robowolves:

bemusedlybespectacled:

gdfalksen:

Chiune Sugihara. This man saved 6000 Jews. He was a Japanese diplomat in Lithuania. When the Nazis began rounding up Jews, Sugihara risked his life to start issuing unlawful travel visas to Jews. He hand-wrote them 18 hrs a day. The day his consulate closed and he had to evacuate, witnesses claim he was STILL writing visas and throwing from the train as he pulled away. He saved 6000 lives. The world didn’t know what he’d done until Israel honored him in 1985, the year before he died.

Why can’t we have a movie about him?

He was often called “Sempo”, an alternative reading of the characters of his first name, as that was easier for Westerners to pronounce.

His wife, Yukiko, was also a part of this; she is often credited with suggesting the plan. The Sugihara family was held in a Soviet POW camp for 18 months until the end of the war; within a year of returning home, Sugihara was asked to resign – officially due to downsizing, but most likely because the government disagreed with his actions.

He didn’t simply grant visas – he granted visas against direct orders, after attempting three times to receive permission from the Japanese Foreign Ministry and being turned down each time. He did not “misread” orders; he was in direct violation of them, with the encouragement and support of his wife.

He was honoured as Righteous Among the Nations in 1985, a year before he died in Kamakura; he and his descendants have also been granted permanent Israeli citizenship. He was also posthumously awarded the Life Saving Cross of Lithuania (1993); Commander’s Cross Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland (1996); and the Commander’s Cross with Star of the Order of Polonia Restituta (2007). Though not canonized, some Eastern Orthodox Christians recognize him as a saint.

Sugihara was born in Gifu on the first day of 1900, January 1. He achieved top marks in his schooling; his father wanted him to become a physician, but Sugihara wished to pursue learning English. He deliberately failed the exam by writing only his name and then entered Waseda, where he majored in English. He joined the Foreign Ministry after graduation and worked in the Manchurian Foreign Office in Harbin (where he learned Russian and German; he also converted to the Eastern Orthodox Church during this time). He resigned his post in protest over how the Japanese government treated the local Chinese citizens. He eventually married Yukiko Kikuchi, who would suggest and encourage his acts in Lithuania; they had four sons together. Chiune Sugihara passed away July 31, 1986, at the age of 86. Until her own passing in 2008, Yukiko continued as an ambassador of his legacy.

It is estimated that the Sugiharas saved between 6,000-10,000 Lithuanian and Polish Jewish people.


Tags:

#history #Holocaust #this is the second time this week I’ve seen Chiune Sugihara on a Tumblr post about historical figures people should know about but don’t #but I actually *had* heard of him #I didn’t remember his name #but that image of a guy desperately flinging visas out a train window sticks with you

redbeardace:

Today is the 100th Anniversary of the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo.  This is a Keystone Stereo View of Sarajevo, from the Keystone View Company’s “The World War” set, probably from the 1920’s.

Interesting side note:  The Keystone View Company used a picture of the wrong bridge! This is not the Latin Bridge, near where the assassination took place. This is the Seher-Cehaja Bridge, about half a kilometer upriver. This photo is also facing south, while the assassination took place on the north side of the river.


Tags:

#history #neat

bisexualzuko:

nonomella:

here are some excerpts from my thanksgiving lesson. once class just couldn’t let the whole squanto thing go. it was not a particularly productive lesson.

it’s six months from thanksgiving but this post never gets old
is squanto a chinese curse word or something


Tags:

#Thanksgiving #anything that makes me laugh this much deserves a reblog #may or may not have reblogged this before

jtotheizzoe:

scienceisbeauty:

First photograph ever taken by phosphorescent light. The face is that of Mr. Tesla, and the source of light is one of his phosphorescent bulbs. The time of exposure, eight minutes. Date of photograph January, 1894.

Source (Tesla Universe)

Tesla was just a cool photo machine, eh?

Here he is with his friend Mark Twain:

And here he is with his friend electricity:

Here He Is With His Friend Electricity


Tags:

#Nikola Tesla #the power of science #*actual photograph* of *actual alien time period* #here he is with his friend electricity

justice-turtle:

caelum-blue:

ohmypreciousgirl:

luigisorchestra:

bowtiesandbiscuits:

15th of March 2012.

Ordered a Caesar Salad today, proceeded to stab it 23 times before consumption. Nobody else found it as hilarious. 

OH MY LORD

I CAN’T EVEN

HISTORY NERDS ARE THE BEST NERDS

I LOL’D OUT LOUD NGL

I waited all year to reblog this and I NEARLY forgot.

been waiting for this to cross my dash! :D just in time!


Tags:

#et tu Brute #joke #this joke never gets old #or if it does it hasn’t yet

photojojo:

Oxford Dictionaries recently announced that the 2013 word of the year is “selfie.”

And to celebrate this momentous event, we present to you the world’s first selfie! In 1839, Robert Cornelius went to his backyard and captured the first ever self portrait using the Daguerreotype

This is the World’s First Selfie

via Lost at E Minor


Tags:

#history #it occurs to me that my feels about this are actually very similar to the ones I had about that Martian photo #*actual photograph* of *actual alien time period*

archaicwonder:

The Oldest Known Map: The Map of Nippur

This ancient clay tablet dates to the 14th-13th century BC. It shows a map of the countryside around the Mesopotamian city of Nippur, located in the middle of the southern Mesopotamia floodplain, near the modern city of Diwaniyah, Iraq. The inscription on the tablet is in cuneiform.

The University of Pennsylvania was excavating in Nippur from 1889 until 1900 and during that time they discovered thousands of clay tablets. This map may have been discovered at that time, but its importance was not recognized until quite some time later.


Tags:

#awesome #for some reason the names of Kish and Nippur #got stuck in my head when I was learning about Mesopotamia #good to see you again Nippur

yourspookyginger:

 

gipsiidanger:

basilton:

In the early years of space flight, both Russians and Americans used pencils in space. Unfortunately, pencil lead is made of graphite, a highly conductive material. Snapped graphite leads and particles in zero gravity are hugely problematic, as they will get sucked into the air ventilation or electronic equipment, easily causing shorts or fires in the pure oxygen environment of a capsule.

After the fire in Apollo 1 which killed all the astronauts on board, NASA required a writing instrument that wasn’t a fire hazard. Fisher spent over a million dollars (of his own money) creating a pressurized ball point pen, which NASA bought at $2.95 each. The Russian space program also switched over from pencils shortly after.

40 years later snide morons on the internet still snigger about it, because snide morons on the internet never know what they are talking about.

THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU YOU WONDERFUL HUMAN

I’VE HEARD SO MANY PEOPLE GIVE AMERICA SHIT ABOUT THIS AND LAUGH BECAUSE THEY THINK AMERICA IS SO FUCKING STUPID FOR SPENDING A MILLION DOLLARS ON A PEN WHEN THEY COULD’VE USED A PENCIL, LIKE THEY WERE TOO STUPID TO THINK OF THAT CONCEPT

THAT PEN WAS AN IDEA THAT PROBABLY LITERALLY SAVED LIVES AND THIS DAMN POST HAS BEEN CIRCULATING WITH PEOPLE LAUGHING AT NASA AND TREATING THEM LIKE IDIOTS 

SHUT THE FUCK UP AND SHIT THE FUCK DOWN


Tags:

#because you know there had to be more to it than that #history #the power of science

uispeccoll:

gov-info:

Smithsonian Gov Doc: Archives…In Bed

In 2010, Fortune Cookie Chronicles author Merlin Lowe donated a 60-year can of “tea cakes,” along with a baker’s hat, to the National Museum of American History. For three years at the museum, the can remained unopened and the question lingered: what is inside a can of Hong Kong Tea Cakes from the 1930s?! This was the mystery finally solved in the conservation lab…. MORE

I am a sucker for any story about actual food in collections. Auto REBLOG!!

Tags:

#60-year-old fortune cookies #that look totally normal #I can feel ‘this is disturbing’ and ‘this is cool!’ fighting for dominance in my brain #(the following category tag was added retroactively:) #in which Brin has a food poisoning phobia