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How the “civilized” Americans exterminated the “barbarian” Apache Indians:The ten-year war that began with a misunderstanding
Where the Apaches lived – The tribes and their way of life – The long wars with the U.S. Army – The regions they were forced to settle in – How many Apaches live in the USA today?
The unknown attempt by the Germans to assassinate Stalin in September 1944
The anti-communist Russian Second Lieutenant Shilo and his defection to the German “camp” – His assignment to eliminate Stalin – His long-term training – The risky mission and its failure – Who betrayed Shilo and his companion? – The other three assassination attempts against Stalin
Maria Callas: The fateful love with Onassis and the divorce that took 11 years
In the final days of 1970, a new law in Italy regarding the dissolution of marriage gave Callas the right to file for a relationship that had essentially ended back in 1959
The Slavo-Macedonians, the artificial language of Skopje, and…the “local” dialects
The Society for Macedonian Studies on the “Slavo-Macedonians” – The evolution of the population of Macedonia after World War I – The product of language planning, the language of “North Macedonia” – And some questions about the “Banda Entopica”…
Empress Elisabeth of Austria had a passion for the Greeks and learned Greek
Empress Elisabeth of Austria and Hungary, who went down in history as “Sisi,” learned Greek so well that she eventually translated literary texts. Who her teachers were and by what criteria she chose them
How “Albanian” was Georgios Kastriotis or Skanderbeg, what does the domed tomb at the Hilandar Monastery on Mount Athos hide?
Questions about Georgios Kastriotis: The “Tower of the Albanian” on Mount Athos, the relations of Ioannis Kastriotis, Georgios’s father, with Mount Athos – The arcosolium (domed tomb) at the Hilandar Monastery and who has been buried there
History has treated her unfairly”: The 400-year mystery surrounding Shakespeare’s wife and son
Restoring an overlooked figure and the link to Hamlet through film
Russia vs. Greece: A relationship marked by threats from the 1950s to today – From Khrushchev’s nuclear bombs to Zakharova’s drones
From the intimidation attempts of 1961—when Moscow hinted at the possibility of bombing the Acropolis with nuclear weapons—to today’s propaganda-laced distortions coming from the Russian Foreign Ministry, the history of threats directed at Athens is a long one