10 Famous People Who Avoided Death On 9 11

SEE ALSO: 10 Disturbing Raw Videos From 9/11 Larry Silverstein, the wealthy property owner and developer who held the lease on the World Trade Center properties, was due to work that morning of September 11, 2001, in the temporary offices of his company, Silverstein Properties, on the 88th floor of the North Tower. But he had a problem; he had a dermatologist appointment that morning, too. According to Silverstein, his wife “laid down the law” and told him he could not miss the doctor’s appointment....

December 25, 2022 · 9 min · 1850 words · Yolanda Fields

10 Famous People Who Were Nazi Sympathizers

At the conclusion of the war and the reveal of the full extent of the Holocaust, many would strenuously deny any connection with or sympathy for the Nazis. Unfortunately for them, there were facts in place to contradict their denials. Read our list today to find ten people who were reportedly Nazi sympathizers. 10 Ezra Pound Ezra Pound was a famous modernist writer who was prominent during the early 20th century among writers such as T....

December 25, 2022 · 10 min · 2026 words · Peter Magaldi

10 Fascinating Digressions Of Freudian Theory

10 Freud’s Theory Of Weaving Freud’s opinions about women are famously patronizing and misogynistic, although he did advocate for them becoming members of his profession. He thought of women as being more emotionally needy, more demanding of attention, more prone to neuroses and hysteria, less swayed by conscience, more passive, and more narcissistic than men. Some of the theories that he invented to explain these personal observations seem completely ludicrous to us today....

December 25, 2022 · 16 min · 3368 words · Oscar King

10 Fascinating Facts About The Ancient City Of Pompeii

When the volcanic gas and ashes reached Pompeii and sealed its fate, the city was “paused” in time. When the site was rediscovered, its excellent state of preservation became apparent. In terms of volume of detailed archaeological data, no other site can rival Pompeii. This list contains 10 interesting facts about this rich site, which hopefully will allow the readers to recreate in their minds some fascinating details of this incredible ancient city....

December 25, 2022 · 8 min · 1563 words · Elizabeth Robinson

10 Fascinating Interpreters Who Changed History

10 Thomas Pereira & Jean-Francois Gerbillon In the 17th century, Jesuit missionaries were a crucial link between the West and the Qing dynasty, as the Chinese emperors valued them for their scientific knowledge and linguistic skills. At that time, there were tensions between the Portuguese Jesuits, who had arrived first, and the French Jesuits, who arrived later and in greater numbers to break the Lusitanian monopoly. During this period, Russian Cossacks had begun to infiltrate the northern borders of the Qing Empire in search of furs and grain, clashing with border troops and subjugating Siberian tribes which were tributaries of Beijing....

December 25, 2022 · 20 min · 4102 words · Daniel Wagner

10 Genetically Modified Animals Not Intended For Consumption

These cases can be even more contentious. Some people feel that it is unethical to experiment with animals in this way. For example, they can be injured or killed during these trials. It is also possible that the environment could be irreparably harmed. 10 Japanese Scientists Created A Chicken That Lays Eggs That Fight Cancer Japanese scientists have created a GM chicken that lays golden eggs. Although the eggs are not actually golden, they are worth their weight in gold, if not more....

December 25, 2022 · 9 min · 1812 words · Joseph Hinton

10 Genuine Reasons To Consider That Hitler Really Did Escape Berlin

For example, most of us have heard and dismissed the claims of body doubles and mismatched skull fragments. Also, Hitler’s dead body has never been found. However, an intriguing argument can be made that Hitler may have faked his death and escaped from the ruins of Berlin with the help of his closest Nazi officers. So, where might he have gone? 10 PatagoniaHome Away From Home The Patagonia region of Argentina was known to the Nazis long before the start of World War II....

December 25, 2022 · 10 min · 2036 words · Letitia Burroughs

10 Great British Eccentrics

The mark of an eccentric is often the enthusiasm they have for a certain personal belief. Matthew Robinson, 2nd Baron Rokeby, developed a fondness for all things watery. At a time when drinking water could be somewhat risky due to waterborne disease most people drank alcoholic beverages, Rokeby drank only water or beef tea. Each day he would walk to the beach and swim in the sea until exhausted. While Lord Rokeby would walk he was followed by a carriage and servants....

December 25, 2022 · 7 min · 1483 words · Steven Fuller

10 Great Financial Collapses In History

I’ve tried to give numbers of the deficits in question, but it should be noted the extreme inaccuracy in trying convert money from 600 years ago into modern terms, especially as I am no economist and certainly no mathematician. Early bullion is difficult to convert into modern terms, and in times of economic turmoil the constantly fluctuating values make for a large margin of error. What’s more, early modern and feudal economies are not based on money transactions as we think of them today, and less than 5% of the population would have any money....

December 25, 2022 · 16 min · 3304 words · Joseph Duran

10 Gruesome And Dreadful Murders By Drowning

Killing someone by drowning takes commitment. This isn’t a split-second squeeze of a trigger but a drawn-out action. Whether the murderers held their victims underwater until they ceased to struggle or facilitated their immersion through other means, they had time to think about what they were doing. The drowned suffer cruel deaths, often at the hands of someone they loved and trusted and in a familiar setting, their last moments terror, their last sights and sounds a confusion of water....

December 25, 2022 · 15 min · 3087 words · Christopher Guizar

10 High Profile April Fools Jokes

However, even prominent and media organizations enjoy a good April Fools’ joke. Wealthy businessmen have also partaken in a little hilarity and reaped the publicity that followed. Probably because of the high standing of the pranksters, many people fell for their jokes. Some of them were so silly, though, that it is hard to understand how anyone believed them. 10 Swiss Spaghetti Harvest Does spaghetti really grow on trees? A BBC “documentary” in 1957 actually managed to fool some viewers into believing it actually did in an April Fools’ Day spoof....

December 25, 2022 · 7 min · 1321 words · Ashley Hawthorne

10 Historical Figures Who Might Have Had Syphilis

10 Adolf Hitler May Have Ruled Germany While Suffering From Syphilis One theory may plausibly explain Hitler’s behavior and decisions while ruling Nazi Germany. Some historians believe that Hitler was suffering from an advanced form of syphilis toward the end of his regime. Dr. Theodor Morell, Adolf Hitler’s personal physician, kept extensive records about his most famous patient. Most of these records still survive, providing modern historians with a portrait of Hitler’s private life....

December 25, 2022 · 12 min · 2480 words · Nadine Chavez

10 Horrifying Facts About The Catholic Sex Abuse Scandal

See Also: 10 Crazy Catholic Conspiracy Theories The Church did their best to keep it from leaking to the press and to deal with the problem within the church. More often than not, though, their solution was little more than to pass child molesters onto a new parish, where they’d be surrounded by a whole new set of children to prey on or sentenced them to the “life of prayer and penance” the religion already demanded....

December 25, 2022 · 13 min · 2574 words · Lamar Trickel

10 Horrifying Real Life Dungeons

Some dungeons were known for their infamous captives, others for their horrific methods of misery. So who were more evil: the inhabitants of the dungeons or the architects of these palaces of pain? 10 Mamertine Prison Mamertime Prison festers below the placid 16th-century church of St. Joseph of the Carpenters. This subterranean chamber of horrors held the Roman Empire’s most feared enemies, who were often political prisoners. Mamertine Prison housed the Gaulish warlord Vercingetorix and Simon Bar Jioras, the defender of Jerusalem....

December 25, 2022 · 7 min · 1482 words · Alvin Green

10 Horrors Of The Guillotine

Guillotine executions were an industry unlike any other. Tens of thousands of people came to witness the executions and spent a good amount of money at local businesses and hotels. The events lined everyone’s pockets, from the High Executioner to the pickpockets in the streets. 10 Botched Execution It is bad enough that you are about to be executed, but imagine how you would feel in those last moments if they totally bungled the job?...

December 25, 2022 · 8 min · 1497 words · Mary Walton

10 Human Attributes Found In Animals

Culture encompasses all behaviors and activities which are not genetically driven and which are found throughout a local population. The arts and humanities, religions, shared attitudes and practices are all facets of culture. The wonderfully wide variety of human cultures around the world is of great interest in itself; however, not all culture is human. For an activity to be deemed cultural, it must not be directly caused by genetics, it must be passed from one individual to another throughout a population, it must be remembered and not forgotten instantly after it has occurred, and it must be passed down through generations....

December 25, 2022 · 9 min · 1711 words · Harvey Gill

10 Images Of Where Children Sleep Around The World

Risa lives with thirteen women in a teahouse in Kyoto where she is training to be a geisha. She chose to train as a geisha after watching them on TV. She trains every day for hours practising tea-making, elocution, singing, and dancing. She is the youngest maiko (someone who has passed the test to train as a geisha) in Japan. She has two days holiday each month. Dong shares a room with his sisters and parents....

December 25, 2022 · 4 min · 649 words · Becky Malone

10 Images That Capture The Beauty Of Africa

10 African Civilizations More Amazing Than Ancient Egypt 10 Well-preserved piece of history Amid a 11th-century caravansary in Ouadane, Mauritania, stands the stunningly well-preserved Ouadane Mosque. It is believed that Quadane became a prominent city during the 11th century and was part of the trading and religious ‘hub’ along one of the main trans-Saharan routes. The mosque itself was built during the 15th century as the population and town expanded....

December 25, 2022 · 7 min · 1400 words · Christopher Tobar

10 Important Historical Letters Nearly Lost To Time

10 Fidel Castro To President Franklin D. Roosevelt Fidel Castro survived the administration of about 10 United States presidents, most of whom would have loved to do away with him. (Some actually tried doing so.) Castro’s first contact with a United States president was, however, amicable. In 1940, a young student of Colegio de Dolores School in Santiago, Cuba, wrote to President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The child, a 12-year-old boy, began the letter with, “My good friend Roosevelt....

December 25, 2022 · 8 min · 1649 words · Dora Carlson

10 Impressively Odd Boundary Disputes

10Denmark And Canada’s Adorable Border War In the pantheon of great border disputes, Denmark and Canada’s “conflict” over Hans Island would come somewhere near the bottom. A 1.3-square-kilometer (0.5 mi2) lump of rock in the Kennedy Channel, it lies almost equidistant between Canada and Denmark-administered Greenland. Since 1973, it has been at the center of one of the most adorable disputes in history. Hans Island is of little strategic or economic value....

December 25, 2022 · 11 min · 2289 words · Tracy Esposito