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      20 Interesting Oddities

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      Adryan
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      20 Interesting Oddities
      May 20, 2010 10:46:20 am
      1. In 1752, there were only 354 days in Great Britain and its colonies. This was because Britain adopted the Gregorian Calendar in place of the Julian calendar. The lost days were September 3 – September 13 inclusive.

      2. The Hundred Years’ War (a war to determine who the rightful King of France would be) was actually 116 years long. It was during this war that Saint Joan rose up in France to lead her army to victory.

      3. From the year 1309 to 1377, the Roman Catholic Papacy was not based in Rome – it was based in Avignon, France. This was primarily over a dispute with the Holy Roman Empire. In 1378, Pope Gregory XI (pictured above) returned the seat of the Pope to Rome.

      4. Arabic numerals (the ones used in English) were not invented by the Arabs at all – they were actually invented by Indian mathematicians. They were modified and transferred to North African Arab mathematicians and transmitted to Europe in the Middle Ages.

      5. After the U.S Civil War, about 33% – 50% of all U.S. paper currency in circulation was counterfeit.

      . In 1938, Time Magazine declared Adolf Hitler “Man of the Year”. In the same year he took full and absolute command over the German military, stated that he intended to crush Czechoslovakia, took greater control over Austria by threatening to invade, and expelled 12,000 Jews from Germany.

      7. In 1685, playing cards were used as currency in New France (the French territories of North America) because of a coin shortage.

      8. In 1892, Italy raised the minimum age for marriage for girls – to 12.

      9. The first contraceptives were used in Ancient Egypt. Egyptian women would use vaginal suppositories made of acidic substances and lubricated with honey or oil. (An early form of English contraception is pictured above.)

      10. The shortest war on record was fought between Zanzibar and England in 1896. Zanzibar surrendered after 45 minutes.

      11. The very first bomb dropped by the Allies on Berlin during World War II killed the only elephant in the Berlin Zoo.

      12. “In God We Trust” was not officially the motto of the United States of America until 1956. The Congressional Record of that year reads: “At the present time the United States has no national motto. The committee deems it most appropriate that ‘In God we trust’ be so designated as U.S. national motto.”

      13. John Aubrey, the diarist, tells a story about the Earl of Oxford. When the Earl made a low obeisance to the Queen, he happened to let go a fart, at which he was so ashamed that he left the country for 7 years. At his return the Queen welcomed him and said, “My lord, I had forgot the fart”!

      14. Despite the terrible nature of and damage caused by the 1666 Great Fire of London, only 8 people were killed. This is despite the fire destroying at least 13,500 houses.

      15. In 74 AD, Emperor Vespasian (pictured above) had run out of money due to a civil war. In order to raise funds, he created the world’s first public pay toilets. When his son Titus criticized him for it, Vespasian pointed out that money (even earnt through urine) did not smell. This gave rise to the common saying “Pecunia non olet” – “money does not smell”.

      16. The Bank of America was originally called the Bank of Italy. It was created in 1904 by Amadeo Giannini to cater to immigrants from Italy. After merging in the 1920s with the “Bank of America, Los Angeles”, it officially became “Bank of America”.

      17. In the First Liberian War in the 1990s, General Joshua Milton Blahyi (also known as General Butt Naked) would lead his troops naked except for shoes and a gun – he did this at the suggestion of the devil, who Blahyi claims telephoned him at age 11. He believed it would protect him from the bullets (and apparently it did – as he is still alive, though he is now a religious preacher). General Butt Naked is pictured above.

      18. At the start of World War I, the US Airforce (then a component of the US army) had only 18 pilots and 5 – 12 airplanes.

      19. Contrary to popular belief and legend, Daniel Boone not only did not wear a coonskin cap, he detested them. Instead, Boone wore a felt cap.

      20. In 1838, General Antonio LĂłpez de Santa Anna (President of Mexico) had his leg amputated after his ankle was destroyed by canon-fire. He ordered a full military burial for it.
      Reprobate
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      Re: 20 Interesting Oddities
      Reply #1: May 20, 2010 12:35:10 pm
      17. In the First Liberian War in the 1990s, General Joshua Milton Blahyi (also known as General Butt Naked) would lead his troops naked except for shoes and a gun – he did this at the suggestion of the devil, who Blahyi claims telephoned him at age 11. He believed it would protect him from the bullets (and apparently it did – as he is still alive, though he is now a religious preacher). General Butt Naked is pictured above.

      I ate children's hearts, ex-rebel says
      Milton Blahyi, a former feared rebel commander in Liberia's brutal civil war ('General Butt Naked') has admitted to taking part in human sacrifices as part of traditional ceremonies intended to ensure victory in battle.

      There had been numerous rumours of human sacrifices during the 1979-93 conflict but this is the first time anyone has admitted publicly to the practice.

      He was speaking to the BBC, after telling Liberia's Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) that his forces had killed 20,000 people.
      Nice fella all round, really.
      Adryan
      • Forum Legend - Paisley
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      • Cut my veins open and I bleed Liverpool Red.
      Re: 20 Interesting Oddities
      Reply #2: May 27, 2010 12:09:09 pm
      Another 20

      1. Before the Boston Tea Party, the British actually lowered tea taxes, not raised them.

      2. England’s King George I was actually German.

      3. Abel Tasman “discovered” Tasmania, New Zealand and Fiji, on his first voyage, but managed to completely miss mainland Australia!

      4. Ethnic Irishman Bernardo O’Higgins was the first president of the Republic of Chile.

      5. Thomas Jefferson and John Adams both died on the same day – the 50th anniversary of the U.S. Declaration of Independence.

      6. When the American Civil War started, Confederate Robert E. Lee owned no slaves. Union general U.S. Grant did.

      7. Kaiser Wilhelm II, Tsar Nicholas II and George V were all grandchildren of Queen Victoria.

      8. Karl Marx was once a correspondent for the New York Daily Tribune.

      9. Josef Stalin once studied to be a priest.

      10. Henry Kissinger and Yassir Arafat won the Nobel Peace Prize. Gandhi never did.

      11. The Constitution of the Confederate States of America banned the slave trade.

      12. The Finnish capital of Helsinki was founded by a Swedish king in 1550.

      13. The “D” in D-Day stands for “Day” – “Day-Day”

      14. There was a New Australia in Paraguay in the 1890s.

      15. A New Orleans man hired a pirate to rescue Napoleon from his prison on St. Helena.

      16. Like Dracula (Vlad Tepes), there really was a King Macbeth. He ruled Scotland from 1040 to 1057.

      17. In 1839, the U.S. and Canada fought the bloodless “War of Pork and Beans”.

      18. Despite the reputation, Mussolini never made the trains run on time.

      19. The world powers officially outlawed war under the 1928 Kellogg-Briand Pact.

      20. Ancient Egypt produced at least six types of beer.

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