History

The mysterious Anasazi and historical fiction

27 January 2012

Around the eleventh century, the modern-day Southwest canyons were alive with architectural wonders, cliff cities and sprawling fields belonging to the Ancient Cliff Dwellers, more known to us as Anasazi. Those ancients built their multi-storey great houses of hundreds of spacious, well-conditioned rooms with such... Read More

Were the ancient weapons influenced by the acceptable battle practices or was it all the way around?

26 December 2011

The evolution of weaponry is a fascinating progress to follow. Our computer games are straining to invent all kinds of new weapons, to dispense with boredom and make the games more attractive to us. But the reality overpasses the imagination. How the most popular ancient... Read More

If you can trace your ancestry to the Sun God himself, you should choose your mate carefully

20 November 2011

The ancient largest North American city deserved to be ruled by no less than a deity, or a descendant of it, so the purity of the bloodline was of paramount importance. The Cahokian Royal House went to great pains in order to preserve it. And... Read More

The Rise of the Aztecs Part I, were they always that powerful?

1 November 2011

Once upon a time, if you would ask the powerful Tepanecs who had dominated the fertile Mexican valley around Lake Texcoco up to the mid 14th century, the Aztecs were no more than pushy newcomers, coming out of the southwest, poor and semi-nomadic, bringing along... Read More

If you can trace your ancestry to the Sun God himself, you should choose your mate carefully

2 October 2011

The ancient largest North American city deserved to be ruled by no less than a deity, or a descendant of it, so the purity of the bloodline was of paramount importance. The Cahokian Royal House went to great pains in order to preserve it. And... Read More

Cahokia – the cherry upon the icing of the Mississippian cake.

31 August 2011

It was settled around the 7th century, gradually evolving into a great urban center, populated more densely than London of the same time. For decades thousands of workers had shifted more than 55 million cubic feet of earth, building a great network of mounds and... Read More

The Great Peacemaker

18 August 2011

He came from across the Great Sparkling Water (Ontario), carrying the tidings of peace. Alone, in a stone canoe; or so the legend says. His mission was suicidal. The southern shores of the Great Lake were torn by decades of a fierce warfare. Five powerful... Read More

The Southwest Ancient Observatories

1 August 2011

The Ancient Pueblo People would not let the events as summer or winter solstice go unnoticed; or uncelebrated. Atop the most famous, imposing Fajada Butte in Chaco Canyon three giant slabs of rocks are leaning against the cliff surface, as if trying to hide the... Read More

The New World has never been discovered

27 July 2011

The discovery of the New World, which was fortunate for some and very unfortunate for the others, had never happened on this small piece of the internet territory. On the Oct. 12, 1492, the lookout of the caravel Pinta, Rodrigo de Triana, napped on, dreaming... Read More

North America before the in/famous discovery – the terra incognita of historical fiction.

24 July 2011

The third largest continent on our globe seems to be slightly overlooked, by historical fiction most of all. Was anything happening on those vast, diverse lands before the 15th century? The logic says – yeah, probably, something has to be going on over there. They... Read More

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