World history is the narrative of humanity's past, understood and studied through archaeology, anthropology, genetics, and linguistics. Since the invention of writing, human history has been studied through primary and secondary source documents.
And the chances are you had (or have) a fair amount of this discipline back in high school and if you hadn’t slept through it, you’d have much better knowledge of it than you do now.
In fact, an article in The New York Times reported "Only 22 percent of American students had mastered enough history in their high school days to identify two contributions made by Lincoln to this country." The thing is, it was published in 1943, but it could have been written today.
Luckily, there’s this Facebook page dedicated to sharing some of the most interesting and lesser known bits of history. It won’t make us re-learn everything from scratch, but it will surely spark this lost interest into the times of the past.
Titled “The World Of History,” the page reminds us how similar yet different humans were hundreds of years ago compared with us today. Below, we wrapped up some of the most interesting posts shared here, so scroll down and enjoy!
#1 An East German Border Guard Offers A Flower Through A Gap In The Berlin Wall On The Morning It Fell, 1989
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#2 A Serbian Soldier Sleeps With His Father Who Came To Visit Him On The Front Line Near Belgrade, 1914/1915
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#3 Berlin, Germany, 1985-2018
Image credits: History of the WORLD
There’s something uncanny and absolutely fascinating about looking at old photographs that document the people, the events, the places, the current affairs of the past. It also challenges our perception of time, because as distant as we feel from the subjects shown in the photographs, we still share this similarity that’s impossible to ignore.
According to Lisa Yaszek, a Regents Professor of Science Fiction Studies at Georgia Tech where she researches and teaches science fiction as a global language crossing centuries, continents, and cultures, old photos affect our perception of time in unique ways like nothing else:
“By making abstract historical events visually concrete, giving us an emotional connection to eras we might not otherwise know very much about, exactly, through books or family stories,” she explained in our previous in-depth interview on a similar topic.
#4 On July 17, 1967, A Florida Lineman Named Randall Champion Accidentally Touched A High-Voltage Line — Which Sent 4,000 Volts Of Electricity Through His Body And Stopped His Heart
Luckily, his friend and fellow lineman J.D. Thompson was close enough to perform mouth-to-mouth resuscitation until paramedics arrived. Thanks to Thompson's quick thinking, Champion survived the incident, and even reported to work the following week. Unbeknownst to Champion and Thompson, a photographer for the Jacksonville Journal was standing just below them to capture this daring rescue. From the ground, Rocco Morabito snapped one of the most moving images in history — "The Kiss of Life."
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#5 Children Going To School Having To Cross A River By Pulley, Modena, Italy, 1959
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#6 18th Century Device That Allowed Researchers To Work/Read Up To 8 Open Books At A Time
Image credits: History of the WORLD
The professor at Georgia Tech added that all the subjects of these photos look so alive and have such a range of emotions on their faces—“from determination to silliness to fear to hope. It reminds us that historical events don’t just happen on their own—they involve real people taking real action, for better or for worse.”
While looking back into history from the present standpoint, it’s easier to imagine that life was simpler back in the day. But the photos are evidence that’s not the case. In fact, people in the past led rich and complex lives, just as we do today.
#7 A Victorian Couple Trying Not To Laugh While Getting Their Portraits Done, 1890s
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#8 Double Leg Amputee Railway Signalman, James Wide, Photographed Working Alongside His Pet And Assistant, Jack Baboon, In Cape Town During The 1880s
James Wide purchased a chacma baboon in 1881 and trained him to push his wheelchair and to operate the railway signals under supervision. After initial scepticism, the railway decided to officially employ Jack once his job competency was verified. The baboon was paid twenty cents a day, and half a bottle of a beer each week. It is widely reported in his nine years of employment with the railway company, Jack never made a single mistake. That's is wild and he worked there for nine years.
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#9 Father, Son, Grandfather And Great Grandfather, New Guinea, 1970
Image credits: History of the WORLD
“For instance, we tend to assume that in the past, women were limited to work as wives and mothers, and we certainly see a number of images here celebrating women’s work in the home. But we also see women doing all sorts of work in the public sphere as well—everything from attending school graduations and working on supercomputers to taking back the streets of postwar London and bouncing drunks out of bars!”
#10 During Wwii, Jews In Budapest Were Brought To The Edge Of The Danube, Ordered To Remove Their Shoes, And Shot, Falling Into The Water Below
60 pairs of iron shoes now line the river's bank, a ghostly memorial to the victims. 'Shoes on the Danube Promenade' by Can Togay and Gyula Pauer.
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#11 A Native American Mother And Her Child, 1900s
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#12 Abraham Lincoln At Gettysburg During The Civil War. Left: Allan Pinkerton, Right: Gen John Mcclernand. 1863. (Colorized)
Image credits: History of the WORLD
“And that is what old photos do best: they remind us that people in the past have had many of the same challenges and triumphs as we have, and that we can look to them for inspiration regarding how to make sense of the present and build new futures,” Yaszek concluded.
#13 Noodle Delivery Boy In Tokyo, 1935
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#14 Injured Dog In An Animal Ambulance Used During Ww2
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#15 Seems Legit
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#16 Knife Grinders In France 1902, They Worked Lying Down To Save Their Backs And Had Dogs Sit On Their Legs For Warmth
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#17 Vietnam War Helmet Graffiti, 1967- “War Is Good Business- Invest Your Son”
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#18 Sisters In Cigarette Break, England, 1960s
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#19 "4 Children For Sale", 1948
The photo first appeared in the The Vidette-Messenger of Valparaiso, Indiana on August 5, 1948. The children looked posed and a bit confused as their pregnant mother hides in shame her face from the photographer after putting her childrens up for sale. The caption read: “A big ‘For Sale’ sign in a Chicago yard mutely tells the tragic story of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Chalifoux, who face eviction from their apartment. With no place to turn, the jobless coal truck driver and his wife decide to sell their four children. Mrs. Lucille Chalifoux turns her head from camera above while her children stare wonderingly. On the top step are Lana, 6, and Rae, 5. Below are Milton, 4, and Sue Ellen, 2”. Family members accused the mother of being paid to stage the photo, which may have been part of the story, but unfortunately, she was dead serious about selling her children. Within two years all of the children pictures, as well as the baby she was carrying at the time, were sold off to different homes.
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#20 Electric Charging Cars In 1917
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#21 This Is About A Victim, Not About Who Is To Blame. It Would Be Lovely To Honor Her And Others Who Lost Their Lives Here, And Debate Specifics Elsewhere
The image has become iconic and the woman in it, a then 28-year-old Marcy Borders, became known as the 'dust lady' in the days after 9/11. She had been working in the North Tower of the World Trade Center only a month, on the 81st floor only 12 stories down from where American Airlines Flight 11 made impact. She made her way down the main stairwell of the tower, along with hundreds of others escaping. In the time it took her to reach the ground floor, the South Tower had just collapsed and an enormous dust cloud, visible from space, was rising. “I took chase from this cloud of dust and smoke that was following me,” Borders said. “Once it caught me it threw me on my hands and knees. Every time I inhaled my mouth filled up with it, I was choking. I was saying to myself out loud, I didn’t want to die, I didn’t want to die.” She was pulled from the dust and into a nearby lobby by a man, and that is where photographer Stan Honda snapped this haunting photo, seen around the world as a testament to the horrors of 9/11. Marcy Borders passed away from stomach cancer in August 2015, cancer she believes was exacerbated by inhaling dust on that fateful day. The 9/11 Victims Compensation Fund and the World Trade Center Health Program estimate that over 2,000 have died of illnesses related to the attack over the past 18 years.
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#22 Town Of Rysstad, Norway, 1888 - 2013
Not much I could find on this small town but the white, wooden, octagonal church was built in 1838 by Anders Thorsen Syrtveit using plans by the famous Norwegian architect Hans Linstow, who built the Royal Palace in Oslo. The church seats around 200 people. The town dates back to the Middle Ages and was once a municipality of Norway. Population today of around one thousand. Seen in an ' The Atlantic' article which details “Tilbakeblikk”, the name of a joint project between the Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute and Norsk Folkemuseum. Tilbakeblikk means “retrospect” or “looking back” in Norwegian, describing the project’s use of photographs taken of the same places separated by long periods of time to illustrate landscape changes in Norway.
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#23 New York City, 1900s. (Colorized)
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#24 Canadian And German Soldiers Sharing A Cigarette During The Second Battle Of Passchendaele, November 1917
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#25 Mummified Head (Mokomokai) With Moko Facial Tattoo
In mummification, the brain and eyes were removed, all the holes in the skull were sealed with flax fibers and gum. The head was then steamed in an oven, before being smoked in a fire, then left in the sun for several days. After that, the head was hydrated with shark fat oil - Maori culture -
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#26 Acrobats Balance On Top Of The Empire State Building, C. 1934
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#27 Northern Irish Boy Poses In Front Of Ira Car Bomb In Belfast, Northern Ireland, 1978
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#28 Dimple Making Machine Made In 1936
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#29 The Moment When President Bush Was Informed About The 9/11 Terrorist Attack, 2001
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#30 2 Year-Old Elvis Presley With His Parents, 1937
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#31 A Woman Walks Through The Ruins Of Berlin During The Battle Of Berlin, May 1945
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#32 The Queen Of England And Her Husband At The Horse Races In 1968
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#33 A Berlin Boy Sells Lemonade Using A Portable Lemonade Dispenser, 1931.
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#34 3 People Pose For A Photo Whilst Wearing Face Masks During The Second Wave Of The Spanish Flu In California; 1918
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#35 A Photograph Of A Filipino-American Family Taken More Than A Decade After The Us Colonization Of The Islands. The Photo Dates Back To 1912
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#36 A British Sailor Removing The Leg Chains Off An Enslaved Man Who Had Worn Them For Three Years
The enslaved man, along with others, had escaped a slave-trading post off the coast of Oman when they heard the Royal Navy was nearby. (1907)
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#37 The Statue Of Liberty - Paris, France - 1886 (Before It Was Transported To America)
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#38 Tricycle Of 3 Year Old Boy Named Shin, Who Died 1,500 Meters From The Hypocenter Of Hiroshima Atomic Bombing, 1945
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#39 Rejected Designs For The Eiffel Tower
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#40 A Sikkimese Woman Carrying A British Man On Her Back, West Bengal. India 1900
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#41 The 2800 Year Old Kiss!
These human remains were unearthed in 1972 at the Teppe Hasanlu archaeological site, located in the Solduz Valley in the West Azerbaijan Province of Iran. The archaeologist who studied the skeletons confirms they were there since 2,800 years ago. The University of Pennsylvania has determined that the couple died together around 800 BC. The skeletons do appear like they are kissing each other before they died – as if to signify that love is eternal.
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#42 British Soldier Retrieving Bandages From The Kit Of A Dog During Wwi, 1915
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#43 Residents Of West Berlin Show Their Children To Their Grandparents Living In East Berlin, 1961
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#44 Anatoly Golombievsky, A Soviet Veteran Who Lost Both His Legs During The Battle For Novorossiysk, During World War II, Takes The Salute Of 4 Cadets At The Nakhimov Navy School On V-Day In Leningrad, 1989
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#45 A German Officer And An Nco Wearing Portable Sound Locating Apparatae To Detect Enemy Aircraft (This Was A Type Of Early Radar). Western Front, 1917
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#46 A German Woman With Her All Belonging Sitting Alone In War Ruined Cologne. 1945
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#47 Meeting Around A Baguette. France 1950. Photo By: Robert Doisneau
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#48 American Troops On Board A Landing Craft Heading For The Beaches At Oran In Algeria During Operation 'Torch', November 1942. (Colorized By Spektonz)
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#49 1910, Mailing A Child Via Parcel Post In The USA, The Post Office’s Parcel Post Was Introduced In 1913
Within weeks, a number of parents attempted to send their children by post. In Ohio, Jesse and Mathilda Beagle posted their son James, eight months old, to his grandmother. The delivery cost 15c - cheaper than a rail ticket. Mr and Mrs Beagle insured James for $50. In 1920, the Post Office elected to no longer deliver children until present time
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#50 16 Year-Old Anti-Aircraft Soldier Of The German Army, Hans-Georg Henke, Cries From Combat Shock As His World Falls Apart. He Was Captured By The Us 9th Army In Hessen, Germany In 1945
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#51 General George S. Patton’s Pet Dog On The Day Of His Owner’s Death, December 21st, 1945
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#52 Forman Was A Well-Known Photographer Working For The Boston Herald When He Attended The Scene Of A Fire
What began as him documenting the rescue of a young woman and child quickly took a turn when the fire escape collapsed. The pair began to fall and he continued shooting as they were falling. He capturing them swimming through the air. Forman only lowered his camera and turned at the last moment when he realized what he was witnessing was a woman plummeting to her death.
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#53 This Image Captured During World War II By Soviet War Reporter Max Alpert Depicts Soviet Red Army Political Commissar Alexey Yeremenko As He Raises A Tokarev Tt-33 Handgun And Leads His Men In Combat Against The Germans On July 12th, 1942
The image was captured near Khorosheye in the Ukraine, and Yeremenko was killed in action only a few minutes later. Yeremenko's identity as the commissar in this image was not established until his family recognized him when the photo was featured in a Pravda magazine in 1965.
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#54 A 'Knocker-Up' In London (1929). Before Alarm Clocks, People Were Paid To Wake Clients Up For Work By Knocking On Their Doors And Windows With A Stick
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#55 One Of The Most Powerful First World War Photographs.
Photographed in near a German prisoner war camp in Douchy, France sometime in 1916. The original glass plate is captioned 'Louis'. We don't know anything else about the boys who are dressed in bits of French and German uniform. There is mention of a pair of boys just like this in the book 'Storm of Steel', the frontline memoires of the famous German soldier-philosopher Ernst Jünger. "There were two French boys, orphans, one eight, the other twelve years old, who became attached to the troops in the most extraordinary way. They wore nothing but field grey, spoke fluent German, and saluted all officers in the prescribed manner. They spoke of their fellow-countrymen contemptuously and called them 'Schangels' as they heard the soldiers doing. Their great desire was to go into the line with their company. They were proficient in drill and fell in on the left of the company at roll-call, and when they wished to accompany the canteen orderlies on an expedition to buy provisions at Cambrai they duly asked for leave. When the and Battalion went to Queant for a few weeks’ training, one of the two, called Louis, was, by order of Colonel von Oppen, to remain behind in Douchy, so that no occasion for false reports should be given to the civil population. During the march he was nowhere to be seen, but when the battalion arrived he jumped out of one of the transport waggons, where he had hidden himself. Unfortunately,some of the more thoughtless of the men used to take them with them into the canteen for the amusement of teaching them to drink. Later, I believe, the elder was sent to a N.C.O. course in Germany."
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#56 Homecoming Prisoner Of War - Vienna, Austria. 1946. Photo By Ernst Haas
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#57 "We Are Russians" Written On The Front Of A Shop In The East End Of London, England In 1915 So That They Would Not Be Mistakenly Identified As German And Attacked/Robbed As A Result Of The Anti-German Sentiment In The Country At The Time.
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#58 A Boxing Match Of American Sailors. 1899
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#59 Myrtle Corbin, Who Was Born With Two Sets Of Legs, Two Pelvises, And Two Functional Sets Of Sexual / Reproductive Organs, Taken Betwen 1868-1928
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#60 The 3,300 Year Old Sandals Of King Tutankhamen
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#61 Pope John Paul II Talks With Mehmet Agca, The Man Who Tried To Assassinate Him, In An Italian Prison, 1983
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#62 French Soldiers, Battle Of Somme 1916
Image credits: History of the WORLD
#63 This Is A Mass Burial At Sea, On The Uss Intrepid In 1944 Following A Kamikaze Attack
Image credits: History of the WORLD
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