The Pax Romana (Latin for "Roman Peace") refers to a period of relative peace and stability across the Roman Empire that ...
Upon the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC, one of his generals, Ptolemy, gained control of Egypt. How did he and his ...
In October 48 BC, the imperator arrived in Egypt to capture his rival Pompey. He ended up staying for nine months to fight ...
The Merovingian dynasty was the first Frankish line of kings who ruled in Western Europe from AD 476 to 752. Dynasty of Frankish kings descending from Merovech, the Merovingians ruled over Gaul until ...
The Reign of Terror, The bloody chapter of the French Revolution, led by Robespierre and the Jacobins, was an extremely violent time in the French Revolution. All those who opposed the current ...
If a doctor “treats the abscess in a nobleman’s eye but causes the loss of the eye,” he would lose his hand. A handful of Egyptian documents describe medicines made from beans, leeks, figs, dates, and ...
The first Roman legions in Provence in 125 BC, the barbarian invasions, the Battle of Soisson in 486 ...
Augustus (63 BCE – 14 CE), originally named Gaius Octavius and later Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus, was the first Roman ...
The French Revolution (1789–1799) profoundly transformed the relationship between religion and the state in France, leading ...
Mirabeau was one of the most eloquent and effective spokesmen of the Third Estate in the Estates-General, advocating for the ...
Women’s roles in Napoleon's Grande Armée, particularly that of the vivandières, became legendary and part of the army's lore. The vivandière, with her distinctive uniform, was an enduring symbol of ...
Napoleon's Grande Armée Medical Service was a pioneering system in military medicine, representing one of the earliest attempts to provide systematic medical care for a large, mobile army. Despite the ...