Carpathia was 58 nautical miles away from the given coordinates, and, once made aware of the situation having been awoken from his sleep, Captain Arthur Rostron immediately ordered Carpathia to be brought about.Quote:
"CQD CQD SOS SOS CQD SOS. Come at once. We have struck a berg. CQD old man."
BQ78 said:
In 1721 the English went to war with the Indian tribes of the future northeast states of the US and the Maritime provinces of Canada. The MikMaq tribe, which had lived in harmony with the Acadians in Nova Scotia, had learned European sailing and ship building from the Acadians. At the start of the war they used a couple of sloops and began raiding British shipping, seizing scores of English vessels. They were assembling this fleet and intended to attack the English capital of Nova Scotia at Annapolis but called off the attack due to the British taking MikMaq hostages. They continued using the fleet for pirating English shipping until they were ultimately subdued three years later.
BQ78 said:
It's pretty amazing that kicking the Acadians out came up seriously twice before it happened. The first time after King Phillips War (killed as too expensive to execute) and again after the War of Spanish Succession ( killed because no one would be available to farm the land).
🚨Amazing Historical Facts (Day 1)
— StefanZL Maps And History☦️ (@StefanZlatkov12) December 17, 2024
🏰Grand Duchy of Lithuania 🏰
Did you know? At its peak in the 15th century, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was the largest state in Europe, stretching from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea. 🌊🏞️
It was a multi-ethnic, multi-religious state that… pic.twitter.com/v7sVkFkN51
That's interesting. I have known three different graduates of the Academy, all of whom sailed on the Eagle, and all of whom said it was a miserable experience. I guess that simply goes under the generalization of different strokes for different folks.StockHorseAg said:
My FIL got to sail on the USCGC Eagle from Denmark to New London back when he was in the Coast Guard Academy. He said it was a really neat experience and has some interesting stories from it.
I was in key west visiting the the Boy Scout sea base and we got to go on board the Eagle and asked for a short tour which they granted. The United States confiscated it after WW2 from the Germans. It is also one of two sailing ships commisioned (the Constitution) by the US military and the only active sailing vessel.StockHorseAg said:
My FIL got to sail on the USCGC Eagle from Denmark to New London back when he was in the Coast Guard Academy. He said it was a really neat experience and has some interesting stories from it.
Do you know the reason why some countries drive on the left hand side of the road?
— Scipio Africanus (@ScipioX__) December 18, 2024
It all goes back to medieval times. You have probably heard why staircase’s in castles spiral in a clockwise direction. It was designed so enemy forces would have a difficult time fighting their… pic.twitter.com/VKTZMXHHD8
Some of this stuff seems pretty arcane to me, as with all British history, from things like weights/measurements to currency etc.Quote:
There is an historical reason for this; it's all to do with keeping your sword hand free!
In the Middle Ages you never knew who you were going to meet when travelling on horseback. Most people are right-handed, so if a stranger passed by on the right of you, your right hand would be free to use your sword if required. (Similarly, most Norman castle staircases spiral in a clockwise direction going upwards, so the defending soldiers would be able to stab down around the twist but those attacking (going up the stairs) would not.)
Indeed the 'keep to the left' rule goes back even further in time; archaeologists have discovered evidence suggesting that the Romans drove carts and wagons on the left, and it is known that Roman soldiers always marched on the left.
This 'rule of the road' was officially sanctioned in 1300 AD when Pope Boniface VIII declared that all pilgrims travelling to Rome should keep to the left.
This continued until the late 1700s when large wagons became popular for transporting goods. These wagons were drawn by several pairs of horses and had no driver's seat. Instead, in order to control the horses, the driver sat on the horse at the back left, thus keeping his whip hand free. Sitting on the left however made it difficult to judge the traffic coming the other way, as anyone who has driven a left-hand drive car along the winding lanes of Britain will agree!
These huge wagons were best suited to the wide open spaces and large distances of Canada and the US, and the first keep-to-the-right law was passed in Pennsylvania in 1792, with many Canadian and US states following suit later.
In France a decree of 1792 ordered traffic to keep to the "common" right and Napoleon later enforced the rule in all French territories.
In Britain there wasn't much call for these massive wagons and the smaller British vehicles had seats for the driver to sit on behind the horses. As most people are right-handed, the driver would sit to the right of the seat so his whip hand was free.
Traffic congestion in 18th century London led to a law being passed to make all traffic on London Bridge keep to the left in order to reduce collisions. This rule was incorporated into the Highway Act of 1835 and was adopted throughout the British Empire.
And I don't think X is a terrible place for historical trivia/facts.Quote:
The French revolutionary government under Maximilien Robespierre best known for leading the late 18th-century "Reign of Terror" in which thousands were guillotined dictated that everyone should drive on the right.
The left side of the road was, by long cultural convention, reserved for carriages and those on horseback. In other words, the wealthier classes. Pedestrians, i.e. poorer folks, kept to the right. Forcing everyone to the same side of the road, besides being good for traffic, was part of doing away with these snobby class distinctions.
The upper classes likely went along since, in those days, being seen as aristocratic was not only unfashionable, it was rather dangerous. (See above about guillotines.)
The French policy is said to have been spread by Napoleon as his armies marched through Europe. Some evidence for this can be found by looking at a map of the Napoleonic empire in 1812.
There is one nation that was neither a subject nor ally of Napoleon. That would be Sweden. Sweden drove on the left, up until one surprisingly uneventful day in 1967 when drivers there switched to the right.
This is how Roman Britain ended
— Maps & Kings (@mapsandkings) December 18, 2024
In the aftermath of the Roman withdrawal from Britain in the early 5th century, the Britons were left vulnerable to external threats. Moreover, the Romans didn’t just retreat, the entire Western Roman Empire has collapsed and now the Britons are… pic.twitter.com/0iyaui0jxs
Quote:
The idea of a bridge crossing the strait is an old one. The Romans considered building a bridge joining Calabria and Sicily made of boats and barrels. Pliny the Elder, a philosopher and Roman military leader born in 23 AD, wrote of a plan to bridge the strait with a series of connecting boats. The idea was abandoned, as it was clear that more traffic plied the strait in a north-south than east-west direction, so any structure on water could not be permanent.
Charlemagne considered joining the two sides with a series of bridges. This idea was revived by the Norman adventurer Robert Guiscard in the 11th century and by Roger II of Sicily in the 12th. In 1876, Giuseppe Zanardelli was convinced that the strait could be linked by either a bridge or a tunnel. In 1866, public works minister Stefano Jacini gave Alfredo Cottrau, an internationally recognised engineer, the task of drawing up plans for a bridge between Calabria and Sicily. Later, in 1870, Navone proposed building a tunnel based on Napoleon's idea of a tunnel under the English Channel. This tunnel was to start at Contesse and was to pass below Messina and Ganzirri at a depth of 150 m (490 ft), crossing the strait to Punta Pezzo and resurfacing at Torre Cavallo.
Lots of that type of accident has taken place. I would not call them "friendly fire" though very deadly none the less.agrams said:
The 81,000 ton Queen Mary, while transporting ~10,000 American Troops from the US to UK, collided with the 4200 ton escort cruiser HMS Curacao broadside while making ~28 knots. She split the cruiser in half and ~337 Officers and men of her crew were lost.
agrams said:
The 81,000 ton Queen Mary, while transporting ~10,000 American Troops from the US to UK, collided with the 4200 ton escort cruiser HMS Curacao broadside while making ~28 knots. She split the cruiser in half and ~337 Officers and men of her crew were lost.
Unveiling the Mysteries of Oley Hills: An Ancient Ceremonial Stone Complex in Pennsylvania
— Red Feather Relics (@red_relics) December 31, 2024
The Oley Hills site in Berks County, Pennsylvania, is an enigmatic complex featuring dry stone walls, shaped rock piles (cairns), perched boulders, and uniquely formed natural stones. Some… pic.twitter.com/R0L7jxiQAq
Quote:
Unveiling the Mysteries of Oley Hills: An Ancient Ceremonial Stone Complex in Pennsylvania
The Oley Hills site in Berks County, Pennsylvania, is an enigmatic complex featuring dry stone walls, shaped rock piles (cairns), perched boulders, and uniquely formed natural stones. Some of these structures are thought to resemble animal and human forms. A notable feature is the "split-wedged boulder," a split rock with another stone wedged into the gap.
Luminescence analysis suggests that the cairns were constructed around 570 BC, possibly by the Adena culture, which was centered in the Ohio River Valley. The site's extensive and elaborate nature, covering approximately 46 acres in the central area with additional outliers along the ridge, indicates it was unlikely created for field clearing. Instead, it may have served ceremonial purposes, reflecting the spiritual and cultural practices of early Native American societies.
The Oley Hills site offers valuable insights into the ceremonial landscapes of pre-Colonial Native American cultures, highlighting their sophisticated understanding of stone construction and spiritual expression.
For a deeper exploration of ceremonial stone landscapes in Pennsylvania, including the Oley Hills site, you might find this video informative:
Proof positive Afghans were here before us...nortex97 said:Unveiling the Mysteries of Oley Hills: An Ancient Ceremonial Stone Complex in Pennsylvania
— Red Feather Relics (@red_relics) December 31, 2024
The Oley Hills site in Berks County, Pennsylvania, is an enigmatic complex featuring dry stone walls, shaped rock piles (cairns), perched boulders, and uniquely formed natural stones. Some… pic.twitter.com/R0L7jxiQAqQuote:
Unveiling the Mysteries of Oley Hills: An Ancient Ceremonial Stone Complex in Pennsylvania
The Oley Hills site in Berks County, Pennsylvania, is an enigmatic complex featuring dry stone walls, shaped rock piles (cairns), perched boulders, and uniquely formed natural stones. Some of these structures are thought to resemble animal and human forms. A notable feature is the "split-wedged boulder," a split rock with another stone wedged into the gap.
Luminescence analysis suggests that the cairns were constructed around 570 BC, possibly by the Adena culture, which was centered in the Ohio River Valley. The site's extensive and elaborate nature, covering approximately 46 acres in the central area with additional outliers along the ridge, indicates it was unlikely created for field clearing. Instead, it may have served ceremonial purposes, reflecting the spiritual and cultural practices of early Native American societies.
The Oley Hills site offers valuable insights into the ceremonial landscapes of pre-Colonial Native American cultures, highlighting their sophisticated understanding of stone construction and spiritual expression.
For a deeper exploration of ceremonial stone landscapes in Pennsylvania, including the Oley Hills site, you might find this video informative:
See my post above.CanyonAg77 said:
Wasn't the same thing done in Romania during the AIDS epidemic? Infants warehoused in orphanages with minimal staffs and limited human contact.
I seem to recall that Americans tried to adopt some of the kids, and they had terrible problems.