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58 votes
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Why can I visit battlefields, but not battleships?

Respect, preservation, and safety. While it's possible there may still be remains on a battlefield, people do their best to find and remove the bodies and bury them properly. Sunken ships often ...
Schwern's user avatar
  • 56.3k
57 votes
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Why were Royal Navy ships forbidden to attack the ARA Veinticinco de Mayo in Argentinian waters?

The exclusion zone mentioned in the article is described in the Wikipedia article as follows: The Total Exclusion Zone (TEZ) was an area declared by the United Kingdom on 30 April 1982 covering a ...
sempaiscuba's user avatar
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56 votes
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In ancient Rome, could free-born Romans become slaves?

That is for sure an overgeneralisation, but so is Wikipedia's. There are some elements of truth in both: Ancient Rome held that freedom could not be sold, and in principle a freeborn person could not ...
Semaphore's user avatar
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55 votes
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How common were marital duels in medieval Europe?

Not that common. Very curiously, we do not see husband and wife, necessarily, in these pictures. Talhoffer only writes of man ("er") and woman ("frow"). (More illustrations, with ...
LаngLаngС's user avatar
  • 81.3k
49 votes

Is there a historical explanation as to why the USA people are so litigious compared to the French?

Very little scholarly work has apparently been done on this, so my answer will closely follow the article "The Culture of Tort Law in France" by Jean-Sébastien Borghetti (2012). The question ...
Brian Z's user avatar
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49 votes
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When and why did the use of the lifespans of royalty to limit clauses in contracts come about?

This is an attempt to escape the rule against perpetuities. No interest is good unless it must vest, if at all, not later than twenty-one years after some life in being at the creation of the ...
Mary's user avatar
  • 2,401
46 votes

Why can I visit battlefields, but not battleships?

In the UK, the wreckage of military aircraft and designated military vessels is protected under the Protection of Military Remains Act 1986. Only 12 vessels are currently designated as controlled ...
sempaiscuba's user avatar
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46 votes
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How did German unification affect existing sentences for criminal convicts?

Thanks to some hints provided in the comments to my original post here, I have been able to locate some sources that answer my questions, at least on a high level: Beginning in 1989, even before the ...
Psychonaut's user avatar
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43 votes
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Why was "leaping into the river" a valid trial outcome to prove one's innocence?

It was a divine judgement in cases where the evidence was inconclusive and previous attempts to resolve the case had failed. In some cases at least, it was only used after other attempts at a ...
Lars Bosteen's user avatar
42 votes

How and when was the modern company ownership structure invented?

The governance model for early corporations is the chartered city; a community granted town privileges and, if also free, independence from feudal obligations to local sovereigns or lords and debt of ...
Pieter Geerkens's user avatar
39 votes

What were sandbags used for in medieval duels?

The sandbag is from a quintain, a "jousting dummy" if you will: On Offham green there stands a Quintain, a thing now rarely to be met with, being a machine much used in former times by youth, as ...
Pieter Geerkens's user avatar
37 votes
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Was Richard I's imprisonment by Leopold of Austria justified?

The Middle Ages was not particularly known for being a civil and orderly period. Leopold V had no authority of any kind to arrest Richard I. He did it simply because he wanted to, and could. The ...
Semaphore's user avatar
  • 97.9k
34 votes

Is there a historical explanation as to why the USA people are so litigious compared to the French?

While this isn't exactly a historical answer, it does provide a reasonable part of an explanation: Different people pay the costs in a lawsuit in the USA and France In France, the legal costs are paid ...
Nzall's user avatar
  • 1,107
33 votes

Were secret treaties ratified? How did they become official while remaining secret?

There are some misconceptions about what ratification means. Though it is now common for treaties to be ratified by a legislature, that has never been essential to the ratification process. In ...
Semaphore's user avatar
  • 97.9k
33 votes

Who had the shortest time in going from imprisonment to head of state within democratic processes?

Olusegun Obasanjo, President of Nigeria from 1999 to 2007 is a possible candidate. He was imprisoned in June 1995 on charges of being involved in plotting a coup and was released in June 1998. ...
Lars Bosteen's user avatar
31 votes

How and when was the modern company ownership structure invented?

The Dutch East India Company (Verenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie) is generally seen as the first company with stocks, shareholders and board members. It didn't have 1 director, it had 17: "De Heren ...
Jos's user avatar
  • 23.6k
31 votes

Why was "leaping into the river" a valid trial outcome to prove one's innocence?

Peter Leeson from George Mason University has argued that medieval trial by ordeal worked because people believed that they worked. Thus, only the innocent were willing to undergo the ordeal. If this ...
Betterthan Kwora's user avatar
28 votes
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How did the US government manage to enforce the 1980 boycott of the Olympic Games in Russia?

Enforce is the wrong word to use here, because while the idea may have began with the US government, formally speaking the decision to participate or not rested with each National Olympic Committee. ...
Semaphore's user avatar
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27 votes
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Are there any accounts written by torturers on their actions?

Takashi Nagase wrote a book about his experiences during and after the Second World War entitled Crosses and Tigers, and financed a Buddhist temple on the Thai-Burma railway to atone for his actions ...
Dave Gremlin's user avatar
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27 votes
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When did one-way mirrors become widely used by police?

Surprisingly enough, in England, screens for identity parades did not come in at all until the late 1980s. A poke around the British Newspaper Archive (paywall, sorry) found this article from Nov 1986,...
Andrew is gone's user avatar
26 votes
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Had there been instances of national states banning harmful imports before the mid-19th C Opium Wars?

"Banning harmful imports" was often done. Prime example being the satanic brew. Coffee was banned in Mecca, Italy, Contantinople/Ottoman Empire, Prussia. Similarly: tea was banned in East Frisia, ...
LаngLаngС's user avatar
  • 81.3k
25 votes
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In medieval Europe, were children born in an annulled marriage automatically illegitimate?

An annulment does not "break" a marriage, as does a divorce. It declares that the marriage never happened in the first place. This meant that the married couple would revert to their previous legal ...
sempaiscuba's user avatar
  • 77.7k
24 votes
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What is the history of the university asylum law?

This goes back to Frederick Barbarossa. He granted the university the so called scholar's privilege the privilegium scholasticum or authentica habita in 1150s. Full universities had to be granted ...
LаngLаngС's user avatar
  • 81.3k
21 votes
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Why was there an Anglo-Saxon law banning sheepskin covered shields?

Because King Athelstan was concerned about the quality of soldiers' shields. Sheepskin was a cheap but poor quality option for covering shields. A key theme of Athelstan's Grately Codes is dealing ...
Lars Bosteen's user avatar
21 votes
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A German immigrant ancestor has a "Registration Affidavit of Alien Enemy" on file. What does that mean exactly?

Short answer This was a requirement for all "natives, citizens, denizens, or subjects" of the German (and, a few months later, the Austro-Hungarian) Empire; thus, 'alien enemy' registration was not ...
Lars Bosteen's user avatar
20 votes

Are there any accounts written by torturers on their actions?

Since it has not been mentioned yet: There are quite a lot of accounts of the Holocaust from the point of view of its perpetrators. It does indeed seem as if there were some psychological problems (...
Jan's user avatar
  • 9,446
19 votes

Why are there so many laws about eye injuries in the Code of Hammurabi?

Most probably, this starts with a an untrue premise: There are not so many laws about eye injury. How many "laws" are there in the Hammurabi Code? — 282. How many "laws" are there concerning ...
LаngLаngС's user avatar
  • 81.3k
18 votes
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When was Nazi paramilitary organisation Waffen-SS liquidated in the legal sense?

I believe I've finally found the answer: Law No. 2 "Providing for the Termination and Liquidation of Nazi Organizations" issued 10 October 1945 by Allied Control Authority Control Council. Waffen-SS, ...
Grzegorz Adam Kowalski's user avatar
17 votes
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From 1936-45 what was the prescribed punishment in Nazi Germany for failing to join or participate in the Hitler Youth?

There was no upper limit to sanctions. From to 1936 to 1939, membership in the HJ was "voluntary". So actual punishment was not put into law until the Second Executive Order on the law about ...
DevSolar's user avatar
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