/u/Jerswar's posts
How seriously did the ancient Romans take it when someone was declared a god? Did people actually pray to Julius Caesar, hoping for divine aid? Or was it more of a posthumous honour?
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Did the people of the British Isles refer to the Viking who plagued them as "Northmen"? I'm asking because, well, to the Brits the Vikings were coming from the east.
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Apparently, Mark Twain blamed Sir Walter Scott for the mindset within the American South that led to the Civil War. Is this completely nuts, or is there some truth to be found behind exaggeration?
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In the movie Tombstone, no one ever objects to being close to Doc Holliday, even though he's visibly wasting away from tuberculosis, and coughing all the time. Is this accurate for the late 19th Century? Did people still not understand that coughs were infectious?
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In the original Sherlock Holmes stories, Holmes and Watson keep addressing each other by their surnames, even after decades of friendship. Was this typical etiquette in the West? And if so, when did it peter out?
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Were the Vikings actually unusually brutal for their era, or does their reputation owe more to Christian progaganda? NSFW
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Viking-era Norsemen: Did they consider entities like Fenrir, Surtr and the Jotnar to be villains and enemies of mankind like Christians do with Satan?
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