Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Mysterious Lost Objects - cover

Mysterious Lost Objects

Linda Hill

Translator A AI

Publisher: Publifye

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

Mysterious Lost Objects explores the intriguing world of items vanished from history, examining their impact on our understanding of the past. From lost treasures to vanished inventions and missing artifacts, the book investigates the circumstances surrounding their disappearance and the void they've left in our collective knowledge. One might be surprised to learn about the Amber Room, a chamber of unparalleled beauty that disappeared during World War II, or the secrets behind Damascus steel, a metalworking technique lost to time. These disappearances prompt us to question established narratives and re-evaluate historical assumptions.

 
The book delves into three core themes, starting with lost treasures like Confederate gold, then shifting to vanished inventions such as Greek Fire, and finally analyzing missing artifacts like the Ark of the Covenant. Each section explores the historical context, known whereabouts, and theories surrounding their disappearances. By drawing upon historical sources, archaeological findings, and technological analyses, Mysterious Lost Objects offers a unique lens through which to examine human history and highlights the enduring fascination with things that are missing.
Available since: 04/03/2025.
Print length: 61 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • Litigating the Pandemic - Disaster Cascades in Court - cover

    Litigating the Pandemic -...

    Susan M. Sterett

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    As officials scrambled in 2020 to manage the spread of COVID, the reverberations of the crisis reached well beyond immediate public health concerns. The governance problems that emerged in the pandemic would be problems in other climate-related disasters, too. 
     
     
     
    Many of these governance problems wound up in court. Businesses filed insurance claims for lost commerce; when the claims were denied, some companies sued. As state governments ordered closures and otherwise tried to adapt, interest organizations that had long sought to limit government authority challenged them in court. Political officials railed against litigation they argued would stop businesses from reopening. The United States, like other countries, governs partly through litigation, and litigation is one way of seeing the multiple governance failures during the pandemic. 
     
     
     
    Drawing on databases of cases filed, news reports, and other sources, Susan M. Sterett argues that governing during the pandemic must include the human institutions intertwined with the effects of the virus. Those institutions reveal problems well beyond the reach of technical expertise. Failures in private insurance as a way of governing risk, conflicts about the primacy of religion, government authority, and health, are problems that predated the pandemic and will persist in future disasters.
    Show book
  • Stoicism for Beginners - The Psychology Secrets of Stoic Philosophy to gain Confidence Resilience and Positivity Build Unbreakable Mental Toughness Self-Discipline and Calmness with Emotional Intelligence and Daily Meditations - cover

    Stoicism for Beginners - The...

    Marcus Newman

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Overwhelmed by daily chaos? 
    Modern stress stealing your joy? 
    🚨 Imagine having an unshakable inner fortress—ready for any challenge life throws at you. 
    👉 "Stoicism for Beginners" is your roadmap to lasting serenity, confidence, and resilience.🎧 Why You Need This Audiobook NOW: 
    ✅ Master Stoic Foundations – Finally stop wasting energy on what you can’t control. Gain true peace. 
    ✅ Build Unbreakable Resilience – Face life’s challenges with calm, unwavering strength. 
    ✅ Cultivate Emotional Intelligence – Forge deeper connections through self-awareness. 
    ✅ Daily Stoic Practices – Integrate ancient wisdom seamlessly into your routine. 
    ✅ Develop Mental Fortitude – Transform obstacles into fuel for growth. 
    💡 Think you're too busy? Listen anytime, anywhere—on your commute, during workouts, or while winding down. 
    ❌ Worried Stoicism is too complex? This audiobook breaks it down into simple, actionable lessons you can apply immediately. 
    ⚡ Still skeptical? Countless people have already transformed their mindset—why not you? 
    But here’s the catch: Nothing changes until you take action. 
    ⏳ Don’t wait—unlock your inner peace NOW. 
    👉 Click "Buy Now" & Start Your Stoic Journey!
    Show book
  • Ancient Anunnaki and the Babylonian Empire - How the Sumerians Descended to the Reign of Nebuchadnezzar - cover

    Ancient Anunnaki and the...

    Faruq Zamani

    • 1
    • 0
    • 0
    The earliest history of Babylon is little known. Among the many cities flourishing in southern Iraq, the town first appears in texts in the third millennium BC. Until the last century of the third millennium, few references existed to Babylon; however, offerings made to the temple of Enlil in Nippur during this period (when Babylon was part of an empire ruled by Ur) suggest a city already of some size and wealth. From relative obscurity in the middle of the 18th century BC, Babylon emerged as the political center of southern Mesopotamia. It held this position almost continuously for the next 1,400 years. 
    Near Baghdad, around 85 kilometers south of the Euphrates, is the site of Babylon. The area is located north of the great alluvial plain of southern Iraq, a landscape of silts deposited by the Tigris and Euphrates into a vast rift created by tectonic movement as the Arabian plate slips beneath the neighboring Eurasian plate. In addition to defining modern-day Iraq's northern and eastern boundaries, the Taurus and Zagros mountain ranges were created by the same collision. As a result, Mesopotamia encompasses several environmental zones, but Babylon itself is found in the flat alluvial plain in southern Iraq. 
    Show book
  • American Idolatry - How Christian Nationalism Betrays the Gospel and Threatens the Church - cover

    American Idolatry - How...

    Andrew L. Whitehead

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Power. Fear. Violence. These three idols of Christian nationalism are corrupting American Christianity. 
     
     
     
    Andrew Whitehead is a leading scholar on Christian nationalism in America and speaks widely on its effects within Christian communities. In this book, he shares his journey and reveals how Christian nationalism threatens the spiritual lives of American Christians and the church. 
     
     
     
    Whitehead shows how Christians harm their neighbors when they embrace the idols of power, fear, and violence. He uses two key examples—racism and xenophobia—to demonstrate that these idols violate core Christian beliefs. Through stories, he illuminates expressions of Christianity that confront Christian nationalism and offer a faithful path forward. 
     
     
     
    American Idolatry encourages further conversation about what Christian nationalism threatens, how to face it, and why it is vitally important to do so. It will help identify Christian nationalism and build a framework that makes sense of the relationship between faith and the current political and cultural context.
    Show book
  • Plenty Good Room - Co-creating an Economy of Enough for All - cover

    Plenty Good Room - Co-creating...

    Andrew Wilkes

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Plenty Good Room lays out in clear terms the hope of democratic socialism for a world ravaged by intensifying racial capitalism and social injustice. Unleash your ingenuity for systems that offer plenty good room—not for just a few but for all. 
     
    Economic inequality yawns as wide as ever. Capitalism is working as it was designed: replicating an uneven balance of power, constraining life chances, and limiting imaginations. Those of us concerned about injustice often confine ourselves to issue-by-issue activism. The end result? Owners, investors, and a politics of inequality win. 
     
    But what if there's another way to organize our common life—and what if it's as homegrown as sweet potato pie? What if we could become moral engineers who co-create the world we all deserve? 
     
    Plenty Good Room helps readers understand Black Christian socialism, a stream of the Black radical tradition, from the perspective of a Brooklyn pastor and political scientist's civic awakening. As the former director of the Drum Major Institute, founded by America's most famous democratic socialist, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Rev. Andrew Wilkes mounts a challenge to the endless greed, inequality, and profiteering of racial capitalism. 
     
    Tugging on the threads of history and scripture and pointing to the work of Black radicals like W. E. B. Du Bois, Rev. Addie Wyatt, and Fannie Lou Hamer, Wilkes weaves a narrative of "plenty good room moments": times in which communities and individuals had sufficient resources, human rights, and beauty. He invites us to join a movement that a day-laboring Christ initiated as he organized the dispossessed, the disinherited, and those pushed to the edges of society. Wilkes also introduces contemporary efforts pushing for reparations, community ownership, participatory democracy, and solidarity economies. These stories show us that we can create a world of care and reciprocity by envisioning an economy of enough for all—one rooted in justice, equity, and the God whose spirit falls on all flesh.
    Show book
  • The State and Revolution - cover

    The State and Revolution

    Vladimir Lenin

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The State and Revolution (1917), by Vladimir Lenin, describes the role of the State in society, the necessity of proletarian revolution, and the theoretic inadequacies of social democracy in achieving revolution to establish the dictatorship of the proletariat.
    Lenin began the composition of an early draft of State and Revolution while in exile in Switzerland in 1916, under the title "Marxism on the State".
    "Soviets", legislative bodies of workers and peasants were the de facto governments of Petrograd and many smaller cities. The Russian public was deeply upset with the continuation of Russia's involvement in World War One and the continued economic difficulties that it brought on. On November 7th The Congress of Soviets officially elected a coalition of Bolsheviks, Socialist Revolutionaries and Mensheviks to govern. Through the Red Guards, paramilitary organizations of revolutionary workers, sailors and soldiers; the Soviet government was able to storm The Winter Palace and officially abolishing the Provisional government. The revolution was not uniformly accepted among all Russians, resistance and disruption would occur routinely leading up to The Russian Civil War. A particular issue that Lenin covers in The State and Revolution was the right of nations to secession (The right to self determination); during the composition of this book The Mensheviks of Georgia declared independence soon after The Revolution forming The Democratic Republic of Georgia.
    Among other famous Marxists there were also: Georgi Plekhanov, Joseph Stalin, Leon Trotsky, Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, Ernst Bloch, Pyotr Kropotkin, Jean-Paul Charles Aymard Sartre, Wilhelm Reich, Perry Anderson.
    Show book