• Kruh Master
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    409 days ago

    Just because I like music doesn’t mean I have to like every genre and artist.

    I know it’s a meme, but this logic is 🗑️

    • @Fizz@lemmy.nz
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      189 days ago

      It all began when John Train had a great idea for a new method of transport…

      • Oh, my sibling in sin, I will tell you things about railways you wouldn’t believe, like a proto-railway that played a role in the 1745 Battle of Prestonpans, or rope haulage, or how the Ffestiniog Railway in Wales was designed to constantly go downhill because it was opened in the 1830s before steam locos were both powerful enough or widespread enough to be practical.

        Sit down, I’m going to tell you about how the inventor of the RORO Train Ferry died in shame.

      • @meyotch@slrpnk.net
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        28 days ago

        That’s a pretty good source to understand the zeitgeist of the whole railroad boom. It’s fictionalized but pretty truthy.

    • Railway history is incredible because it was very much built on personal spats between various millionaires and scam artists. Yerkes is probably my favourite example of both.

  • Destide
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    259 days ago

    Actually I am a slightly overweight bald man with a beard so Vikings are my personality

    • Björn Tantau
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      118 days ago

      I feel attacked. But my excuse is that my mother is from Norway and my name is Bjørn.

      • @Initiateofthevoid@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        8 days ago

        Don’t worry, actual vikings within one generation of the fjords get a pass for being fans.

        Same with Italians and being fans of (ancient) Rome.

        Not Germans, though. Sorry Germans. You know how it is.

  • Match!!
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    158 days ago

    [burning with an urge to tell you about indigenous transgender priestess revolutionaries]

  • Uriel238 [all pronouns]
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    8 days ago

    The French Revolution took about a century to fully process through. There were several instances of guillotines and piles of heads. We usually know about the first one (and the second one for those who’ve seen Les Misérables. ) During the post 1789 process there was also a weird cult thing that looked a bit like MAGA, until even the cultists got tired of Robespierre’s bullshit.

    Marie Antoinette was a perfectly serviceable princess / queen and fielded charities and smiled at the commoners and all the things ambitious feudal ladies are supposed to do. She never said Qu’ils mangent de la brioche but the rumor of it was current, and sped her way to the guillotine. She was also accused of sexual perversities, including The German Vice (lesbianism) most of which had to be explained to her so she could deny having ever done them.

      • @Valmond@lemmy.world
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        38 days ago

        Nah they’re just more or less the usual ashole king. The 12th was a complete douche, think angry spoiled kid, went on a war rampage in russia/poland and grabbed some land, got wrecked (but that’s just bad luck eh right?) went to invade norway, got shot in the head lol. Such a great king.

  • Blackout
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    89 days ago

    I’ll have you know I’ve listened to all episodes of the Revolutions podcast and remember nothing.

      • Mister Neon
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        37 days ago

        One: Women would use indigo hair dye called xiuquilitl to turn their hair blue.

        Two: In Tenochtitlán human waste would be collected from public toilets for fertilizer. Thus it was someone’s job to sail the “poop canoe” to deliver night soil.

        Three: Only a certain type of cacao was used as currency. Counterfeiting was rampant.

        • Blue hair and probably also pronouns… damn woke Aztecs! The poop canoe seems pretty ordinary to me, after all, shit is gold in an agricultural society. Then, how does one counterfeit cacao??

          • Mister Neon
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            36 days ago

            Even with billions of cacao beans exchanges, Aztec cacao sellers took great measures to disguise their fake cacao. According to Bernard Sahagun, a Spaniard documenting Aztec lives, cacao sellers processed fakes using hot ashes, chalk, and a generous coating of amaranth dough, wax, or avocado pits (Coe 100). To further camouflage their counterfeit cacao, sellers mixed the fake cacao with pure Theobroma cacao beans. Other cacao deception experts exploited empty shells by filling the insides with mud (De Maré).

            Source

            Sahagun was one of the first westerners to document the indigenous people of Mexico.