The adages “History repeats itself” and “There is nothing new under the sun” have been well-known for many years and we often wonder how a newspaper headline from a thousand or two thousand years ago would look when recounting events as they occurred in real time, which today are called “historical” or “revolutionary.” How would these events appear to a contemporary journalist? How would they look as a lively, colorful and journalistic report from the field rather than as an historical analysis of these events?View Our Videos
Last Reviews:
His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI
"it is a wonderful historical book about the Holy Land every Christian must have it ..."
One of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales. He was born at Dufton, at Westmoreland, England, and studied at Oxford. Becoming a Catholic in 1576, he went to Reims and received ordination in 1581. John went back to England where he worked in the northern parts of the kingdom and became the object of a massive manhunt. He was betrayed, arrested, and taken to London. There he was crippled on the rack and returned to Dryburn near Durham. On July 24, he was hanged, drawn, and quartered. John was canonized by Pope Paul VI in 1970 as a martyr of Durham.