Today in HistoryA bill allowing people to be stripped of their citizenship for terrorist activities has been introduced to Federal Parliament but citizenship has ancient roots
FORMER Prime Minister Bob Hawke’s drinking escapades are well known but his antics pale in comparison to what other past political leaders did with the drink.
Today in HistoryOur Matildas are making great inroads at the FIFA Women’s World Cup, thanks in large part to some intrepid football-playing pioneers.
When Richard Stephens visited Cork workhouse in February 1847, the schoolroom had been closed for weeks to sleep 102 boys. Each boy, aged five to 13, shared one of 24 beds with at least four others
With only 80,000 giraffes left in the wild, the Giraffe Conservation Foundation has designated June 21, the longest day of the year in the northern hemisphere, as World Giraffe Day.
WWII bomber pilot, Flight Lieutenant Peter Townsend claimed 11 Luftwaffe aircraft in two years service but he best-remembered as the man denied marriage to a lovelorn princess.
The late Ron Clarke was an athlete, accountant, businessman, writer, ecowarrior, politician and gentleman.
Some people treat their sport like a religion and some sportspeople are intensely religious in the traditional sense.
Today in HistoryLauded during 800th anniversary celebrations as England’s “greatest export”, the Magna Carta that inspired liberal democracy around the world was immediately annulled by a medieval pope as the work of Satan.
Tall, aristocratic and debonair, with a rich baritone that seemed to come from deep caverns below the earth, the late Christopher Lee was never going to be romantic leading man material.