The Macedonian Renaissance’s “The Paris Psalter” Artwork

*SOME* folks think the Italian Renaissance was the *only* Renaissance. But we Medievalists realize that there were several times when the culture of the Ancient Greek and Roman civilizations was self-consciously re-created, to form phenomenal artistic movements.And if you’re not a Medieval historian who knew this already, no worries — I am here to fix […]

The Macedonian Renaissance’s “The Paris Psalter” Artwork Read More »

Marc Chagall

Marc Chagall’s “The Window of Peace and Happiness”

I don’t want to run any sort of lens filter through this image — it would mar the beauty of one of the most famous works by the surrealist artist Marc Chagall (1887-1985). This is “The Window of Peace and Happiness”, an enormous 15’x12′ stained glass window the artist did for the United Nations headquarters

Marc Chagall’s “The Window of Peace and Happiness” Read More »

Katalin Kariko

Katalin Kariko

In 1985, scientist, Katalin Karikó left her native Hungary for the United States with her husband and two-year old daughter. The University of Szeged, where she had earned her degree and was working as a postdoctorate fellow, had run out of funding. So the family — who had to sew cash into their daughter’s stuffed

Katalin Kariko Read More »

The Bulgar Slayer

Byzantine’s Basil II – “The Bulgar Slayer”

I try to keep the “Byzantine” (overly complex relationships of very wealthy people) out of my Byzantine history class, but in the early 11th century there’s no getting around the way events parallel _The Game of Thrones_. Take the reign of Basil II, a.k.a. “the Bulgar Slayer,” for instance. It wasn’t just the way the

Byzantine’s Basil II – “The Bulgar Slayer” Read More »

Boston City Hall

Post World War II Brutalism Architecture

Are you on team Brutalism or not? Brutalism is an architectural movement from the post-WWII era that features exposed concrete (from the French “béton brut” which got translated “brutalism”). Made popular worldwide in the 1960s, it has tended to inspire either awed admiration or deep-felt repulsion among viewers. And this building here, the Boston City

Post World War II Brutalism Architecture Read More »

Palace Alhambra in Granada

This is one of the entrances to the famed palace complex of the Alhambra, one of the most beautiful buildings I have ever seen. Specifically, this area is known as the “Gate of Justice” or “Esplanade’s Gate”, built by the Sultan Yūsuf I of Granada in 1348. It is also one of the most famous

Palace Alhambra in Granada Read More »

Dolly Sods Outlook

Allegheny Front at the Dolly Sods Wilderness Area

This eastern-facing plateau at the Dolly Sods Wilderness Area in West Virginia is part of the Allegheny Front, a ridge-line of mountains that make up the eastern Continental Divide. To the west, water flows into the Mississippi River. To the east, it flows into Chesapeake Bay — and it almost looks like you can see

Allegheny Front at the Dolly Sods Wilderness Area Read More »

Dolly Sods Wilderness

West Virginia’s Dolly Sods Wilderness Area

The Dolly Sods Wilderness Area in West Virginia is almost 72 square kilometers of protected lands. The ecology is unique — much of the area is between 2,000 and 4,000-foot elevation, and is filled with high-altitude marshy bogs, red spruce forests, and windswept boulders. But it did not look like this 100 years ago.In the

West Virginia’s Dolly Sods Wilderness Area Read More »

Ancient Rome

Ancient Romans Fondness of Sex

The Ancient Romans were definitely not prudish about sex, but their ideas about when the act was healthy and when it wasn’t are certainly foreign to moderns. The first-century encyclopedist Pliny the Elder wrote that “sexual intercourse is good for lower back pain, for weakness of the eyes, for derangement, and for depression”. On the

Ancient Romans Fondness of Sex Read More »

Carl Bosch and the Haber-Bosch Fertilization Process

It fits that the grave of Carl Bosch in Heidelberg is overgrown with the competing green textures of the jumble of plants collecting at his tombstone. Plants were something Bosch understood more than most people — and that, combined with his engineering skills, got him the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1931. A just reward,

Carl Bosch and the Haber-Bosch Fertilization Process Read More »

Long Pond Trail Vistas in Maryland

You are looking at vistas along the Long Pond Trail, an isolated and somewhat arduous trek through some of the loveliest mountainous paths that make up the Green Ridge State Forest in western Maryland. Like so much of the Atlantic seaboard states, the forests of the Green Ridge were all but eliminated around the late

Long Pond Trail Vistas in Maryland Read More »

Terreiro – The Oldest Religious Shrine in Brazil

This image looks very old, but it was taken in 1984 — it is a picture of a sacred pillar in the religious shrine, or “terreiro,” called the Ilê Axé Iyá Nassô Oká. It is the oldest shrine in Brazil of the syncretic religion Candomblé. And if you’ve never heard of Candomblé, that’s not very

Terreiro – The Oldest Religious Shrine in Brazil Read More »

Chinese Stick Drawing

Chinese Stick Drawings of Comets

These Chinese tiny stick drawings contain precious information — very few could understand it in the second century BCE when they were inscribed in silk and placed in the famous Mawangdui tomb, but modern astronomers have studied such markings to learn about the history of celestial objects of the distant past.These are renderings of different

Chinese Stick Drawings of Comets Read More »

Urdu Manuscript of Medicine

The way medical knowledge has spread across the globe over time is fascinating. Now, of course, the internet makes things easy — that’s why the mRNA technology that produced two of the major COVID vaccines could be developed so quickly. Throughout recorded history, the Ancient Greek tradition was the most influential source of medicial studies

Urdu Manuscript of Medicine Read More »

Ancient Romans and Their Bath-Houses

The Ancient Romans loved their baths — this is a circular pool from the baths in the eponymously named town of Bath in England. Although the custom of public bathing had come from Ancient Greece, by the early 400s CE Rome had 856 bathouses throughout the Empire.These were places of beauty and comfort — heating

Ancient Romans and Their Bath-Houses Read More »

Hindu Mother

Yasoda and Her Foster Son God Krishna

I have a good story for this Mother’s Day in the U.S.. It comes from a Hindu myth found in a sacred text called _The Bhagavata Purana_ (8th-10th c), which tells the story of the maternal love of Yasoda for her foster son, the God Krishna.Yasoda had no idea that she was raising a divine

Yasoda and Her Foster Son God Krishna Read More »