Tuesday, April 26, 2022

51 Truly Astonishing Historical Facts You Never Heard Before

 October 28, 2020

51 AMAZING 1

The past is full of curious stories and perhaps mysteries. These curious stories are what we call facts, making history truly interesting.

The Facts listed here might surprise you, or they might not convince you enough to believe, but still, it’s our past, and if you turn over the pages, you will find the truth.

These 51 facts might not make you feel like a historian, but they are the tiny little surprising bits of history and perhaps the most fun part of our past.

As a wise man once said

History Quotes and Famed Sayings of All Time

Those who don’t know history are doomed to repeat it.

— George Santayana Click to Tweet this Quote 😀😉



Contents

Here are our picks for the 51 Astonishing Historical Facts that Might completely Surprise You…..

1.
Cleopatra Married Both of her Brothers.

cleopatra 51 amazing historical facts 1

The famed queen of Egypt is well known and remembered for several weird and absurd things, including bathing in milk, being unrolled from carpets, and using a snake to kill herself.

But you might not know that she married not one but both of her brothers, of course, in keeping with custom. Eventually, they both got killed, one drowned due to golden armour, and the other brother was probably poisoned on her instructions.

 Also, A 1963 movie based on her was one of the most expensive movies.

2.
The shortest war being fought lasted for only 38 minutes.

AngloZanzibarWar

The Anglo-Zanzibar War was fought between Zanzibar Sultanate and Great Britain on 27 August 1896. The military conflict lasted between 38 to 45 minutes, marking it as the shortest recorded war ever fought.

3.
Compassion and Love of the Woman for her Father

amazing history facts

This painting of a young woman with her child breastfeeding an older man in a prison cell was sold for 30 million euros. It may look perverse, but the story behind it is indescribable.

The poor man was sentenced to “death by starvation” for stealing a loaf of bread during the reign of Louis XIV in France. The woman was his only daughter and the only visitor to his cell. She was allowed to visit him daily but was not allowed to take food in.

Even after 4 months, the man was still alive, with almost no weight loss, nothing. The authorities now started spying on her in the cell and to their utter astonishment found her breastfeeding her father to the fullest sharing her baby’s milk. The judges realizing the compassion and love of the woman for her father, let off her father and set him free.

4.
The Great Wall of China is Sadly Called the Longest Cemetery in the World

great wall of china fact 1

The Great Wall of China is actually a graveyard with lakhs of men buried inside when they died carrying the huge boulders to build the wall. scary tragic and typical of the Chinese cold-bloodedness. It was an exceptional punishment for convicted criminals.

5.
Give Us Our Eleven Days!! Britisher

lost days website 1 1

Britain skipped 11 days of September 1752, when Britain changed over from the Julian calendar to the Gregorian calendar(today’s international calendar), bringing it into line with most of Europe.

Before 1752, Britain and its colonies followed the Julian calendar, implemented by Julius Caesar in 46 B.C. However, this calendar had a small error of 1 day every 128 years, due to a miscalculation of the solar year by 11 minutes and over millennia it turned out to be 11 days. It isn’t bad though. A day in 128 years, that’s a pretty accurate calculation of that time.

It was caused due to leap years. We add a day every 4 years because the earth takes 365 days, 5 hours, 59 minutes, and 16 sec to revolve around the sun. So, to maintain these 6 hours we have a Feb 29 every 4 Years.

If you noticed, we are adding 44 extra seconds to our calendar and that is what caused the addition of a day every 128 years which had to be removed and that’s why we skip 3 leap years every 400 years.

6.
The work of an incompetent jazz-hating Time Traveler.

At the age of 2, he fell out of the window of a two-story building and fractured his skull.

When he was 6 years old, he accidentally drank Boric acid( H3BO3). Boric acid is a colourless crystal that dissolves in water and is a natural pesticide.

As soon he became 9, he decided to fall off a cliff and broke his leg.😂

When he was 11 years old, he contracted measles and was in a coma for 9 days.

When he was 14 years old, he broke his arm and got caught in a carriage door.

When he was 19 years old, a brick fell right on his head.

When he was 23 years old, he almost killed himself by drinking tainted wine.

And at 29, Adolph Sax invented the saxophone.

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7.
The Picnic Battle of the American Civil War!

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The First American civil war, the Battle of Bull Run (also known as the Battle of First Manassas) was called “The Picnic Battle” because many wealthy elites and Washington’s civilians, including congressmen and their families, went on picnics on the sidelines and watched the battle.

8.
The most successful pirate in history was a Chinese Lady.

Most sucessful pirate 1

She is Ching Shih, A Chinese woman and the most successful pirate of all time. During the Peak of her power, She commanded over 1,800 pirate ships and an estimated 80,000 men. She is also famous as The Pirate Queen. Who thought the most successful pirate was a Lady. She is the only Pirate I know about, except our captain Jack Sparrow.

9.
Christopher Columbus didn’t discover America.

columbus

Columbus explored the Central and South American coasts but he never reached North America Native Americans. It is believed Leif Eriksson, a Viking made to North America Nearly 500 years before the birth of Christopher Columbus.

fox tossing

Fox Tossing was a competitive blood sport that gained popularity in many parts of Europe especially Germany in the 17th and 18th centuries. It involved throwing live foxes and other animals high into the air.

11.
Napoleon Bonaparte known as The Little Corporal wasn’t short

napoleon 1

According to wiki Napoleon Bonaparte who led many successful battles during the French revolution and gained popularity as Little Corporal was 1.68 meters long which is equivalent to 5 foot 6 inches which is indeed the average height of men.

12.
Albert Einstein Didn’t Fail Math.

einstein 1

Most people believe that Einstein failed in maths during his school days, but the records show that he was an extraordinary student (with good marks in Math and physics).

A few of his grade sheets are still available across the internet, which represents he might be weak in the non-scientific subjects but good at math (I couldn’t verify the available grade sheets and the source, so I haven’t attached them).

13.
Rasputin survived being poisoned and being shot.

rasputin 1

Grigori Yefimovich Rasputin was a Russian mystic and self-proclaimed holy man. He was stabbed in the stomach, shot in the chest, Poisoned beat, and finally murdered on December 16th, 1916. When the shooting failed to kill Rasputin, so they beat him, tied up his body, and threw it into the freezing waters of the Neva River. Pretty hard to kill huh!!

14.
During World War I, the French built a “fake Paris”.

fake paris

During the First word War, France decided to build a replica Paris outside the city  15 miles north of Paris to fool German bombers.

Also Read: Battle of Nalapani- An epic battle fought by 600 Gurkhas

15.
Turkeys were once worshipped as Gods.

wild turkey

During 300 BC Mayan culture was at its height and it was their tradition to worship Turkeys and it was part of most sacred rituals.

16.
The owners of the Titanic insist that They said it was an unsinkable ship.

Titanic

It was never said that the Titanic was an unsinkable ship as per the ship oners. They claim that the ‘unsinkable’ myth was the result of people’s interpretations which grew after the disaster.

17.
Thomas Edison Didn’t Invent the Light Bulb.

light bulb

There were already different versions of light bulbs when Thomas Edison started working on Bulbs but they were somewhat different forms. More than 20 scientists had already worked on the light bulb before Edison with their own patents.

Related: 13 Least Known Facts about Buddha You May Love to Know

18.
Roman Emperor Caligula made one of his favourite horses a senator.

horse senator

According to the ancient historian Suetonius, the Roman emperor known as Caligula loved one of his horses, Incitatus, so much that he made him a senator.

19.
The University of Oxford is older than the Aztec Empire.

oxford 4 edited

The Aztec Empire was established in 1428 whereas the University of Oxford was established as early as 1096, making it the oldest university in the English-speaking world.

20.
Women Were Once Banned from Smoking in Public.

smoking

In 1908, a so-called law known as the ‘Sullivan Ordinance‘ was passed in New York City and it was declared that it will be illegal for a woman to smoke in public places. The rule only lasted for two weeks.

21.
Abraham Lincoln was a champion wrestler.

lincon

Abraham Lincoln was a skilled wrestler who lost only a single match throughout his carrier of approximately 300 matches. He is enshrined in the Wrestling Hall of Fame.

22.
The First Ever “Selfie”: One Among the Top Historical Image

Robert Cornelius self por 017 webp? i=AA

The above image is officially the world first ever taken selfy. He literally stood in one position for nearly 10-15 minutes to take this image. His name was Robert Cornelius. It was taken in 1839. Now it takes barely a millisecond to capture a selify. Evolution

23.
Foot Binding was considered to be attractive in ancient China

boundfeet

Chinese women used to bind their feet to about 10 centimetres in size to display social status and were considered beautiful. Mostly rich Chinese girls were used to following such tradition.

Related: China Nepal War- An Invasion of Tibet by Gurkhas

Some Informative Historical Facts You May Love to Read

24.
The Greatest Gathering of Knowledge Ever – The iconic Photo

solvay conference

This iconic photograph was taken at the Fifth Solvay Conference in October 1927. All the greatest scientists of the 20th century together in one picture- isn’t that amazing.

25.

It is believed Ancient Greece was the starting point of democracy

Democracy 1

The term ‘Democracy‘ itself is a Greek word. The first Democracy was established in 508-507 BC by Athenians. Athenians were led by Cleisthenes therefore he is referred to as “the father of Athenian democracy.”

26.
Paper was initially used for packing and protection rather than writing

paper

Paper was invented during the 2nd century BC by the Chinese and they used it for packaging, protection, and even as toilet paper. Later on, people started to use it for writing purposes.

27.
The Roman Empire lasted for more than 1,000 years.

Roman Empire

 The Roman Empire was founded by Augustus Caesar in 31 BC and lasted till 476 AD marking the longest empire that lasted for more than 14 centuries. “ We have been getting a lot of comments wondering how 31 BC and 476 AD sums up to 1400 years. After the fall of the Roman Empire in 476AD, the Eastern Empire, known as the Byzantine Empire lasted until around 1453 A.D. “

28.
Hundreds of millions of people across Europe and Asia died due to the Black Death.

black death

The Black Death, caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis was the deadliest disease ever recorded by mankind. The Black Death resulted in the deaths of up to 75–200 million people in Eurasia and North Africa, peaking in Europe from 1347 to 1351.

29.
A war lasted 335 years with Zero causalities and no deaths.

the 335 year war

The war between the Netherlands and the Isles of Scilly ( rather an alleged state of war ) was fought for 335 years due to a lack of a peace treaty. The hypothetical war finally came to end with peace declared in 1986.

30.
The longest war fought continued for 781 years.

longest war

The Iberian Religious War The conflict, known as the “Reconquista,” was fought between the Catholic Spanish Empire and the Moors living in present-day Morocco and Algeria from 711 to 1492.

Some Ridiculously Weird Historical Facts

31.
Tsutomu Yamaguchi survived both the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and then later Nagasaki.

Atomic bombing of Japan

Tsutomu Yamaguchi, a Japanese marine engineer who luckily did survive both atomic bombings.

He was leaving Hiroshima when the first bombing was made and got few injuries. He came to Nagasaki and limped to the hospital. When the other bomb hit Nagasaki he was in a meeting giving a description of the Hiroshima bombing. Here is an article by History.com on him.

32.
The well-Known rum brand Captain Morgan was a real Guy.

captian morgon

Yeah, It’s real. The cartooned captain-like person appearing on bottles of popular rum turns out to be based on a real person. His full name was Sir Henry Morgan, and he was born in Wales in 1635 and was in the British Royal Navy while England was at war with Spain.

33.
It was common to attach Bells to coffins.

bells to coffins

It had been common to be buried alive in the Victorian era so they came up with the idea to attach bells to coffins. Over a period of time, these safety coffins have saved many peoples buried alive.

Read About: Battle Of Nalapani – An Epic Battle Fought By 600 Gurkhas

34.
In Victorian England, people used to take pictures of their dead relatives in lifelike positions to keep as Mementos.

Death Photography with filters

This historic tradition is what they used to call Post-mortem photography. Although Various cultures have followed this tradition but were mostly practised in Europe and America.

35.
A jockey won a Race despite being Dead.

jokey

Frank Hayes is the only man to ever win a race despite being dead. On June 4, 1923, jockey Frank Hayes suffered a fatal heart attack in the middle of the race at Belmont Park. Hayes somehow remained in the saddle enough to win the race.

36.
In Ancient Rome, urine was used as a Mouthwash.

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It was common to use urine as a mouthwash in Ancient Rome due to its good cleansing property. Both Human and Animal urine contains ammonia which acts as a cleansing agent, therefore, is capable of whitening teeth.

37.
Heroin was once a perfectly acceptable medicine. Doctors prescribed it for everything from coughs to headaches.

heroin

A century ago, Heroin was widely used against coughs caused by serious and some common diseases such as tuberculosis and pneumonia, but soon doctors discovered side effects.

The patients required more and more doses and soon become dependent on it. Therefore it was declared a drug problem.

38.
Hitler was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.

hitler

In 1939, Adolf Hitler was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. He was recommended by Erik Gottfrid Christian Brandt(A Member of national assemblies who can nominate candidates for the Peace Prize).

It was only three months before he led invaded Poland and started World War II. This wasn’t intended to be taken seriously as this nomination was meant as a joke.

You May Like: Why did Britain never succeed in Colonizing Nepal?

39.
In Renaissance France, a woman could take her husband to court if he was impotent.

a scene from trial 1

In the 16th century France, divorce was a rarity, reserved only for the well-to-do and possible only in exceptional cases. Back then erectile dysfunction was the only way in order to have a divorce

40.
The Government of the US Poisoned Alcohol during 19’s.

poisoned alcohol 1

In 1926 the government of the US decided to poison alcohol When people continued to consume alcohol despite its banning. Statistics show that more than ten thousand people died due to the consumption of such alcohol.

41.
Researchers once turned a living cat completely into a working Telephone.

cat into telephone

It was 1922 when Professor Ernest Glen Wever and his research assistant Charles William Bray at Princeton University turned a living but unconscious cat into a working telephone. The purpose of the experiment was to test how sound is perceived by the auditory nerve.

42.
Albert Einstein was offered the Presidency of Israel.

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Albert Einstein was offered the presidency of Israel in 1952 but he rejected it saying he lacked “the natural aptitude and the experience to deal properly with people

43.

One thing that makes a Scientist Great.

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Even Nobel Prize is less for Him. What do you think? Only a few risk their lives to save others. These people deserve fame and all that. This was the most shocking historical fact (in the science community) for me and I am proud that I am sharing this.

44.
Before dentures were invented, The teeth of the dead were used as dentures.

dentures

In the late 18th and early 19th Centuries, the teeth of dead soldiers were pulled out and sold to dentists where they boil them, cut off their roots, mix with gold and shape them into dentures.

45.
Alexander the Great was Buried Alive.

alexendra

Well, there is absolutely no archaeological evidence to prove that Alexendra the great existed. Still, let’s continue.

Alexander the great suffered a rare disease that left him paralyzed for six days. His muscles were so paralyzed that the doctors couldn’t figure breathing and announced him dead. So there is a very strong possibility of him being buried alive, accidentally.

46.
There were female Gladiators.

Gladiator
Venice – The Adoration of Magi by Antonio Vassilacchi nickname l’Aliense (1556 – 1629) from Chiesa di San Zaccaria church.

Rare, of course. But it’s true there used to be female Gladiators in Ancient Rome and they were Known as gladiatrices (gladiatrix). I wish someday, maybe we will get to know more about them, perhaps in a movie.

47.
Vikings didn’t wear horned helmets.

vikingd1

It was the outcome of people’s imagination and the result of some fascinating historical transposition rather than a true fact.

There is no archaeological evidence that proves Vikings wore horned helmets. The helmets were used in order to protect the head from impact during the battle, but having a pair of horns doesn’t make sense in any way. Horned helmets, rather decrease the strength of helmets.

48.
Jewish slaves didn’t build the Pyramids.

GreatPyramids 1

The newly discovered tombs of people who worked on the Great Pyramids of Giza evidence that the pyramids were built by workers, not slaves. As it’s less likely for slaves to get buried in a proper and respectable way.

#Bonus Stuff

49.

This Man Is Great!

knownepal facts

The Maharaja of Jamnagar took in and agreed to look after more than 1000 orphaned polish, Jews and Catholics. I think that is the greatest thing a king could do in times of crisis and people fighting in the name of religion.

50.
Quotes Worth Your Time!

Buddha was once asked – What is the difference between ” I like you” and “I love you? His answer was so beautiful and satisfying.

buddha

When you like a flower, you just pluck it. But when you love a flower, you water it daily!

— Gautama Buddha Click to Tweet this Quote 😉😊


Great leaders inspire action through the example they set in their own lives. Renowned for their legacy and lifetime achievements across politics, charity, culture, and science, these are the people The world will always look up to read more.

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The very ink with which history is written is merely fluid prejudice.

— Mark Twain, American writer Click to Tweet this Quote 😀😉


Enjoy More at :

51.
It’s Missing, for Now, Suggest Us!

I left it empty so that we could know how much care about history. Share some of your facts and we will Place that here if it’s amazing. Comment Down at the End. Let’s see who wins?

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