The Pope Smackdown of the 14th Century
Three popes: that’s the dream, right? Well, they tried it in 1409. Turns out that’s too many popes.
read nowEver wonder about dinosaur romance? Or who the baddest b*tch in history was? Or the origin of black cat folk lore? Museum Hack knows what's up, and we share it here with reverant irreverance. Plus 🔥 tips like how to have a successful museum date and frameworks to tell stories like our renegade guides.
Three popes: that’s the dream, right? Well, they tried it in 1409. Turns out that’s too many popes.
read nowWashington Crossing the Delaware is an incredibly famous painting. It’s also incredibly wrong.
read nowThe most interesting man in the world isn’t the Dos Equis dude. It’s a badass adventurer named Carl Akeley.
read nowIn the 860s, the viking chieftain Hastein pulled the ultimate tourist move: he sacked the wrong Mediterranean city.
read nowMost Americans know three things about John Hancock: he was the first signer of the Declaration of Independence, he signed his name really big on said declaration, and his signature is now so famous that we call signatures “John Hancocks” in American English. It’s three more things than I’m famous for, but I can’t help […]
read nowHumans started digging up dinosaur bones on purpose in 1822; 150 years later, we asked “where are the little one?” What was the hold up?
read nowThe real hackstory of Hercules isn’t quite so family-friendly.
read nowHow a beef between King Harold of England and William the Bastard changed the English language forever (and gave us the word “beef”).
read nowIf you think your last Thanksgiving was bad, be glad you weren’t a guest at Nitocris’ banquet.
read nowMichael Preysman started Everlane with a simple t-shirt designed and grew the company into a high-end, high quality fashion empire.
read nowWhen the Nazis killed her husband, Mariya Oktyabrskaya killed ’em right back.
read nowLook, everyone knows cats are in league with Satan. But did medieval Europeans really kill them all for it?
read nowMost depictions of the god Pan show him playing his pan flute. The story of how he got it? Pretty f***ed up.
read nowIt’s 1861. A plot has been uncovered to assassinate everyone’s favorite top-hatted president, Abraham Lincoln. Who you gonna call? The answer my friends is Kate Warne; trailblazer, spy, and all around Badass Bitch.
read nowThe worst president in history that you probably know nothing about.
read nowLillie Hitchcock Coit was her name and gamblin’ was her game.
read nowWhen you’re a Caesar, you’re never crazy. You’re “eccentric.”
read nowHell hath no fury like a woman whose husband got ripped in half by birch trees.
read nowWhen Teddy Roosevelt was shot at a campaign stop in 1912, he kept the bullet and gave his speech.
read nowFrom slave trade galley, to democratic pirate ship, to waterlogged husk off the coast of Cape Cod—this is the story of the Whydah.
read nowPythagoras? Yeah, he was a cult leader.
read nowIf it doesn’t have cryptic death dioramas, brutal sacrifices, and alcohol poisoning, it ain’t a Viking funeral.
read nowThe Greeks played it while besieging Troy, Caligula cheated at it, and the church tried to ban it: it’s backgammon, and it’s been around for a while.
read nowWWII was a nightmare, but that didn’t stop Mad Jack Churchill from having the time of his life.
read nowThis is the story of Violet Jessop, an Irish woman who survived not one, not two, but three of the most catastrophic ship disasters of the 20th century.
read nowFrom behind-the-scenes to must-be-seen.
read nowAt first glance, it may seem like museology and neuroscience have little overlap. But we took a closer look at the potential connection between the two disciplines.
read nowAlexandria was home to the world’s greatest library, until someone set it on fire.
read nowNot all museum Twitter accounts are created equal.
read nowAsaph Hall was a very good astronomer, until his wife Angeline Stickney made him a great one.
read nowThe Spartan Army dominated Ancient Greece. That’s not because there was something in the water in Sparta that made their soldiers grow crazy strong, but because they worked together as a team.
read nowLong before Winifred Sanderson told the partygoers of Salem, MA, to “Dance! Dance until you die!” a small town in the Holy Roman Empire was consumed by a serious, if strange, affliction: its citizens were struck by a dancing plague.
read nowPope Francis recently elected the first woman in charge of the Vatican Museums. In this role, Barbara Jatta is officially the highest ranking woman in the Vatican. This is her story.
read nowIn November of 1872, the Mary Celeste sailed from New York for a transatlantic voyage. The ship eventually made it to Europe, but her crew never did.
read nowWe have always known that museums are awesome and now, thanks to AAM, we have the facts and stats to back it up!
read nowCleopatra wasn’t just some incredibly beautiful woman hellbent on having affairs with Roman rulers. She was closer to Cersei Lannister: a ruthless military and political leader that Rome was absolutely terrified of.
read nowBy turns both Queen of France and England, Eleanor of Aquitane was beautiful, intelligent, and took no prisoners. We can learn a lot about female leadership from her.
read nowBeing the first casualty of the Salem Witch Trials isn’t exactly an honorable tag but it is one that makes for an interesting story.
read nowIn 1717, Stede Bonnet had it all: wealth, status, a family, a home on Barbados. But he gave it all up to become a philanthropist. Nah, just kidding. He became a pirate.
read nowYeah, Titanic this is not.
read now