[Boards: 3 / a / aco / adv / an / asp / b / bant / biz / c / can / cgl / ck / cm / co / cock / d / diy / e / fa / fap / fit / fitlit / g / gd / gif / h / hc / his / hm / hr / i / ic / int / jp / k / lgbt / lit / m / mlp / mlpol / mo / mtv / mu / n / news / o / out / outsoc / p / po / pol / qa / qst / r / r9k / s / s4s / sci / soc / sp / spa / t / tg / toy / trash / trv / tv / u / v / vg / vint / vip / vp / vr / w / wg / wsg / wsr / x / y ] [Search | Free Show | Home]

Archived threads in /his/ - History & Humanities - 4116. page

This is a blue board which means that it's for everybody (Safe For Work content only). If you see any adult content, please report it.

It's not a story Plato would tell you. It's a Cynic legend.
23 posts and 6 images submitted.
>>
>>479791
Diogenes was a philosopher of the Cynic so power and wise that he could influence Alexander the Great to give him light
>>
FUCKING NORMIES
>>
Don't let this thread die you fucks, we need to great more daring syntheses.

File: 1390066915229.png (67KB, 991x1071px) Image search: [Google]
1390066915229.png
67KB, 991x1071px
I love polish history. I've recently begun to write a fictional story based on early 13th century poland. Despite most modern poles being highly autistic, I think polish history is one of the greatest stories ever. How about some interesting historical facts about poland? I'd personally like some interesting info on 13th century polish principalities but anything goes really. I love it all.

>Polish nobility believed they were descended from migrating Iranians and convinced the Lithuanians that they were too.
>Poland's national anthem was written in Italy
>Poland's national epic poem begins with "Lithuania, my fatherland"
>Descendants of Polish soldiers who fought for the french in the 1800s still live in Haiti and are considered black whites
>Poland invented vodka
26 posts and 2 images submitted.
>>
Cute Polish-American girls are the cutest American girls
>>
>>479716
Living in Chicago, which has a higher polish population than poland, I can tell most poles apart from humans by the shape of their head. All poles I've met have had potato shaped heads.
>>
>>479716
be still my aching dick.

File: br4.jpg (106KB, 640x360px) Image search: [Google]
br4.jpg
106KB, 640x360px
Tell me, without using memes, why this isn't the greatest philosopher since the classical times.
50 posts and 6 images submitted.
>>
Nobody can because they haven't read him
>>
Because Wittgenstein
>>
It's obviously Descartes. Founder of modern philosophy, and creator of modern rationalism, the philosophical basis for the scientific method, which is the one objectively positive achievement of philosophy.

File: deadliest-warrior-spike-logo[1].jpg (253KB, 1920x1080px) Image search: [Google]
deadliest-warrior-spike-logo[1].jpg
253KB, 1920x1080px
What does /his/ think of this show?
11 posts and 2 images submitted.
>>
>>479325
Inaccurate and shit for history learning.

But hilariously retarded shittalking.
>>
its the kind of thing you know is shit and shouldn't take seriously but its fun to partake in some times. Like a Call of Duty campaign or watching John Wick
>>
I've lost friends over this show

Not really, but I have yelled at people and they have yelled back over this show.

File: hqdefault.jpg (16KB, 480x360px) Image search: [Google]
hqdefault.jpg
16KB, 480x360px
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EqmpT6T_2tU

>The Mataha-expedition researched the lost labyrinth of Egypt at Hawara. A colossal temple described by many classic authors like Herodotus and Strabo, to contain 3000 rooms full of hieroglyphs and paintings. A legendary building lost for 2 millenia under the ancient sands of Egypt. Bringing the highest level of technology to unlock the secrets of the past. The sand of Hawara was scanned in 2008 by the Belgian Egyptian expedition team.

>The results of the Hawara geophysic-survey were officially released for the first time in August 2008, by the National Research Institute of Astronomy and Geophysics (NRIAG, Cairo) at the Workshop in Cairo, to the persons directly related with the Hawara preservate masterplan of the Supreme Council of Antiquities. The Mataha Expedition results were secondly published in the scientific journal of the NRIAG in fall 2008. Thirdly, all Mataha-expedition research information was exchanged on the Public Lecture at Ghent University ( October 2008 ) in the presence of the Belgian press.

>The conclusion of the Hawara geophysic-survey is, however, still waiting to be internationally released by Dr. Zahi Hawass, the Secretary General of the Supreme Council of Antiquities (Egypt). Since the release of the scan results at the Ghent University public lecture, Dr Zahi Hawass requested to stop communicating our results, intimidating the Mataha Expedition team members with Egyptian National Security sanctions. After 2 years of patience we decided June 2010, to oppose all cunning and deceit by posting the conclusion on the labyrinthofegypt.com website.
13 posts and 1 images submitted.
>>
Are the Egyptian government and academics suppressing what may be one of the greatest discoveries of all time, /his/?
>>
probably
>>
>>478649
>one of the greatest discoveries of all time
Its just hieroglyphs and paintings, whats so great about that

File: WhentheAtheistStartsTalking.jpg (11KB, 200x252px) Image search: [Google]
WhentheAtheistStartsTalking.jpg
11KB, 200x252px
daily reminder that things move
12 posts and 4 images submitted.
>>
File: zen o.jpg (42KB, 485x637px) Image search: [Google]
zen o.jpg
42KB, 485x637px
daily reminder that things don't move
>>
File: cuddeback2.jpg (62KB, 880x495px) Image search: [Google]
cuddeback2.jpg
62KB, 880x495px
>>478646
Daily reminder that Zeno is wrong
>>
>>478613

Let me know when you have proven infinite regression to be impossible or how you can justify the chain of "moved stuff" to inexplicably end at a Bronze Age war god from the Canaanite pantheon.

File: 1428284100928.jpg (47KB, 600x800px) Image search: [Google]
1428284100928.jpg
47KB, 600x800px
How did the Crusaders reconcile their militancy with the idea of Christian pacifism?

I understand that the Crusades likely were more for political/economic reasons than religious ones, but many of the common soldiers and knights were motivated by their faith. And at the very least, the knights in holy orders like the templars must have had a little more knowledge of the religion than the serf-turned-crusader.

How did they explain the discrepancy? I don't know much of the Bible, but I do seem to recall that most of the war and possible justifications for war are in the Old Testament, usually the Israelites killing people (correct me if I'm wrong). Are there any justifications for militancy in the New Testament? Or that Jesus himself might have given?

pic unrelated
17 posts and 2 images submitted.
>>
>>478549
Well, first of all, the average crusader couldn't even read the bible. It didn't start getting mass produced until after the reformation. Also, we're talking about the Catholic Church. If the pope says something and can find a way to back it up with scripture/tradition, then they consider it to be righteous. They didn't just believe that God allowed the crusades, they believed that he WILLED them. Thus the term, Deus Vult.
>>
>>478571
So how did the church typically explain it away? Did the even use the Bible or were they really that duped?
>>
>>478574
I'm not totally privy to exactly what scripture urban might have used as justification, if any, but like I said, it probably didn't require much convincing. And when it came to the church at that time, they pretty much had a monopoly on what was okay in Christianity and what was not. And like I said, most people couldn't read, and if they could, the bible was only printed in Latin at the time. The way we think about war and religion nowadays is just different than how someone from a thousand years ago did.

File: 857390465756.png (580KB, 1274x698px) Image search: [Google]
857390465756.png
580KB, 1274x698px
Who would win in open battle, 100,000 mandinka warriors from imperial mali or 100.000 early sengoku era samurai?

First scenario takes place in Japan.

Second scenario is in Mali.
13 posts and 1 images submitted.
>>
>>478537
Mandinka Warriors because Samurai swords are folded 1000 times ;^)
>>
>>478537
samurai with tanegashima
>>
spetsnaz

File: image.jpg (125KB, 742x549px) Image search: [Google]
image.jpg
125KB, 742x549px
I read accounts of the the Great War and what always strikes me most is how a lot of the men who willingly went to fight in the first seem so nonchalant and almost excited to go fight.

Wasn't there some salty officers or NCOs that knew what was coming or was war as the world knew about change forever?

What do you guys think?

WWI General thread
36 posts and 4 images submitted.
>>
WW1 was a totally new type of warfare and the first major european war for a long time so many of the conscripts and volunteers had no idea what they were in for, same goes for the officers because they were volunteers/conscripts as well.
>>
>>478411
Would you say thay America's entry prepared them more for this new type of warfare? Or I should say SHOULD'VE considering they took enormous losses in the few months they were in country for. It was as if everything was learned through trial and error and the blood of a whole generation.
>>
>>478411
This. WW1 was a transition from 19th century "gentlemanly" warfare to modern warfare. The war started with horses and ended with tanks. Battles which used to only last a day or two at most started to span months. Those soldiers had no idea what they were getting into.

File: Louis_XIV_of_France.jpg (161KB, 900x900px) Image search: [Google]
Louis_XIV_of_France.jpg
161KB, 900x900px
>I am the State

What did he mean by this?
17 posts and 5 images submitted.
>>
>>478170
You've just gone to wikiquotes category:quote_that_weren't_actually_said haven't you
>>
File: judgedredd_i-am-the-law.jpg (28KB, 281x400px) Image search: [Google]
judgedredd_i-am-the-law.jpg
28KB, 281x400px
>>478170
Probably something like pic related.
>>
I don't think he ever actually said that, but that idea comes from the modernist ideology that the nation is the king's body and wife in the same sense the Church is Christ's Body and Wife.

File: worldofkababcraft.jpg (2MB, 1948x3409px) Image search: [Google]
worldofkababcraft.jpg
2MB, 1948x3409px
Was there always unrest inbetween the ethnicities historically, or is it a new phenomenon?
17 posts and 7 images submitted.
>>
>>478156
they lived in ethnic enclaves during the days of the ottoman empire and the ottomans designed their own provinces to kind of separate various peoples as well as they could

Syria as in current-border Syra was almost literally drawn on a map in closed rooms many hundreds of miles away so of course there'd be a fuckton of unrest from the get-go
>>
>>478190
Why are the Assads the rulling dynasty?
>>
>>478195
The Assad clan is Alawi, a religous minority that controls the east coast. When France was trying to colonize Syria the main threat to their holdings was Pan-Arab nationalism so they tried to separate minority support with preferential treatment and kickbacks. When Syria became its own country the officer core was made up of Alawites which supported Hafiz al-Asad's military coup in the 1970's

File: 8106968_f520.jpg (68KB, 520x433px) Image search: [Google]
8106968_f520.jpg
68KB, 520x433px
All too often I see Epirus and Macedonia excluded from ancient Greek historiography. Why exactly is that? Did they not speak Greek dialects or at least very closely related languages? We're they not intertwined with Greek politics? Did they not share the same Gods and culture (for the most part)?

I know that they were called barbarians at times, but the "official Greeks" did that among themselves too when they were sufficiently asspained. On the other hand, there were times when Epirotes and Macedonians were called Greeks by Greeks. To me "barbarian" seems like a very politicized concept rather than an authentic cultural designation. Why is it relevant to us in hindsight?

Note: This is not an invitation for contemporary nationalist crap. I find it genuinely puzzling, like excluding Catalonia and Galicia from Spanish history or Prussia from German history.
11 posts and 4 images submitted.
>>
>>
And here Epirus is recognized, but not Macedon.
>>
>>478089
Where exactly do you see this? To exclude Alexander's conquests for example as part of Greek history seems very ahistorical.

File: tumblr_inline_n7hx16Yphv1swhkea.jpg (60KB, 500x266px) Image search: [Google]
tumblr_inline_n7hx16Yphv1swhkea.jpg
60KB, 500x266px
Also, what are your thoughts on him, /his/ (especially Arab posters)?
18 posts and 12 images submitted.
>>
>>478023
Promised shit he couldn't deliver and Britain hung him out to dry when it came to backing said promises.

I genuinely believe he was a decent dude who came to appreciate Arabian culture but he was largely used as a tool to manipulate the Arab populace into destabilizing the Ottoman Empire for the benefit of Britain and France.

Britain and France subsequently fucked up the entire region when they split the Ottoman Empire apart after WW1 into protectorates and mandates.

Hussein-MacMahon Correspondance and
Sykes-Picot Agreement lead to cultural conflicts that still exist today.

Basically he unwittingly set off a chain of reactions that lead to a very destabilized Middle East, but again I think he personally meant well.
>>
Talleyrand.
>>
>>478077
It really sucks if you think about it. You are T.E. Lawrence and you mean to do good but in the end you end up causing a domino effect that fucks the entire region for decades.

File: anglo_saxon_guy_by_bartonix.jpg (104KB, 226x369px) Image search: [Google]
anglo_saxon_guy_by_bartonix.jpg
104KB, 226x369px
Assuming that the Anglo-Saxons have defeated William and survive. Had they used Knights like the other European powers?
49 posts and 19 images submitted.
>>
>>477788

What are you trying to say? If the Anglo Saxons had cavalry at Hastings, they might have won? If they had won, would they have developed cavalry? Something else entirely?
>>
>>477797
>If they had won, would they have developed cavalry

Yes, this.
>>
>>477834
I don't see any reason why they would.

File: pax.jpg (16KB, 315x216px) Image search: [Google]
pax.jpg
16KB, 315x216px
Why is the Pax Romana so significant?
20 posts and 3 images submitted.
>>
>>477650
We partly owe our current civil law level to it.
>>
File: Romanindustry.jpg (51KB, 733x383px) Image search: [Google]
Romanindustry.jpg
51KB, 733x383px
>>477650
The Empire was relatively stable for some 200 years and its economy expanded immensely, becoming an economic powerhouse that wouldn't be surpassed until the Industrial Revolution.
>>
>>477650
It's important for IR because of the hegemony theory.

Pages: [First page] [Previous page] [4106] [4107] [4108] [4109] [4110] [4111] [4112] [4113] [4114] [4115] [4116] [4117] [4118] [4119] [4120] [4121] [4122] [4123] [4124] [4125] [4126] [Next page] [Last page]

[Boards: 3 / a / aco / adv / an / asp / b / bant / biz / c / can / cgl / ck / cm / co / cock / d / diy / e / fa / fap / fit / fitlit / g / gd / gif / h / hc / his / hm / hr / i / ic / int / jp / k / lgbt / lit / m / mlp / mlpol / mo / mtv / mu / n / news / o / out / outsoc / p / po / pol / qa / qst / r / r9k / s / s4s / sci / soc / sp / spa / t / tg / toy / trash / trv / tv / u / v / vg / vint / vip / vp / vr / w / wg / wsg / wsr / x / y] [Search | Top | Home]

I'm aware that Imgur.com will stop allowing adult images since 15th of May. I'm taking actions to backup as much data as possible.
Read more on this topic here - https://archived.moe/talk/thread/1694/


If you need a post removed click on it's [Report] button and follow the instruction.
DMCA Content Takedown via dmca.com
All images are hosted on imgur.com.
If you like this website please support us by donating with Bitcoins at 16mKtbZiwW52BLkibtCr8jUg2KVUMTxVQ5
All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective parties.
Images uploaded are the responsibility of the Poster. Comments are owned by the Poster.
This is a 4chan archive - all of the content originated from that site.
This means that RandomArchive shows their content, archived.
If you need information for a Poster - contact them.