On March 6, 1944, during World War II, U.S. bombers flying from Britain began the first daytime attacks on Berlin.
A German court found that the attacker, now age 20, had traveled more than 100 miles to stab a Spanish tourist, who survived.
Russian and Iranian drones, cruise missiles, helicopter debris and a destroyed aid vehicle are among the exhibits illustrating the tragic reality of everyday life in Ukraine during Russia's all-out ...
Sadeqa Johnson (author of both “Yellow Wife” and “The House of Eve”) has quickly become one of my favorite historical fiction writers, and in her new novel “Keeper of Lost ...
Permanent "Ukraine Museum" launches inside historic WWII air-raid shelter to display front-line artefacts, drones, missiles and personal testimonies, urging sustained European support for Kyiv amid ...
World War II produced some of the most consequential military leaders in modern history.
Four years into grueling war with Russia, museum curator says new display hopes to show 'physical reality' of war, as it ...
The Minneapolis Institute of Art is opening "Modern Art and Politics in Germany 1910-1945: Masterworks from the Neue ...
The National Museum of the Mighty Eighth Air Force will host a Mighty Talks presentation on March 7 about the first American ...
Longer and lighter days were supposed to save energy, reduce traffic accidents and help people become more active.
Beate Uhse, who as a destitute war widow sold birth control pamphlets from a bicycle before going on to develop Europe’s biggest emporium of erotic goods, died on Monday in a hospital in Switzerland.