Five hundred years ago, a Bible accidentally printed with a backwards map of the Holy Land sparked a revolution in how people imagined geography, borders, and even nationhood. Despite the blunder, the ...
Religious maps from the 1300s showing tribal Israel inadvertently became the blueprint for how later mapmakers drew political ...
The first printed Bible to include a map of the Holy Land appeared roughly 500 years ago, yet its vision of where sacred ...
Ever since independence, India has been concerned about the depiction of its northern borders, as Pakistan and China laid claim to territory. After the 1962 war ...
The inundation of water was more than just provision for crops and fields: the Egyptians called the event the coming of Hapy, ...
In the earlier part of this series, I looked at Western responses to Israel through various theological lenses—premillennial, ...
A backwards 1525 Bible map helped shape modern borders, influencing how we imagine territory, nations, and political space today.
Ten years on, Tamasha still holds strong recall value because it reshapes itself with each viewing. The film meditates on performance as a human condition, tracing how storytelling has shaped identity ...
Preston City Council has officially backed a blueprint that would see it merge with Lancaster and Ribble Valley to create a ...
Britain colonised Nigeria primarily for economic exploitation of resources including palm oil, cocoa, groundnuts, tin, and ...
The New Scientist Book Club is currently reading the late Iain M. Banks’s Culture novel The Player of Games. Fellow science ...
The launch of the first-ever Modculture gift guide, which is essentially 50+ gift ideas for Mods for any time of the year.