These will forever change your concept of time. This list puts historical moments into a
time-line context that will surprise you when you discover which one of two
happenings is older. Most of them
surprised me. :) I did verify the
founding date for Harvard and the date the Chicago Cubs last won a World
Series, but I didn't verify anything on this list beyond that.
1) Betty White Is Older Than Sliced Bread
1928 is the date when bread was first sold commercially as
sliced rather than the traditional whole loaves. Prior to that, bakers didn't believe that
sliced bread could stay fresh. Betty
White was born in 1922, six years before the invention that became the
benchmark for greatness with future inventions being heralded as the greatest thing since sliced bread.
2) Harvard University was founded before
calculus was invented
Originally called the New
College, 1636 is the date for the founding of Harvard University, the
oldest institution of higher education in the new world—in an area that is now
the United States of America. It should
also be noted that physicist, mathematician and astronomer Galileo was still
alive during Harvard's early years. He
died in 1642. The invention of calculus
didn't come about until 1684 with Gottfried Leibniz's publication of Nova Methodus.
3) The Ottoman Empire still existed when the
Chicago Cubs last won a World Series
1908 is the last time the Chicago Cubs won the World
Series. The Ottoman Empire, founded in
the 13th century, came to an end in 1922 with Mehmed VI being the last sultan
of the empire before the Turkish government abolished the sultanate and took governing
control of the new republic.
UPDATE: The Chicago Cubs finally won the World Series in
2016 after a very long dry spell of not winning.
4) The Pyramids of Giza were built before wooly
mammoths became extinct
It's believed that the last wooly mammoths died out
approximately 1700B.C. on Russia's Wrangel Island. The Pyramids of Giza, in Egypt, were built
approximately 300 years earlier (about 4,000 years ago). There are some claims that the pyramids might
be even older than that.
5) The fax machine is the same age as the Oregon
Trail
1843 is the year Alexander Bain, a Scottish mechanic,
invented the first fax machine. The same
year the Great Migration on the
Oregon Trail began when a wagon train of approximately 1000 migrants attempted
to travel west but probably died of dysentery along the way.
6) Jewelry store Tiffany & Co. was founded
before Italy was a country
1837 is the year Charles Tiffany and John Young founded
Tiffany & Young which became Tiffany & Co. in 1853. 1861 is when General Giuseppe Garibaldi led a
successful campaign to bring the various city-states together as one nation,
although Rome held out for a number of years after that. Macy's was founded in 1858, also prior to
Italy becoming the nation we know today.
7) France was still using the guillotine when
the first Star Wars movie was
released
1977 is the release date of the first of the Star Wars movies. A few months later is when France conducted
its last execution by guillotine. The
guillotine had been used in France for approximately 200 years. And another French time line fact to boggle
the mind: 1889 is the year of the Eiffel Tower, the same year Nintendo was
founded (the company originally made playing cards) and Van Gogh painted The Starry Night.
8) Two of President John Tyler's grandsons are
still alive
1841 to 1845, John Tyler was America's tenth president. And, surprisingly, two of his grandsons are
still alive. December 2013, both Lyon
Gardiner Tyler, Jr., and Harrison Tyler, were only in their 80s…as verified by
Snopes…and are still alive today in 2017.
And there you have it…a few surprising facts from history.
6 comments:
I love lists like this. My favorite is the fax machine, I think, because it blends modern with old.
Great list of interesting historical facts. It proves that historical details need to be double-checked before inserting them into a story to avoid anachronisms.
As usual your blog post is really interesting. Puts things in perspective.
Jennifer: The fax machine really surprised me. Thinking of the fax machine and pioneers in covered wagons as being in the same time reference is weird.
Thanks for your comment.
Cat: So true. There shouldn't be any assumptions. If a writer doesn't have factual knowledge, it's time to verify.
Thanks for your comment.
Vonnie: Glad you enjoyed the list. Sometimes things can really be a shocker when you put them into a timeline for comparison.
Thanks for your comment.
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