35 strange and entertaining facts from the Weird History account that history lovers will appreciate
By Pictolic https://pictolic.com/article/35-strange-and-entertaining-facts-from-the-weird-history-account-that-history-lovers-will-appreciate.htmlThe account "Strange Story" on Twitter recently turned ten years old, but, to the delight of 177 thousand subscribers, the flow of interesting and funny facts does not dry up. And it's good, because there is never much knowledge! Here is a selection of fresh historical facts that will help you show off your erudition in a circle of friends.
During the Great Smog in London in 1952, blind people helped sighted people walk home because they could find their way blindly.
A dagger to repel an attack. He was held in his left hand to repel the blows of the sword, and the right was attacked at this time.
Photo of barricades on the streets of Paris during the revolution in France in 1848
Children's leather shoes from Ancient Rome
Mussolini's Fascist headquarters, 1934
Because of the embargo, there are more 1950s cars left in Cuba than anywhere else
Folding globe of 1852
The 1000-year-old Ki-gompa Monastery in India, located at an altitude of 4,166 meters above sea level
During communion, priests say the words "Hoc est corpus meum" (this is My Body) in order to "turn" bread into the body of Christ - hence the expression "hocus pocus"
Helmet with protective mask worn by riders of the elite Roman cavalry
The man who invented garden gnomes hoped that in this way he would be able to attract real gnomes and invite them to tea
The ancient Egyptians caught criminals with the help of trained baboons
Leonard Nimoy has written two autobiographies: "I am not Spock" and "I am Spock"
Hannah Stilly was born in 1746, and this picture was taken in 1840. It is believed that she was born earlier than any other person who has ever been photographed.
This is an ostracon - a shard on which the ancient Greeks wrote the names of people they wanted to expel
The place where Gaius Julius Caesar was killed now serves as a shelter for cats
The morning after the abolition of Prohibition in the United States, 1933
Monocycle, 1931: it's a pity that it didn't catch on!
Black cats in line to audition in Hollywood, 1961
Dogs are not allowed to enter Selwyn College in Cambridge, so the Basset Hound Yo-yo is considered a "very big cat."
A telephone tower in Stockholm before the Swedes sorted out the wires: 5000 lines in the photo, 1890.
Medieval armor in the form of a bird, Prague Castle
Until the 20th century, boys were dressed in pink clothes, and girls - in blue
In India, these blades were attached to the tusks of war elephants going on the attack
3000-year-old axe with dragons from ancient China
Stairs in Europe's oldest 4,000-year-old palace (Knossos Palace in Crete).
In 2010, Iran banned the haircut "mallet".
In the XIX century, cyclists were warned that they could develop a "bicycle face": bulging eyes and a prominent chin
Shepherds in some parts of France used to wear stilts to keep an eye on their flocks and not get their feet wet in the swamps
A bag for books from medieval Italy. It looks like a backpack of a schoolboy who is fond of heavy metal
A smoke break during the Tour de France cycling race, 1920
One of the first fighter pilots, Turkish pilot Sabiha Gokcen, 1937.
What flight booking looked like before the advent of computers, 1945.
Alexander von Humboldt learned a language that was declared dead 40 years ago from a parrot that still knew some words.
Former US Secretary of State Colin Powell took selfies 60 years before it became fashionable.
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