VengefulMight
VengefulMight OP t1_jdeky8l wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in TIL that at the Battle of Aspern-Essling in 1809, one of the French Generals was decapitated, while he was talking to a friend. by VengefulMight
It was the first defeat Napoleon had suffered since the Battle of Acre (and he’d lost then because he had fought Britain on their strongest point battles in countries where they had colonial leverage and could deploy their navy, which was the best in the world) ten years prior.
The French got a wake up call that day.
VengefulMight OP t1_jd6z9jk wrote
Reply to comment by kudichangedlives in TIL that Al Pacino boycotted the 45th academy awards in 1973, because despite having more screen time than Marlon Brando, he was nominated for best supporting actor and not best actor. by VengefulMight
Only the first two of those films need be acknowledged.
VengefulMight OP t1_jd6z8aa wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in TIL that Al Pacino boycotted the 45th academy awards in 1973, because despite having more screen time than Marlon Brando, he was nominated for best supporting actor and not best actor. by VengefulMight
Both for The Godfather. Brando won but refused to accept the award and sent someone to lecture the audience about Native Americans instead.
VengefulMight OP t1_jd6tc5j wrote
Reply to TIL that Al Pacino boycotted the 45th academy awards in 1973, because despite having more screen time than Marlon Brando, he was nominated for best supporting actor and not best actor. by VengefulMight
I would imagine that Pacino’s tantrum is little known, because it was overshadowed by Marlon Brandon’s own boycott.
VengefulMight OP t1_ja364qj wrote
Reply to comment by dontheconqueror in TIL of the less well known and earlier War in Vietnam (1945-1946), which was a military success. by VengefulMight
Brits and their French allies. The Frogs only lost once Britain left.
VengefulMight OP t1_ja067nm wrote
Reply to comment by Yanowknow in What urban legends do you find most interesting in literature and books? by VengefulMight
To some extent, it can veer into conspiracy theory stuff at times.
VengefulMight OP t1_j9zdol6 wrote
Reply to comment by Billypisschips in TIL of the less well known and earlier War in Vietnam (1945-1946), which was a military success. by VengefulMight
Most battles of the American War of Independence were field battles. The Patriot is historical fiction.
The Boer War talk Britain about how to counter insurgents by cutting off their supply lines and taking the war to them. The Boer leaders got the shock of their lives once Kitchener took over.
VengefulMight OP t1_j9za5yf wrote
Reply to comment by KindheartednessIll97 in TIL of the less well known and earlier War in Vietnam (1945-1946), which was a military success. by VengefulMight
Indeed, Britain allied with Japan to fight off the Vietnam insurgency, just months after having been fighting them.
Britain had always been a reluctant enemy of Japan, there was far more closeness between the countries in culture (Britain had taught Japan's Navy and had been allies with Japan ever since the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905), than there was between the USA and Japan.
VengefulMight OP t1_j9z9u7z wrote
Reply to comment by Glitz-1958 in What urban legends do you find most interesting in literature and books? by VengefulMight
Hence, why I said just a grain. Many urban legends have a kernel of truth to them.
Oh absolutely, the idea that witchcraft was a pagan religion being supressed is nonsense.
Witches were considered Christians, just flawed ones. Midwives and others would have actually been used to help carry out the witch trials, to search women for the alleged "marks of the devil".
The reality is that if you were a woman, disease and starvation were a far bigger anxiety than witchcraft accusations.
The number of women allegedly burned (witches were normally hanged, rather than burned, as burning was a punishment for heretics and witches weren't considered heretics) is always massively exaggerated.
VengefulMight OP t1_j9z5jmw wrote
Reply to comment by Immediate_Area9178 in What urban legends do you find most interesting in literature and books? by VengefulMight
The period before WW1 is remembered as an Age of Innocence but it had its own macabre stuff.
Many of the books bound in human skin, are from the late 19th century and were poor people whom the doctors felt entitled to use their skin to remember them by.
General Kitchener the head of the British Army, kept a human skull he had taken from a dead chieftain and used it to store pencils in.
VengefulMight OP t1_j9z4dh0 wrote
Reply to TIL of the less well known and earlier War in Vietnam (1945-1946), which was a military success. by VengefulMight
Britain had already had their War in Vietnam in the form of The Boer War of 1899-1902. The Boer War was shockingly brutal and eventually concentration camps were used to achieve victory but lessons were learned. Britain was much better at counter insurgency than it was at field battles.
VengefulMight OP t1_j9yqf37 wrote
Reply to comment by Glitz-1958 in What urban legends do you find most interesting in literature and books? by VengefulMight
There will probably be a grain of truth in that. Most witches accused were women, but most of those who accused them were also women.
So, say a mother loses her baby in a miscarriage and the midwife herself happens to be childless. It is very easy for her to suspect that a jealous midwife has done something sinister.
VengefulMight OP t1_j9w70fd wrote
Reply to comment by ShortOldFatGuy in TIL about the 1938 Gettysburg Reunion, where veterans of The American Civil War met, they were on average 94 years old. by VengefulMight
Probably true. The Boer War I think is a good insight into the tactics The Union might have had to use had The South not surrendered and instead adopted a guerrilla warfare approach.
Britain defeated the Boers in conventional warfare in the early 20th century, however the Boers then adopted commando raiding tactics which were highly effective.
Eventually Britain brought in a scorched earth policy and concentration camps to isolate the insurgents and starve them out.
VengefulMight OP t1_jdemsn6 wrote
Reply to comment by Kolja420 in TIL that at the Battle of Aspern-Essling in 1809, one of the French Generals was decapitated, while he was talking to a friend. by VengefulMight
It wasn’t a good battle for France, they’d been handed the first real defeat they had suffered on land for 10 years. Although it wasn’t the turning point of the Wars (which was the disastrous Russian invasion), it was a sign of things to come.
Under the circumstances they would try to make the death of a general seem as dignified as possible. But bullets were not that accurate back then and cannonballs are capable of tremendous damage.