Before He Wrote a Thesaurus, Roget Had to Escape Napoleon’s Dragnet
At the dawn of the 19th century, the young Brit got caught in an international crisis while touring Europe
Remains Discovered in Parisian Chapel May Belong to Guillotined Aristocrats
New research suggests the bodies of nearly 500 nobles beheaded during the Reign of Terror are buried in Chapelle Expiatoire
A Belgian Abbey Is Using Centuries-Old Recipes to Revive Its Brewery
Grimbergen Abbey in Belgium will produce its first beers in more than 200 years
How Voltaire Went from Bastille Prisoner to Famous Playwright
Three hundred years ago this week, the French philosopher and writer began his career with a popular retelling of Sophocles’ ‘Oedipus’
What if Napoleon Hadn’t Lost Europe and Other Questions of Alternate History
How the 200-year-old literary genre reflects changing notions of history and society
Madame de Pompadour Was Far More Than a ‘Mistress’
Even though she was a keen politicker and influential patron, she’s been historically overlooked
How Marie Tussaud Created a Wax Empire
From France, to Britain, to the world, Tussaud’s waxworks endure
The Father of Modern Chemistry Proved Respiration Occurred by Freezing a Guinea Pig
Where he got the guinea pig from remains a mystery
Napoleon’s Lifelong Interest in Science
Napoleon was a Frenchman of his time, which means he was interested in how science could do good–he just took it farther than most
Three Things to Know About the Louvre’s History
The home of the Mona Lisa has a history that’s almost 1000 years long
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