Your favourite period in history and why?

Your favourite period in history and why?

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Discussion

Boom78

Original Poster:

1,443 posts

63 months

Thursday 3rd July
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Come on then guys, what’s your favourite period in history and why?

I’m a bit of a sucker for the Eastern Roman Empire/Byzantine, mainly because it’s pretty unknown, everyone still talks about the collapse of Roman Empire (albeit the western) in 476 but Rome (or idea of being a Roman) proceeded until 1453 and fall of Constantinople. It also has some very interesting characters such as Justinian, Theodora, Basil II etc.

dontlookdown

2,192 posts

108 months

Thursday 3rd July
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I read a lot of 20th C European history, but I also like the Tudor period (Hilary Mantell is largely to blame for this!), and pre-Norman Anglo Saxon England is also interesting. How different things might have turned out if Harold had won in 1066.

I don't know much about the Byzantine empire, might check that out tks.

Gary29

4,535 posts

114 months

Thursday 3rd July
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1930's through 1940's, my favourite period to study about, couldn't call it my favourite for obvious reasons, but it fascinates me. Part of me thinks I would've fitted in in that era more than I do now, without trying to sound too mental.

Tango13

9,544 posts

191 months

Thursday 3rd July
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From 1900 to about now...

In 1900 powered flight was on the cusp of actually happening and in 1903 the Wright brothers finally flew all be it only a few yards at the pace of a fast run

24 years later in 1927 Charles Lindbergh non-stop from New York to Paris

20 years after that in 1947 Chuck Yeager flew faster than sound

22 years later in 1969 Neil Armstrong walked on the moon

That's just a small part of the advances made in the 20th century, progress across the board seemed to be happening like someone hitting the fast forward button on a video and nearly all of it was documented.

Paul Dishman

5,010 posts

252 months

Monday 7th July
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I took an Open University history degree as a retirement project. OU degrees involve studying and passing six modules-two per year for a full time BA, one a year for part time.

The two modules I enjoyed the most were one on the long 19th century 1789-1914 and one on the 20th century 1914-1989.
The emphasis in both modules was on political and social history and were fascinating. I throughly enjoyed both, in fact I loved the entire course. It was a great six year project.

TwigtheWonderkid

46,348 posts

165 months

Wednesday 16th July
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Not so much a period but a place. I've read and watched tonnes of stuff on America, basically from Columbus onwards. I wish Howard Zinn were still alive to add to A People's History of the United States, as he wrote it in 1980, and a lot has happened since then.

NDA

23,218 posts

240 months

Wednesday 16th July
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I spent some while in Egypt and have always been fascinated by the 'pharaonic' period - which is actually several very similar periods spread over 3,000 years.

It seems so distant and alien, and yet they were people like us. Strange to think that Cleopatra was closer in years to the iPhone that she was to the pyramids.

Mars

9,532 posts

229 months

Wednesday 16th July
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Three periods: Romans, Vikings, and the American Wild West. I'll watch and/or read anything about any of these. Why? I think it's the achievements and dynamism of each period. How the Romans built so much infrastructure... the Vikings evolved transportation of the time and explored so far and wide... and how people in the Wild West was essentially stepped back in time (in terms of their abandoning known civilisation) in order to forge new lives - it was a time for individuals to make a name for themselves.

Edited by Mars on Wednesday 16th July 23:22

DeejRC

7,701 posts

97 months

Saturday
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Justinian Reforms and the period that follows is fascinating I agree Boom. A period very little focussed on in western Europe, but fascinating and crucial to the history of Europe.

Roman Romans are fine, but I prefer earlier with the Greeks, Mycenean age, Athens v Sparta, Salamis, Marathon.
After that, absolutely love the Devils Brood timeline, Acquitaine the rise of the Plantagenets and William Marshal v well, everyone.
Tudors are good fun, especially when combined with European history of the same time and look at the naval side of things, an absolutely huge period in the development of naval technology, vessels, sailing/seanmanship and fighting. The continent gets interesting after the Tudors, we dont study the 30yrs war in the UK, but its utterly crucial to understand modern Europe and the EU.

Everything is fascinating for different things after that. I could happily talk for hours about each century and various bits.

Alex Z

1,791 posts

91 months

Saturday
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It’ll be hard to beat the Roman Empire, but 60s America would be fascination to see.

the-norseman

14,376 posts

186 months

Saturday
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For me, one of the following:


Viking period
Victorian period in London
WW2 period

and then probably the 80/90's

ChevronB19

7,883 posts

178 months

Yesterday (12:37)
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Probably somewhere between the fall of Romans in Britain and 1066.

tumble dryer

2,195 posts

142 months

Yesterday (12:47)
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Cowboys. shoot

smile

DodgyGeezer

44,260 posts

205 months

Yesterday (12:55)
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now is that favourite to live in or favourite to read about as the answers are VERY different!!

To live in, the answer is now(ish): Decent medical care; (semi)functioning society; reasonable standard of living

To read about/watch: A lot more difficult. From a fantasy perspective I guess the ages up to about the 1600s are quite fascinating (the age of chivalry etc). From a historical perspective, I'd be looking at: The Roman empire, and lead-up to it; the British Empire and decline