Castle That Was Built on a Single Night

Dec 2, 2020

Sunomata Castle stands at the confluence of the Sai and Nagara rivers, in the city of ÅŒgaki in Gifu Prefecture. It’s a typical Japanese cast...

The Yukon Square Inch Land Rush of 1955

Dec 1, 2020

Marketers give away freebies all the time to generate buzz and promote their products. Usually these freebies are cheap trinkets like toys, ...

Hostile Façades

Nov 27, 2020

The old city of Segovia, about 90 km north of Madrid, is best known for its aqueduct , but this historic city is full of architectural curio...

The Great Glass Slab at Beth Shearim

Nov 26, 2020

In a cave adjacent to an ancient cemetery near Beit She'arim, an old Jewish town in northern Israel, there lies a huge slab of glass app...

The Wine Cellars of Hercegkút

Nov 25, 2020

The Tokaj wine region in northeastern Hungary has been producing wine since Roman times. Tokaj’s wines were historically prized throughout E...

The Great Bed of Ware

Nov 25, 2020

For much of human history, sleeping arrangements were very informal. You heaped a pile of straw or leaves on the floor, covered it with anim...

Charles Crocker’s Spite Fence

Nov 24, 2020

Back when San Francisco's luxurious destination Nob Hill was just another neighborhood in the newly incorporated city, a young German im...

The Lost Villages of The Port of Antwerp

Nov 21, 2020

In the middle of the Port of Antwerp, in Belgium, surrounded by an endless sea of shipping containers, stands an old church tower on a small...

George Cayley: The Man Who Invented Flight

Nov 19, 2020

History credits Orville and Wilbur Wright for flying the world’s first aircraft, but it was Yorkshire Baronet Sir George Cayley who first pr...

How Alexander Turned The Island of Tyre Into a Peninsula

Nov 17, 2020

The city of Tyre in southern Lebanon is one of the oldest cities in the world. Originally founded by settlers from the nearby city of Sidon ...

Pericles' Funeral Oration, The Most Famous Speech in History

Nov 16, 2020

The Peloponnesian War between Sparta and Athens began in 431 BC and would last for almost 28 years. In the end, Sparta prevailed, but its he...

Australia's Great Artesian Basin

Nov 13, 2020

Australia is dry, hot, unimaginably infertile and the most inhospitable of all inhabited continents. Yet, underneath the parched land, lies ...