7 Historical Facts about the world
7 Historical Facts about the world
1.
The swastika was actually a symbol of good — until the Nazis got ahold of it.
The swastika has been around for over 3,000 years
and commonly symbolized goodness and luck, up until its use by the
Nazis in Germany. The now reviled image was used by cultures all over the
world, including early Christians, Jews, Hindus, Buddhists and even Native
Americans.
In more recent history, the swastika was still
prominent just before the rise of the Nazi party. A few American uniforms
featured the symbol in World War I, Coca Cola
used it in advertising and, as seen above in this picture of the Edmonton Swastikas, sports teams even took its name. The Nazis deeply
complicated the swastika’s long existence as a symbol for good, and looking
back upon its thousands of years of prominence in cultural history can yield
some results that appear incredibly strange with contemporary
eyes. To salvage the image, it has been proposed that the clockwise version of
the swastika should represent evil while counterclockwise would represent
goodness.
2.
Drunk debates were once a key aspect of any important decision-making process.
Perhaps you don’t have to be Don Draper to believe
in the necessity of alcohol at the work place. When famous Greek historian Herodotus,
travelled to Persia around 450 B.C., he found a culture that deeply valued the
wisdom that comes while being drunk. The Persians he encountered would make
sure that particularly important arguments were debated both while sober and
drunk, as only ideas that made sense in both states were truly worthwhile. This
process went both ways: Arguments originally had while drunk would be debated
again the next day in soberness, and dry arguments would be followed up with
discussions over wine.
C.S. Lewis expanded upon this idea in his “Letters to Malcolm,” when he wrote:
I know this is the opposite of what is often said
about the necessity of keeping all emotion out of our intellectual processes –
‘you can’t think straight unless you are cool.’ But then neither can you think
deep if you are. I suppose one must try every problem in both states. You
remember that the ancient Persians debated everything twice: once when they
were drunk and once when they were sober.
3.
The Olympic Games used to award medals for art.
Maybe artists deserve varsity jackets, too. From
1912 to 1948, the Olympics held competitions in the fine arts, with medals being awarded
for architecture, literature, music, painting and sculpture. The art produced
was required to be Olympics-themed, so gold-winning pieces had names like,
“Knockdown” and “Étude de Sport.” The first winning work of literature was
actually written by the founder of the modern Olympics, Pierre de Frédy, Baron
de Coubertin, who supposedly wrote the piece, “Ode to Sport,” under a
pseudonym.
According to Frédy, adding an arts component to the
modern Olympics was necessary because the ancient Greeks used to hold art
festivals alongside the games. Over the years, dancing, film, photography and
theatre were all proposed as additional events, but none of these ever became
medal categories. In total, 151 medals were awarded before the Olympics removed
the art competitions in favor of requiring host cities to provide cultural
events to accompany the games.
4.
Pink wasn’t always a girl’s color and blue a boy’s color — in fact, it was once
the other way around.
The distinction of blue for boys and pink for girls didn’t take full hold
until the middle of the 20th century. Many people already know that President Franklin Delano Roosevelt wore dresses as a
child, but this was common practice for the time. Children would wear gender
neutral, mostly white clothing that was easy to bleach clean, and wouldn’t get
haircuts until around the age of six or seven. It wasn’t until department
stores started marketing gender-specific colors that parents began to worry
about making sure their children were wearing the “right” outfits.
Even when mass marketing began, the messages were
mixed. The trade publication “Earnshaw’s Infants’ Department” featured an
article suggesting, “the generally accepted rule is pink for the boys, and blue
for the girls. The reason is that pink, being a more decided and stronger
color, is more suitable for the boy, while blue, which is more delicate and
dainty, is prettier for the girl.”
5.
English was once a language for “commoners,” while the British elites spoke
French.
Despite the severity with which some contemporary
English-speakers vehemently attack “incorrect” uses of the language, English
used to belong to the people. In the formative years of the
language, it was only spoken by “commoners,” while the English courts and
aristocracy mostly spoke in French. This was due to the Norman Invasion of 1066
and caused years of division between the “gentlemen” who had adopted the Anglo-Norman
French and those who only spoke English. Even the famed King Richard the
Lionheart was actually primarily referred to in French, as Richard “Coeur de
Lion.”
To further mess with your preconceptions about the
English language, the “British accent” was actually created after the
Revolutionary War, meaning contemporary Americans sound more like the colonists
and British soldiers of the 18th century than contemporary Brits. Of course,
accents vary greatly by region, but the “BBC English” or public school English accent (which
sounds like Austin Powers) didn’t come about until the 19th century and was
originally adopted by people who wanted to sound fancier.
6.
Money was once designed to discourage people from having too much of it.
Perhaps having quick and easy money isn’t truly in
our best interests. According to Greek historian Plutarch, in his “Life of Lycurgus,” the Spartans used long and heavy iron rods as their currency in hopes that it would
discourage them from pursuing large amounts of wealth. This unusual currency
was called “obeloi” and was supposedly so cumbersome that carrying multiple
rods would require oxen.
A couple other things that might change the way you
think about contemporary money: American presidents weren’t originally supposed
to be on the nation’s currency, as that was seen as a practice of monarchies. Also, the idea civilizations relied on
established barter systems before the rise of physical currency is
probably incorrect. People may have traded things, but one of the only
well-known bartering practices was more of a bonding and sex ritual between
tribes in Northern Australia called the dzamalag.
7.
A good night of sleep used to mean waking up sometime in the middle.
Are we sleeping all wrong? According to growing
research about sleeping habits before the 20th century, people didn’t
always sleep in one long block, but would briefly wake up in the middle to
split the slumber into two sessions. During this time, people would reportedly
engage in all sorts of activities, with the more scholarly using the time to
read and write, while couples might spend the break having sex.
The two-part sleeping pattern was the product of
people going to bed much earlier before the invention of electricity, which
meant the world actually went dark when the sun set. For those who assumed
candles were regularly lit at night before electric lights, historian Craig
Koslofsky points out in his book, “Evening’s Empire,” that we tend to
overestimate their importance. He writes, “even the wealthy, who could afford
candlelight, had better things to spend their money on. There was no prestige
or social value associated with staying up all night.”
Contemporary society seems to have adjusted to the
single session of sleep, but that doesn’t mean the transition has been entirely
smooth. It has been suggested that those who consistently wake
up in the middle of the night and have trouble falling back asleep, may
simply have bodies that yearn for the way we used to operate.
Bonus:
Tickling may have been used as torture.
This one may be more of a legend, but still,
tickling is not funny, dammit! It was apparently used as a form of torture during the Han Dynasty, as captives would recover
quickly and no physical signs of abuse were left on the body. The ancient
Romans may have also used tickle torture, where a goat would be brought in to
lick the captive’s feet.
Although there is only shaky evidence that either of
these modes of torture were actually employed, there appear to have been cases
in which severe tickling was deemed abuse in more contemporary times.
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Source
: http://www.huffingtonpost.com
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by : http://thesplendorofthechurch.com
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