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Category: Military

Bee
By The Generalist Posted on January 18, 2020January 25, 2023

Mad honey

Honey takes on the chemical properties of nectar gathered by bees. This fact turns out to be quite useful if you’re fighting the ancient Romans.

Categories: Ancient history, Animals, Food & agriculture, Health & medicine, History, Middle East, Military, Places, Plants, Sciences
Yaa Asantewaa
By The Generalist Posted on January 17, 2020April 28, 2021

War of the Golden Stool

When the British colonise your country and exile your king, what do you do? If you’re a queen mother of the Ashanti Empire, you start a war.

Categories: 19th century history, Africa, History, Military, Places, Politics & law
Navy
By The Generalist Posted on January 16, 2020January 14, 2020

Longest acronym

The US Navy loves their abbreviations: JAG, SEAL, NCIS, SECNAV, USLANTFLT… but the best has to be ADCOMSUBORDCOMPHIBSPAC. The Soviets also loved their abbreviations: НИИОМТПЛАБОПАРМБЕТЖЕЛБЕТРАБСБОМОНИМОНКОНОТДТЕХСТРОМОНТ!

Categories: Language, Military
USS Johnston
By The Generalist Posted on December 16, 2019January 25, 2023

Deepest shipwreck

The USS Johnston was sunk in the Battle off Samar in World War II. Its wreck descended into the Philippine Trench, the third deepest trench in the world, and we know of no deeper wrecks.

Categories: 20th century history, History, Military, Places, Southeast Asia, The oceans
Tank
By The Generalist Posted on December 8, 2019January 25, 2023

Worst tank

In World War II, New Zealand wanted a tank, but none of their allies had any to spare. So they made their own, with a tractor, corrugated iron, a mattress, and a postcard.

Categories: 20th century history, History, Military, Oceania, Places, Sciences, Technology
Plaza de Mayo
By The Generalist Posted on December 5, 2019April 28, 2021

Grandmothers vs. the dirty war

As part of Argentina’s Dirty War, hundreds of children were taken from their parents and adopted into military families. The Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo are trying to get them back.

Categories: 20th century history, History, Military, Places, South America
St. Raphael
By The Generalist Posted on November 27, 2019April 28, 2021

The disappearances of a prince and princess

Princess Anne and Prince Ludwig of Löwenstein-Wertheim-Freudenberg liked flying and spying, respectively. Both disappeared under mysterious and separate circumstances.

Categories: 19th century history, 20th century history, Europe, History, Military, Places, Southeast Asia, The oceans
By The Generalist Posted on November 21, 2019November 20, 2019

Launched and sunk in one day

King Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden really wanted a big ship so he could dominate the Baltic. The Vasa was one of the most heavily armed ships in the world when it launched in 1628. But the same day it launched, it sank.

Categories: Early modern history, Europe, History, Military, Places
Military skateboard
By The Generalist Posted on October 28, 2019April 21, 2021

Military skateboarding

Sometimes the image says it all; in the 1990s the United States military experimented with skateboards for urban warfare.

Categories: Games & sport, Military
Shell sculpture
By The Generalist Posted on October 24, 2019January 25, 2023

Art in the trenches

In World War I millions of troops sat in trenches for more than three and a half years. It was by turns terrifying and boring. To ignore one feeling and allay the other, they made art.

Categories: 20th century history, Art, Arts & recreation, History, Military
Castle
By The Generalist Posted on October 20, 2019April 28, 2021

Castle licence

If you wanted to build a castle in medieval England, you needed permission from the king. They’re supposed to be for the defence of the realm, but sometimes you just want to fake out the neighbours.

Categories: Architecture, Europe, History, Medieval history, Military, Places, Politics & law
Sea Peoples
By The Generalist Posted on October 3, 2019September 26, 2019

Sea Peoples

Around 1200 BCE, almost every civilisation in the Eastern Mediterranean collapsed, or just barely survived. One possible culprit were invaders from across the sea: the Sea Peoples. No-one knows precisely who they were.

Categories: Ancient history, Europe, History, Middle East, Military, Places
War tree
By The Generalist Posted on September 24, 2019April 28, 2021

Tree war

In 1976, North Korea, South Korea, and the United States almost went to war over a single tree.

Categories: 20th century history, East Asia, History, Military, Places, Politics & law
By The Generalist Posted on September 19, 2019April 28, 2021

Dictator vs. rock music

Manuel Noriega was the CIA-funded dictator of Panama from 1983 to 1989. When the United States invaded Panama, they drove him out with The Clash’s cover of I Fought the Law.

Categories: 20th century history, Arts & recreation, History, Military, Music, North & Central America, Places, Politics & law
Ration
By The Generalist Posted on August 13, 2019August 17, 2019

Food for a day

The humanitarian daily ration (HDR) is a small non-perishable package designed to provide one day’s food supply to anyone, regardless of religious dietary restrictions. Just don’t make it the same colour as a bomb when you airdrop it.

Categories: Food & agriculture, Military, Politics & law, Sciences
Fort Drum
By The Generalist Posted on August 3, 2019January 25, 2023

Concrete battleship

There’s an island fort in Manila Bay that’s shaped just like a battleship – a remnant of the American colonisation of the Philippines.

Categories: 20th century history, History, Military, Places, Southeast Asia

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