As National Geographic reimagines its iconic headquarters for the 21st century, here’s a look back at its history as a base for both Cold War spies and the Society’s own Explorers.
From financing expeditions in the New World to founding hospitals and schools, these women were incredibly influential—and granted more power than their counterparts back home.
Photograph by Werner Forman, GTRES This story appears in the January/February 2017 issue of National Geographic History magazine. Mesopotamia—“the land between two rivers”—gave birth to ...
This story appears in the March/April 2017 issue of National Geographic History magazine. Throughout history, small states have come out of nowhere, and rapidly become great powers. This was the ...
A revolutionary Irishman provides inspiration for how to handle present-day suppression of views. What a little-known work of Tolkien can teach us. Near Naples, it’s a case study in archaeology ...
The new National Geographic film 'Endurance' sees Antarctic explorer John Shields follow in the footsteps of survival icon Sir Ernest Shackleton.
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Last week President Roosevelt appointed the first Archivist of the U. S.* For this $10,000-a-year job, created by the last Congress, he followed the recommendation of the American ...
Hosted by the museum’s director, Kim Sajet, PORTRAITS explores art, biography, history and identity.
‘Oakland is already burning under her watch,’ the spokesman for the recall effort told National Review. ‘It’s a city on fire.’ ‘Age and gender are the two most dynamic factors that are ...
Emeraldwhale breach allowed access to over 10,000 repositories and resulted in the theft of more than 15,000 cloud service credentials ...
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