CoinOfNote , to histodons group
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MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
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Today in Labor History March 30, 1856: The Treaty of Paris was signed, ending the Crimean War, between Russia and the victorious Ottoman Empire (allied with the UK, France and Sardinia-Piedmont). The flashpoint was a conflict over the rights of Christian minorities in Ottoman-controlled Palestine, and control of its holy sites.

The Crimean War was one of the first to utilize modern armaments, like explosive shells, railways and telegraphs. Much of these armaments came from Alfred Nobel’s family armament factory. It was also a particularly deadly war. Around 670,000 soldiers died in only four years, the majority from preventable infectious diseases (e.g., typhus, typhoid, cholera, and dysentery), not from battle wounds. Mortality rates for soldiers were 23-31%, compared with U.S. troop mortality rates of only 2% during the Vietnam War.

In the aftermath of the Crimean War, Russia sold Alaska to the U.S. out of fear that the UK would simply take it from them in their weakened military state. The last living veteran of the Crimean war was a Greek tortoise, named Timothy, who had served as a ship’s mascot during the war. He died in 2004, nearly 150 years after the war ended. Despite their victory, the Ottomans gained no new territory, and the war nearly bankrupted them, contributing to their decline as a super power. The Crimean War also helped forge the alliances and grievances that would lead to the First World War, and quite likely to the conditions leading up to Russia’s recent annexation of Crimea and its current fight with Ukraine.

Florence Nightengale became famous as a nurse during this war. Tolstoy fought in the 11-month Siege of Sevastopol. His experiences in this war contributed to his pacifism and anarchism. After witnessing a public execution in France, one year after the Crimean War ended, he wrote, “The truth is that the State is a conspiracy designed not only to exploit, but above all to corrupt its citizens ... Henceforth, I shall never serve any government anywhere.” The war also influenced his novel, “War and Peace.”

@bookstadon

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  • serdargunes , to random German
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    Science Fiction, Utopia, Futurism, Fantasy

    Tweets, Texts, books, debates sources...

    serdargunes OP ,
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    Famous Sci-Fi Scenes Painted As 16th Century Ottoman Miniatures

    Today in Awesome

    By Kellie Foxx-Gonzalez

    https://www.themarysue.com/sci-fi-scenes-ottoman-ar/

    dohanian , to histodons group
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    dohanian , to histodons group
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    On the docket today: Combing through French ambassadorial requests to have the minister of foreign affairs certify its consuls and (c. 1700). Later in the 18th century and/or during the 19th century, French diplomats had many interpreters. But, at this point, they were all Frenchmen and Ottoman Jews. Except this guy: Matusagha (Մաթուսաղա), son of the somewhat famous Abro (Ապրօ) Çelebi.

    @histodons @emdiplomacy

    dohanian , to histodons group
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    What an impressive undertaking: an online gazetteer for Evliya Çelebi’s huge 17th century travelogue. @histodons

    RE: https://mastodon.online/@ahmetcadirci/111635609116197153

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