Medieval toilets, just as today, had more “polite” names, the most common being ‘privy chamber’, just ‘privy’ or ‘garderobe’. More evocative names included the ‘draught’, ‘gong’, ‘siege-house’, ‘neccessarium’, and …	
	        
                        
                                
				    	
	    	    	
	
		If medieval executioner is too good a job for you, try Rackare. The job description for a Rackare is: deputy executioner, flayer, dog and cat killer. In Medieval Sweden, …	
	        
                        
                                
				    	
	    	    	
	
		During “Secessions of the Plebians” the common people rebelled by simply abandoning the city and leave the aristocrats to themselves. The upper classes were left servantless; shops and workshops shut down; commercial …	
	        
                        
                                
				    	
	    	    	
	
		Sealand was founded as a sovereign Principality in 1967, seven miles off the eastern shores of Britain. A former army fort, It’s just two concrete pillars holding up an iron …	
	        
                        
                                
				    	
	    	    	
	
		In 1994, 35,000 Americans insured themselves against being kidnapped and eaten by aliens. The very first company to offer Alien Abduction insurance was the St. Lawrence Agency in Altamonte …	
	        
                        
                                
				    	
	    	    	
	
		In the Medieval period, monkeys were a stand in for depraved humanity, often appearing in the margins of illuminated manuscripts. The prayer book written for Charles V. of Austria …	
	        
                        
                                
				    	
	    	    	
	
		To medieval Europeans, elephants were equally ‘real’ as unicorns, as both existed in texts but were never seen. Vikings sold unicorn “horns” for centuries. The dominant story about unicorns …	
	        
                        
                                
				    	
	    	    	
	
		How  do you like them pineapples?  Probably not enough to risk seven years of hard labor for the crime of pineapple theft. People in 17th and 18th century Europe …	
	        
                        
                                
				    	
	    	    	
	
		In Georgian and Victorian times, armies of bathing machines protected a woman’s modesty before she slipped into the waves. (Image credit: Messy Nessy Chic) People entered the changing room on …	
	        
                        
                                
				    	
	    	    	
	
		Queen Marie Antoinette’s birthed a brief craze for Caca Dauphin, a shade of brown that resembled the contents of the new prince’s diapers. Carolyn Purnell in The Sensational Past describes …	
	        
                        
                                
				    	
	    	    	
	
		One reason Charles VI  “the beloved,” became Charles “the mad” was his belief that he was made of glass. As part of this glass delusion, Charles would stay motionless …	
	        
                        
                                
				    	
	    	    	
	
		Chastity belts are a story that’s been told for hundreds of years. Medieval men going off to the crusades (for years at a time) would fasten an metal underwear …