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Tag: public history

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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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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‘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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Forgiven yet not forgotten: Victor Spencer’s execution

October 1, 2021October 14, 2021 Public History Student

Twenty-one-year-old Private Victor Spencer was the last soldier during the First World War in the New Zealand army to be executed for desertion. His death was scarcely mentioned afterwards, as the fact was a great shame to his family and country. However, the silence changed after 2000 when the Pardon for Soldiers of the Great […]

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Breaking habits: The Breathalyser

October 1, 2021October 14, 2021 Public History Student

It’s finally back in business: the pubs are open again, people are dancing in nightclubs and the drinks are flowing. In the countryside, people are eagerly awaiting the fair and the whole of the Netherlands is hoping that carnival will be back to normal. This is often accompanied by the necessary amounts of alcohol, something […]

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A very ‘skulled’ professor

October 1, 2021October 17, 2021 Public History Student

In Dutch, we say that people who have a talent to learn languages have a ‘talenknobbel’, the same goes for a talent for math: a ‘wiskundeknobbel’. These expressions literally mean that someone with one of these talents has a bump on their head that shows their special ability. Long ago, in the 18th and 19th century, […]

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Deafness: Something to be cured?

October 1, 2021October 14, 2021 Public History Student

Since time immemorial, humans have coped with deafness by using hearing aids. These were often trumpet-like, designed to focus soundwaves and channel them into the ear. However, these tools only amplified sound, and thus were only useful to people who were hard of hearing. Those who were completely deaf instead developed sign languages to communicate. […]

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