They don't teach you the weird stuff in school. Here are 10 History Facts That Sound Fake but Aren’t.
1- Andrew Jackson and
the Parrot.
President
Andrew Jackson’s pet parrot had to be removed from his funeral because it was
swearing, During President Andrew Jackson’s funeral in 1845, his pet
parrot began to speak obscenities and had to be removed. The parrot
became excited while the crowd was gathering and began to swear, disturbing the
mourning people. The bird was promptly escorted out as people were both in awe
and horrified at the words.
2- The damned fork
The use of
forks was considered sacrilegious. The widely used eating utensil was once seen
as offensive to God when it was first introduced in Italy in the 11th
century. Oddly enough, people used to eat with their fingers. The number of
fingers used for eating distinguished the upper class from the lower class.
Three fingers were considered to be good manners. The oldest forks were
discovered in Turkey, dating back to the fourth millennium B.C., but it was
likely that they were only used as tools. The Church in Italy argued that God
had created humans with fingers so that they could eat God’s food, but this
didn’t stop the production of expensive forks made of gold for wealthy
families.
3- Heart in a drawer.
Mary Shelley
kept the heart of her dead husband in her desk. Maybe the author intended for
this to be some sort of metaphor, but a truly smelly metaphor if that. Everyone
grieves differently. When Mary Shelley’s husband, Percy Bysshe Shelley, was 29
years old he drowned while out on his boat during a storm. While his remains
were buried in the Protestant Cemetery in Rome, Mary kept her husband’s heart
wrapped up and carried it with her almost everywhere. When she passed away, the
heart was found in her
desk wrapped in one of his final poems, Adonais.
4- Demon Cats.
Pope Gregory
IX declared war on cats, In the 13th century, the pope believed that cats carried the
spirit of Satan within them which sparked the notion that black
cats symbolize bad luck. In response, the Catholic Church and all of its
followers initiated the extermination of cats. Some historians even believed
that this massacre of cats contributed to the plague because of the abundance
of rodents carrying the disease and the lack of their natural predator. The
slaughters stopped for the most part after the death of Pope Gregory IX.
5- A Headless Lover.
Peter the
Great kept the head of his wife’s lover in her bedroom. Once Peter the Great
discovered his wife Catherine’s unfaithfulness to their marriage with William
Mons, the ruler had the man beheaded. He asked that the head of William be placed in a jar
with alcohol. It was required that the jar remains in Catherine’s
bedroom until Peter’s death so that she could be constantly reminded of her
affair.
6- Urine as a
mouthwash.
Urine was
used as a mouthwash by ancient Romans. Human urine was so valuable to ancient
Romans that it was collected from public urinals and even taxed when sold.
Urine was used for many purposes, but most amusingly, it was used for dental hygiene.
Romans used the urine to clean and whiten their teeth. The active ingredient
being ammonia, which is a proven stain remover.
7- Peas as an alarm.
Before alarm
clocks, people were hired to wake up others by shooting dried peas at their
window. Not your typical wake-up call. The “knocker upper” was a
common sight in Britain before 1970. They would use long sticks like fishing
poles or soft hammers to tap on windows as a wake-up call or used pea shooters
in which they blow-dried peas up at the window of the sleeper. One problem
these employees faced was waking people up for free because the noise they made
would inadvertently wake up the neighbors who did not pay.
8- Mary and the Lamb.
“Mary Had a
Little Lamb” is based on a true story. Mary was indeed a real person and she
did in fact have a little lamb. Mary Sawyer was
born in 1806 and her lamb followed her to school one day around 1816. When Mary
arrived at school, she wrapped the lamb in a blanket that she placed at her
feet until it made a noise, informing the teacher of its company. John
Roulstone had just arrived in town and witnessed Mary sneaking the animal into
school, so he wrote a poem about the incident and delivered it to Mary.
9- Lyndon Johnson held
his meetings in the toilet.
President
Lyndon B. Johnson conducted White House meetings on the toilet
The former president actually
had a telephone installed in the
bathroom so he could take calls while using the restroom. He
conducted meetings with aides while sitting on the toilet because of his
insistence on keeping the conversation going. While the president considered
his odd methods productive, many of his aides struggled to hear him speak due
to running water.
10-
Einstein is president of Israel
Albert
Einstein was offered the position as president of Israel. When Israel’s first
president Chaim Weizmann passed away in 1952, Albert Einstein was offered the role by
Ambassador Abba Eban. The offer was upon the request of the Israeli Prime
Minister David Ben-Gurion. Einstein would have had to relocate to Israel and
accept Israel as his nationality but would be free to pursue his scientific
endeavors. He replied that due to his inexperience working with people, he
isn’t qualified to fulfill a role in a high office. Next, check out these split-second
decisions that changed history.
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