History Lovers Share 50 Fascinating Anecdotes Mixing Humor, Tragedy And The Unexpected
It’s impossible to know about everything that happened in the past. You could spend decades sitting through lectures and still have barely scratched the surface of everything that has occurred in human history. Because of this, most of us only really know what we were taught in school. But if you’re interested in finding out some juicy stories about the past that you might have never heard before, you’ve come to the right place.
We took a trip to History Anecdotes on Reddit and gathered some of their best posts down below. From dark secrets that historical figures probably didn’t want you to know to amusing tales that weren’t told in textbooks, you'll find it all on this list. So enjoy reading through, and be sure to upvote the posts that teach you something new!
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Zura Karuhimbi - An Elderly Widow Who Saved More Than 100 People During The Rwandan Genocide By Exploiting Local Rumors She Was A Witch
Her family were traditional healers and Karuhimbi was believed to have magical powers. During the genocide she sheltered more than 100 people in her two room house. To maintain her reputation she painted herself and her house with herbs that would irritate the skin of whoever touched them. She threatened that anyone who entered her house to k**l the refugees would unleash the wrath of God upon themselves.
Vietnam War Pow Doug Hegdahl Pretended To Be Illiterate To Fool His Captors, Who Believed Him To Be So Stupid That They Gave Him Almost Free Rein Of The Camp
His captors called him “The Stupid,” but his mind was a fortress. The incredible story of Douglas Hegdahl, a young U.S. Navy sailor captured during the Vietnam War, is a powerful example of how ingenuity and an exceptional memory can become weapons in the face of impossible odds. After being blown overboard from his ship and taken prisoner in 1967, Hegdahl quickly realized that his low rank and youthful appearance gave him an opportunity. He began to feign illiteracy and a simple-minded demeanor, an act so convincing that his North Vietnamese captors deemed him a low-value prisoner.
This perception of his incompetence was a brilliant ruse. While others were subjected to brutal interrogations and t*****e, Hegdahl was given more freedom to move around the infamous "Hanoi Hilton" prison camp. He used this liberty not to escape, but to gather vital intelligence. With the help of a fellow POW, he developed a system to memorize the names, capture dates, and other personal details of over 250 American prisoners. He committed all of this information to memory by singing it to the tune of "Old MacDonald Had a Farm." He also carried out small acts of sabotage, such as putting dirt in the gas tanks of prison trucks.
When he was unexpectedly released in 1969 as a propaganda gesture, Hegdahl was initially reluctant to go, worried that his early release would be seen as a betrayal. However, senior POWs ordered him to accept the offer, recognizing the immense value of the information he carried. Upon his return, Hegdahl's detailed testimony helped the U.S. government confirm the identities of numerous prisoners previously listed as missing in action, expose the appalling conditions in the camp, and gave families of the missing desperately needed hope. His remarkable courage and cleverness turned a devastating situation into a stunning victory of human spirit and intelligence.
A Thing Can’t Commit Treason
During the American Revolution, an enslaved man named Billy was charged with treason and sentenced to hang. Cleverly, he argued that since he was legally considered property, he was not a citizen and could not commit treason against a government to which he owed no allegiance. Billy was subsequently pardoned.
Probably the only time in US history that this worked out well for someone.
I’m not proud to admit this, but when I was in school, I always thought history was the most boring subject. I didn’t understand how events that occurred hundreds of years ago had anything to do with my life, and I simply didn’t see why I should care about these stories that I couldn’t relate to. But boy was I wrong! There are hundreds of thousands of fascinating tales to be told from the past, and many of them actually are still relevant today.
Whether you just want to learn something new or want to better understand the world around you, History Anecdotes is the place to be. This subreddit has been around for a decade and has amassed an impressive 132K members. And as the community writes, it’s the “quickest way to make yourself the life of the party,” as you’ll always have fun facts to share if you frequent this group.
In 1913, 10-Year-Old Sarah Rector Received A Land Allotment Of 160 Acres In Oklahoma
The best farming land was reserved for whites, so she was given a barren plot. Oil was discovered there, and she became one of the country's first black millionaires.
María García Was Taunted Repeatedly By Her Next Door Neighbor Who Had Brutally R**ed Her Daughter Verónica, With Him Even Asking ‘How Her Daughter Was’ On His Release From Jail
She saw him in a local bar, poured gasoline on him and set him on fire. He died. She was sentenced to 9.5 years in prison.
Respect
Triboulet, a notorious jester for Louis XII and Francis I once slapped the king on the b**t, which greatly angered him, but then was given a chance to be forgiven if he could think of something more clever. He said "I'm so sorry I mistook you for the Queen!" When he was sentenced to death for making fun of people, he was allowed to choose how he would die. So he chose to die of old age. ...
The speechless King let him go.
What are your favorite moments in history? Did you love learning about how your nation gained independence from a former oppressor? Or maybe you were fascinated by the way royal families lived hundreds of years ago. Regardless of what piques your interest, there are plenty of benefits to delving deeper into history.
When it comes to why it’s so important to study the past, the University of Wisconsin’s Department of History notes on their site that the past teaches us about the present. We all know that history repeats itself, so when we look back on similar situations that occurred in the past, we’re able to understand our current issues and find solutions that we know will work.
In 1984, Ryan White Was Diagnosed With Aids That He Contracted From A Blood Transfusion
When the 13-year-old tried to return to school in Kokomo, Indiana, hundreds of parents and teachers petitioned to have him removed, and his family was forced to leave town after a bullet was fired at their house
"People would get up and leave so they would not have to sit anywhere near me. Even at church, people would not shake my hand." Ryan White was just 13 years old when he was diagnosed with AIDS. A hemophiliac since birth, the Indiana teen contracted HIV through a tainted blood transfusion — yet he was bullied and ostracized by his peers and the community at large for having the "gay disease." But the brave teenager persevered and helped change the negative stigma around the disease before dying at age 18.
I remember this. It was so sad. in the mid 80s my clinical advisor was working with two young boys who had haemophilia and who were receiving factor 8 or 9 (can't remember) treatment, and they had to put up with all sorts of shit from people assuming that they then must have AIDS. God, people are both ignorant and stupid.
Hans Münch, A Doctor Known As The Good Man Of Auschwitz Because He Refused To Assist In The Mass M*****s
His experiments were elaborate farces intended to protect inmates. He was the only person acquitted of war crimes at the 1947 Auschwitz trials after many inmates testified in his favour.
I think you had to do some dark things to even get into the SS. But it means a lot if victims stood up for him
British Sisters Ida And Louise Cook Rescued 29 Jews From The N**is By Sneaking Out Valuables In Plain Sight
For Example, Ida pinned a large diamond brooch to her cheap sweater and officials assumed it was fake. They repeated this trick several times.
Both girls were born in Sunderland, Louise in 1901, Ida in 1904. By 1934 both girls, now considered spinsters, were living together in London and working civil service jobs although Ida would soon be a successful romance author under the pen name Mary Burchell (her first book was published in 1936). Ida and Louise both had a passion for opera and frequently traveled so they could see their favorite operas. That year Ida and Louise were both in Salzburg attending an opera festival. They became acquainted with a Romanian opera singer named Viorica Ursuleac and her Austrian husband, a conductor named Clemens Krauss who were both secretly involved in helping Jews escape from the N***s. The sisters were told about the plight of Jews in Austria and Germany and what they heard moved them so much that they knew they needed to act. Back in Britain the sisters contributed their own money and later donations from friends to help resettle Jews in Britain. Later they agreed to covertly transport expensive jewelry owned by Jews out of occupied territory. This was illegal as Jews weren't allowed to take any valuable items out of the country so Ida and Louise took a big risk doing this. That's when Ida had to transport the large diamond brooch and got the idea to pin it to the front of her cheap cardigan from Marks and Spencer's. It worked so well that Ida and Louise repeated the ruse several more times. On the rare occasions when they were stopped by officials they would “do the nervous British spinster act” and act so crazy that any official would back off. As an example I'll quote this anecdote from the article "When an Austrian frontier official questioned Louise’s opulent string of pearls that she was wearing along with her otherwise inexpensive outfit, she acted affronted, exclaiming, “And why not?!’ She frantically ran to a mirror and looked at herself, all the while yelling at the inspector, “What is wrong with my appearance? What were you trying to imply?” until the inspector fled Louise’s crazy act." For their heroism they were awarded "Righteous Among the Nations" from Yad Vashem in 1965.
Did you hear about the art looted by the N@zis that was spotted in an online real estate posting in Argentina? The house belonged to the daughter of a an SS officer who was known as Adolf's banker. They removed the picture but it was too late. The Argentinian police raided their house and found it and then searched the couple's other properties and came across dozens of paintings and other artworks.
Another reason why it’s so important to study history is because it allows us to build empathy. It’s easy to go through life only ever seeing the world from your own perspective. But when we take the time to understand how exactly other cultures came to be and why people of other backgrounds exist, we’ll start to understand their current lifestyles and choices as well. It’s actually quite beautiful to understand how all of the rich and diverse cultures that our world has to offer were formed throughout history.
In 1140, When An Enemy Castle Was Captured By King Conrad III, The Women Of The Castle Were Granted Free Departure And Allowed To Take What They Could Carry On Their Backs
Thinking quickly, the women carried the men on their backs. The King kept his word and let the men live.
I remember a similar scene from “Ever After”, one of my favourite movies ❤️
A Protestant Husband And His Catholic Wife Were Not Allowed To Be Buried Together. Here Are Their Headstones Reaching Across The Two Cemeteries In 1888
In The Early 1960's, The Kgb Attempted To Blackmail Indonesian Revolutionary & President Sukarno By Secretly Filming An O**y Between Him & Several Flight Attendants
Sukarno, who was openly a polygamist with a reputation as a womanizer, was unimpressed, & asked for his own copy of the tape to watch
At the same time, looking back at the mistakes and atrocities that occured in the past can help us prevent ourselves from making the same errors today. Unfortunately, there will probably always be humans on Earth that harm others. But we must never forget terrible things that took place in history to continue to make our world a better place. The bleakest moments in history that make us feel sick to our stomachs to read about are some of the most important things for us to remember.
Colonel Gail Halvorsen, a US air force officer who was known as the "Berlin Candy Bomber" or "Uncle Wiggly Wings" because he airdropped candy to German children during the Berlin Airlift from 1948 to 1949. He would wiggle his wings to let them know he was coming.
A Hungarian doctor's brilliant insight saved thousands of mothers in childbirth, but the scientific community rejected it and discredited his irrefutable results; he went mad, and women resumed dying.
Ignác Semmelweis, a 19th-century Hungarian doctor, discovered that handwashing drastically reduced maternal deaths from puerperal fever. Despite clear results, his ideas were rejected by the medical community, leading to his dismissal, mental breakdown, and early death—ironically from the very infection he sought to prevent.
In 1965, A Scottish Man Named Angus Barbieri Didn't Eat For 1 Year And 17 Days
He lived entirely off his excess body fat and vitamins, ultimately losing 276 pounds with seemingly no adverse effects. He only pooped once every 40 to 50 days.
In the mid-1960s, a 456-pound man named Angus Barbieri went without food for 382 days straight in a medically supervised diet designed to help him lose weight. In addition to drinking black coffee, tea, and sparkling water, he was prescribed multivitamins — including potassium, sodium, and yeast — to compensate for the lack of nutrients. Shockingly, Barbieri not only survived the diet but was able to achieve his ideal weight. By the end of his fast, he had lost 276 pounds, reaching his goal weight of 180 pounds, and he managed to keep most of the weight off afterward. And at the time of Barbieri's death in 1990, he had only gained back 16 pounds.
Learning about the past can also be incredibly personal. Have you ever stopped to wonder why your nation eats the specific cuisine that it does? Or what about why people interact with strangers (or avoid strangers) the way that they do in your home country? Do you know why basketball is your nation’s favorite sport? There are countless questions that we can answer simply by looking back in history that will give us a deeper understanding of why things are the way they are today.
In the early 1920's, when notorious Russian anticommunist general Roman von Ungern-Sternberg learned one of his lieutenants had sexually a*******d several nurses & looted their communities during one of his military campaigns, he ordered the man severely flogged & burned at the stake
In 1942, A Dutch Minesweeper Called The Abraham Crijnssen Avoided Japanese Aircraft And Escaped To Australia By Disguising As A Tropical Island
Personnel covered the ship in foliage and painted the hull to resemble rocks. The ship remained close to shore during the day and only sailed at night.
After She Was Publicly Flogged And Her Daughters R**ed By Roman Soldiers, Queen Boudica Of The Iceni Destroyed 3 Entire Cities
Londinium burned with such ferocity that a blackened scorch-layer still runs under modern London, named by archaeologists the 'Boudican Destruction Horizon'
According to a brief glance at Wikipedia, she either died of illness or of suicide, but she managed to take 70,000–80,000 Romans and Britons with her. That's some cosmic revenge. However, I am sure some BP scholar will come on here and give us the real story from a more accurate source.
Now, this list is full of moments in history that were particularly amusing. But these certainly weren’t the only funny stories from the past. BoomSet shared a list of hilarious moments from history that you might not believe are true. One of which is the Great Emu War of Australia in 1932. This occured after the Australian military launched a war against emus that were destroying crops in the West. However, the birds were a surprisingly difficult enemy. And after they outsmarted the troops enough times, the military finally gave up.
The 21st Of January 1795, The French Attacked And Captured A Dutch Fleet... With Horses
The 14 ships were caught in the ice at Helder, and the French general attempted this bold move. It is the only documented occurence of a cavalry charge against ships in History.
In 1945, Tsutomu Yamaguchi survived the atomic blast in Hiroshima, sought refuge in an air raid shelter overnight, and then took a morning train to Nagasaki to report for work—where he endured and survived a second atomic blast.
In 1922, A Young Future 3-Star General George S Patton Was In New York When He Saw A Woman Being Carried Into A Truck By Several Men
Patton immediately brandished a pistol & ordered her let out at gunpoint, learning only moments later she was leaving her own wedding, & was exhausted from dancing
Another amusing moment in history was the day that Sweden stopped driving on the left and began driving on the right. Nicknamed “H-Day,” on September 3, 1967 at 4:50 a.m., all Swedes on the road were expected to suddenly switch sides. Thousands of road signs were changed, road markers were repainted, and buses had to be modified. But aside from being a bit chaotic, the public widely cooperated, and the transition went more smoothly than expected.
Carl Herman Unthan A 19th Century Violinist Who Was Born Without Arms
During a concert, he accidentally broke a string; he replaced and tuned it using only his toes. Afterwards, he deliberately weakened a string before each performance so that he could repeat the stunt.
On April 18, 1930, at 8:45 pm the BBC News evening bulletin announced: "Good evening. Today is Good Friday. There is no news." For the rest of the 15 minute time slot, the station played only piano music.
I'd do anything for a day like that right now. A day of global peace and kindness.
The Great Smog Of London In 1952 Was So Bad That Pedestrians Couldn't Even See Their Feet
Some of the 4,000 who died in the 5 days it lasted didn't suffer lung problems – they fell into the Thames and drowned because they could not see the river
We hope you’re enjoying your scroll through these fascinating anecdotes from history, pandas! Keep upvoting the ones that you find particularly entertaining, and let us know in the comments below if you have any amusing stories from the past that aren’t widely known to share. Then, if you’d like to check out another Bored Panda article featuring fascinating photos from history, look no further than right here!
In 1926, Renowned Author Agatha Christie Mysteriously Disappeared, Sparking A Large-Scale Search Effort
After 11 days, she was identified by a musician at a hotel, where she had been staying under an assumed name. Christie passed away without ever offering an explanation for her disappearance
George Vi Was Appalled When The South African Government Instructed Him To Only Shake Hands With White People While On His Visit There In 1947
He referred to his South African bodyguards as "the Gestapo"
I couldn't find a source on the handshaking part, but it wouldn't surprise me. Apartheid started a year later in 1948. King George and Queen Elizabeth (she was with her dad on the trip) never visited South Africa again, in line with UK and Commonwealth opposition to apartheid.
An American Philosophical Society Member For 35 Yrs, Thomas Jefferson Was The 1st Scientist Us President
At 23, he went to Philadelphia to be inoculated for smallpox when Virginia discouraged it. He later vaccinated 200 family members & neighbors. This 1806 letter gives praise to Dr. Edward Jenner.
200 years ago and people knew about goddamned vaccinations and now we have Trump and RFK, Jr. Smacking my head.
The Worst Year In Human History
If you ask what the worst year in human history is, there are a number of possible answers. Some might respond that 2020 was the worst year in human history, a time when life came to a literal halt. Nearly 6.9 million people died due to COVID-19. And if you’re a bit familiar with history, your answer might be that the worst year was 1918, the year World War I ended, after claiming the lives of around 20 million people. In addition, the Spanish flu swept the globe, k*****g between 50 to 100 million people. But did you know that there's something even worse? A year that is described as the worst in recorded history... The Mysterious Fog: In the year 536 AD, the year began with a mysterious thick fog that covered vast parts of Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. It completely blocked out the sun. Procopius described the sun at that time: “It seemed as though the sun had lost its light, and it no longer shone with the brilliance of day, but rather as the moon, without rays or warmth, for more than a year.” The Roman statesman Cassiodorus also wrote: “The sunlight was weak, the sky appeared colorless, the cold pierced to the bone, and it was as if summer had been defeated by winter.” Catastrophic Climate Change: Temperatures dropped by 2 to 2.5 degrees Celsius in some regions, causing the worst cold spell the Northern Hemisphere had experienced in the past two thousand years. Widespread Famines: The climate shift led to the failure of harvests across Europe and Asia, resulting in massive famines, particularly in places like Ireland, Syria, and Byzantium. The Spread of Plagues: After this climate catastrophe and the ensuing famines, rats emerged from their hiding places in search of food, increasing their contact with humans. The fleas on these rats, which feed on blood, began infecting humans. Due to the general decline in public health and malnutrition, the world was struck by the Plague of Justinian, or the “Black Plague,” in the year 541 AD—just five years later. This pandemic k****d between 30 to 50 million people, nearly half of the population of the Byzantine Empire. The economy and military were weakened, trade came to a standstill, and this accelerated Europe’s descent into what became known as the Dark Ages. "The Triumph of Death is a painting by the Flemish artist Pieter Bruegel the Elder, created in 1562."
In 2020 another grim factor was that the President of the United States of America was a fucking moron who contributed to the high COVID death toll in the US by his stupidity and who suggested using bleach and internal lights to fight COVID.
And when he got it was given the best available medical care for free and told people not to wear masks.
Load More Replies...Probably a volcanic eruption somewhere that made upper atmosphere hazy and bloated out the sun. That happened in the early 1800s too, there was a Year Without Summer.
I enjoy Bruegell’s paintings, but he was not known for painting a family on a picnic. Lol
Not a picnic maybe but a pretty good party nonetheless: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wedding_Dance
Load More Replies...The painting shows the Last Judgment (see the bells in the upper left corner), not a 'Medieval battle scene' as the alt text would have you believe.
The alt text is wrong but unless BP changes it, the painting is Bruegel the Elder's "The Triumph of Death", not a depiction of the Last Judgment. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Triumph_of_Death . The image also has nothing whatsoever to do with the Volcanic Winter of 536: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volcanic_winter_of_536
Load More Replies...In 1978, Scottish journalist Malcolm Caldwell (right), an ardent defender of the Khmer Rouge, traveled to Cambodia for an audience with communist dictator Pol Pot, (not pictured) of whom he was an admirer. Caldwell was found m******d only a few hours after their meeting
Adrian Carton De Wiart, During Ww1 Was Shot In The Face, Skull, Ear, Chest, And Leg. After Losing A Hand And An Eye He Refused To Retreat, Staying To Toss Grenades
When a doctor was later amputating his fingers he got impatient and pulled them off. - he later said "Frankly I enjoyed the war"
The Sad Tale Of Virginia "Gennie" Christian (1895-1912): The Last Female Minor Executed In The United States
Convicted of m*******g her white employer at age 16. Sentenced to death despite no previous arrests and her claims of self-defense. Executed the day after her 17th birthday.
Historical “16th Century” Fart!
In John Aubrey's Brief Lives, it is the story of the Earl of Oxford, who bowed deeply to the first Queen Elizabeth and accidentally farted. Overcome with shame, he vanished from court and spent seven years travelling. On his hesitant return, the queen greeted him with: "My Lord, I had forgotten the Fart."
There's a similar tale in 1001 Nights, where the farter eventually plucks up courage to come home, certain that everyone would have forgotten, and he hears a little girl asking her mother what year she was born, and mother replies "you were born in the year that Abu Hassan farted"
In 1945, A B-25 Bomber Crashed Into The Empire State Building. 14 People Died. An Elevator Operator Named Betty Oliver Survived A 75-Story Elevator Fall
She suffered severe burns, and a broken pelvis, back and neck. It remains the world record for the longest survived elevator fall.
The First Vaccines Were Invented In 14th Century China. Where Powdered Small Pox Scabs Were Blown Up Peoples Noses
Nasal Insufflation k****d 1 - 2% of recipients which was still preferable to smallpox. This method was brought to Europe in the late 17th century before being banned in the 1800's
I just can't make another comment about - OK, blah blah blah RFK Jr. - you guys fill in the blanks.
On January 24, 1972, Two Hunters In A Remote Area Of Guam Were Attacked By An Emaciated Man
After being captured, he was identified as Shoichi Yokoi, a Japanese WW2 soldier who had hid in the jungle for almost 30 years. When he landed back in Japan, he wept "I am ashamed that I have returned alive"
When Shoichi Yokoi was drafted into the Imperial Japanese Army in 1941, he and his fellow soldiers were taught "to prefer death to the disgrace of getting captured alive." So when American forces invaded Guam in 1944, Yokoi fled into the jungle to avoid becoming a prisoner of war. But although he saw the pamphlets dropped above the country announcing that World War 2 had come to an end a year later, he still refused to surrender. Instead, Yokoi spent the next 27 years living in an underground shelter he dug for himself, weaving clothing out of tree bark, and eating coconuts, frogs, eels, and rats. Then, in 1972, two hunters discovered him and turned him in to the authorities, who sent him back to Japan. Even nearly three decades after the war, Yokoi was ashamed that he'd been captured, telling the crowd gathered to greet him: "I have returned with the rifle the emperor gave me. I am sorry I could not serve him to my satisfaction." At the age of 56, Yokoi initially had trouble assimilating back into Japanese society, but he ultimately got married just nine months after returning home — and spent his honeymoon back in Guam.
Solomon Linda (1909-1962) Was A Black South African Musician Who Wrote And Recorded The Original Version Of The Song The Lion Sleeps Tonight In 1939
He sold the song rights for 10 shillings (less than $2), and he died virtually penniless, with his estate not seeing any royalties for decades.
After Olga Of Kiev's Husband Was M******d, She Went After The Culprits And Not Only Obliterated The Whole Family Through Ruse And Deceit, And Also Destroyed Their City
Doesn't tell half the story. Olga of Kyiv sought brutal revenge against the Drevlians for the murder of her husband, Igor, by tricking them into a bathhouse fire, burying their emissaries alive, and laying siege to their city, Iskorosten, from which she finally exacted payment in the form of pigeons which her soldiers then set ablaze to burn the city to the ground when they went home to roost.
In 1813, Future President Andrew Jackson Was Shot In The Arm In A Bar Fight Against Two Men, & Was Told It Would Have To Be Amputated
Jackson refused, seeking out the help of a Cherokee medicine man who successfully treated his arm. Decades later Jackson ruthlessly ethnically cleansed the Cherokee
In 1935, Professional Faster Albert Wolly Was On Public Display In A Glass Box To Go 30 Days Without Eating
On Day 12, a girl taunted him by waving an eclair in front of him, causing him to go insane and smash his way out.
Between 1978 And 1980, A Frenchman Named Michel Lotito Consumed An Entire Cessna 150 Aircraft, Having Discovered At The Age Of Nine That His Stomach Could Digest Metal
A Silent Film About The Titanic Was Made In 1912, Just 29 Days After It Sank
The film starred Dorothy Gibson, an actress who had survived the sinking. To add to the film's authenticity, she wore the same clothes that she had worn on the night of the disaster.
So using disasters for publicity and personal gain is not a new thing - good to know.
In 1898, During Kaiser Wilhelm II's Visit To The Ottoman Empire, He Was Deeply Appalled By The Shabby State Of Medieval Islamic Conqueror Saladin's Tomb
Germany's final emperor was so moved that he fully funded the restoration of his mausoleum, personally donating a marble sarcophagus in his honor.
In 1935, An Extremely Drunk Mongolian Socialist Leader Peljidiin Genden Slapped Joseph Stalin So Hard He Broke His Pipe
Stalin & Genden had fallen out over Stalin's insistence on eradicating Buddhism from Mongolia, with Genden once remarking "On earth there are two great geniuses, Buddha & Lenin"
When She Was 23, Rosemary Kennedy, The Sister Of Jfk And Rfk, Had A Forced Lobotomy Arranged By Her Father. The Surgery Left Her Incapacitated For The Rest Of Her Life
When He Was Only 14 Years Old, Future Mongolian Conqueror Genghis Khan Stalked And M******d His Half Brother Behter Over A Piece Of Stolen Food. His Mother Reportedly Scolded Him Severely
When his son Uday was only 11 years old, Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein took him to witness enemies of the Ba'ath being tortured. Such experiences supposedly had a profound effect on young Uday, who grew up to the one of the most ruthless, feared men of Saddam's government
Irma Grese, A Notorious N**i Concentration Camp Guard During World War II, Gained Infamy For Her Brutal Conduct, Leading To Numerous Accusations
Known as the "Hyena of Auschwitz" and later as the "Witch of Bergen-Belsen," Grese's reputation was marked by extreme cruelty and sadistic behavior.
After The Death Of His Friend, Alexander The Great Organized A Contest “To Determine Who Could Drink The Greatest Quantity Of Unmixed Wine”
According to Chares of Mytilene, 35 people died before midnight, and a further 6 from various complications in the days that followed.
In The Late 19th Century, When Mexican Dictator Porfirio Diaz Was Building Mexico's First Train System, He Had A Railway Constructed Specifically To Take Him To His Mistresses' Estate
Us President Harry Truman Was Known For Starting Every Day By Doing A Shot Of Bourbon, Which He Called His "Morning Medicine"
Despite this, Truman was not known for being an alcoholic, and did not drink to excess throughout the day
It's ironic that the USA now has a Secretary of Defence who does the same dang thing, although he is frequently described as being "a bit of an alcoholic."
In 1907, Jesús García Saved The Entire Town Of Nacozari De García By Driving A Burning Train Full Of Dynamite Six Kilometres (3.7 Miles) Away Before It Can Explode
They forgot the part where the man died a hero because he gave his life to get it away from town before it exploded, killing him.
Sometimes History’s Most Legendary Criminals Were Also The Worst
The Memorial To Heroic Self-Sacrifice In London England
It opened in 1900 and and commemorates the ordinary people who died saving the lives of others and who might otherwise have been forgotten. It has 54 tablets. A new one was added in 2009, the first in 78 years.
Taffy Iv, A Regimental Goat Of The British Army
He was on active duty in France during World War I, participating in the Retreat from Mons, the First Battle of Ypres and other famous battles. In 1914, he was awarded a medal; the 1914 star.
The Royal Welsh Regiment who still have a goat mascot with the rank of Lance Corporal. Thw tradition started with Queen Victoria. The goats are Kashmiri goats from the royal herd. The goat is selected from the herd that live on the Great Orme. They also get a bottle of Guinness a day.
Union (Left) And Confederate (Right) Veterans Meet For The Battle Of Gettysburg's 50th Anniversary In 1913
Despite official concerns "that there might be unpleasant differences," the peaceful reunion was repeatedly marked by events of Union-Confederate camaraderie.
The Roman Emperor Nero Found A Boy Named Sporus, Who Looked Like His Deceased Wife, So He Had Him Castrated, Put In Female Attire, And Made His Entire Court Play Along
In 1922, A Young Michigan Woman Was Thrown Out Of College For Smoking A Cigarette Despite There Being No Specific Rule Against It
Her case made it the state Supreme Cort, who backed the school and praised them for supporting "lady-like" behavior.
Meanwhile, male students were freely permitted to smoke at the school.
During the Great Plague of London in the 1600s, it was mistakenly believed that tobacco smoke protected against the "miasmas," or bad air, that supposedly caused the disease. This led to a brief, but documented, period during which smoking was made compulsory for students at Eton College. Students who refused to smoke were publicly flogged.
Colonel Sanders Had A Kind Of Depressing And Harsh Life Before He Became The Chicken King
Forced to be the man of his house at 5, he failed at making anything of a short stint in the army, had a ton of bad luck with work, and his first wife left him and took the kids, thinking him a failure.
It’s funny cos, we all know and love colonel. But I would not be able to tell you who his wife’s name was 😂 or anyone else who deemed him a failure
Circa 1992 - I Decided To See What War Was Truly Like. At 21 I Made A Fake Press Pass For A Fake Newspaper And Pretended To Be A Real Journalist
I was too dumb to understand the risks and too convincing to be denied. The UN put me on an aid flight out of Zagreb into the besieged Sarajevo.
In 1888, Vincent Van Gogh Cut His Left Ear With A Razor. He Was Taken To The Hospital, Where He Was Treated By Dr Felix Rey
Van Gogh painted a portrait of Rey and gave it to him. Rey was not fond of it used it to repair a chicken coop, then gave it away. In 2016, it was valued at over $50 million.
Humans Are Not The Only Animals That Go To War. In The 1970s, Two Groups Of Chimpanzees Fought A Prolonged Conflict, Famously Known As The Gombe Chimpanzee War, Which Lasted Four Years
Charles Darwin’s Walking Stick Was Made Of Whale Bone And Looked Like A Super Villain’s Cane
Brenda Spencer Shot Up An Elementary School At Age 16, K**ling Two And Injuring Eight Children And A Cop. When Questioned Why She Did It, She Simply Said, "I Don't Like Mondays"
🎶 The silicon chip inside her head - Gets switched to overload - And nobody's gonna go to school today - She's gonna make them stay at home 🎶 😥
In 1971, John List M******d His Entire Family, Claiming It Was To Save Their Souls
After carefully arranging their bodies in sleeping bags, he methodically cleaned the scene, removed himself from family photographs, turned on a religious radio station, and vanished.
"List assumed a new identity, remarried, and eluded justice for nearly 18 years. He was finally apprehended in Virginia on June 1, 1989, after the story of his murders was broadcast on the television program America's Most Wanted. After extradition to New Jersey, he was convicted on five counts of first degree murder and sentenced to five consecutive terms of life imprisonment, making him ineligible for parole for nearly 125 years. List gave critical financial problems, as well as his perception that his family members were straying from their religious faith, as his motivations for the murders. He believed that killing them would assure their souls a place in heaven."
In The 1930s, Carl Tanzler Developed An Obsession With Elena De Hoyos, A Woman 32 Years His Junior. Two Years After She Died, He Dug Up Her Corpse And Kept It In His Bed For Seven Years
While Traveling Through Present-Day Arizona In 1851, Most Of Olive Oatman's Family Was Clubbed To Death By The Yavapai
The 13-year-old girl was captured and sold to the Mohave, who she lived with for the next 4 years as a tribeswoman called 'oach'
In 1955 Dominican dictator Rafael Trujillo fired & almost executed two-dozen of his most high ranking officials, including two senators, simply for failing to reprimand a speaker who forgot to praise Trujillo during his remarks at a minor celebratory dinner thrown in honor of a local lawyer.
The Chainsaw Was Originally Invented To Assist In Childbirth By Cutting Through The Pelvises Of Mothers Who Struggled To Deliver Their Babies
This procedure, known as a symphysiotomy, was often performed without anesthesia on fully awake mothers.
During World War II, The Japanese Government Used “Ohkas”, A Type Of Small Rocket-Powered Aircraft That Reached Up To ~600 Mph, To Conduct Kamikaze Missions
700 Japanese pilots lost their life, yet the missions were only able to sink 3 American ships and damage a total of 7
Same thing was thought after in Germany for manned V1 rockets - plans were discarded as a german life was considered too valuable to be thrown away for something rather ineffective
During A Meeting Called By Holy Roman Emperor Henry Vi In 1184, The Second Floor Of A Cathedral Collapsed
60 German nobles died when they fell through the first floor into the latrine cesspit below. Many died drowning in what was called the Erfurt Latrine Disaster
Budd Dwyer, A Former Treasurer Of Pennsylvania, Ended His Life By Shooting Himself On Live Television. Marilyn Manson Later Sampled The Audio For Get Your Gunn
Serial K****r Albert Fish Would Embed Needles Into His Groin And Abdomen. After His Arrest, X-Rays Revealed That He Had At Least 29 Needles Lodged In His Pelvic Region
I love that right under your question is 3 of those "work" bots' posts. Really highlights your point, VibingShark 👍
Load More Replies...The loss of sunlight sounds like a neuclear winter. ?? Result of a asteroid strike somewhere??
I love that right under your question is 3 of those "work" bots' posts. Really highlights your point, VibingShark 👍
Load More Replies...The loss of sunlight sounds like a neuclear winter. ?? Result of a asteroid strike somewhere??
