Showing posts with label Women. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Women. Show all posts

Thursday, August 11, 2016

Historical Thursday - Medieval Women

Three this week on the Medieval lives of women from history.com with the first being a simple look at Medieval Life in pictures here.


Also, they ask, "Tudor women: what was life like?"  Have a look here.


Finally, things get even worse with "Witches in the dock: 10 of Britain’s most infamous witch trials" here.


Sifting through History to
enhance our tabletop RPGing.
Please Like, Share, Plus, Tweet, Follow, and Comment!

Thursday, July 28, 2016

Historical Thursday - Jane Grey, Isabella, & Matilda

Three posts on historic women this week with the first being from historyextra.com titled "Lady Jane Grey: why do we want to believe the myth?"  Find out here.


Also, from historyextra.com, have a look at "Isabella of France: the rebel queen" here.


Finally, on medievalists.net, check out "How the death of a Queen led to 68,000 people being fed" here.


Sifting through History to
enhance our tabletop RPGing.
Please Like, Share, Plus, Tweet, Follow, and Comment!

Sunday, July 3, 2016

Setting & Society Sunday - Medieval Twins & Sisters

Three from the Medievalists.net this week with the first being "The Significance of Twins in Medieval and Early Modern Europe" here.


Also, have a look at "The Case of Conjoined Twins in 10th Century Byzantium" here.


Finally, check out "Sisters Between: Gender and the Medieval Beguines" here.


Looking closer at Setting and Society
as a part of what is presented by GMs.
Please Like, Share, Plus, Tweet, Follow, and Comment!

Thursday, June 9, 2016

Historical Thursday - Joans

Over on medievalists.net, they examine "The Myth of Pope Joan" here.


Also, on medievalists.net, they look at "Joan Beaufort, Queen of Scotland" here.


Finally, on historyextra.com, they ask "Joan of Kent: a perfect princess?"  Find out more here.


Sifting through History to
enhance our tabletop RPGing.
Please Like, Share, Plus, Tweet, Follow, and Comment!

Thursday, May 26, 2016

Historical Thursday - Mary, Eleanor, & Osthryth

Over on historyextra.com, they wonder about "Mary, Queen of Scots: what happened to her ladies-in-waiting?"  Find out more here.


Also, on historicalnovelsociety.org, Elizabeth Chadwick muses "on Eleanor of Aquitaine, and how to push Henry II out of the limelight" here.


Finally, on medievalists.net, we learn of "Osthryth, Queen of the Mercians" here.


Sifting through History to
enhance our tabletop RPGing.
Please Like, Share, Plus, Tweet, Follow, and Comment!

Thursday, March 31, 2016

Historical Thursday - Noble Women

Three from the Medievalists.net this week with the first being "‘The boldest and most remarkable feat ever performed by a woman’: Fiery Joanna and the Siege of Hennebont."  Learn more here.


Also, find out about "Queenship, Nunneries and Royal Widowhood in Carolingian Europe" here.


Finally, enjoy an "Interview with Nancy Goldstone, author of The Rival Queens" here.


Sifting through History to
enhance our tabletop RPGing.
Please Like, Share, Plus, Tweet, Follow, and Comment!

Saturday, January 23, 2016

Saturday in Space - More Women in Space

Over on sciencealert.com, they tell us "The latest class of NASA astronauts is 50% female (And they're all candidates for Mars)."  Learn more here.


Also, on nytlive.nytimes.com, they ran an article titled "NASA’s latest class of astronauts is 50 percent female, and could be heading to Mars" here.


Finally, on glamour.com, they ask "Would You Go to Mars? Meet the Four Women Astronauts Who Can't Wait to Go" here.


Saturday in Space on GRYMVALD.com
What's happening in Space and
what can it mean for our tabletop RPGing?
Please Like, Share, Plus, Tweet, Follow, and Comment!

Thursday, January 21, 2016

Historical Thursday - A Marjorie, a Mary, & an Elizabeth

Over on medievalists.net, Susan Abernethy informs us of "Marjorie Bruce, Princess of Scotland and mother of the Stewart dynasty of Kings of Scots."  Learn more here.


Also, on medievalists.net, Susan Abernethy tells us of "Mary, Duchess of Burgundy" here.


Finally, on historyextra.com, Emma McFarnon writes of "Elizabeth of York: a Tudor of rare talent."  Find out more here.


Sifting through History to
enhance our tabletop RPGing.
Please Like, Share, Plus, Tweet, Follow, and Comment!

Thursday, April 16, 2015

Historical Thursday - Margaret Beaufort, Warrior Women, & Literary Women

Three through the Medievalists.net this week on women, the first tells us more about "Margaret Beaufort, Mother of King Henry VII" here.


Also, they raise the question "‘An Entirely Masculine Activity’? Women and War in the High and Late Middle Ages Reconsidered" here.


Finally, they share a video from The University of Arizona YouTube channel which features a lecture on "Breaking the Mold: The First Woman in Italian Literature" here.



Sifting through History to
enhance our tabletop RPGing.
Please Like, Share, Plus, Tweet, Follow, and Comment!

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Historical Thursday - 1887 Nursing, Nordic Witchcraft, & Chinese Chariot

A series of stories that gave no attributions gave enough clues for me to be able to track down the origins of articles touting a "Job Description for a 1887 Nurse."  Sounded pretty cool, if true, and certainly some of the listed items were eyebrow-raising.  Anyway, when I was able to suss out more details it all came down to an incomplete list typed in the 1950s and in the archives at the Graham Hospital School of Nursing Library.  I won't go as far as to say it isn't truly how 1887 was for some nurses.  The list seems like a page from a nursing student's homework folder from that period which likely would have relied on text books from the time.  The number of things I have discovered weren't true, since the advent of the Internet, that were in textbooks from two decades later in all manner of subjects leaves me skeptical about some of the details in the list.  No matter.  You can check out the info here.


Over on the Medievalists.net website, they posted an article a couple of years ago titled "Nordic Witchcraft in Transition: Impotence, Heresy and Diabolism in 14th-century Bergen" here.  If you do nothing else, read this article to bolster the list of crimes to add in your tabletop RPG for accusing witches, like "drying up cows, raising storms, and murder."


Finally, the History Blog tells us there was a "Large chariot, horse burial found in China" here.  The article goes into a lot more, though, and be sure to bookmark that site if you haven't already.


Sifting through History to
enhance our tabletop RPGing.
Please Like, Share, Plus, Tweet, Follow, and Comment!

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

The Tuesday Sundries - Medieval Women Scientists

Over on the Medievalists.net website, they recently featured an article on "Women Scientists of the Middle Ages and 1600s."  Read more here and check this wiki-list here of women scientists of the Middle Ages.


The Tuesday Sundries on GRYMVALD.com
Essentially, a clearinghouse for topics on GRYMVALD.com
not covered elsewhere or wanting a particular focus.
Please Like, Share, Plus, Tweet, Follow, and Comment!