Sharing the most interesting moments in history 🔙 😎 Ads: @buzzads x https://telega.io/c/buzzhistory
A nanny locks children in a cupboard during a German air raid. London, 1942.
Buzz 📔 History
Around 2 million people from Latvia, Estonia, and Lithuania formed a human chain that united all three countries to show the world their desire to leave the Soviet Union, on August 23, 1989.
Buzz 📔 History
The Marble Veil by the Italian sculptor Camillo Torregiani, 1855. From the collection of the National Museum of Prado in Madrid.
Put 🔥 if you liked this post.
Buzz 📔 History
Sculptors Charles Lang and Otto Falkenbach working on the head of a Triceratops for the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago, 1938.
Put ❤️ if you were interested in this post.
Buzz 📔 History
Kiss in gas masks. United Kingdom, 1940.
Buzz 📔 History
Experimental space suit for lunar exploration, 1960.
What do you think about the experimental spacesuits of the 1960s for lunar exploration?
❤️ - They are a fascinating sample of the innovation of that era.
👍 - It interests me, but I prefer today's spacesuits.
⚡️ - It's impressive to think about how technology evolved since then.
🔥 - I don't think the old suits are relevant today.
Buzz 📔 History
Samson the gorilla and his famous gaze, 1960.
Share our channel with your friends 👐🏻
Buzz 📔 History
The boy who had just stolen his father's car and crashed it, taking one last drag before facing the consequences. 1974
If you enjoyed this post, please put 🔥
Buzz 📔 History
One of the first recorded wedding photographs in the world. February 10, 1840. Queen Victoria and Prince Albert.
Were you aware of this information?
❤️ - Yes
⚡️ - No
Buzz 📔 History
The torture "witch's chair" with spikes, handcuffs, locking blocks, and an iron seat, which in some cases was heated to a glowing state. This popular torture device was particularly widespread among the Austrian Inquisition.
Buzz 📔 History
A cat left its paw print on this ancient Roman tile almost 2000 years ago. The artifact is kept at the Gloucester City Museum in England. It was discovered during excavations in 1969. Apparently, the cat sneaked across the still-wet clay tiles in the early first century AD, literally leaving its mark on history.
Buzz 📔 History
The Milan Conservatory is named after Giuseppe Verdi, even though it refused to admit him in 1833. The young Verdi was told that he was four years older than the usual age for applicants, was not a citizen of the Lombardo-Venetian Kingdom, and lacked musical talent.
Buzz 📔 History
In the 13th century, near Paris, the giant Montfaucon gallows was erected, but it has not survived to the present day.
Montfaucon was divided into sections using vertical posts and horizontal beams and could be used for the simultaneous execution of up to 50 people.
Share our channel with your friends.
Buzz 📔 History
One of the cheapest lodging houses in New York at the beginning of the 20th century, commonly known in slang as "flophouses" or "furnished rooming houses."
Buzz 📔 History
Alvin Kelly, standing on his head on the roof of the Chanin Building skyscraper in Manhattan, ate 13 donuts and washed them down with coffee. October 1939.
Buzz 📔 History
A break on the construction site of a bridge in Auckland, New Zealand, 1950.
Buzz 📔 History
Scientists Ulrich Beck and Mike Wagner discovered the world’s oldest pants in China, with analysis showing them to be 3,300 years old. The pattern on the pants, noted by the Germans as a “typical Slavic ornament,” is of great cultural value.
Buzz 📔 History
A photograph showing the true size of the Titanic's propellers.
Buzz 📔 History
Inventor Karl Ward demonstrates his invention—a pedal-powered monowheel where the wheel is replaced by legs. The aim of the invention was to allow sitting while walking. Los Angeles, California, 1971.
Buzz 📔 History
Grains overwhelmingly dominated the diet due to their long storage capabilities, ease of preparation of various dishes, and, above all, cost-effectiveness.
Buzz 📔 History
An Eskimo listens to music on a phonograph, 1922.
Buzz 📔 History
A 19th-century minibus. These horse-drawn omnibuses traveled through the streets of European cities. In London, they were in use until 1914, and in Berlin until 1923.
Buzz 📔 History
The device is conveniently housed within a top hat, allowing gentlemen to enjoy their favorite radio programs while walking.
Buzz 📔 History
In 1815, around 50,000 soldiers died in the Battle of Waterloo. Before their bodies were buried, their teeth were removed to create dental prosthetics. "Waterloo Teeth" were in high demand and sold quickly.
Buzz 📔 History
The so-called "Welbike" is the smallest motorcycle that was in service with the British Army. A total of 3,641 of these motorcycles were produced.
Buzz 📔 History
Put 👍 if you like the posts we publish.
Buzz 📔 History
They were invented by Swiss designer Henry Roth, who came up with the idea of placing a small toy inside the "Kinder Surprise."
If you liked this post, put ❤️
Buzz 📔 History
This is Manohar Aich, Mr. Universe of 1952. He lived until the age of 104 and passed away in 2016. Almost until his last days, he continued training in the gym.
Did you know that?
👍 - yes
⚡️ - no
Buzz 📔 History
USA, Washington State, late 19th - early 20th century.
Buzz 📔 History
The official Mickey Mouse gas mask from the 1940s was specially designed to make children feel comfortable in an emergency situation.
Share our channel with your friends if you find our channel useful and interesting.
Buzz 📔 History