St. Patrick’s Day usually conjures images of partying, Catholicism, Irish nationalism and, perhaps most famously, the color green: green clothes, green shamrocks, green beer and green rivers.
Everyone knows about St Patrick – the man who drove the snakes out of Ireland, defeated fierce druids in contests of magic and used the shamrock to explain the Christian Trinity to the pagan Irish. It ...
In honor of St. Patrick's Day on Monday, a few tidbits from The Fact File: ...
In 41 BC, Cleopatra hosted a dinner to celebrate the Roman leader Mark Antony, who was a well-known party animal. Twelve ...
Delicious industry dining, a Roman footprint in the Square Mile, brokers on the box and a competitive rowing career - what ...
An ancient book about Roman emperors has become a modern bestseller, captivating readers with its timeless stories of power ...
One-party rule by Ulster unionists, Watkins writes, left Catholics with “few jobs, poor housing and threadbare resources.” In ...
STORY: Britain has indicated that a prosecution or other legal action could be brought over the frozen $3.2 billion from ...
Time for the Romans was divided differently, with the Kalends, the Ides at the start and middle of each month, respectively, and the Nones sitting between them. With the intention of maintaining and ...
A senior member of Donald Trump’s administration will travel to Moscow to meet Vladimir Putin, it has been reported ...
Britain’s most dangerous prisoner, Robert Maudsley, has gone on a hunger strike inside his isolated cell at the UK’s ...
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