June 15, 2017 | Josh Mendelssohn

Bizarre Historical Facts They Didn't Teach You in School


“Life is infinitely stranger than anything which the mind of man could invent”.
- Arthur Conan Doyle (Author of Sherlock Holmes)

Life really is bizarre. I mean, does anyone really understand it all? Any human being who's ever lived has confronted that kind of existential confusion. As soon as we get old enough to really think about things, we start to realize just how much of life around us makes no sense at all! Maybe that's why most teachers tend to focus on the basics: fundamental knowledge and well-known facts. Why make things complicated right? We start with our ABCs, move onto basic math, and try our best to steer kids clear of the really crazy stuff.

Well that strategy leaves something to be desired. Because beyond those boring basics, there's so much more to explore! Here's hoping our article gives you a few new bizarre facts to think about. With any luck, you'll find yourself sharing them with all sorts of people. Cheers.


Bizarre Historical Facts

 1. Whoops…

During WWII, the Russians trained dogs to run under German tanks with bombs strapped to their backs. Unfortunately, the tanks the dogs were trained to run under were Russian, so they ended up running under the Russian tanks and blowing them up instead.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

2. Rebel Party

When the Russian Bolsheviks overthrew the provisional government and stormed the Winter Palace in 1917, their revolution was halted for a few days because the Bolsheviks got ridiculously drunk in the Winter Palace after finding the wine stores.

Advertisement

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

3. Thanks, Robert

Robert E. Lee’s Virginia estate, named Arlington House, was confiscated by the Union and turned into a cemetery during the war. The idea—supported by Lincoln--was that if Lee should ever return, he would “have to look at these graves and see the carnage that he had created”.

In 1877, George Washington Custis Lee sued the federal government for confiscating Arlington illegally, and the Supreme Court awarded the estate back to him.

Advertisement

What did Robert’s son do with an estate littered with dead bodies? He sold it back to the federal government for $150,000.

Civil War - Arlington Facts

Advertisement

Union Soldiers at Arlington House.

4. Immovable Object

Confederate General Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson got his nickname during the first battle of Bull Run. Soldiers stated he stood “like a stone wall” in the midst of battle. He was accidentally shot and killed by his own men.

Advertisement

Civil War Facts

Advertisement

5. And… Cut.

Amputation was the most common treatment for broken or severely wounded limbs during the American Civil War. There were too many wounded men for doctors to do time-consuming procedures like removing part of a broken bone or mending damaged flesh. More than half of leg amputations at the thigh or knee ended up being fatal.

Advertisement

83% of amputations were fatal if the amputation was done at the hip joint.

Civil War Facts

Advertisement

6. Biting the Bullet

Anesthesia wasn’t available on the battlefield. Sometimes, patients were given chloroform, but they often had to have their limbs amputated after a glass of whiskey while they bite down on a bullet.

Civil Amputee

Advertisement

7. Bulletproof

During the American Civil War, a man named W.

Advertisement

V Meadows was shot in the eye during the Battle of Vicksburg. Not only did he survive, but he coughed the bullet out of his mouth 58 years later.

Civil War Facts

Advertisement

8. Head of the Army

King Goujian of Yue (reigned 496–465 BC) placed a row of convicted criminals at the front of his army. Before the battle, the criminals would cut off their own heads to scare his enemy’s army.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

The Bronze Sword of Goujian, King of Yue State.

Advertisement

9. Little Foot

Ilya Ivanovich Ivanov, a Russian scientist in the 1920s, conducted experiments where he tried to make a human-chimpanzee hybrid. Before you get any naughty ideas, he attempted to make this “humanzee” with artificial insemination.

Humanzzee

Advertisement
Factinate

Sign up to our newsletter.

History’s most fascinating stories and darkest secrets, delivered to your inbox daily. Making distraction rewarding since 2017.

Thank you!
Error, please try again.

10. Mad as a Hatter

Boston Corbett, the man who shot John Wilkes Booth, was totally insane from handling mercury as a hatter.

Advertisement

Years prior to shooting Booth, he calmly castrated himself with scissors.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

11. Dear Diary…

The Diary of Anne Frank was edited by her father because, quite rightfully, since he didn’t want some of the stuff she wrote published. He edited out writing about her period, discovering herself, learning about boys from a younger guy that was staying with them, and her father’s infatuation with fart jokes.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

12. Horror Souvenirs

During WWII, propaganda created to dehumanize the Japanese was so successful that American marines in the pacific kept body parts of Japanese soldiers as souvenirs.

Advertisement

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

13. Burn, baby, burn!

Nero (emperor from 54 AD - 68 AD) is famous for allegedly singing and playing the fiddle while much of Rome burned to the ground during the Great Fire of Rome.

It was later speculated that this account was false, and that it was propaganda created by the next emperor.

Advertisement

A key piece of evidence: the fiddle wasn't invented yet, and Nero wasn't even in Rome at the time of the fire.

Great Fire of Rome

Advertisement

14. The Love of Contraception

Ancient Romans had an effective natural contraceptive: a plant called silphium. The shape of the seed is where we get the traditional heart shape that we all recognize as a symbol of love.

Advertisement

The Romans harvested so much silphium that it went extinct, and now we’re not even sure exactly what type of plant it was.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

15. Too Lustful to Trust

The FBI ignored compelling evidence of the attack on Pearl Harbor because Hoover didn’t trust the Serbian double agent Dusan Popov, who was apparently a gambling, lustful drunk. His nickname was tricycle because of his love of threesomes.

Advertisement

He was one of the inspirations for Fleming’s Bond.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

16. Shocking Facts about Edison?

Thomas Edison electrocuted a lady circus elephant to death.

The elephant had killed three men over the years, including an abusive trainer. Over a thousand people came to watch her die, and Edison recorded it on video.

Advertisement

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

17. Shooting the Poop

Just because a conflict is absolutely barbaric in terms of lives lost, and blood shed, doesn't mean that all sense of moral dignity is cast aside.

For example: an American Civil War code of honor forbade soldiers from shooting at men while they were pooping. After all, it's one thing to be shot in service of a cause you believe to be righteous.

Advertisement

It's quite another to have that happen with your pants down.

Civil War Facts

Advertisement

18. This is Sparta!

The reason why the Spartans were able to be so focused on war was because of massive slavery. Every single Spartan male was a soldier. Every other job was done by slaves.

The Spartans beat their slaves.

Advertisement

.. by law. To clarify, we don't mean the law allowed them to beat slaves. The law required it. Most horrifically, as a sort of coming of age holiday, there was an occasion every year where young Spartan men would sneak around and murder as many slaves as they could.

Advertisement

Spartanian

Advertisement

19. X-Rated Creation

There’s an Egyptian creation myth that states that the universe was the result of the ejaculation of the god Atum.

To honor Atum, some Pharaohs would ceremonially ejaculate into the Nile.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

20. Claim Your Dead

Mongols used to light the fat of the enemies they killed on fire, and proceeded to shoot it with their catapults onto other enemies.

Advertisement

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

Genghis Khan.

21. Half-Blind Leading the Blind

A Byzantine emperor, Basil, captured 15,000 Bulgarians in battle and blinded 99 of every 100, leaving the 100th guy with one eye. He then sent them all home.Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

22. Vlad the Impaler

Vlad earned his name by impaling his enemies through the torso with large stakes and erecting these stakes in the ground.

Advertisement

Sometimes thousands of prisoners would be impaled at the same time, and many victims lived in agony for days.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

23. Freedom

Harriet Tubman led a raid to free slaves during the Civil War. In 1863, Tubman and Union Colonel James Montgomery stormed into the Confederate interior with 300 black Union soldiers.

Advertisement

They swept through nearby plantations, burning homes and barns. Slave men, women and children came streaming from the countryside, and more than 720 slaves were shuttled to freedom.

This was the first raid led by a woman during the Civil War, and Tubman liberated 10 times the number of slaves she had freed in 10 years on the Underground Railroad.

Advertisement

Civil War Facts

Advertisement

 24. Joined at the Sternum

Two Siam natives, Chang and Eng Bunker, were American twins joined at the sternum. In 1839, they bought 110 acres in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina and settled down.

During the American Civil War in 1865, Union General George Stoneman raided North Carolina and drafted locals using a lottery wheel.

Advertisement

Eng’s name was drawn. Unfortunately for Stoneman, Chang’s name was not drawn, and there was little General Stoneman could do: the brothers were not only joined at the sternum, their livers were fused. Neither twin served in the war.

Chang and Eng Bunker 2

Advertisement

Artistic Depiction of Chang and Eng Bunker.

Advertisement

25. What’s That Smell?

The 1 million horses used in the American Civil War would produce enough urine in one day to fill more than 12 standard sized swimming pools.

Civil War Facts

Advertisement

26. That’s Crappy

Diarrhea was the deadliest disease to plague soldiers of the Civil War. More soldiers died of diarrhea than in battle with around 1 in 40 cases being fatal.

Advertisement

Civil War Hospital

Advertisement

27. Laundry Day

Because clothes were in short supply during the American Civil War, soldiers from both sides would commonly wear enemy colours and get fired at by mistake.

Civil War Facts

Advertisement

28. Years Before Elmo Wanted Tickles…

Foot tickling was used in the Muscovite palaces and courts for centuries as a means of arousal. Many of the Czarinas (Catherine the Great, Anna Ivanovna, and others) loved it.

Advertisement

In fact, it was so popular that eunuchs and women were employed as full time foot ticklers.

While the ticklers performed their task, they often told bawdy stories and sang obscene ballads. This was done to get the ladies into the mood for liaisons with their husbands or lovers.

Advertisement

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

29. The Rubber Police

In the 1880s, Anthony Comstock started confiscating people’s dildos and other sex toys in the United States. He referred to them as “immoral rubber goods,” and in 1882, he confiscated 64,836 pounds of illicit material.

Anthony Comstock

Advertisement

30. Early, Condemnable Pimping

Christopher Columbus prostituted pre-pubescent native American girls.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

31. Founding Father

Ben Franklin visited brothels almost every night.

Advertisement

Also, in 1998, while renovating his home into a museum, ten bodies were discovered in the basement. This led to speculation the Ben Franklin may have been a serial killer, but further analysis has revealed this is likely not the case: the bodies were more likely cadavers used for the anatomical studies of William Hewson, one of Franklin’s friends.

Ben Franklin

Advertisement

32. Unit 731

There was a biological and chemical warfare research facility called Unit 731 that undertook lethal human experimentation during the occupation of China.

Advertisement

They specialized in vivisection, germ warfare, and weapons testing on prisoners. The researchers didn’t even refer to the Chinese people as humans: they called them “logs” and often bragged about how many logs they had cut that day. After WW2, the leaders of the unit gave the United States their research data in return for amnesty.

Advertisement

Many of previous members of Unit 731 became part of post-war politics, academia, business, and medicine.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

33. A2 + B2 = Death

The mathematician Pythagoras, who discovered the Pythagorean theorem, killed people who didn’t agree with him or disproved him. He convinced people that facing the sun when you urinate is a punishable sin.

Advertisement

He also didn’t believe in fractions, or decimals.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

34. Hypochondriac

Confederate general Stonewall Jackson did not eat pepper because he felt it made his leg weak. He made sure to always stand upright, thinking it helped “naturally” align his organs. He would raise one arm when under fire so blood would flow down his body and re-establish his equilibrium.

Advertisement

Civil War Facts

Advertisement

Robert E. Lee (left) and Stonewall Jackson (right).

35. Lucky Lincoln

Lincoln was almost killed two years before he was assassinated. Late one August evening in 1863, Lincoln rode alone by horse to his family’s summer residence. A private at the gate heard a shot ring out and, moments later, a bareheaded Lincoln clinging to his steed galloped into the yard.

Advertisement

Lincoln explained that gunfire at the foot of the hill had sent his horse into a frenzied gallop, running so fast that it knocked his hat off. Two soldiers retrieved Lincoln’s hat, which had a bullet hole in it. Lincoln asked the guards to keep the incident quiet because he didn’t want to worry his wife..

Civil War Facts

Advertisement

36. Age Gap

The youngest active soldier to fight in the Civil War was an 11-year-old boy from Mississippi.

Advertisement

An 80-year-old man from Iowa was the oldest.

Child Soldiers

Advertisement

37. Malcolm XXX

Malcolm X was bisexual. He was also sex worker for almost ten years.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

38. Don't mess with King Pilip

The Tour de Nesle affair was a scandal amongst the French royal family in 1314, during which the three daughters-in-law of King Philip IV of France were accused of adultery, the accusations apparently started by Philip's only daughter, Isabella, Queen of England. The Tour de Nesle was a tower in Paris where much of the adultery was said to have occurred. The scandal led to the imprisonment of Blanche and Margaret, and the execution of their lovers.

Advertisement

Having been tortured, the guilty knights Gautier and Philippe were then killed; most histories agree that they were first castrated and then either drawn and quartered or flayed alive, broken on a wheel and then hanged.

Philip_iv_and_family

Advertisement

39. Madame De Pompadour

While on the outside, the relationship between Madame de Pompadour and King Louis XV of France was happy and healthy, modern historians now know that the couple hid a dark secret behind bedroom doors. From 1750 onwards, Pompadour ceased being a sexual partner to Louis XV.

Advertisement

Just five years into their relationship, they stopped making love. But the reason for their abstinence was so shocking that it's impossible to forget.

In public, the reason for Pompadour's shifting role was chalked up to her poor health. She suffered multiple miscarriages, her childhood bout with whooping cough had weakened her, and she always seemed to have a cold or bronchitis.

Advertisement

But behind closed doors, there was another reason: Pompadour just wasn't that interested in bedroom-based activities. She didn't want to engage in them at all.

Madame De Pompadour FactsMadame De Pompadour: The King

Advertisement

40. The My Lai Massacre

Approximately 400 unarmed civilians were killed during the Vietnam war by United States soldiers. 26 soldiers were originally charged with war crimes. One served time.

Advertisement

He was given a life sentence, but in the end, he served less than four years of house arrest.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

41. Nice Sideburns, Sir.

All great facial hair comes from somewhere. At some point in history, a truly brave pioneer had to think to themselves (while shaving) "you know what, I think I'm going to get weird with it". Sometimes those bold experiments turn into truly monstrous follicle catastrophes.

Advertisement

.. and sometimes, they change the world.

Sideburns, for example, are named after an American Civil War General: General Burnside.

Civil War Facts

Advertisement

42. Got Milk?

The Milky Way supposedly got its name because it was formed when the Greek goddess Hera sprayed her breast milk into the sky.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

43. Filthy Composition

Mozart was surprisingly obsessed with feces and bathroom humor.

Advertisement

Two of his songs actually talk about anlingus. He also wrote letters to his family members where he described his farts in great detail.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

44. A Recipe for Compliance

During WWII, the Russians would have “barrier troops” that would be set up behind Russian army forces and shoot those soldiers that were trying to desert from the front line.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

45. Eighteen Napkins

Each meal, Nikola Tesla would use exactly 18 napkins to polish his cup, plate, and cutlery.

Advertisement

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

46. A Man of Many Talents

Julius Caesar was once kidnapped and briefly held by Cicilian pirates and held prisoner. When the pirates asked for a ransom of 20 talents ($600,000 in today money), he scoffed at them and demanded they ask for 50 talents.

Facts about Pirates

Advertisement

47. A Man of his Word

Whilst incarcerated by pirates, Caesar treated them like his subordinates and somehow managed to gain their respect.

Advertisement

However, he told them that when he was released, he would return, hunt them down, and crucify them. Upon his release, Caesar made good on his promise, raised a private navy, and killed all the pirates, who hadn’t taken him seriously and didn’t even bother to leave the island where Caesar had been held. Caesar got his 50 talents back.

Advertisement

Julius Caesar

Advertisement

48. Alien Property

When Tesla died in 1943, the office of Alien Property seized his possessions. Though most of it was later returned to his family, some of it still remains classified. What did Tesla invent that we never got to know about?

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

49. An Eye for an Eye

In rural America in the eighteenth and early nineteenth century, citizens would settle disputes with  gouging: an incredibly violent form of wrestling where opponents would try and gouge out each others eyes.

Advertisement

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

50. Royal Audience

On his wedding night, future king William of Orange consummated his marriage while Charles II watched from the sidelines and shouted encouragement.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

Charles II.

51. Too Brilliant for His Shirt

Ben Franklin showed his neighbors his birthday suit 5.00am each morning while sitting near an open window writing. He claimed the air aroused his creativity.

Advertisement

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

52. Where’d they get the bears?

In the 1st century A.D., polar bears fought seals in Roman amphitheaters flooded with water.

Polar Bear

Advertisement

53. Building like champions.

After the fall of the Roman Empire, the technology to make concrete was lost for 1000 years. In fact, Ancient Roman concrete has withstood the attack by elements for over 2,000 years, which is considerably longer than the lifetime of modern concrete structures.

Advertisement

Slider 1 Unedited

Advertisement

54. A bad way to go…

In Ancient Rome, the punishment for killing one's father was the death penalty, consisting of being sewn up in a sack along with a monkey, a viper, a dog, and a cock. The punishment (called “poena cullei”) varied slightly depending on the ruling emperor. It seems some rulers preferred more snakes and others more dogs.

Advertisement

Regardless of the emperor, a fair fight wasn’t an option: the person was first beaten with virgis sanguinis ("blood-colored rods”) and his head was covered in a bag made of a wolf's hide.

poena cullei

Advertisement

55. “Brain-washing” in a Tub

Dr. Yoshiro Nakamatsu, who patented more than 3,300 inventions in his 73-year-old life, got his creativity from sinking himself underwater for hours at a time.  Point?

Advertisement

“To starve the brain of oxygen. Zero-point-five seconds before death, I visualize an invention”.

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

56. Singing to the Powder

Sigmund Freud, cocaine addict, published his Cocaine Papers (1887), a “song of praise to this magical substance”.

Psychoanalysis

Advertisement

57. The Interview

Researchers who wanted to work for Thomas Edison had to sample soup. If they seasoned it before tasting, they were fired, since it showed they were biased.

Advertisement

Before we start thinking Thomas Edison is cool, let’s remember that he also electrocuted a circus elephant to death.

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

58. Isaac Newton, Super Cop

After becoming recognized as one of the world’s greatest minds, Newton was appointed England’s Warden of the Mint. His job was to find and build cases against counterfeiters, and he duked it out with one particularly well-connected counterfeiter named William Chaloner.

Advertisement

Newton went full-on Dirty Harry and bribed crooks for information on Chaloner.  He also leaned on the wives and mistresses of Chaloner’s crooked associates for intelligence.

Eventually, Newton gathered enough information to convict Chaloner, who was hanged for his crimes. Newton did not attend the hanging.

Advertisement

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

 59. Farmer Newton

Isaac almost became a farmer. When he returned from school at the age of 17, his mother insisted that he take over the family farm. He was an awful farmer though, and soon after his uncle convinced Newton’s mom to send him to Trinity College.

Newton Wallpaper

Advertisement

60. The Mad Scientist and the Two-Headed Dog

In 1954, Soviet surgeon Vladimir Demikhov, revealed his masterpiece to the world:

Advertisement

a two-headed dog. He created 19 more over the next 15 years.

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

Although Demikhov’s research has been (justifiably) called out for horrific animal cruelty, it did help pave the way to human organ transplants.

61. “What's My Address”?

Einstein's secretary once got an anonymous call asking where Einstein lived. The secretary declined to respond.

Advertisement

The caller then admitted he was Einstein himself who had forgotten his address.

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

62. Only Two Words!

Richard Feynman, physicist, bet a friend he would be able to get more than two words at a time out of Paul Dirac, famed but taciturn physicist. After speaking to him for several hours with no success, Richard revealed his failure to Dirac.

Advertisement

The latter smiled and said, “You've lost”.

Facts about Scientists
Paul Dirac.

Advertisement

63. Lock it Up

Richard Feynman, physicist, became a master of cracking safes after working on the atomic bomb project at Los Alamos in the 1940s, where everyone was required to keep confidential documents in safes. It started as an intellectual curiosity:

Advertisement

he wondered if he could figure out how to open these safes.

He became so good at his craft that he found himself — for the sake of cultivating his legend — carrying tools as a red herring and pretending that safe jobs took longer than they really did.

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

Richard Feynman.

64. Star(k) Naked

Scientist Neil DeGrasse Tyson almost became an exotic dancer.

Advertisement

Having danced and wrestled through university, Tyson considered dancing at a Chippendale's type club for extra cash.

Imagine the dinner-and-a-show you'd get from a male dancer who knew everything there is to know about the cosmos. Come to think of it... It's kind of shocking that business doesn't already exist.

Advertisement

Get on it, Mr. Tyson!

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

65. Biggest Fan

The pathologist who performed Einstein’s autopsy stole his brain, and kept it in a jar for 20 years. We’re pretty sure that’s not legal, or useful.

Buuuuuuuuuut... It would make a for a pretty great conversation starter at dinner parties.

Advertisement

"Oh so this here is the painting my grandmother left for me... This here is my mum's old hat-stand... Oh! And here's Einstein's brain in a jar"!

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

66. Brainy

Einstein’s brain had a parietal lobe that was 15% larger than that of the average human. The parietal lobe is responsible for processing sensory information, as well as language and mathematics.

Advertisement

Now it’s starting to add up. That's like cheating!

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

67. Clueless

Marie Curie, the celebrated physicist and chemist who conducted pioneering research on radioactivity,  was completely in the dark when it came to the dangers of radioactive materials. Though she and her husband both suffered from chronic pain, neither considered that it was their radioactive substance handling that was the cause.

Advertisement

Some of their original lab equipment is still so radioactive and cannot be safely viewed or studied.

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

68. 84 Year Old Virgin

Either science doesn't exactly attract the opposite gender the way you'd expect, or Sir Isaac was really, really picky...

Though Isaac Newton lived to be 84, he never married. Some even believe he never lost his virginity.

Advertisement

Still, there’s no conclusive way to tell.

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

69. It’s Real To Me!

Newton was really into alchemy. What’s alchemy? It’s the pseudoscientific predecessor of chemistry that sought to transmute base metals into rare metals, create an elixir of life, and other wacky pursuits. He wrote 169 books on the subject, but none were published in his lifetime.

Advertisement

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

70. Nellie

General Lee of the American Civil War was given a flock of chickens by a Virginia farmer in 1862. The soldiers ate all but one of the chickens, which had caught the attention of the General. This chicken became his pet, was named Nellie and laid eggs under Lee’s cot every day

Civil War Facts

Advertisement

71. Relative Politics

Albert Einstein declined the Presidency of Israel, saying he had no head for problems.

Advertisement

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

Albert Einstein, Summer 1939 Nassau Point, Long Island, NY, original  and colorized photograph.

72. I’ll Take That

A slave boarded and took over a Confederate ship during the American Civil War in 1861, then delivered it to the Union. He was then given the ship to command.

Civil War Facts

Advertisement

73. Not So Pure

Gandhi is remembered as a figure of peaceful protest and understanding.

Advertisement

But most people don’t know his dark history. At the age of 36, while married, Gandhi became more and more obsessed with lust. In order to train and “perfect” his control over his desires, Gandhi would sleep naked with young women. But one night, he committed an act so heinous that it made his own staff member quit on him forever:

Advertisement

Gandhi had performed this sleeping act with his own grand-niece named Manu. His stenographer quit in disgust.

mahatma-gandhi---a-legacy-of-peace

Advertisement

 

74. Good Eats

Einstein's chauffeur reported that Einstein plucked a grasshopper off the ground and ate it.

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

75. Angel’s Glow

During the American Civil War, soldiers from both sides began reporting glow-in-the-dark wounds after the Battle of Shiloh in 1862.

Advertisement

Of nearly 16,000 wounded, those with glowing wounds seemed to heal faster. Later research revealed that the area was likely a breeding ground for P. luminescens, a luminescent bacterium that produces a natural anti-biotic.

Civil War Facts

Advertisement

Artistic Depiction of the Battle of Shiloh.

76. Smells Like Steel

The 16th-century Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe lost his nose in a duel.

Advertisement

Hey, it happens to the best of us. But what's a 16-th century Danish astronomer to do when his sniffer gets blown off? Can't go walking around with a big ol' hole in your face, now can you?

Tycho Brahe (great name by the way) had a pretty wicked solution.

Advertisement

He donned a metal one instead, designed to mimic his original schnoz.

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

77. Her Heart Was Black

Catherine of Aragon's demise was utterly mysterious in its time. While preparing her body for burial, her embalmer noticed the corpse was in perfect health—save for her heart, which had turned black. The ghastly condition, coupled with Catherine’s chilling premonitions of her own demise, led people to some dark rumors about her end.

After witnessing her strange condition, those loyal to Catherine and disloyal to Henry and Anne started whispering that the Royal Couple 2.

Advertisement

0 had poisoned Catherine in a chilling act of self-service, leading the “Dowager” to die poetically of a broken heart. Modern historians, however, believe a much different story.

Most experts today believe that rather than foul play, Catherine passed of cancer of the heart; sometimes it can turn the heart black.

Advertisement

Nonetheless, it's still tragically poetic given the circumstances of Catherine's life and her queenship.

Catherine of Aragon facts Shutterstock

Advertisement

78. No Speak Language? No Problem.

The physicist Robert Oppenheimer was a polymath, fluent in eight languages. In 1931, he asked a University of California colleague to teach a class, giving the students a book as prop. Later that day, the colleague complained the text was Dutch.

Advertisement

Oppenheimer's response? "But it's easy Dutch"!

Oppenheimer

Advertisement

79. Marriage Contract

Albert Einstein’s marriage contract included these conditions: “You will make sure that my clothes and laundry are kept in good order; that I will receive my three meals regularly in my room; that my bedroom and study are kept neat, and especially that my desk is left for my use only”.

Ooooooh romance.

Advertisement

You might think those rules were a liiiiiiiiitle bit onerous, but clearly his wife felt differently. She agreed.

Facts about Scientists

Advertisement

80. No Take Backs

Because it was a powerful political entity at the time, Harry Truman’s political advisers suggested he join the KKK. While he did give the $10 membership fee, he demanded it back and claims he was never inducted nor initiated.

Advertisement

President Facts

Advertisement

81. A Man of Letters

As sheriff of Erie County, New York, President Grover Cleveland twice had to spring the trap at a hanging. That's right: Grover is the only US President to have ever held the job of hangman.

We bet nobody ever accused ‘ol Grover for not being tough on crime.

President Facts

Advertisement

82. Proudly Serving the American People

Lincoln is the only president who was also a licensed bartender.

Advertisement

He co-owned Berry and Lincoln, a saloon in Springfield, Illinois.

This is a man who also wrestled in high-school... and was apparently notorious for hurling insults at his competitors. Basically what we're saying is: Abraham Lincoln was freaking cool. As if his honest and upstanding reputation as a leader weren't enough.

Advertisement

..

President Facts

Advertisement

83. Snowbirds

It's tough to host a big event: no matter how much you plan(hotdogs for the BBQ, drinks for all the guests..). things have a tendency to go exactly the way you don't expect them to.

Ulysses S. Grant’s inauguration was just that sort of event. In fact, it got so cold while the ceremony was going on,  the canaries that were supposed to sing at the inaugural-ball actually froze to death.

President Facts

Advertisement

84. He Shouldn’t Have Smoked All of Them

Ulysses S.

Advertisement

Grant was an avid cigar smoker and after a brilliant war victory, a jubilant nation sent him more than 10,000 cigars.

Amazing! Nothing like the love and admiration a grateful people can show to its Commander-in-Chief.

...

He died of throat cancer.

Whoops.

President Facts

Advertisement

85. Clinton’s Cuban Missile Crisis

Of course, this wasn’t the last time a cigar in the Oval Office hurt a president. During Bill Clinton’s impeachment hearings, it was revealed that Bill used a cigar to pleasure Monica Lewinsky.

Sad Bill

Advertisement

86. A Chip and a Chair

Thomas Jefferson and John Adams once traveled to Stratford-upon-Avon to visit the birthplace of Shakespeare and while there, they carved wood chips out of one of Shakespeare’s chairs as souvenirs.

Thereby making them the most presidential vandals in history.

Advertisement

President Facts

Advertisement

Thomas Jefferson.

87. Classic Good News, Bad News

The first president to ever ride in a self-propelled vehicle was William McKinley. Unfortunately, it was an ambulance that was taking him to the hospital after he was shot.

Old Ambulance - Facts about Presidents

Advertisement

88. Secure the Package

In 2009, a woman walked into the Museum of the Confederacy in Richmond, Virginia. She had an acorn-shaped object in hand that was made of brass and had no inscriptions or markings.

Advertisement

She said that one of her Confederate soldier ancestors used the device to smuggle secret messages, hiding it in his posterior until he reached his destination.

Civil War Facts - Rectal Acorn

Advertisement

89. Bad Sushi

After Bush Sr. vomited on the Japanese Prime Minister, the Japanese invented a new word: Bushusuru. This means to “do the Bush thing” or to “publicly vomit”.

President Facts

Advertisement

90. I Keelhaul You!

If pirates wanted to torture their foes, they would drag them from a rope behind the ship (a practice known as keelhauling), strand them on a desert island, or lash them with a whip.

Advertisement

Facts about Pirates

Advertisement

91. Of Course

Jimmy Carter was the first president to go on record as having seen a UFO.

President Facts

Advertisement

92. Blast from the Past

In 1996, famous pirate Blackbeard’s ship, the Queen Anne’s Revenge, was found off the coast of North Carolina. Thirty-one cannons and 250,000 artifacts have been recovered. One such artifact was a urethral syringe, which was used to treat syphilis with mercury.

Advertisement

Ouch. Plot twist: mercury does not, in fact, cure syphilis.

Facts about Pirates

Advertisement

93. Movin’ On Up

Thomas Jefferson had a 38-year long affair with Sally Hemmings, one of his slaves, and he may be the father of her children.

President Facts

Advertisement

94. Standing Really Tall

Every member of Teddy Roosevelt’s family owned a pair of stilts. They often walked around the White House on them for fun.

Advertisement

Just because you're rich and famous (and incredibly powerful to boot) doesn't mean you can't have a little bit of fun with stilts. That's just the law of the land.

President Facts

Advertisement

95. He Couldn’t Bear It

“Teddy Bears” got their name when Teddy Roosevelt refused to shoot a small bear cub prompting a toy manufacturer to start making cute stuffed animals. Yay capitalism.

Advertisement

President Facts

Advertisement

96. What Speech Giveth…

During his second run for president, Teddy Roosevelt was shot after a failed assassination attempt but, instead of going to the hospital, insisted on giving a planned speech with the bullet still lodged in his chest. The bullet was reportedly slowed by the thick papers in Roosevelt’s coat pocket on which the speech was written.President Facts

Advertisement

97. Gun Control

Andrew Jackson was apparently involved in over a hundred duels, most of which were fought to defend his wife’s honor. Why her honor was constantly besmirched is another story.

Advertisement

President Facts

Advertisement

98. A Museum Piece

James Garfield was shot in the back with a five-barrel, .44 caliber pistol called a British Bulldog. When asked why he selected that gun, the assassin Charles Guiteau said he thought it’d look good in a museum someday.

President Facts

Advertisement

John Adams..

99. Nail in the coffin.

During the 7th century B.C., ancient Roman "vestal virgins" were required to keep their hymens intact as proof of virginity until age 30. Vestal virgins who engaged in sexual conduct were buried alive.

Advertisement

scared

Advertisement

100. Praying for a good poop.

The inhabitants of ancient Rome had a sewer goddess, a toilet god, and a god of excrement. The gods were said to frequent the latrine in large numbers and excrement was regarded as the food of the dead.

Toilet God

Advertisement

101. Dental hygiene matters.

Urine was used in Ancient Rome to wash clothes.

Advertisement

The Romans also used it to whiten their teeth.

Head in Hands

Advertisement

Statue of an ancient Roman, clearly upset about the fact that his society has started using pee to brush their teeth.

102. All is favour of the Free Carrots Bill?

The Roman Emperor Gaius Caligula made his horse a senator. Caligula also allegedly committed incest with his sisters, fed prisoners to wild beasts and had conversations with the moon.

Advertisement

Caligula's horse

Advertisement

Caligula on his horse.

103. Ancient cook book: 100 Uses of Gladiator Fluids.

Ancient Roman women wore the sweat of Gladiators to improve their beauty and complexion. Romans also used to drink Gladiator blood because they thought that the blood of these strong and fierce beings had the power to cure epilepsy.

Spartacus

Advertisement

Spartacus, as seen in the popular TV series produced by Starz.

Advertisement

104. Ever thought about how much of a win the invention of toilet paper was?

Ancient Romans used a sponge on a stick called a “spongia” to clean themselves after pooping. Public facilities had a long marble bench with holes on top – for the obvious thing – and holes at the front: for the sponge-sticks. There were no doors or dividing walls. You sat right next to your friend and did what you had to do.

Advertisement

Once you had done your business, you would rinse the spongia in the channel of running water at your feet and – without standing up or revealing anything –push the spongia through the hole at the front, give your bottom a solid wipe, rinse off the spongia… and leave it in a basin for the next person to use!

Spongia Public Lavratory

Advertisement

Proserpina Dam, Spain.

Advertisement

105. Well, Not All Love Is Welcome Aboard

Pirate code decreed that any man found “seducing one of the latter sex and carrying her to sea in disguise, he shall suffer death”. Desertion was also punishable by death.

Facts about Pirates

Advertisement

106. Well, if you’re going to brush your teeth with it…

In Ancient Rome, women would drink turpentine to make their urine smell sweet like roses.

Ancient Roman Women

Advertisement

107. Ancient drugs for ancient fun.

The Salema Porgy is a species of fish that can cause hallucinations when eaten.

Advertisement

In Ancient Rome, it was consumed as a recreational drug. In fact, Salema porgies are regularly eaten without their consumers experiencing hallucinogenic effects, but in 2006, two men were hospitalized in the south of France after consuming them, one of whom was 90 years old. They both claimed to fall “ill” and experience auditory hallucinations along with lucid nightmares for several nights, until the “symptoms” finally and mysteriously abated.

Salema Porgy

Advertisement

Salema porgy.

Advertisement

108. We’ve been butchering the pronunciation.

Julius Caesar was pronounced 'YOO-lee-us KYE-sahr' in ancient Rome.

Julius Caesar

Advertisement

109. Interesting emperors.

Nero, the Roman Emperor, married a man named Sporus, a freedman who took the role of the bride. While it may be tempting to give Nero props for his forward-thinking stance on sexuality, it’s also important to remember his darker side. He castrated Sporus.

Advertisement

If that wasn’t enough, during his rule, he murdered his own mother, Agrippina the Younger; his first wife, Octavia; and allegedly, his second wife, Poppaea Sabina. There also was that incident with the Great Fire of Rome that we’ll get to later…

Nero

Advertisement

Statue of Nero.

110. Take that, Cristiano Ronaldo!

Roman charioteers earned more than even the best-paid footballers and international sports stars of today, according to academic research.

Advertisement

One charioteer, named Gaius Appuleius Diocles, amassed a fortune equivalent to $15 billion USD today.

Maximus Decimus Meridius

Advertisement

111. We finally found the lost legion.

Inhabitants of the Chinese town of Liqian have blond hair and white skin. Historians have speculated they are the descendants of a lost Roman settlement. The most common theory is that Liquian features are linked to the legend of the missing army of Roman general Marcus Crassus.

Advertisement

Basically, the Parthians massacred most the Roman troops Crassus sent into battle. 10,000 Romans survived and were captured. They were forced to fight for various rulers, eventually settling in China.

Liqian people

Advertisement

112. Cover up, sweetie.

After the wedding night, a modest Roman wife wasn’t supposed to let her husband see her naked again. Consequently, it may be no surprise that the philosophers who argued that a man shouldn’t have sex with anyone but his wife won few converts.

Roman Wedding

Advertisement

113. Arsenic for dinner, please.

Emperors poisoned themselves every day.

Advertisement

From the end of the first century AD, Roman emperors had adopted the daily habit of taking a small amount of every known poison in an attempt to gain immunity, a practice called “Mithridatism”. Although effective against some types of poisons, it doesn’t work against all of them, and, depending on the toxin, the practice can lead to the lethal accumulation of a poison in the body. Turns out, it’s much easier just to label things "poison" and tell people not to eat them.

King Cobra

Advertisement

114. Mad as a Mobster

When Al Capone was arrested for tax evasion, he was found to have syphilis.

Advertisement

Capone refused treatment because he was afraid of needles. After 11 years in Alcatraz, the disease had eaten away at his brain so much that he could no longer resume his life of crime. Before his death, he was often spotted casting a fishing rod into his swimming pool.

Advertisement

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

115. Et Tu, Caesar?

Marcus Brutus’ mother was Julius Caesar’s lover.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

Julius Caesar, as portrayed in Spartacus.

116. Hysterical…

The vibrator was created to treat Hysteria. Why? Doctors were taking too long to manually stimulate women. Shortly after it’s invention, the vibrator became the largest selling household appliance.

Bizarre Historical Facts

Advertisement

117. A bit extreme, don’t you think?

Marcus Aurelius (largely known for his philosophy and humanitarianism) faced an interesting gladiator dilemma.

Advertisement

His wife Faustina became aroused over one combatant and confessed her passion to her husband. His solution? Faustina was ordered to strip and have sex with the gladiator in question, who was then murdered while on top of her. Afterwards, she was obliged to bathe in his blood, do a quick cleanup, and then make love to her husband Marcus.

Advertisement

Commodus Death

Advertisement

Russell Crowe killing Marcus’ son, Commodus.

118. So Romantic!

Catherine de Medici was only 14 when she married Henri, the son of King Francis. And although she was young, the King and other older men insisted on being present for the consummation of the marriage. I have one thing to say about this:

Advertisement

EW.

Henry II of France factsGetty Images

Advertisement

For factaholics who love history, check out these historical myths that have been busted:

 

We hope you enjoyed these fun facts!

Sources:  123Reddit567. . 9101112131415161 2 3 412345678 , 910111234567891012345678


More from Factinate

Featured Article

My mom never told me how her best friend died. Years later, I was using her phone when I made an utterly chilling discovery.

Dark Family Secrets

Dark Family Secrets Exposed

Nothing stays hidden forever—and these dark family secrets are proof that when the truth comes out, it can range from devastating to utterly chilling.
April 8, 2020 Samantha Henman

Featured Article

Madame de Pompadour was the alluring chief mistress of King Louis XV, but few people know her dark history—or the chilling secret shared by her and Louis.

Madame de Pompadour Facts

Entrancing Facts About Madame de Pompadour, France's Most Powerful Mistress

Madame de Pompadour was the alluring chief mistress of King Louis XV, but few people know her dark history—or the chilling secret shared by her and Louis.
December 7, 2018 Kyle Climans

More from Factinate

Featured Article

I tried to get my ex-wife served with divorce papers. I knew that she was going to take it badly, but I had no idea about the insane lengths she would go to just to get revenge and mess with my life.

These People Got Genius Revenges

When someone really pushes our buttons, we'd like to think that we'd hold our head high and turn the other cheek, but revenge is so, so sweet.
April 22, 2020 Scott Mazza

Featured Article

Catherine of Aragon is now infamous as King Henry VIII’s rejected queen—but few people know her even darker history.

Catherine of Aragon Facts

Tragic Facts About Catherine of Aragon, Henry VIII’s First Wife

Catherine of Aragon is now infamous as King Henry VIII’s rejected queen—but very few people know her even darker history.
June 7, 2018 Christine Tran



Dear reader,


Want to tell us to write facts on a topic? We’re always looking for your input! Please reach out to us to let us know what you’re interested in reading. Your suggestions can be as general or specific as you like, from “Life” to “Compact Cars and Trucks” to “A Subspecies of Capybara Called Hydrochoerus Isthmius.” We’ll get our writers on it because we want to create articles on the topics you’re interested in. Please submit feedback to contribute@factinate.com. Thanks for your time!


Do you question the accuracy of a fact you just read? At Factinate, we’re dedicated to getting things right. Our credibility is the turbo-charged engine of our success. We want our readers to trust us. Our editors are instructed to fact check thoroughly, including finding at least three references for each fact. However, despite our best efforts, we sometimes miss the mark. When we do, we depend on our loyal, helpful readers to point out how we can do better. Please let us know if a fact we’ve published is inaccurate (or even if you just suspect it’s inaccurate) by reaching out to us at contribute@factinate.com. Thanks for your help!


Warmest regards,



The Factinate team




Want to learn something new every day?

Join thousands of others and start your morning with our Fact Of The Day newsletter.

Thank you!

Error, please try again.