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Category: Blog

A never ending obsession for beauty

September 30, 2022September 30, 2022 Public History Student

She was once considered the most beautiful woman of the 19th century: Empress Elisabeth of Austria, better known by the wider public as ‘Sisi.’ With hair down to her feet, a waist of 50 centimeters and the tall height of 172 centimeters, she stood out amongst her contemporaries and her physique gained an immense popularity […]

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Pennyroyal: from ancient Greek theatre to TikTok

September 29, 2022September 30, 2022 Public History Student

By Hanna Jaspers Besides the famous Nirvana song Pennyroyal tea, pennyroyal did not mean much to me two weeks ago. As you might know, Kurt Cobain sings movingly: “Sit and drink Pennyroyal Tea. Distill the life that’s inside of me.” Kurt Cobain refers to the fact that in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, […]

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TB-huts: the tiny houses of a century ago

September 29, 2022September 30, 2022 Public History Student

If you were looking to book a weekend away in the last two years, you have probably considered a tiny house. But have you heard of it’s predecessor, the TB-hut? These small houses were very popular in the 19th and 20th century. However, they were made for a very different purpose. “Exactly as they were […]

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Please think of the children!

September 29, 2022September 29, 2022 Public History Student

Throughout history humanity has had to face numerous threats to its existence. While many of these were man-made, mother nature itself can be a cruel mistress indeed. Perhaps there is not a more common or longstanding danger to humanity as the everlasting threat of disease. While nowadays it is relatively easy to teach people how […]

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The looted Cannon of Kandy: Far from home

September 29, 2022October 14, 2022 Public History Student

Gold, silver and gems were all used for the decoration of the Cannon of Kandy. A beautiful cannon that’s being displayed by the Dutch Rijksmuseum. However the story behind the obtaining of the cannon isn’t quite as shiny as its looks are. The cannon was unjustly taken as war booty from Sri Lanka by Dutch […]

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Bloodletting: the cure for all diseases

September 29, 2022September 29, 2022 Public History Student

In the past there were limited medical treatments available for doctors. Often the first thing a doctor would do when someone got sick was: cut open their veins. This gruesome practice called bloodletting is thousands of years old. It is also known as phlebotomy, from the Greek words phlebos (vein) and temnein (to cut). Bloodletting […]

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Ayahuasca: from the Amazon Rainforest to a worldwide hallucinating power

September 29, 2022September 30, 2022 Public History Student

“I really did get just what I needed, and wanted. Emotions and trauma are stored energetically in the body.” – Sara’s story on her experience with Ayahuasca This sounds pretty interesting and as a solution for many troubled souls, but isn’t experienced without paying a price. The meaning of the medicinal drink Ayahuasca is ‘vine […]

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The Female Body Reclaimed: Dolle Mina and the Media

September 29, 2022September 29, 2022 Public History Student

On June 24th 2022, the U.S. Supreme court overturned Roe v. Wade, ending the right to a (safe) abortion as a federal law in the United States. Since then, a total of thirteen American States have restricted or prohibited abortions. The new restrictions range from a stricter time limit on when abortions are legal to […]

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‘The Yellow Submarine is my trusted, mechanical friend’: Life inside the Iron Lung

October 1, 2021October 14, 2021 Public History Student

It’s hard to believe that there are people who still depend on technology from decades ago to stay alive. Yet, this was exactly the case for Mona Randolph, an American woman who passed away in 2019 due to the long delayed effects of polio. She was able to use a wheelchair during the day but […]

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‘My disability does not define me’: The prosthetic leg of Frida Kahlo

October 1, 2021October 14, 2021 Public History Student

While many people might recognize her unibrow and bright color palette, most are unaware that the work of Mexican artist and activist Frida Kahlo (1910-1954) is deeply shaped by her disability. Frida’s lifelong struggle with her health eventually resulted in the amputation of her lower right leg in 1953. The prosthetic leg she used during […]

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