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majorshrapnel

Date Posted:2022-03-29 07:12:35

In 1974 a Chinese farmer accidentally uncovers one of the greatest archeological jewels in all history, the Chinese terracotta army, 8,000 terracotta soldiers to guard the Emperor Shi Huang (259 BC) and every single one has a different face. 

majorshrapnel #1

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-03-29 07:20:54

1912 Robert Falcon Scott, leader of the British attempt to be the first to the South Pole writes his last entry in his diary, it simply says.... the end cannot be far.
shula #2

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-03-30 01:13:37

29 March 1886.  John Pemberton brewed the first batch of Coco-Cola in Atlanta. 
majorshrapnel #3

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-03-30 08:54:40

1867 The US buys Alaska from the Russians. The fact was, the Russians knew they couldn't defend this territory against such a strong opponent and so chose to get some money out of it. The British did the same with, I think, Oregon.
MarkUK #4

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-03-30 05:54:26

There doesn't appear to be a way to reply to a post by quoting it again. 

Anyway, to go back to Capt Scott, the three who died in the tent around 29 March were discovered eight months later in November, The tent was collapsed over them and marked as a grave. But they're not there today. As fresh snowfall over the years buried them still deeper they would have slowly sunk down into the ice before falling out into the sea far below, the same with Oates who crawled out of his tent to die a fortnight earlier. 

majorshrapnel #5

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-03-30 06:47:25

There doesn't appear to be a way to reply to a post by quoting it again. 

Anyway, to go back to Capt Scott, the three who died in the tent around 29 March were discovered eight months later in November, The tent was collapsed over them and marked as a grave. But they're not there today. As fresh snowfall over the years buried them still deeper they would have slowly sunk down into the ice before falling out into the sea far below, the same with Oates who crawled out of his tent to die a fortnight earlier. 


I'll have a go

majorshrapnel #6

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-03-30 06:48:40

Well it's worked for me Mark. So 'quote to reply' doesn't work for you then?
shula #7

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-03-30 10:20:59

I don't have a "quote to reply" button.
MarkUK #8

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-03-31 05:58:18

31 March 1922 - The Hinterkaifeck Murders. 100 years ago today.

One of Germany's most infamous unsolved murders.

On 4 April 1922, after the six residents of Hinterkiafeck Farm in Bavaria had not been seen for four days, a search revealed the bodies of four family members in the barn with another plus a servant in the house. Investigations concluded that they had all been killed with a mattock on 31 March and that the killer(s) had remained in the house for several days after.  

A number of suspects were identified and questioned, but no-one has ever been charged with the murders.

The dead were - Andreas Gruber, 63; his wife Cäzilia, 72, their daughter Viktoria Gabriel, 35; her daughter Cäzilia, seven - all found in the barn. In the house were Viktoria's son Josef, two and the maid Maria Baumgartner, 44.

 

shula #9

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-03-31 09:28:52

A sad and grisly end for the family.  Forensics today might well have led to other suspects.  There had to be more than one killer.


Also on this 31 March in 1933 the Civilian Conservation Corps was established in the U.S.

MarkUK #10

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-04-01 07:24:30

It would make a great thriller/horror film. If you look into it you'll see there was much going on in the days prior to the killings - strange noises in the attic, footsteps in the snow etc. The police believed the four victims found in the barn were lured there one by one before he/they moved into the house to kill the last two. 

MarkUK #11

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-04-01 11:43:46

1 April 1922 - Karl, Emperor of Austria-Hungary 1916-19, died. 100 years ago today.

Great-nephew of Emperor Franz Josef whom he succeeded in the midst of World War I. Within months of his accession Karl made tentative peace overtures, but his dependence on Germany, both militarily and economically, put an end to any such thoughts.

Austria-Hungary signed an armistice in early November 1918 and following the German surrender a week later Karl renounced the government of the Empire (but not the Crown) and retired to Schloss Eckartsau to await events. In April 1919 he was formally deposed in Austria and forced into exile in Switzerland; but crucially he was not formally deposed in Hungary. 

Following a series of short-lived governments and economic chaos Karl made two attempts to regain the Hungarian Crown in 1921, the second of which resulted in him being exiled from Europe and he and his family being carried away on a Royal Navy warship to the Portuguese North Atlantic island of Madeira.

Never in robust health he fell seriously ill in March 1922 with influenza and died at his villa of Quinta do Monte in Funchal aged just 34.

Blessed Karl von Habsburg - Crisis Magazine | Austria, European royalty,  Habsburg austria 

majorshrapnel #12

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-04-01 07:25:15

In 1993 in Liverpool, two 10 year old boys were charged with the abduction, torture and murder of two year old James Bulger. It was a crime that rocked a nation.
shula #13

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-04-02 04:14:07

Would that make Emperor Karl Marie Antoinette's nephew?
shula #14

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-04-02 04:17:23

I remember the murder of that poor little boy.  The murderers were so tragically disturbed.  What ever happened to them?  It was a horrifying murder and rocked nations beyond the UK.
MarkUK #15

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-04-02 07:41:14

Both were released after just eight years when they were 18. One seems to have disappeared from the public eye, but the other has been twice back inside for breaching his parole conditions and the possession of child pornography.   

MarkUK #16

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-04-02 08:07:59

Going back to Emperor Karl. Marie Antoinette was several generations back. She was Karl's gt-gt-gt-grandfather's sister making her a distant cousin several times removed. 

shula #17

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-04-03 02:33:03

Good Lord.  I was in the wrong century.  No wonder I'm never dressed appropriately.  I need professional history help. 
MarkUK #18

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-04-03 08:46:55

I too got it wrong describing them as cousins, Marie Antoinette was Emperor Karl's gt-gt-gt-gt-aunt.

Here's the line of descent. Her brother was -

Emperor Leopold II b. 1747 d. 1792, his son -

Emperor Franz II b. 1768 d. 1835, his son -

Archduke Franz Karl b. 1802 d. 1878, his son -

Archduke Karl Ludwig b. 1833 d, 1896, his son -

Archduke Otto b. 1865 d. 1906, his son -

Emperor Karl b. 1887 d. 1922. 


His father Archduke Otto (the younger brother of the famous Archduke Franz Ferdinand assassinated at Sarajevo in 1914) lived the kind of life one half expects to hear from a younger son of noble family but with no role in life - no interest in education, numerous affairs and illegitimate children, juvenile pranks (many involving nudity), alienation from Court, life abroad, illness (syphilis), physical decline (prosthetic nose) and early death.  

shula #19

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-04-04 01:59:29

Spare heirs sometimes don't live up to their potential.
majorshrapnel #20

Re:Reply Topic

Date Posted:2022-04-04 07:53:09

1918 The battle of the Somme ends. It had lasted five months and killed or injured around a million soldiers on all sides. An unbelievable 1.75 million shells were fired in just one battle! No wonder it was called the great war.
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