/r/askhistorians
Wikipedia's List of Famines has a listing for an Iranian / Persian famine from 1917-1919 which claimed 8-10 million lives, nearly half the population at the time, but doesn't have a page for it, and I've never heard of it. Can anyone here teach us more about it?
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I'm a young disaffected Irishman in Derry in 1970. How do I join the IRA? What was it like to be in it?
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Did Caesar actually leave 75 Drachma to every Roman citizen in his will? How would the money have been distributed? Apparently a skilled roman laborer would have earned 1 Drachma a day so how did this affect inflation?
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In Vietnam War movies, you constantly see American soldiers wearing altered uniforms like torn sleeves and bandanas, and using non-standard equipment like bows and arrows. How common was this really? Why isn't it as present in WWII or Afghanistan War films / reality?
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As a non-historian, how can I identify accessible, legitimate writing about medieval history without accidentally reading white supremacist propaganda/invented history?
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Did people in the past really have more leisure time than we do today? If so, when did this start to change?
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TIL That today the US is responsible for 25% of the world's prison population. Presumably in 1776 we were on par with Europe. Has the US proclivity for incarceration been a historical trait or only a more recent phenomenon? What laws has the US enacted enabling this increased rate of imprisonment?
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"Historians say they were Just Friends, but they were obviously gay!" What are actual historians' strategies for educating the history of sexuality and gender when the audience is wary of erasure?
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