Some of the most exciting stories you’ll ever hear are those that come straight out of history books. But sadly, the way these tales are often delivered tends to bore us to tears or leave us snoring through our lessons. So if you’re interested in taking your understanding of history into your own hands, we’ve got the perfect list for you, pandas.
Below, you’ll find photos of some of the most fascinating moments from the past couple centuries that have been captured on film, courtesy of the Incredible History Instagram account. Enjoy scrolling through this virtual blast from the past, and keep reading to find a conversation with Luke Rosa, teacher and creator of Students of History!
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Iran, 1979 - Thousands Of Iranian Women Protesting On The Streets Against Prospects Of Mandating Hijab
This is such a sad picture, knowing all of those women lost the freedoms they were accustomed to and became little more than property
True, but it is also worth recognising that some women wear the hijab or niqab by choice, and they feel that it empowers them and is an action of religious piety. The real issue is when people are forced to do something, and otherwise oppressed. The western world is too quick to assume that the hijab equals oppression.
Load More Replies...Exactly. Many condemn Iran for what religious nationalism has turned them into as they walk in Iran's footseps, choking on their own condemnations.
You don't understand. Islam is the wrong religion to impose. The religion they want to impose is the correct religion, so it's a completely different thing. (eyeroll)
Load More Replies...This is so devastating that so many people protested and were completely disregarded, frightening to see it happen in so many other places, like sadly my country :(
The history of women. So often ignored, cheated out of their rights or simply kept in their ‘place’ with platitudes and propaganda about ‘tradition’.
Load More Replies...Along the same lines as what the religious right has in mind for American women.
So many women are repressed in patriarchal societies, treated as possessions, with little to no rights. It’s disgusting! We still have so far to go. Femicide, physical abuse, rape, human trafficking.
650 American Officers And Enlisted Men Paying Tribute To More Than 8 Million Horses, Mules And Donkeys That Died In Service In The World War I
It’s disgusting. The poor animals, used and abused by humans.
Load More Replies...Animals have lost EVERY war. Just a few days ago I saw footage of german tanks in early WW2, carrying a piglet on the front that they seem to have ... well, acquired, they say in these cases ... somewhere on the way. For sure, not a joyride, but way too terrifying to jump down over the chains and stuff while going three times as fast as a pig can and ending up inside the tank crews' stomach ... sure, wasn't a joylife anyway, but still. Grandpa told me, of very few things from WW2, that they one time started to tear apart a dying horse whose rear half was frozen like solid ice, while it was still breathing and dying of exhaustion and freezing. A disgusting thaught, a disgusting six years. A horse is a motorcycle that can navigate home with unconscious driver, a heated bed, a friend and mate - and, eventually, it's dead, now ingest your dearest friend, the only one who neither is a murderer (... german side...) nor shoots at you you have seen in months, and, now, eat it! At least, they're remembered. Don't serve them any either, but it has an impact on our view on how hideous our relation to other animals truly is. A disposable friend. Reliable carrier. Takes YOUR shots, not the other way. Is injured or killed on the behalf of the dude atop. The Wehrmacht displayed itself a lot more modern than it was, especially in large numbers. There were tanks, airplanes, submarines, all that - but the major bulk, in the first two, three, years, were horse-drawn cannons, infantry on their feet etc. Glad that technology outdated the use of many of these animals in war. It NEVER is their war, it ALWAYS is ours alone, but we drag them into the battlefield, abuse them to death and beyond. We, we humans, we do suck a lot, don't we?
We abuse them so horrifically in so many ways. It’s truly heartbreaking.
Load More Replies...I'm sure all the horses and donkeys that survived really appreciated this picture
I think they were all invited to a banquet. Then, afterwards, a tour of the memorial slaughterhouse.
Load More Replies...Can't imagine the trauma these animals go through at the behest of humans...😢 it is so wrong how people exploit them just because they can't fight back.
This shouldn't have happened in the first place. Animals need to be left out of things like war.
Shavarsh Karapetyan, An Armenian Finswimmer(10-Time World Record Holder), Who Saved Lives Of 20 Drowning Passengers In A Sinking Trolleybus Which Fell Of A Bridge Into The Yerevan Lake
He absolutely did! He dove down over 90 feet in cold, sewage filled water with no visibility over 20 times. He ended up hospitalized for 45 days with pneumonia and sepsis, and the damage to his lungs prevented him from ever competing in swimming again. He never was bitter about it though. He really is a true hero!
Load More Replies...Finally, some hope left in humanity. Good men are good not because they are born good but because they make good choices and try to help humanity. - me
He's not a soldier. He was an athlete who ended his own career when he saved all of those people. He got so sick from the nasty water they were in he ended up hospitalized and unable to compete anymore.
Load More Replies...You can tell he must be very fit to wear all that metal in front ;-)
The Incredible History Instagram account has made quite an impact on the platform, as it has shared over 2,350 posts and amassed an impressive 41.6k followers. The account’s bio states, “Nihil novi sub sole,” meaning “there is nothing new under the sun” in Latin, and notes that the page is for sharing history, stunning places and interesting facts. So if you pandas need to brush up your knowledge of historical events, or need a reminder of why learning about history is so important, Incredible History has got you covered.
To learn more about why we should all be interested in history, we reached out to Luke Rosa, teacher and creator of Students of History. Luke was kind enough to have a chat with Bored Panda and share what inspired him to become a history teacher in the first place, as well as why he's so passionate about the subject.
A 9000-Year Old Skeleton Was Found In A Cave Near Cheddar, England, And Nicknamed "Cheddar Man"
His dna was tested and it was concluded that his living relative, a history professor, is living a 1/2 of a mile away from the cave, tracing back 300 generations to each other
This tickles me pink every time I see it. And a history professor is the cherry on top
If he doesn't take up residence in the ancestral cave or at least demand the deed im going to be very disappointed.
Load More Replies...I expect in another 9,000 years I will make it to the grocers.
Load More Replies...And they do make darned good cheddar in Cheddar. Though, for everyday eating you can't beat a nice bit of Lancashire.
Load More Replies...I reckon that's because they've borrowed the guy's eyes for the reconstruction.
Load More Replies...If the early inhabitants of the British Isles were darker skinned, that adds a new spin to the Fair Folk, or Fairies legends. They had to have been pretty surprised to see a white person for the first time. Were the Scandinavians lighter skinned 9000 years ago? It seems like White people evolved in colder regions. It's interesting to consider some myths and legends might have a kernel of truth.
Were the fae considered light skinned though? What about Brownies? Grateful for any insight you may have, as I want to learn morw
Load More Replies...The fact that they even resemble each other is just.. it blows my mind every time I see this picture, even though I've seen it dozens of times.
Without meaning to spoil the magic a bit, it's worth noting that anyone from 9000yrs ago who had multi0le children would more than likely have a collossal number of direct descendants. For example, if you are a Caucasian Europesn, it's overwhelmingly likely you descend from at least one European monarch pre-dating 1000AD. What was interesting in this case was they nabaged to natch the DNA from such a relatively tiny sample size. But that also illustrates my point.
Remains Of An Ancient Roman City Of Timgad In The Aures Mountains Of Algeria
Two things stand out to me: proof the Romans really did love their columns, and wow, more evidence that they really knew how to build roads that last. They are still not overgrown!
The Roman Empire sure was a big deal, wasn't it? Bet they thought they could never come to an end. America, pay attention!
They were so powerful, so organized. Then they just fell apart and faded away.
Internal political conflict...Democracies end...The Republic is what stands...sound familiar?
Load More Replies...A Shepherd From The Village Of Kınalık With His Children, Azerbaijan, 1970's
I was also thinking this gives strong 3-raccoons-in-a-trenchcoat vibes.
Load More Replies...The top one is just another kid with a mustache and wig on. Classic Little Rascals stacking.
“I wanted to help make learning history fun for all kids,” Luke shared. I felt like there was too much memorizing of dates and facts and not enough appreciation for the amazing stories from the past. I also saw it as a way to bring people together. Learning about diverse cultures helps kids see how alike we are and also to appreciate the accomplishments of others.”
And as far as why we should all care about history, Luke says it’s about much more than memorizing facts. “It’s about understanding who we are,” he told Bored Panda. “World History introduces kids to the rich diversity of world culture and fosters empathy and respect for those of different backgrounds. US History helps kids evaluate sources, analyze evidence, and think critically. And my US Government classes help students understand the importance of rights and freedoms and how to be an active and responsible citizen.”
The Arkadiko Bridge, A Mycenaean Bridge Near The Modern Road From Tiryns To Epidauros On The Peloponnese, Greece. Dating To The Greek Bronze Age, It Is One Of The Oldest Arch Bridges Still In Existence And Use Today And The Oldest Preserved Bridge In Europe
If only that bridge could talk, what amazing stories it would tell!
"I've been trying to reach you about your chariot's extended warranty"
Load More Replies...Wikipedia reports the Greek Bronze Age as spanning 700 years, from 1750BC TO 1050BC. That bridge is at least 3000 years old...
If only we, with all that modern technology we have, could build bridges that last half as long...
Load More Replies...I want to crawl into the cave under it. Probably nothing but dirt but I still want to do it.
I've got to admit, that did make me think that I now understand how myths about trolls living under bridges started. It's a cosy little den.
Load More Replies...It'd look a lot cooler without the car tho. But it's crazy how it withstood the test of time tho.
I don't know, I think the car makes its point. Not only is the bridge still in use, it's sturdy enough for modern transport.
Load More Replies...You might find that some outer ones have been replaced over the years - dry stone walls need occasional upkeep, and I can't imagine a dry stone bridge being any different. But the inner stones - why not.
Load More Replies...Kind of poetic if the car in the photo is a Ferrari, Porsche or Mustang (each having a horse as part of their logo).
Polish Border Guard And His Horse Drinking Water From The Stream In The Bieszczady Mountains During A Patrol, 1980
Bieszczady, one of the wildest and most beautiful places in Poland
I'm going there in 3 weeks, I am so blessed that we always spend beginning of October there <3
Load More Replies...Horse is probably thinking it's too polite to shrink away from sharing the water with a stinky human
The polish cavalry is hard to surpass. And their arab horse breeding program epitomized the breed. A stark contrast to today’s show arabians.
I have a Polish/Egyptian cross (old pedigree). She's mentally sound, not flighty, athletic and agile like a ballerina. She never puts a foot down wrong and is unlike any Arabian anyone I've met in the horse world over the past 10 years has known. I attribute this to her Polish side because her mom was all that I've described. I feel bad for most of the Arabs in America of today. They all seem so... Scared and out of their minds. Nor could they run across the desert all day in battle with their disfigured heads.
Load More Replies...for a moment it looked like it was just a horse head and no neck! i got so confused
Makes me feel reeeeeeeaaaalllyyyy old that this post considers “history” as the 1970’s and 1980’s. 😬
Princess Elizabeth At 19 Years Of Age Is Seen In The Auxiliary Territorial Service In The 1945, During World War II
Say what you want about the Queen but she was cast iron. She said on her 21st birthday that "my life whether it be long or short will be devoted to your service." She certainly kept that promise.
If there's a Heaven, you know she was reunited with all the Corgis she buried.
Load More Replies...An amazing individual. Who can think of another individual who has grown, adapted, and tried to be a decent caring leader over so many decades? Regardless if you are a supporter of the royals or not, she really was an incredible human
In norway that "L" would stand for student-driver, and if that is true here too then this picture becomes quite endearing.
It is now my head canon that Princess Leia's hair in New Hope was inspired by Princess Elizabeth's in this picture.
We were also curious if Luke is partial to any particular moments or events in history. “I love so much of History!” he shared. “For World History, I love teaching about Ancient Egypt. It’s so mysterious and a unit kids love to explore. In US History, I love teaching the Civil Rights Movement. It’s a living example of how society can transform for the better and an opportunity to help students understand the struggles of marginalized communities.”
Paris, France, 1890
Picture is of the Exposition Universelle, which was attended by more than 2,000,000 people.
This beautiful scene is a view of the Exposition Universelle, May to November 1889. This was when the Eiffel Tower was opened.
I’m always amazed that women of those times wore clothes that dragged along the dirty pavements.
True! Not only that, but all the elegant clothes in general for people without air conditioning! Modern people have far more comforts and conveniences, like air conditioning, washers and dryers in our homes, etc. and we dress so casually almost all the time. You'd think it would be the other way around, honestly!
Load More Replies...My grandmother's favorite city. In her final days she claimed I was born there. (I was born in Toronto.) Bless your heart, Granny, and RIP.
All the buildings in this picture were temporary building for a World Expo (not the bridges obviously, but ALL the others, no exception :-) )
This looks like it was around the time of the World’s Fair.
"Mother's Eyes" The Bedouin Mother; Photograph By Ilo Battigeli, 1948
I think the Bedouins are some of the hardiest people on this planet, surviving in the hostile environments they manage to live in...
Bedouin are amazing people. I hope they can survive the modern age.
German And British Pilots Engaged In A Dogfight Above St Paul's Cathedral During The Battle Of Britain, London, 1940, World War II
If I see it isolated, I absolutely have to love the gechnology used there. But, unfortunately, I can't ONLY see it that way. German aircraft engines in WW2 had single-lever steering (throttle only, so to say, ignition, mix, compressor if present were regulated by a mechanical device on the pilot's behalf), direct injection, and some 5 liters more displacement. British had traditional carbs, but, as a german, I'm more than glad the British won, the German lost. Because the ideology of that time's germany shall lose anywhere, everywhere. But the Tech, the same the tech of today, of the USSR, China, and all our own Evil Empires, still, is technology that serves a purpose, and development during wartime often made it work better than prior... Radar would've been invented a lot later without the war, same with jet engines - story I love: Both main inventors from England (Whittle) and Germany (von Ohein) became friends later on, after the war. Cos we engineers gotta be role models! Who else?
"Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few." Winston Churchill
A lot of people would not understand how amazing this picture is.
One comment to the chemtrail crowd - As can be clearly seen from this photos. Gasoline combustion piston engines from 80 years ago product CONTRAILS, which are water vapor products from the burning of fossil fuels.
Luke also noted that social studies education is more important than ever. “Americans are blasted with a fire hose of information every day. Some is real, and much of it is not. In social studies, kids learn critical thinking and how to evaluate sources,” the educator explained. “This teaches kids how to discern facts from fiction and make informed decisions. At the same time, social studies connects kids with different cultures and fosters empathy. Lastly, history shows students the progress we’ve made in terms of civil rights, gender equality, and social justice, and hopefully inspires them to continue the fight for a better, more inclusive world.”
If you’d like to expand your own knowledge of history or improve your plans for teaching it to students, be sure to visit Luke’s website Students of History!
March 16, 1945: A U.S. Marine Approaches A Japanese Soldier On Iwo Jima, Japan During World War II
The Japanese soldier was buried for 1 1/2 days in this shell hole playing dead and ready with a live grenade inches away from his hand. The marines feared he might be further booby trapped underneath his body after knocking the grenade to the bottom of the shell hole. Promising no resistance, the prisoner is given a cigarette he asked for and was dragged free from the hole
Fanaticism and propaganda needlessly killed a lot of people. This one was lucky, though he might not have seen it that way at the time. I think a lot of Japanese were ashamed for not having died.
Hence kamikaze pilots. Dying for the cause was the pinnacle for their honour. Tragic all around.
Load More Replies...the last line is " and was dragged free from the hole."
Load More Replies...Actor Yul Brynner Arriving To The Premiere Of The Movie "The Ten Commandments" In His Mercedes 300 Sl Roadster, 1956
I found him really dashing and attractive. Loved the movie "The King and I".
In 1983, I was amazingly fortunate enough to take a school trip to see Mr. Brynner perform in The King and I in San Francisco at (IIRC) the Orpheum Theater. I was 14. Mr. Brynner was unparalleled. One of the highlights of my life. Two years later, he passed away due to lung cancer. RIP to this amazingly talented performer.
Load More Replies...Looks like the poster is telling him to park there. I had the extraordinary privilege of seeing him on stage in his last reprise of "The King and I". When I was in the Navy at Charleston, South Carolina, I took the train up to New York to see my brother and my aunt, and having some time to spare, I went to the USO (servicemen's lounge), to see if they had any free tickets for movies. No, but the lady advised me to go to the theater, show my military ID, and ask for a "single". $15 (1985), 6 rows from the stage, center. OH, WOW!
Being an gen x/y cusp, a "Xennial"... all I can think of is the reference in "One night in Bangkok" by Murray Head
I didn't realize this movie came out the year I was born. I don't remember when I actually saw it but I remember thinking how cruel a god be. It frightened me for years.
Activist Ben Masel Smokes A Joint While Voting In The 1976 Presidential Election Taking Advantage Of An Apparent Law That Prohibits Arrest While Voting
Living in a sate that marijuana is legal, and has been for about 10 years, I forget it used to be illegal and still is in some states (looking at you Idaho, Wyoming, Nebraska, Indiana, and North Carolina). Weed is by far less problematic that alcohol, and in states where it is fully legal, there are 25% less opioid related deaths than stated that marijuana is illegal. Not to mention The tax revenue it brings in! It is time the fed decriminalize it and stop putting people in jail for long a*s sentences over weed!
I live in nc. I don't mind if it ever becomes legal, but damn I wish some of these people would smoke it at home. That s**t stinks to high heaven. My sister smoked it for her migraines and I had to stay away sometimes because I can't stand the smell.
Load More Replies...Sorry, I know this is about freedoms, but surely there are more worthy freedoms to be fought for???
Aside from how fascinating it is to see images from World War II or a snowball fight in France in 1896, it’s actually important that we ensure history isn’t forgotten. According to University of the People, studying history is a key factor in understanding our world better. Systems that we may simply accept, such as governments and how societies function, can be understood by examining the past and how these structures came about in the first place.
We can also deepen our understanding of people and ourselves through studying history. Ever wonder why certain countries have such strong bonds or distaste for one another? Just look back in time, and you can clearly see how wars, occupations and alliances have bonded nations or torn them apart. And the impacts of these events can last long after they actually took place.
A Lone Dog Sits In Snow Next To A Column Of Retreating Italian Soldiers Near Stalingrad, Soviet Union, December 1942, World War II
The expected lifespan of a soldier during that battle was twenty-four hours. One and a half million soldiers died during the battle.
I hope it wasn't eaten. Almost everything left in Stalingrad was, including rats and children. A horrifying part of history. Work hard for peace every day, starting with yourself, then your nearest and dearest, then your neighbours.
Napoleon’s hubris couldn’t win a winter war against the Russian Bear. Hitler should’ve known that, and waited for spring. But the fight on the ground dragged on too long, and winter fell hard. He should’ve pulled his troops out before then, but didn’t. Real d**k move, as well as a boneheaded one.
it feels kind of sad to know, that this poor little fellow probably didn´t survive the strong winter in 1944!
Sadly, dogs, horses, wildlife, and farm animals are often caught up in warfare. They’re rarely counted as casualties. Indeed, human civilians are often only counted in estimates. When certain supposedly ‘prominent’ individuals state that only young men are casualties of war, they don’t include them.
Load More Replies...The Bridge To Nowhere
I’d like to see a documentary about how this bridge was constructed. I think it would be riveting.
Better educated architects had worked differently in 1426. Edirne, Uzunköprü: TFEk3vf.jpg
Goodyear’s Illuminated Tires - A Woman Adjusts Her Stocking Using The Light Emitted By The Goodyear Tire On An October Night In 1961
I believe they were a prototype and never made it into circulation. They look so cool though.
Dad joke warning: what's the difference between 365 tyres and 365 rubbers - one's Good Year and one's a great year - 🤣you were warned
They were AWFUL tires in absolutely every way, just neat looking.
Load More Replies...excuse me, would you mind removing the trophy doll ? i want to see the car
Seriously. I'm pretty well versed in cars, and I have no idea what that is, other than that it looks vaguely French.
Load More Replies...Can you try to shine them all directly into my rearview mirror?
Load More Replies...Looking back in time also helps us understand our own identities. The culture of any specific place or group of people likely took centuries to form, and it’s impossible to understand why your grandmother always prepares tamales on Christmas or why you celebrate Halloween in that way without learning the historical context. We can feel closer to our ancestors when we learn about their ways, and when we understand how traditions came about, we’re more likely to consider them significant and continue passing them along.
A Soldier Of The French Foreign Legion Holding The Dog "Fritz", The Battalion Mascot, At Bir Hakeim. Fritz "Moved Over To The Other Side" And Joined The Battalion In Narvik In 1940, And Stayed With Them Ever Since
The (Free) French Foreign Legionaires sacrificed themselves to hold back the German and Italians, giving the British time to fall back to stronger positions, similar to The French at Dunkirk. Berlin ordered any German-born among them to be executed if captured, but Rommel didn’t comply.
Stayed with them ever since - you mean he's still there?! These captions need some serious editing, the grammar is truly terrible!
They're from Instagram posts, I don't think there's anything Bored Panda can do about it
Load More Replies...The Coins That Saved A Soldier's Life- At The Beginning Of World War I
There's a few stories like this - men saved by flasks or Bibles (they're thick enough to slow down a bullet enough to stop it being fatal). I've never seen the coins before, though - that's amazing.
James Doohan (the original Scotty) was saved by his cigarette case during D-Day. Just as a good example. There's many, many more, but that's the one off the top of my head, it's easily searchable too for verification.
Load More Replies...To Protect It From Drying Out, A Worker Sprays Water Onto A Millennia-Old Chariot Recently Unearthed In The City Of Luoyang In Central China
Another way you can learn more about history that An Historian About Town recommends is doing things the old fashion way: actually going to the library. She explains that many public libraries actually offer talks and presentations from authors, professors, politicians, artists, historians and more that can quickly teach you a bit about anything at all! If you’re not even sure where to start or which topics interest you, it can be great to simply see what information is available and dive into whatever piques your interest.
The Cockpit Of An American B-24 Bomber From The 392nd Bomb Squadron Of The 30th Bomb Group, Damaged By A Japanese Anti-Aircraft Shell On January 27, 1945, During A Sortie To Bombard Iwo Jima
The projectile badly damaged the instrument panel, the co-pilot and the navigator of the bomber were injured by shrapnel, but miraculously the pilot managed to return the aircraft to base
Those old birds were tough. A lot of instances of them flying home with holes in them you could crawl through.
The aiming computers were completely mechanical. They found out they were actually more accurate when the plane was in the air because of the vibrations. It's the basis of a technique known as dithering, which is a way of making a low quality image better by intentionally introducing "noise" to an image.
Load More Replies...He weighed to odds of getting back alive against ditching and possibly ending up either dead or in a Japanese POW camp, which would’ve been worse than death. Personally, I’d at least try to get home, even if I died somewhere along the way. Kudos to the crew for getting a badly damaged plane back home.
My dad was a navigator/bombardier out of Italy in those. The Norden bombsight was both a mechanical computer and autopilot, though the bombardier had to do a .ot of calculations to feed into it. I was told at an air museum they had to take an oath to destroy it before bailing out to prevent the technology from being captured. My dad was a bad a*s, though I never knew it.
My Grandpa was sent to bombardier school out West. He was transferred so quickly, he kept his flight jacket. There but for Glenn Miller's bands go my family. Glad your dad survived!
Load More Replies...B-17s usually took damage like that and came home. B-24s, not so much. This crew was very lucky indeed.
Just put the aircraft in a bed of rice and it should be ready to fly again in the morning...
J. Robert Oppenheimer With Albert Einstein At The Institute For Advanced Study, 1947
When this pic was taken, Albie was explaining to JR his preferred method for drawing a stick man.
Einstein: "It will be enormous! Beyond the imagination of man" Oppenheimer: "What's this bit here?" Einstein: "That will be the water slide. It will have a wave pool and a big heated outdoor pool and..."
Jordanian Brides Wearing Full-Face Veils Seen Waiting Patiently For Their Mass Wedding Ceremony
This largest ever mass wedding ceremony in Jordan brought together 48 couples in a ceremony funded by islamist Charity group which covers all expenses for couples who cannot afford to pay for their wedding. Amman, Jordan, 1999
Well, that's the reason why religious Christians and Jews still wear a wedding veil - as a nod to the confusion between Leah and Rachel. That's why we lift the veil up to check (of course it also serves as a modesty thing). Not sure if that's also the case here - I think it's probably more of a modesty thing. But ultimately, whether or not you get the right bride is all in the hands of the bride's father, who gets to put the veil down before "handing her over" to her husband. Yuck. That's why I refused to wear a veil at my wedding - I think we've moved on.
Load More Replies...It's uncomfortable, yeah. Though, from their perspective, a legitimate marriage is their gateway to a decent life... I hope it is for all of these ladies.
Load More Replies...I think it's sweet that if not for the charity group non of them would be able to afford to get married. Mass ceremony or not, they want to be there.
OMG...WHY DO PPL DOWNVOTE!!! AND DONT SAY NOTHING!!! I WILL UPVOTE YOU, AND APPLAUD U 👏 👏👏👏
Load More Replies..."Now Khaled, remember that I'm the one under the REALLY long veil. I'm not under the shorter ones"
😳 😳 😳 they look like they're awaiting ex😳cution...idk, they don't even appear to be looking at each other or talking or showing much joy about this mass wedding ceremony ...😳😕 I just see a room of sadness
If you do know which time periods or events interest you the most when it comes to the world’s history, then you can certainly find books, podcasts, documentaries and more on those topics. Learning about history can be much more fun when you get to decide what you want to know, and becoming curious about a topic will likely lead you down a rabbit hole of learning more and more. It doesn’t matter where you start, just pick up some fun facts and you’ll certainly be able to impress your friends with interesting knowledge any day now!
A Fake Tree Used As An Observation Post And Sniper Nest On The Frontline By The British Army During World War I
Yes, cosy. Apart from the whistling sound of artillery spelling imminent death or mutilation, and the guttering screams of people dying from poison gas.
Load More Replies...The Keebler Elves gave up their bakery for the love of their country.
Bahaha! So THAT'S why all the fudge stripes disappeared.
Load More Replies...More convincing than the pretend trees to hide phone masts, thankfully!
You know, that was the first thing I thought of. How could they do a better job a century ago than we can do now?
Load More Replies...German soldier using binoculars"Damn! Ze trees arund here frow very fast ya?"
A 1960's Coca Cola Advertisment Made By Spreading Grain For Pigeons In St. Mark's Square, Venice, Italy
No, I haven't, please share. I'd love to hear all about it.
Load More Replies...Only regular. Cherry Coke > Cherry Pepsi tho.
Load More Replies...From now on this is the only format in which I will accept advertising.
I'm actually more amazed by the fact that you can see the square, instead of having it obscured by thousands of tourists
It is now illegal - and costly! - to feed the pigeons in St. Mark's Square.
Mugshot And Fingerprints Of Benito Mussolini, Bern, Switzerland, 1903
and this gleam of intelligence in the gaze, completely absent
Load More Replies...Named after Mexican president Benito Juarez, who’d redistributed land to the peasants. Mussolini started out as a radical socialist. He ended up a fascist, and the only thing Mexican he resembled was a pinata.
I hadn't realised he's so short, 169,2 cm. What is it with short men & violence?
It's like with dogs - smaller dogs tend to be a lot louder to compensate their height
Load More Replies...I don't know why he was arrested, but it just shows that the Swiss have always been good judges of character.
according to Wikipeadia : "In 1903, he was arrested by the Bernese police because of his advocacy of a violent general strike, spent two weeks in jail, and was deported to Italy. After he was released there, he returned to Switzerland. He was arrested again in Geneva and expelled for falsifying his papers."
Load More Replies...Reminds me of another one - recently indicted--
Load More Replies...Have you learned something new about our world through scrolling through these photos, pandas? We hope they’ve provided you with a different perspective on a certain time or place, and remember to keep upvoting the ones that deserve to be seen by everyone. Feel free to share in the comments what some of your favorite historical moments are, and then if you’re interested in checking out another Bored Panda article, we recommend this one featuring images of some of the darkest moments in history.
Last Sword Duel In History In France, 1967, Between The Mayor Of Marseille -Gaston Defferre, And Another Member Of French Parliament, Rene Ribière
Gaston Defferre won. For the story, Defferre was speaking at the parliament and Ribière keeped interrupting him. Defferre told him "S**t up m**ron". As he didn't want to apologize, Ribière challenged him in duel and Defferre choose the swords, a weapon that he knew very well unlike his rival. Nobody died or was severely injured. But Defferre said that, as he knew Ribière will get married the next day, he aimed at his crotch to waste his wedding night. You can take a look at this duel here : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e68nuAcSuWQ&t=3s
Load More Replies...Bring back legitimized dueling. It's a better alternative to mass shootings.
There's always the chance there could be another one. This is the most recent sword duel, but not necesarily the last. Thank you for your attention in this not-at-all-important bit of pedantry.
Fighting is so stupid. It doesn't prove who's right, only who's the better fighter, or who happened to be lucky that day. That has nothing to do with the original issue.
"Last duel"? What about all the fencing tournaments all around the world? Including the Olympics.
This is how we should political debates in the US. I bet more people would watch!
The U.S. Pacific Fleet Seen Positioning For Battle During The Marshall Islands Campaign, 1944, World War II
American Pilot Robert L. Brown Of Denver, Colorado, Poses In The Cockpit Of An F6f Hellcat Aboard The Uss Yorktown (Cv-10) Aircraft Carrier With “Scrappy,” The Ship’s Mascot, November-December 1943, In Pacific, World War II
It’s a cute photo but it’s kinder to let dogs stay at home than it is to bring them to war. Calling them “heroes” later doesn’t make it ok.
Load More Replies...That’s what the five flags mean so that makes him an ace.
Load More Replies...I have toured the Yorktown which is now a museum in Charleston Harbor. It's humongous.
Right before they bombed the c**p out of Japan? Yeah, it ended WW2. But, not something to be cheery about.
Go read "The Chrysanthemum and The Sword." Then discuss that war's end
Load More Replies...111 Football Games Played At Hackney Marshes, London, United Kingdom In 1962
Just imagine running late to the game, not knowing where the pitch is you have to go to, and parking way over the other side.
I live near to Hackney Marsh, it's always been famous for football, looks very different nowadays.
what happens when you accidentally kick the ball into a whole other game? xP
Gosh, I know when my daughter plays in volleyball tournaments, it causes quite an issue when balls from other games end up in the middle of other courts. But in volleyball you can stop the play and just replay it again. Can't imagine what they'd do here... can't just blow the whistle every time someone kicks the ball out of bounds.
My dad used to be down there playing footie every Saturday in the 1950s
About 80 I think nowadays. It was as many as 120 in the '60s. Ironically, a number of pitches were lost to re-landscape the vicinity for the 2008 Olympics!
Load More Replies...The Crew Of British Hm Submarine ‘Unison’ Display Their ‘Jolly Roger’ At Devonport, Plymouth, Having Returned From A Successful 16 Months In The Mediterranean. 1943, World War II
I did 5 years on a nuclear sub. People think I was brave for that. These diesel boat guys were a different breed though. They were brave and maybe slightly crazy too. Also those boats were much smaller that modern ones
We toured WW II submarine and besides being very cramped (especially the 3-tier bunk beds sized like a coffin), what shocked me those men had two outfits for 6 months stint on the submarine and no laundry facilities.
Load More Replies...Agfa and Kodak commercialised color films as early as the mid 30's. But this picture is in fact a colorised version of a B/W original.
Load More Replies...Drive-In Theater, Los Angeles, 1949
I have one about an hour from me, and it is SO MUCH FUN. I saw the new Indiana Jones there. It rained on us the entire time, but I would still go again.
Load More Replies...The man who took this, J.R. Eyerman, was a pioneering photographer. Used remote triggers to capture nuke tests in Nevada. Developed a deep sea camera. And made some of the fist color pics of the aurora borealis.
Mine is 10 minutes away .... same it's been a hot minute since I've gone.
Load More Replies...West Wind Drive-in they are in a few states with a few locations in each!
When the pandemic was going strong, a drive in would have been busy, minus the snack bar
It was a dollar night at the drive in. We had 11 of us in that car.
Portus, Roman Empire's Imperial Port, As It Would Have Appeared In The Past Compared To Today. The Port Was Established By Emperor Claudius, And Enlarged By Emperor Trajan, To Supplement The Nearby Port Of Ostia
The harbor was once directly on the Tiber, but is now several kilometers inland.
It's also related to the word for gateway, so there's a bit more implied. Plus, it relates the idea that this is THE port, the most important one, the one that matters most in the empire, just as they named their first province outside of italy "Provincia" or "the Province" (still called Provence today). Many others followed, but that was the first.
Load More Replies...Painter Marc Monnier Paints A Canvas On The Front During The Gulf War In October 1991, Kuwait
It's an oil fire, so he probably has time to do a few more paintings
Load More Replies...My husband was there fighting. He was in the french foreign legion.
Japanese Samurai, 1870's
read up on "yasuke", the only black/african samurai warrior. he was a servant to a jesuit priest in japan in the late/early 1580s-1590s. the local daimyo, lord nobunaga heard of this "painted" giant (yasuke was 6'3 and was very muscled) and had him presented to him. lord nobunaga was very impressed with yasuke's physique, and after confirmin that it was in fact his real skin, he made yasuke his weapons bearer with the rank of samurai. yasuke faithfully served his new lord for many years until lord nobunaga was defeated in battle. he then served nobunaga's son until he was defeated by daimyo lod akechi. lord akechi had yasuke brought before him. yasuke asked for the honor of ritual suicide, (seppuku) but was denied because he was not japanese. lord akechi had yasuke turned over to the europeans and then he was lost to history.
Load More Replies...Meiji restoration was 1865? It was illegal to be samurai after that so the date is a bit suspicious?
The samurai held a fun little rebellion from January 1877 to September 1877 where, by that time, the last 500 samurai were surrounded and killed by 30,000 imperial Japanese forces at Shiroyma
Load More Replies...He resembles Seiji Miyaguchi, who played the badass in Seven Samurai (and by James Coburn in the Magnificent Seven)
A lot of soldiers spend a lot of time outside, even with a ne without armour.
Load More Replies...Canadian Police Officer Guarding The Pharmacy In Waist-High Flood Waters In Galt, Ontario, 1974
"chief ? nothing important, just a little bit of water."
Load More Replies...Are all the people in the background getting ready to ransack the pharmacy if the cop leaves?
Snowball Fight In Lyon, France, 1896
Would anyone have an idea which street this is? I used to live in Lyon!
For you sweety 😊 According to the Progrès (local newspaper) this fight took place in the Montplaisir area, cours Albert-Thomas . https://actu.fr/auvergne-rhone-alpes/lyon_69123/bataille-de-boules-de-neige-a-lyon-pourquoi-cette-video-est-devenue-virale_55905476.html Im from Lyon too so I always feel something special when Lyon is on Boredpanda 😊 "I was eight years old And running with a dime in my hand To the bus stop to pick Up a paper for my old man I'd sit on his lap in that big old Buick And steer as we drove through town He'd tousle my hair And say, "Son, take a good look around" This is your hometown" Lyon is my hometown ❣️
Load More Replies...For you sweety 😊 According to the Progrès (local newspaper) this fight took place in the Montplaisir area, cours Albert-Thomas https://actu.fr/auvergne-rhone-alpes/lyon_69123/bataille-de-boules-de-neige-a-lyon-pourquoi-cette-video-est-devenue-virale_55905476.html Im from Lyon too so I always feel somethong special when Lyon is on Boredpanda 😊 "I was eight years old And running with a dime in my hand To the bus stop to pick Up a paper for my old man I'd sit on his lap in that big old Buick And steer as we drove through town He'd tousle my hair And say, "Son, take a good look around" This is your hometown" Lyon is my hometown ❣️
It's 1897, cours Albert Thomas, near Montplaisir, filmed by les frères lumières
IIRC this was a video, not just a still! What is it about color film that makes the past seem more 'real'?
Babies Left To Sleep Outside In The Freezing Cold, Enforcing Their Immune System, Moscow, Soviet Union, 1958
Unfortunately, as this was once considered true, new evidence has suggested that the humans are more likely to get sick in cold temperatures and the cold is more likely to weaken the immune response and system, specifically the nasal and upper airway defense (which is our first and most important defense) A drop in nasal tissue temperature by 5⁰ c kills nearly 50% of the billions of virus and bacteria-fighting cells in the nostrils and upper airway. It also kills of important RNA, necessary for helping identify viruses and bacteria and getting the immune system to respond accordingly, in the cells that survive. Your blood vessels also restrict throughout your body, accusing white blood cells to become sluggish and slower to respond. Vitamin D levels are also lower in the winter and cold weather lands, which also effects the immune system. The other factor is that viruses love cooler, dry air and are much more prevalent during cold weather. That being said, it doesn't mean that we should all stay inside and never be cold. With proper precautions, like hand washing, increased vitamin C and D intake, and general caution around people who are sick, you will be just fine, but sleeping, or being in the cold does not benefit the immune system. Here is a link to some studies and articles if you want to learn more https://www.jacionline.org/article/S0091-6749(22)01423-3/fulltext .... https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/coronavirus-why-cold-winter-weather-makes-it-harder-to-fight-respiratory-infections ..... https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/323431
My mum did this (Europe), I have done this with my kids (Australia), its the same as letting them get grubby and eating dirt, it is good for their bodies and immune system
Load More Replies...We still do this in norway and all the other nordic contries. It is so common that it is done in kindergardens and the streets of our cities. Edited to add: crimerates are very low due to good sosial systems and we are heavily surveiled, so its very safe still.
IMHO, I think this is a great idea ( within reason) I think it gets kids "used" to the cold. I sleep better when I am cool but snuggled.
We let our sons sleep outside in winter as babies as well, they almost never got sick…
Im almost never cold, even in 10°C and a t-shirt, so yeah. Still get sick tho, but in norway we dont have bad weather- only bad sweaters, so that must be why 😄
Load More Replies...Historically i think this practice stems, at last in combination with the fact that they, and northern contries used to bundel their kids up really tight in many sheets of garment. This was to make the child calm and supposedly be good for them for many different reasons. When winter came it was to warm for the babies inside in that wrapped up bundle, so they popped them outside when they wore their "therapautic" garments. Disclaimer: the russian bundle is more excessive than what was done here, unless the child had a crocked something. Then they really did it good and well.
Germany, 1923: During Hyperinflation, Banknotes Had Lost So Much Value That They Were Used As Wallpaper, Being Much Cheaper Than Actual Wallpaper
in German class we learned a joke from back then. You would need a basked to carry all your bills if you were going to buy a bread. When someone wasnt looking, she got robbed. The bills were left, someone took the basket :-)
I've heard that, and was going to post it. The story may be an urban legend, but it definitely has the ring of truth.
Load More Replies...My dad used to go to the store with a billion mark to buy a loaf of bread
Presidents don't raise prices. Greedy corporations do.
Load More Replies...World War I Us Army Helmet With Skull Trench Art On The Front
Digital Reconstruction Of Untouched Manhattan, New York, In Year 1609, In Comparison To Year 2021
I don't understand Bored Panda readers. I am a regular though I don't comment often. You hate this big city, but yet you want dense, walkable cities instead of suburbs. You complain about capitalism, but you love beautiful architecture, fashion, etc. that only occurs through capitalism.
Most of Europe's beautiful castles and cathedrals were built under Monarchies or feudal systems. Walkable cities don't have to be concrete hellholes, just the smallest amount of forethought can make high-rise blocks that are liveable, with green spaces and spaces for facilities such as stores, doctors surgeries and dentists. In the UK, permission will not be given for large housing projects without suitable infrastructure being provided at the expense of the developer.
Load More Replies...Is anyone else so confused on how an island can support all that weight and activity without disintegrating into the ocean. Nope, just me. A landlocked Montanan.
Hi, islands are the top of underwater mountains. The base is at the bottom of the ocean.
Load More Replies...I always think about how much that real estate would be worth if you'd managed to get in early.
Members Of The Fat Men's Club Of New York, 1904. All Members Had To Be At Least 200 Pounds(91kg), Pay A One Dollar Fee And Learn A Secret Handshake And Password
And it brought all the boys to the yard.
Load More Replies...For the password, you had to tell them the color of your shoes. If you were right, you didn't get in.
weight alone doesnt mean that your fat, are you tall?
Load More Replies...And here I sit, 91 kg and with the frame of aspargus... At least I'm tall
200 lbs doesn’t seem very heavy for today’s US population
Pavlik Manukyan, Armenian War Hero During The First Nagorno-Karabakh War In The Early 1990's, Seen During A Visit To His Family Away From The Frontline. He Is Posing Armed With A Pkm Machine Gun, Standing Next To His Son
I went to both Azerbaijan and Armenia within the span of about a month and heard very different stories about the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute
Stories might seem different until you realize what Armenians living there speak of the region as of a land they lived on for generations while Azerbaijani about the land which "belongs" to them. On top of that historical and religious differences pretty much live no chance for peaceful resolution.
Load More Replies...During the Covid pandemic if you wore a mask and seen someone else wearing a mask, I don't know if anybody else could tell, but I could tell if someone was smiling. Seems like other people could tell if I was smiling or not. Even kids/toddlers could tell.
Young Boy With Prepared Molotov Cocktails On A Rooftop Of A Building In Derry, During The Battle Of The Bogside, August 1969
I learned a lot about the history of Derry from the show Derry Girls. I know it is a fictional comedy, but being from the US this part of history is not well known to us, and the show was enough to perk my curiosity and start researching it. It is so incredibly crazy how all this has been going on into today. If you all want to learn more, the books Say Nothing , The Troubles, Did Ye Hear Mammy Died, and That's That were all very good and informative in different ways and voices. If your not a reader, I recommend watching The Wind that Shakes the Barley, Belfast, I Dolours, The Devil's Own, Hunger, The Images you Missed, and I am going to throw in The Crying Game because it is a great yet crazy movie. (if anyone lives in Great Britain or Northern Ireland and has other recommendations of books or movies, please add,or even better, share your own experience! And if I recommend a movie that is very inaccurate, please let me know)
I think that's a very good list! And although I'm English we were very aware of what was going on over the water because it often came to visit us too. We were evacuated from a shopping centre in Manchester as kids, just before a huge bomb went off. Thankfully the IRA usually phoned in a warning before such attacks. We happened to live near an RAF training base and every time I did my paper round when we were on high alert, I had to have one of the military police go through every page of my papers, looking for who knows what. Resurrection Man, and Paperboy and Breadboy (same author, forget his name) are also good reads. Lost Lives, too.
Load More Replies...As others have said, we grew up with this, seeing news reports of the murders, bombings and sadly, lives lost or changed forever on both sides. In true British fashion we refer to it as “The Troubles” as if it was the neighbours not cutting back their hedge.
Burning Kuwaiti Oil Fires, Caused By The Iraqi Military Setting Fire To Approximately 700 Oil Wells As Part Of A Scorched Earth Policy While Retreating From Kuwait In 1991 Due To The Advances Of Us-LED Coalition Forces In The Gulf War. Photograph By Steve Mccurry
Our addiction to petroleum and fossil fuels is indeed sending us that way.
Load More Replies...We saw the smoke from in Abu Dhabi. We called it the mirk of Sauron
Red Adair made enough money to retire long before then. He liked his job.
Load More Replies...German Kaiser Wilhelm II Of The German Empire, Photographed Smoking In Silesia In 1913
The Ball Turret On The American B-17 Bomber Plane, 1943, World War II
Tail end Charlie was probably worst, but this is a close second.
Load More Replies..."From my mother’s sleep I fell into the State, And I hunched in its belly till my wet fur froze. Six miles from earth, loosed from its dream of life, I woke to black flak and the nightmare fighters. When I died they washed me out of the turret with a hose." Randall Jarrell
My granddad had a job like this in the Second World War. He never ever stepped on a plane after that
My granddad on my dads side helped liberate a concentration camp. From what my dad told me, it really affected his life after the war.
Load More Replies...This makes me think of the descriptions inside the aircraft in Catch-22. No wonder everyone was mad. Or were they?
During WW2 my dad (italian) fought in the El Alamein battle and tood me his job was basically to lie down in the sand, slip under the enemy tanks and place magnetic bombs.
In the movie Memphis Belle, Sean Astin plays the ball turret gunner. It really shows how it worked.
A British Soldier Is Seen Tempting Turkish Snipers To Give Away Their Positions While Others Snatch Some Shut-Eye During The Gallipoli Campaign In 1915, World War I
The retreat of the ANZAC troops was very interesting - they placed rifles alongside the trench, tied buckets with water to the triggers and pocket holes into them at different heights to make the Ottoman troops think that the trenches are still manned
There would have a British sniper located nearby ready to fire back at the Turkish sniper if he exposed his position
I could be wrong, but it is my understanding that the ANZACs who were led to the slaughter undeBritish direction, albeit unintentional, but still. A massive tragic loss of life due to being sent to the wrong shore.
Load More Replies...An Elderly Chechen Man Wearing Traditional Clothes, Poses On A Horse While Chechen Rebels Behind Him Stand On Top Of A Captured Russian Armored Vehicle, Grozny, Chechnya, First Chechen War(1994-1996
He had to ride the horse because his shoulder pads were to big to fit in the tank.
An American Soldier Poses On The Dragon At The “Nibelungenhalle” In Königswinter, North Rhine-Westphalia Germany - 1945
RICHARD WAGNER’S FANTASTIC OPERA CYCLE Der Ring Des Nibelungen is the inspiration for a great deal of the fantasy genre, and it also inspired Germany’s Nibelungenhalle, a stone temple decorated with scenes from the opera that even has its own collection of “dragons,” both living and sculpted, that recall the giant-turned- dragon, Fafnir. Opened in 1913, on the 100th anniversary of Wagner’s birth, the original building was constructed to reflect the epic fantasy scope of Wagner’s work with the sites name etched in runic leterring above the door bookended by bas reliefs of dwarves. (S: Atlas Obscura)
Just 2month ago I was there. It's so beautyful & it still looks like this. Also nearby is the Drachenburg (Dragoncastle). It's definitly worth visiting.
American Heavyweight Boxing Champion Muhammad Ali During His Visit To Egypt, June 1964
Ever see him lighting the torch for the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta? Sad, but inspiring.
Bosnian Girl With An Ak-47, Smoking Smokes While Waiting For A Funeral Service At Sarajevo’s Lion’s Cemetery On Monday, Sept. 14, 1992
Smoking ages you, as does war. No idea what her age is. She could be under 18, who knows.
Load More Replies...It's quite disheartening that this photo has been spreading around the internet since last year, and nobody knows who she is or whether she survived the war, or even who took the photo.
She’s beautiful, and has just the prettiest hair. Hope she survived the war, and has had a long and satisfying career, happy marriage, grown children, and maybe even grandbabies, by now.
I'm sure someone in this world enjoys shoving them up their...
Load More Replies...Us Marine Resting After The Capture Of Saddam Hussein's Presidential Palace In Tikrit, Iraq, April 14 2003
Candy covered chocolate like M&M were actually created to provide soldiers with chocolate that did not melt in high temperatures
Luftwaffe Pilot Adolf Galland Preparing To Take A Gift Basket Of Lobster And Champagne For General Osterkamp's Birthday, 1941
Check out his watch. Judging from the black dial and the thin gold lines indicating the hours it's probably a Junghans.
Croatian Soldier Attending A Mass In Front Of A Destroyed Church, Croatian Homeland War, 1991-1995
Soldier Of The 1st Mechanized Guard Brigade "Tigers" Of The Croatian Army, Posing With A Tiger Cub, The Unit's Mascot. 1991, Croatian Homeland War
Kurdish Peshmergas, Iraq, 1970's
I mean no disrespect, but the guy on the left looks like when he takes off his glasses the nose and mustache comes off too.
He does rather. Not that we'd mess with him though!
Load More Replies...That dude did so well with Bear Grylls... noway I could do what he did now at 40 as opposed to what he achieved nearly 80!
Load More Replies...Oil Derricks And Beach-Goers At The Huntington Beach, California, 1930's
A Man Rushes Off With A Trolley Full Of Diapers During The 1992 Los Angeles Riots. Photograph By Kirk Mckoy
LA92 is a documentary on Netflix all about the build-up (Rodney King), during and after effects of the LA riots. Definately worth a watch
I was 17 years old and living in a suburb of Los Angeles when this all went down. I was as disgusted then as I am now with the cops that got away with the brutal beating of Rodney King. Then, as downtown LA was being rebuilt and things were starting to get back to normal, Mother Nature tossed us a devastating earthquake (Northridge, CA 1994). I lived 2 miles from the epicenter and was lucky enough to walk away unscathed. My apartment and my car weren't as lucky,
Load More Replies...I don't support looting, but at least he just has diapers and not TVs.
Childcare products should be free imo. I don't support looting either but I'm definitely not saying anything about the dude with a cart full of baby supplies.
Load More Replies...Us Soldier Circa 1942 With A Flamethrower And Experimental Camo At Fort Belvoir, Which A Testing Ground For The Us Army
OMG! My Dad was stationed there 3 times during his 21 years in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. He served as Occupation Forces in WWII, combat engineers in the Korean conflict, and combat engineers during the Vietnam War. So proud of my Dad, RIP.
My father was a Pharmacist in the Army Medical Corps in WWII. He actually volunteered in 1940, and told us he went through basic training at Ft Belvoir before going to OCS at Ft Dix (he ended up as a Captain). By the end of the war, he (along with my mother, who he married in 1941, and oldest brother, who was born in 1942) was stationed at Ft Lewis in Tacoma, WA. He left active duty in 1946, and stayed in the reserves until well into the 1950s.
Load More Replies...Dubai, United Arab Emirates
especially if you are a woman (i.e. half of humanity)
Load More Replies...What a waste of habitat. Deserts aren’t uninhabited dead zones. They’re full of life that has adapted to the environment. However, that life cannot survive a concrete urban hellscape.
German Fallschirmjäger Armed With The Fg 42 Automatic Rifle, Seen During The Battle Of Monte Cassino, 15 March 1944, World War II
An italian writer (Luciano De Crescenzo) told in one of his books the story of when his father decided to bring his family in the safest possible place, far from their hometown (Naples), because bombings were getting worse. He studied and studied, and then decided: they all retired to MonteCassino...
He is wearing the M38 Fallschirmjäger helmet with the Reichsadler insignia on the left side.
Load More Replies...The Norrmalmstorg Robbery - Press Photographers And Police Snipers Side By Side On A Roof Opposite Of Kreditbanken Bank In Stockholm, Sweden, August 1973
Teenage Wasteland - A Young Us Marine Takes A Break During A Ground Movement 25 Miles North Of An Hoa, North Vietnam. 1969, Vietnam War
Reminds me of the song "19" by Paul Hardcastle
Load More Replies...Poor bugger will never be the same again. Prob carry the trauma for the rest of his life
Austro-Hungarian Officer At The Frontline In Galicia, Eastern Front, 1915, World War I
He's getting ready to fix the bayonet onto his revolver.
Load More Replies...There are an uncorfortable number of hand grenades pinned onto him.
I think he needs more grenades, looks a little under-equipped there....
Rest In Peace, Tony Sirico
Continuation War, Finland. Close-Up Of The "Elephant-Gun", The Lahti L-39, Lipola
"Forgotten Weapons" on YT has a video on it, he fires it on a shooting range and the recoil is insane
Town Of An-Loc, Vietnam. Soviet -Built North Vietnamese T54 Tank Destroyed By South Vietnam's 81st Airborne Ranger Group, 1972, Vietnam War
Town? Maybe once upon a time. The Vietnam War (never a declared war, so actually a police action, not to mention the area had been French Indochina, so should’ve been their fight, it ours) absolutely gutted the infrastructure that had been built in the country, which had greatly benefited the population. Such an unnecessarily destructive and sad situation all around.
German Ski Patrol Equipped With A Mg 34 Machine Gun In Snowy Conditions In The Soviet Union, Winter 1942, World War II
I imagine very few of them ever got back home. One of Hitler's biggest mistakes, turning on Russia. Better for the rest of the free world though.
A Crew From The 16th/5th Lancers, 6th Armoured Division, Clean The Gun Barrel Of Their Crusader Tank At El Aroussa In Tunisia, 1943, World War II
Chechen Fighter, 1995, First Chechen War
A terrible time. I just think of all those little children at Beslan, caught up in something there is no way they could understand, suffering horribly because of idiotic grown-ups.
A German Mg 34 Machine Gunner On The Eastern Front, World War II (Winter, 1941)
Lebanese Christian Militia Of The Phalanges. Note The Iraqi Made Ak ‘Tabuk’ And Hungarian Made Amd65 Rifles. Lebanese Civil War, 1975-1990
Following instructions, I noted rifle models and manufacturing countries. And now? Just asking, because I'm going to erase this information from my brain within a few seconds.
A sign of beauty in some cultures, e.g. in Tajikistan. A unibrow, I mean, not being unkind to people's appearances.
Load More Replies...Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988)
The Russian Vietnam is another nickname for it, because it was an unwinnable war. Apparently Bush Jr and his advisors conveniently forgot about that when he got the US involved in yet another unwinnable war in the very same place.
Load More Replies...Two Croatian Soldiers On The Frontline In Turanj, Croatia, 1992, Croatian Homeland War
Members Of The 1st Guards Brigade - Tigers Of The Croatian Army, On Trpinja Road, Vukovar, 1991, Croatian Homeland War
Agreed, far too much. You would think that they could have made more of an effort to find things more enlightening than soldiers carrying guns
Load More Replies...Best collection of historical photographs yet. Saw so many for the first time. Fascinating!
@ Atero, you do realise that the world is bigger than your state of mind and social conditioning, right? If you have the time, meet women in your neighbourhood who are Islamic, or just get out more often. There are plenty of strong women who choose hijab, and unfortunately there are those who have.no choice. But to claim it is all oppressive is hypocrisy. And ignorant
Salaams. So respectfully, Greenmantle, _do_ they choose it? Let's say in Saudi or Iran, or Afghanistan? لَا إِلَٰهَ إِلَّا ٱللَّٰهُ مُحَمَّدًا رَسُولُ ٱللَّٰه
Load More Replies...Agreed, far too much. You would think that they could have made more of an effort to find things more enlightening than soldiers carrying guns
Load More Replies...Best collection of historical photographs yet. Saw so many for the first time. Fascinating!
@ Atero, you do realise that the world is bigger than your state of mind and social conditioning, right? If you have the time, meet women in your neighbourhood who are Islamic, or just get out more often. There are plenty of strong women who choose hijab, and unfortunately there are those who have.no choice. But to claim it is all oppressive is hypocrisy. And ignorant
Salaams. So respectfully, Greenmantle, _do_ they choose it? Let's say in Saudi or Iran, or Afghanistan? لَا إِلَٰهَ إِلَّا ٱللَّٰهُ مُحَمَّدًا رَسُولُ ٱللَّٰه
Load More Replies...
