25 Absurd Random History Facts - Part 2

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024

Комментарии • 147

  • @VloggingThroughHistory
    @VloggingThroughHistory Год назад +261

    YES! My pleasure. All I did was point people to where they could find some great history content.

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад +38

    • @RantingMonkey
      @RantingMonkey Год назад +9

      I literally just came from your video react to the first one. Great find. Subbed.

    • @THExDESERTxFOX
      @THExDESERTxFOX Год назад +6

      I subed because of VTH glad to see a part II!

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад +8

      @@THExDESERTxFOX

    • @dbach1025
      @dbach1025 Год назад +3

      I came from VTH too. Congrats on the subs. You really deserve it. I have learned a lot and been entertained as well. God bless.

  • @Hegelundd
    @Hegelundd Год назад +4

    came here from the rdr2 channel, love the amazing content! i'm excited for the growth of this channel:)

  • @brucefreadrich1188
    @brucefreadrich1188 Год назад

    The Romans did not have bottled urine. The bottle did not come along until the 1300s.

  • @NEXUSNEST
    @NEXUSNEST Год назад +60

    Came here from VTH, stayed for your quality videos!

    • @IulianYT
      @IulianYT Год назад +4

      Same here, glad they got over 10k subs in the meantime

    • @connarkent282
      @connarkent282 Год назад +2

      Same

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад +5

      Thanks for checking us out!

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад +4

      Thank you so much and welcome to Decades!

  • @leahhafemeister2156
    @leahhafemeister2156 Год назад +6

    NOT burlap sacks, they were flour sacks. Flour companies began printing patterns on their flour sacks. If burlap had been used the flour would fall out through the holes!!

    • @kristianfox3002
      @kristianfox3002 11 месяцев назад +1

      Burlap is the name of the sack the flour and other products such as rice etc came in

  • @naomiskilling1093
    @naomiskilling1093 Год назад +4

    Am I the only one who thinks that marathon runner from fact #20 looks like the Oklahoma City bomber, Timothy McVeigh?

  • @davidrockdale
    @davidrockdale Год назад +5

    In a single High School Football game, Al Bundy scored 4 touchdowns.

  • @Bigdog5400
    @Bigdog5400 Год назад +24

    I’ve always found it interesting that Mark Twain and Ulysses S. Grant we’re good friends

  • @suddendeath2000
    @suddendeath2000 Год назад +5

    The cigarette lighter was invented and used well before matches were.

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад +1

      I'm definitely not taking notes to research for part 3.

  • @HelFrostKara
    @HelFrostKara Год назад +5

    No. 12: Banning the mention of Genghis Khan seemed a bit random. Apparently was out of fear Mongolian's deifying him and potentially leading to an immediate neighbour becoming nationallist?
    No. 18: You want some Freedom Fries with your Liberty Steak? 🤣
    No. 22. Well that sure is coincidental timing 👀👀
    No. 23: I assume that maybe relate to wearing armour, you may think they're ready for battle/a fight so could be seen as threatening? (or I'm just having Red Wedding flashbacks lol). Why it would still be a thing is they just probably thought about it (and the legal process can be slow)
    No. 25: So much for the "native" english then, eh?

  • @mistydlove.5512
    @mistydlove.5512 Год назад +7

    The dog "disarming" a bomb by peeing on it is just epic. I can imagine a dog not knowing wtf was actually going on strolling up to a whole bomb and lifting their leg. 😂😂

  • @hawtozer
    @hawtozer Год назад +6

    A couple of weeks before his assassination on the 15th of March 44BC, Julius Caesar spent an evening with a couple of his soon to be assassins, and they chatted long into the evening. At one point, the conversation turned philosophical and Decimus Junius Brutus posed the question "what is the best way to die?" Caesar responded with "suddenly, and unexpectedly". You can imagine the unease in the room.

  • @milisavstefan8725
    @milisavstefan8725 Год назад +2

    In serbia the is a brewery older than US

  • @FilbeeGaming
    @FilbeeGaming Год назад +9

    The urine one took me by suprise!

  • @DevilboyScooby
    @DevilboyScooby Год назад +3

    #17 Related to this- a Finnish soldier, Aimo Koivunen, once consumed his patrol's entire supply of pervitin when surrounded by Soviets, in order to get enough energy to ski to safety. As a result of the delirium he got lost and went missing for an entire week.

  • @robertambrosini4442
    @robertambrosini4442 Год назад +2

    #5 was flour sacks, not gunny sacks.

  • @TheCamoruneGaming
    @TheCamoruneGaming Год назад +5

    Stalin has lots of interesting facts about him. From almost becoming a Monk and going to monastery school for a few years, to his love of John Ford western movies.

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад

      I heard about his love of Western movies.

  • @Yo-eq2hh
    @Yo-eq2hh Год назад +3

    Yo

  • @sachahector5674
    @sachahector5674 Год назад +19

    I can’t believe the quality of these videos. This is original content and probably one of my favorites history channels. What a great find

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад +1

    • @brianwilhelm3777
      @brianwilhelm3777 Год назад

      You mean "original content" like there's not other older videos with this information or its not pretty common knowledge?🕵
      New to you doesnt make it original

  • @cabowerks3973
    @cabowerks3973 Год назад +9

    One of my most favorite, random history facts I’ve learned was that the prototype for the first modern safety pin was invented on accident. The guy was in trying to invent a better gun lock.

  • @susaniacuone5758
    @susaniacuone5758 Месяц назад +2

    The burlap sack story is incorrect. The american feed and flour sacks were made from a cheap but sturdy grade of woven cotton. The pretty floral prints are well documented and much of the fabric ( similar to modern quilting cotton ) and unused bags, quilts, and garments, still exist

  • @wedgeantilles8575
    @wedgeantilles8575 Год назад +3

    One addition to Nr. 18: In the "war against terror" the US started to call the French Fries "Freedom Fries", because they were dissatisfied with the lack of French commitment.
    (I guess this will know a lot of people)
    It is interesting that they already renamed something into "Freedom..." in WW2, I didn't know that :)
    (As I did not know most of your other facts)
    One question regarding 10: AFAIK Vespasian put a tax on urine (which was used in the dying process and in the washing process of clothes). It is said that "money doesn't stink" derives from this instance (no idea if this is true). I did not know about Nero.
    Am I mistaken here? Or is both true, Vespasian put a tax on it's use and Nero put a tax on the trade?
    21 is absolutly amazing. As a German, I have never heard this before.
    It proves yet again, that torture is not a useful tool for extracting deeper going information.
    (Well, it depends on the kind of information - if you just need information that can be fact check immediatly, tortue does work. E.g.: "What is the password to this computer". You can factcheck the answer of the victim immediatly. Wrong pw? Torture continues.
    However, as soon as you want more detailed information, it breaks down immediatly. Questions like: Who is involved? What are your plans? are absolutly useless. Because you can't factcheck. And the victim just tells you whatever you want to hear. The information you get is worse than useless.)

  • @jankusthegreat9233
    @jankusthegreat9233 Год назад +3

    Fihzy!!!!! My man!!

  • @thplumanns
    @thplumanns Год назад +1

    Excellent video
    In fact Hans Scharff wasn't that absurd. He lived in South Africa and was married to the daugther of a British flight top gun of WW1, Stokes or sth like that, from there his empathy and languages. He was in Germany when the war broke out. The book "The interrogator" explains his method, it's 90% data gathering and intelligence, the rest "courtesy".
    After the war, he went to the US and became trainer for US pilots... no wonder.

  • @Chiquita18852
    @Chiquita18852 Год назад +6

    New subscriber from VTH. Been loving your recent videos and cant wait to binge watch all your other videos. Thank you so much for your support to Chris. Cant wait till you guys reach 15k subs! you deserve it!!!

  • @stevenbrennan7027
    @stevenbrennan7027 Год назад +4

    Thoroughly enjoyed this one. I will look like the smartest historian in the boozer tommorow night with my new found knowledge, thanks to Decades. In Arthur Morgans voice beside his dying horse "Thank you"

  • @michaelcooper6725
    @michaelcooper6725 Год назад +2

    As to #25, I wonder how far back you could go before modern day English speakers couldn't understand an English king?

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад +1

      Would be George II who ruled between 1727 and 1760, he primarily spoke French and German, his English wasn't so great.

  • @stefmyt5062
    @stefmyt5062 Год назад +1

    Sorry but number 12 is just plain wrong. The proof is that in 1939, Soviet writer Vasily Yan received a Stalin Prize in literature for his work titled "Genghis Khan".

  • @natalieerib
    @natalieerib Год назад +4

    Amazing! The one about Russia really tickles me, they didn’t have to prove that they can drink us all under a table THAT hard.

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад +1

      Oh yeah nah the prospect of a massive country running out of vodka, the effective birthplace of Vodka no less.

  • @Shayrin2
    @Shayrin2 Год назад +4

    Great facts, thanks for the work !

  • @suecrowhurst4393
    @suecrowhurst4393 Год назад +3

    Very interesting thankyou

  • @dorissloan2037
    @dorissloan2037 9 месяцев назад +1

    Not burlap sacks but cotton sacks, tightly woven to. hold flour. Factories would shift the floral patterns around areas, to keep the girls from having the same patterns.

  • @bettyir4302
    @bettyir4302 10 месяцев назад +1

    Not scratchy skin irritating burlap sacks. It was cotton flour sacks that were printed in floral prints which people would sew for clothing.

  • @asszudemi3650
    @asszudemi3650 Год назад +11

    i love the fact that you included the Elefant Chris mention in his reaction to your first video in this one
    Good job guys

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад +4

      It's how we heard of it and since this video exists because of his kindness, it was worth a spot!

  • @Charliekewl91
    @Charliekewl91 Год назад +2

    Great video, definitely learned something new today

  • @gunterke
    @gunterke Год назад +2

    Silly is actually a Belgian town, close to Brussels. They have a good brewery and a fine selection of local beers. The name is unrelated to the English word sily, it just refers to a small river named Sille.

  • @meemo32086
    @meemo32086 Год назад +1

    Subscribed because of vth. The fact about the depression was wrong. They weren't burlap bags. They were flour sacks. Which are much less itchy and just really cotton cloth.

  • @Loserssd
    @Loserssd Год назад +2

    Truly believe you’re one of those creators that once people find they instantly want more

  • @jep77ray
    @jep77ray Год назад +2

    VTH pointed me here too.

  • @paulcowlishaw
    @paulcowlishaw 10 месяцев назад +1

    Ghandi was the Ripper. All makes sense now

  • @thegodlygoatgamer
    @thegodlygoatgamer Год назад +2

    A cool video idea could be going over the actual real life Assassin group that operated during the Crusades, just as a homage to your old content

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад

      The Hashshashin

    • @thegodlygoatgamer
      @thegodlygoatgamer Год назад

      @@DecadesVideos yea

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад +1

      @@thegodlygoatgamer regardless of my old Assassin's Creed content on Fizhy I think it'll be worth a video sometime, for sure.

  • @MrKippo
    @MrKippo Год назад +1

    Didnt expect the New Romney Railway to be on this list, amazing that Kents Culture is being noticed.

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад +1

      ruclips.net/video/xIlczNPpW2Y/видео.html this one's for you then

    • @MrKippo
      @MrKippo Год назад

      @@DecadesVideos Thank you so much for linking the video.

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад

  • @michellejacobcik9946
    @michellejacobcik9946 Год назад +1

    I found you through Vlogging Through History. Cannot wait to watch some of your other videos.

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад

      We can't wait to share more content soon! Thanks for coming by!

  • @abraxasjinx5207
    @abraxasjinx5207 Год назад

    "Urine was a common mouthwash ingredient until the 18th century" ... These are our ancestors folks.
    Imagine what idiocy(s) we currently commit that our descendants will be disgusted by. Pooping in our drinking water and then spending a lot of effort to de-poopify that water will probably seem pretty silly in the future. We can hope.

  • @belongtotoday
    @belongtotoday 7 месяцев назад

    Came through VTH, staying and subbed for your humor and content. :-D Keep up the excellent work!

  • @AlanEmmons-qw6bg
    @AlanEmmons-qw6bg 4 месяца назад

    You also left out sack cloth and ashes that the peons wore! Oh yes we still wear it to this day!! 😜. Poor us? And stop the war its tea time!!! And there's something fishy about the salmon act, it stinks on ice! And your welcome??😖

  • @samuelrodriguezrivera6856
    @samuelrodriguezrivera6856 9 месяцев назад +1

    love the videos!!

  • @davidbarkin8269
    @davidbarkin8269 8 месяцев назад

    Edward the 3rd replaced French and Latin with English during his reign as the defacto legal language of England. This occurred in 1362.

  • @sanskarmishra5309
    @sanskarmishra5309 Год назад +1

    Based

  • @blacknoise7997
    @blacknoise7997 11 месяцев назад

    10:55
    I'm a descendant of King Henry IV. I have documentation and DNA testing to prove it.

  • @thplumanns
    @thplumanns Год назад

    Stalin was also a goof singer and he cpuld perform opera aries. Had he only done that... but was Trotsky a better optiln then?

  • @DustinHoran1
    @DustinHoran1 Год назад

    Am I the genius? Just posted a video of historic stories about some very interesting things I really wish you would watch the video and then give us a more detailed video of some of the stories especially the Spanish double agent

  • @Ron-qe4ul
    @Ron-qe4ul Год назад +1

    Came here from VTH also

  • @michaelbrooks1458
    @michaelbrooks1458 10 месяцев назад

    Oh I say mate that dialect you uns talk jus ain't right to us Appalachian Americans

  • @GRapPhil
    @GRapPhil Год назад

    Skip ahead to 1min 26sec. Video finally starts.

  • @Danielle-mg5lf
    @Danielle-mg5lf Год назад +1

    I love your show and vlogging through history ❤😊

  • @djquinn11
    @djquinn11 11 месяцев назад

    Stale urine used for mouthwash? That’s sooo nasty….

  • @AlanEmmons-qw6bg
    @AlanEmmons-qw6bg 4 месяца назад

    You forgot KAAAAHHHHAAANNN!! or Khan in slow motion?

  • @snicksabea
    @snicksabea Год назад

    #2 The elephant was hungry and going to get watermelons.

  • @Patricia-zh1rd
    @Patricia-zh1rd 8 месяцев назад

    Vodka is not made from grain... it's made from potatoes.

  • @kylemartin3746
    @kylemartin3746 8 месяцев назад

    The bat bomb that was tested by the U.S. in world War two

  • @JackFranco95
    @JackFranco95 8 месяцев назад

    Gandhi supported West Ham United

  • @the4tierbridge
    @the4tierbridge Год назад

    Loving these videos!
    Just one suggestion: maybe cut down on the unrelated stock footage? Half of the section about the Romney Hythe & Dymchurch railway, which as stated in the video is a miniature railway (track gauge 15 inches) was a video of an unrelated standard gauge locomotive (track gauge 4 ft 8.5 inches).

  • @TheMasonK
    @TheMasonK Год назад +3

    That Russian vodka fact is the funniest thing to me. Most of their grain went into feeding their population and the amount of alcohol being made was probably not as high at that point (not to mention much of the alcohol that they had prewar was made into Molotov cocktails) but it’s infinitely funnier that out of context it’s the Russians just enjoying their vodka 😂

  • @stayfaded69
    @stayfaded69 Год назад +2

    Loving the videos caught a few of them and I love the humor. Keep up the good work

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад +1

      Glad you are enjoying!

    • @stayfaded69
      @stayfaded69 Год назад

      @@DecadesVideos of course and one thing not trying to b all knowing but giving a quippy one liner and/or joke for the facts. Even though I love the dry deliver would show us a bit more of that smart wit. Thank u brother for replying.

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад +1

      @@stayfaded69 will keep it in mind of course

  • @bryanlasermagiktyler3132
    @bryanlasermagiktyler3132 10 месяцев назад

    very well done, and thank you.

  • @stevenickerson829
    @stevenickerson829 7 месяцев назад

    Too much intro. Not here for you.

  • @netwrench6570
    @netwrench6570 7 месяцев назад

    Video facts start at 1:30 sort of.

  • @ijqdaz
    @ijqdaz 11 дней назад

    The elephant one :(

  • @freddyjefferson5164
    @freddyjefferson5164 9 месяцев назад

    More random than absurd

  • @stevenickerson829
    @stevenickerson829 7 месяцев назад

    Sorry, buddy, i tried.

  • @davidhatch7056
    @davidhatch7056 Год назад

    The best intro ive ever heard, to anything.. ever.. all time winner haha well played sir, well played indeed!

  • @lilashelton535
    @lilashelton535 6 месяцев назад

    Fascinating

  • @freeman8128
    @freeman8128 Год назад

    Begins at 1:25

  • @MariaTrollip
    @MariaTrollip Год назад

    Im from south africa and my granny always told us about flour sack panties she had to wear and even made for my mom also. That was worn iduring 1940-50's

    • @joeroscoe3708
      @joeroscoe3708 8 месяцев назад

      Thats so hot.

    • @MariaTrollip
      @MariaTrollip 8 месяцев назад

      And at the back the writing showed when bend. Also going barefoot to school walk kilometres and put feet in cowdung to warm it up. True stories

    • @joeroscoe3708
      @joeroscoe3708 8 месяцев назад

      @@MariaTrollip Warm cow dung...nice!

    • @MariaTrollip
      @MariaTrollip 8 месяцев назад

      @@joeroscoe3708 😂😂😂😂😂had no shoes was poor

  • @shinyshinxlvl9913
    @shinyshinxlvl9913 Год назад

    🎉🎉

  • @GugaOnScreen
    @GugaOnScreen 3 месяца назад

    gros caca

  • @everettbateman4741
    @everettbateman4741 Год назад

    This was part 2? What did the 1st video tell us, the sky is blue? Come on people, do some research and find new stories.

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад

      I presume a lot of these have been explored to death by other channels then?

    • @everettbateman4741
      @everettbateman4741 Год назад

      @@DecadesVideos
      Yes, that is an understatement.

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад

      So how would you state it?

    • @everettbateman4741
      @everettbateman4741 Год назад

      @@DecadesVideos
      As much as you'd like to think everybody is only loyal to your channel, we watch tons of these on other channels. I get tired of seeing the same stories and facts over and over. No offense intended, it's just frustrating.

    • @DecadesVideos
      @DecadesVideos  Год назад

      Okay, I can see that. More obscure facts are the long term objective for a series such as this, and naturally they will get more and more obscure as we're forced to expand the research from episode to episode until we exhaust all our efforts and the series ends at which point we can hopefully fall back on different approaches to making content.
      That said the knowledge has to exist somewhere to be found for the most part when it comes to topics such as history, so we cannot promise to dish out information you haven't heard somewhere else in the past even though we'd certainly like to.

  • @abraxasjinx5207
    @abraxasjinx5207 Год назад

    9:32 "rapport" is pronounced "rah-PORE", the T is silent. Saying it with the T sounds exactly like "report".

  • @SIGMUSS
    @SIGMUSS 2 месяца назад

    Benjamin Franklin = Jack The Ripper?

  • @thephilster6860
    @thephilster6860 10 месяцев назад +1

    Hanging an elephant. That's disgusting.

  • @ElectricWitch44
    @ElectricWitch44 Год назад

    Thanks for the laughs! 😂❤