Meet The Salamander
Dig Into History Magazine for Kids and Teens|July/August 2017

Make the Match - These salamanders look just like the one on page 22—but only one is an exact match? Can you spot it?

Regina Hansen
Meet The Salamander

Today, most people think of salamanders as lovable pets, but, for centuries, this gentle amphibian had a fiery reputation. The word “salamander” traces its roots to a Persian term that meant “fire within” or “lives in fire.” The fourth century B.C.E. Greek philosopher Aristotle was one of the first to claim that salamanders could live inside flames. He also said that they could extinguish a blaze just by walking across it. The first-century c.e. Roman writer Pliny the Elder tested this theory by throwing a salamander into a fire. The salamander died, but that did not kill the legend.

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The news spread throughout Egypt—a new pharaoh, Ramses III, now sat on the throne.

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Ramses III, the second king of Egypt’s 20th Dynasty, is viewed as Egypt’s last truly great pharaoh.

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Stone Code
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Stone Code

Hundreds of ships, led by the French general Napoleon Bonaparte, sailed from France in May 1798 on a secret mission.

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Up & Away!

Eclipse observers often face unexpected difficulties, sometimes on their way to their chosen sites and sometimes at a site itself.

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Edison's Eclipse Adventure
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Edison's Eclipse Adventure

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Digging Up Copernicus
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Digging Up Copernicus

The scientist “who made the Earth a planet” is how the Harvard-Smithsonian astronomer Owen Gingerich refers to Nicolaus Copernicus (1473–1543). Copernicus’ path breaking book, On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres,challenged the centuries-old belief that the Earth stood stationary at the center of the cosmos.

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Demosthenes & Cicero
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Demosthenes & Cicero

Even today, more than 2,000 years after they lived, Demosthenes and Cicero are still considered two of history’s most outstanding orators.

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Confucius & Socrates

Some teachers are so inspirational that their influence lives on long after they die.

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