About Great History

Follow Great History

RSS Feed
 
Daily Great History Update
 
 


RSS Partner Bloggers On Great History

  • Bonapartists in the United States
    The century between 1750 and 1850 witnessed a period of immense transformation, politically, economically and culturally. New ideas, revolutions, wars and the rise of industrialism shook the known world, bringing great men to rise and at the same time devastating old institutions. Out of these ruins a new world evolved, the world we live in today. In those p […]
  • Ancient History in 15 minutes: Mesopotamia
    The "Timewatch" series are intended for all history enthusiasts - novices or experts alike. It's goal is to make complex history concise and understandable in maximum 2000 words. It tries to avoid the dry, musty and scholarly style that is inherent to many historical works. Timewatch wants to make the past fun and underderstandable! In this 1s […]
  • Edwin Stanton at War
    The first of two parts chronicling the boldness of Edwin Stanton. This entry discusses Stanton's role leading up to the conclusion of the American Civil War. Part two will discuss his role in early Reconstruction. […]
  • John Ericsson
    You can make whatever you wish of this man... the propeller, his financial ineptitude, his overbearing personality, his gun and match recoil design, his engineering genius, or the USS Monitors impact upon the American Civil War... this man was a patriot! […]

RSS Comments on Great History

  • Comment on Hurray For The Two-Party System by frankchadwick
    Andy, with respect to the non-structural nature of the U.S. two-party system, you are correct that there is nothing constitutional which mandates two parties and we have nad multiple parties in the past -- in fact have one socialist and one independent senator right now. But the campaign finance laws currently favor two parties, since there is a support thre […]
  • Comment on Hurray For The Two-Party System by frankchadwick
    Andy, I can't say for sure what I would have done instead, and I'm not certain my wisdom on the subject would be all that valuable at this remove. From what I know of the situation, however, I am reasonably certain that the U.S. architects of Iraq's current governmental structure deliberately accentuated the a three-way split which could not b […]
  • Comment on What Does This Say? by frankchadwick
    Barbara, I understand what you are saying but no one sent Iman al-Hams to die. She was simply a little girl who apparently got lost. Tom, the source article is not from the New York Times, and I do not work for them, but I would be proud to do so. […]
  • Comment on An End to the Ghurkas? by frankchadwick
    Sensemaker, I went back and deleted your comments on that column, which is the only way I know to make sure your name no longer shows up. Do Swedish employers not have the option of probationary periods for new hires? […]
  • Comment on What Does This Say? by mikiehorn
    http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/jpost/access/768631631.html?FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&date=Dec+16%2C+2004&author=Jerusalem+Post+Staff&pub=Jerusalem+Post&edition=&startpage=02&desc=IDF+commander+%27had+no+idea%27+he+killed+young+girl Initial trial goes back to 2004!!! Conflicting versions of the events seem to make this case less clear than […]

RSS Weider History Group

  • Obama and Lincoln in the White House
    President Barack Obama dicusses the Emacipation Proclamation with guests. Official White House photo by Pete Souza. This past June, while the sputtering economy, seemingly bottomless oil spill and the war in Afghanistan dominated headlines, a distinguished "visitor" departed the White House after five quiet months in residence. Too few people ever […]
  • The Overmountain Men Battle for the Carolinas
    At the 1780 Battle of Kings Mountain, a force of backwoods hunters known as the overmountain men thrashed the Loyalists, altering the destiny of the Southern states. […]
  • Was Secession Legal
    Southerners insisted they could legally bolt from the Union. Northerners swore they could not. War would settle the matter for good. Over the centuries, various excuses have been employed for starting wars. Wars have been fought over land or honor. Wars have been fought over soccer (in the case of the conflict between Honduras and El [...] […]
  • Interview with Author Sebastian Junger
    Best-selling author Sebastian Junger joined an Army combat infantry unit on its 15-month deployment to research his latest book, War. […]
  • Military History - November 2010 - Letters from Readers
    Readers letters in the November 2010 issue of Military History sound off about the 1975 Mayaguez Incident, the 1948-60 Malayan Emergency, U-boats, author Evan Thomas, the 1967-70 Suez War of Attrition, the 1899-1902 Second Boer War, female submariners and North Korean aggression. […]

Currently browsing the tag Iraq

The last 1200 troops of the 4th Stryker Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, crossed into Kuwait at the Khabari border crossing point shortly before dawn today.  More.
Frank Chadwick | 1 Comment 
As the U.S. pulls out, much of the financial and security "glue" which held the ramshackle peace together will be removed as well. Can the Iraqis replace it with a glue of their own?  More.
Frank Chadwick | 2 Comments 
The story of how we captured Saddam Hussein is the story of a military coming of age, a maturing world view, and a young guy with a computer.  More.
Frank Chadwick | 1 Comment 
This past week the U.S. death toll in Afghanistan passed the 1,000 mark.  More.
Frank Chadwick | 2 Comments 
As Tehran grapples with its internal problems, look for it to be less cooperative with the west in the near term. But it's a dangerous game they are playing. Dangerous for all of us.  More.
Frank Chadwick | 3 Comments 
There's an old saying about investigating crime: "Follow the money." Do you want to understand what happened in Iraq? Follow the oil.  More.
Frank Chadwick | 1 Comment 
There is a land where the people believe magic wands can detect bombs and firearms.  More.
Frank Chadwick | 2 Comments 
Frank ChadwickComments Off 
There were five elements which contributed to the drop in violence and casualties in Iraq following the surge. The increase in troops in theater was one of them, but arguably was the least important.  More.
Frank ChadwickComments Off 
Christina Asquith's Sisters in War paints a compelling portrait of how the 2003 invasion into Iraq affected women: Iraqi, American soldiers, and aid workers. It turns out the price of overthrowing an evil dictator is pretty high.  More.
Tracey McCormick | 2 Comments 
As Christmas approaches, Richard Lowry reminds us of the fifth anniversary of the urban battle in the infamous Fallujah.  More.
Richard S. Lowry | 1 Comment 
A story of battle in the infamous war-torn city of Fallujah, Iraq. The Iraqis refer to it as the New Dawn.  More.
Richard S. LowryComments Off 

What is Great History?

Great History's mission is to provide a home for the best and brightest history bloggers writing today. We also allow members to create their own personal blogs and share their writing with our community. Our goal is to bring together all the best in history!

What We Write About

Weider History Group Magazines

Weider History Network:  HistoryNet | Armchair General | Great History | Achtung Panzer!

Copyright © 2009 Weider History Group. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
History Blog Directory