Blind History
A compilation of the stories of Frederick Douglass, Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Dubois
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71 Episoder
History of Egypt Part 1 Article
@Blind-History-with-Josh-Barry Prehistory and Predynastic Egypt (to c. 3100 BCE)The Nile Valley before PharaohsLong before the first pharaohs ruled a unified kingdom, communities were already experimenting with settled life along the Nile. The river’s annual flood, spreading a dark band of fertile silt across otherwise arid land, turned narrow strips of the valley into a reliable agricultural zone in the middle of the desert. This contrast—thin green life surrounded by desert—would shape Egyptian history, beliefs, and politics for thousands of years.In deep prehistory, the Sahara was not yet the immense desert we know today. It shifted through wetter and drier phases, at times supporting lakes, savannas, and herds of animals that hunter‑gatherer groups exploited. As conditions became more arid, especially from the sixth to the fourth millennium BCE, people increasingly concentrated near permanent water sources, above all the Nile. Over time, this environmental pressure encouraged the transition from a mobile life to more permanent villages with fields and herds.Archaeologists reconstruct this long, poorly documented era from stone tools, pottery fragments, animal bones, and the remains of houses and graves rather than written records. Writing would not appear in Egypt until the very end of the Predynastic period. Yet even without texts, the material remains show a clear trend: from scattered, small camps to more organized communities with social distinctions, specialized crafts, and long-distance contacts.
History of Egypt - Part 1
Historical Figures - Black History
Historical Figures W.E.B. Dubois Ep. 17
@Blind-History-with-Josh-BarryW. E. B. Du Bois: Scholarship, Struggle, and the Meaning of FreedomW. E. B. Du Bois stands as one of the most powerful and wide-ranging intellectuals in American history. He was a scholar, sociologist, historian, editor, political activist, public critic, and global thinker whose work transformed the way race, democracy, and modern society were understood. More than almost any other American figure of his era, he moved across boundaries that others treated as fixed. He crossed the lines between scholarship and activism, literature and sociology, national politics and international anti-colonial struggle. To write about Du Bois is not simply to write about one man’s career. It is to write about a body of thought that helped define some of the central political and moral questions of the modern world.
Historical Figures Booker T Washington Ep. 16
@Blind-History-with-Josh-Barry Booker T. Washington: Education, Strategy, and the Struggle for Black AdvancementBooker T. Washington remains one of the most significant and debated figures in American history because his life stood at the intersection of slavery, emancipation, education, racial politics, and national power. Born into slavery in Virginia in 1856, Washington came of age during the collapse of the slave system and rose to become one of the best-known Black leaders in the United States. He founded and led the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, became a nationally influential spokesman for Black progress, and shaped public debate over education, labor, political rights, and the future of African Americans in the decades after Reconstruction.
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