/u/RusticBohemian's posts in /r/askhistorians
Did people of average means and education embrae Epicureanism, Cynicism, Stoicism, or the other philosophies of life that flourished during antiquity, or were they mostly a pursuit of the rich and powerful?
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Hesiod tells us of Atalanta, a fast female runner who "rejected her equals, avoided marriage with men who eat bread." What does this mean?
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William Wallace seems to get all the press, but Robert the Bruce actually won independence for Scottland. Is there a good reason why Wallace overshadows the king?
414 upvotes
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Garum — a fermented fish sauce — was ubiquitous and beloved by the ancient Romans. Even the poor could afford it. Why did Garum fade away with the fall of the empire, since it was pretty easy and cheap to make from fermented fish bits?
405 upvotes
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The Odyssey opens with unwanted suitors making strange demands on Penelope while eating Telemachus out of house and home. Would their demands have seemed reasonable to ancient Greeks?
400 upvotes
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Was it easy to cut the aqueducts to an ancient city like Rome or Constantinople during a siege and so force the populace to surrender from thirst? If so, why wasn't this the go-to strategy for forcing a surrender?
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I'm a roman soldier looting Carthage at the end of the third Punic war. What items might I look for to maximize my take?
377 upvotes
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The Sutton Hoo burial mound was from the English dark ages, but contained items from Byzantium, the Middle East, and Asia. Does this mean England maintained a vast trade network even after the western Roman Empire had withdrawn and barbarians had seized much of the territory on western Europe?
374 upvotes
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