Galileo’s career started in a monastery in Florence; but his father saw a doctor in him. Defying his father, he studied mathematics instead of medicine. He made his first invention at 22. At 25, he was lecturing at the University of Pisa and building high class musical instruments. He had to move to Padova after being mobbed out from Pisa.
I like history. If it is sometimes weird and wonderful, so much the better.
Saturday, September 28, 2013
Saturday, September 21, 2013
Lohengrin: Sweet History of Product Placement
We all know that the splendid knight Lohengrin was an invention. Created as a minor character for an epic poem written by Wolfram von Eschenbach, he entered as a mainstream hero by means of Richard Wagner's opera of the same name. If he was not a historical figure, what is this article doing on a history blog, you might ask. But there is a real history to tell about Lohengrin. It is all about Norway.
Monday, September 16, 2013
The Town of Baden in Baden
The German town of Baden-Baden acquired its name officially in 1931 with a formal decision of the town's council.
Before that, it was simply called Baden and was the capital of the Grand Duchy of Baden until 1918. Baden was a bathing spa in
Roman times and was known as Aquae like Bath in England. Aquae in Latin and Bath in English have the same
meaning as Baden in German. How did Baden end up with the weird tautology of being called Baden-Baden?
Saturday, September 7, 2013
Sunday, September 1, 2013
Livia, First Empress of Rome
Livia was the first First Lady of Rome. As the wife of Octavian Augustus, she was the first Empress of Rome. She was grossly vilified by Roman writer Tacitus roughly a hundred years after the event. Matthew Dennison came to her rescue with a book about her life. The biography was intended to rectify some entrenched myths even historians had a problem leaving behind.