The Sun emits more energy in a second that humanity has generated in the history of civilization.

Origami Around
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

blake kathryn

Product Placement

pixel skylines
Three Goblin Art

#extradirty
Game of Thrones Daily
Mike Driver
Claire Keane
One Nice Bug Per Day
ojovivo
YOU ARE THE REASON
Monterey Bay Aquarium
wallacepolsom
Peter Solarz
trying on a metaphor

Love Begins
Misplaced Lens Cap
Sade Olutola
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@historyishuman
The Sun emits more energy in a second that humanity has generated in the history of civilization.
The aftermath of the attack on Pearl Harbor.
Müezzinzade Ali Pasha, the commander of the Ottoman fleet at Lepanto. He was killed in action during the battle when boarded. As depicted here, he was then beheaded to have his head placed on a pike. This German language paper printed after the battle heralds his death, as well as the liberation of approximately 15,000 of the Christian galley-slaves that the Ottomans relied on to row their fleet.
(Zentralbibliothek Zürich)
Togo the cat was a mascot of the HMS Dreadnought.
(IWM)
"Let Them In!"
(Vasily Vereshchagin)
Men of the 10th Royal Hussars (Prince of Wales’s Own) run down fleeing rebel tribesmen in Sudan in 1884 at El Teb. Following the massacre of an Egyptian force at the hands of the Mahdist forces earlier in the month, a 4,500 man British contingent returned the favor at El Teb on February 29th.
(Anne S.K. Brown Military Collection)
The British Camel Corps marches towards Khartoum in 1885. Although the British would triumph at the Battle of Abu Klea, it was of little consequence, reaching the city too late to save Gen. Charles Gordon and the defenders.
(Anne S.K. Brown Military Collection)
Grenadier Guards in skirmish practice, c. 1880.
(Anne S.K. Brown Military Collection)
Mark Senior (British, 1864-1927), A sunlit square, 1904. Oil on canvas, 20.5 x 24 in.
Abraham Cooper - Study of a Cat (1817)
Tsukioka Yoshitoshi Japanese, 1839-1892 Masudaya Ginjiro, publisher Japanese Uramatsu Sandayu Fujiwara Takanao, Portraits of true loyalty and chivalrous spirit, 1868.6 Polychrome woodblock print/RISD Museum
Remains of Roman Legionaries armor (known as Lorica segmentata). Roman Britain, 1st-2nd century AD
The Mass Media is like alcohol — if consumed in large enough quantities it becomes the focus of life, and gets a grip on the mind and the body so that ever more is wanted to maintain the stimulus, and ever more is required to avoid withdrawal effects. At some point cravings push aside all good intentions of selectivity, restraint and limitation.
Bruce G. Charlton, Addicted to Distraction: Psychological consequences of the modern Mass Media (via zerogate)
Kuniyoshi. Ichikawa Kadanji IV as the Ghost of Sakura Sagoro, 1851.
(Continuing our posts of our favorite artworks that are inspiring our Halloween).
The Pazzi conspiracy
The Pazzi conspiraci was a plot to assassinate Lorenzo de’ Medici, ruler of Florence, and his brother Giuliano de’ Medici, in 1478. The objective was to remove the Medicis from power and place the Pazzi family, allies to the Pope, instead. The key members of the coup were Jacopo and Francesco de’ Pazzi, the Archbishop of Pisa Francesco Salviati, Federico da Montefeltro, Bernardo di Bandino, and Girolamo Riario, the nephew of Pope Sixtus IV. The Pope himself was known to support the coup.
On Sunday, April 28th, the Medici brothers were assaulted during High Mass at Santa Maria del Fiore, in front of celebrants and attending Florentines. Giuliano de’ Medici was stabbed 19 times by Bernardo di Bandino and Francesco de’ Pazzi. The wounded Lorenzo was able to escape to safety in the Sagrestia delle Messe. At the same time, Archbishop Salviati attempted to take control of the Palazzo della Signoria and kill Gonfaloniere Petrucci, member of the Florentine government.
As the coup failed, the enraged Florentines began seizing those involved in the plot. Jacopo de’ Pazzi was tossed from a window, dragged naked through the streets of Florence and ultimately thrown into the Arno river. While attempting to take the Palazzo, Archbishop Salviati was trapped in a room, was arrested and soon hanged from a window. The remaining conspirators were hunted down through Italy. The disgraced Pazzis were barred fom Florence.
Soon after the failed plot, Sixtus IV placed Florence under interdict. Two years of war between Florence and the Papacy followed.
Lorenzo de’ Medici issued a commemorative medal, depicting the attempt on his life and the murder of his brother Giuliano at Santa Maria del Fiore.
Another contemporary depiction was painted by Sandro Botticelli. The painting was destroyed after Lorenzo’s son Piero was expelled fom Florence in 1494.
Manfred Von Richthofen, the ‘Red Baron’, scored 20 of his 80 kills in a Fokker Dr.I Triplane.
New statue of Tsar Nicholas II in Belgrade, Serbia. Presented by the Russian government to Serbia to commemorate the 100th anniversary of WWI.