Vault of Secrets - Unpopular History
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A channel for historical content, including lesser known moments and opinions on history.

An investigation into lost culture, tradition, and past. Broad scope of content.

A warehouse of facts. Sources are usually published or available on request.
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Vault of Secrets - Unpopular History
Heinrich Himmler founded, for example, the German Ancestral Heritage Association (deutsches Ahnenerbe e.V.), a group that engaged in scientific research projects on the descent and characteristics of the "Aryan race".
The external stones can also be found near the Hermann. If you are not afraid of heights and are in the mood for discovery, you can also find the runes. Heinrich Himmler also felt this pleasure.
Forwarded from Tafelrunde (David Korb)
Thomas Edison's 1891 patent for a ship-to-shore wireless telegraph that used electrostatic induction
Forwarded from Tafelrunde (David Korb)
James C. Maxwell was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, on June 13, 1831, and studied at the University of Cambridge before holding various professorships. Known for his innovations in optics and gas velocity research, his groundbreaking theories of electromagnetism, expressed in the famous Maxwell's equations have greatly influenced modern physics as we know it. Maxwell died in England on November 5, 1879.
Forwarded from Tafelrunde (David Korb)
The idea of wireless communication predates the discovery of "radio" with experiments in "wireless telegraphy" via inductive and capacitive induction and transmission through the ground, water, and even train tracks from the 1830s on. James Clerk Maxwell showed in theoretical and mathematical form in 1864 that electromagnetic waves could propagate through free space.[1][2] It is likely that the first intentional transmission of a signal by means of electromagnetic waves was performed in an experiment by David Edward Hughes around 1880, although this was considered to be induction at the time. In 1888 Heinrich Rudolf Hertz was able to conclusively prove transmitted airborne electromagnetic waves in an experiment confirming Maxwell's theory of electromagnetism.
"The principles of Caesar were the same as those of Alexander the Great and Hannibal: to hold his forces together, not to be vulnerable on any point; to move quickly to the important points, to rely on moral means, on the reputation of his arms, on the fear that he inspired, and also on political means to maintain in fidelity his allies, in obedience the conquered peoples; to give himself all the possible chances to ensure victory on the battlefield; to do this, to gather all his troops there."

Napoleon