ufansius:

Reliquary Crown at the Cathedral of St. Aubin in Namur, Belgium, said to contain two fragments of the crown of thorns worn by Christ on the cross.

ufansius:

Reliquary Crown at the Cathedral of St. Aubin in Namur, Belgium, said to contain two fragments of the crown of thorns worn by Christ on the cross.

1 month ago on 07 April 2013    via them-witches   originally from ufansius

manced:




Chainmail - signed with yellow alloy ‘maker’s link’, and decorated with yellow-alloy edges, denoting the high quality of the chainmail.German, late 14th or early 15th century, weight 8.84kg.

manced:

Chainmail - signed with yellow alloy ‘maker’s link’, and decorated with yellow-alloy edges, denoting the high quality of the chainmail.
German, late 14th or early 15th century, weight 8.84kg.

(Source: effervescentaardvark)

1 month ago on 07 April 2013    via manced   originally from effervescentaardvark

poete:

Girls Rifle Team, Drexel University, circa 1925

poete:

Girls Rifle Team, Drexel University, circa 1925

(Source: denisebefore)

1 month ago on 30 March 2013    via vaginawoolf   originally from denisebefore

pauvremelodynelson:

fapoleon-bonerparte:

General Bonaparte in Italy 
-Edouard Detaille

pauvremelodynelson:

fapoleon-bonerparte:

General Bonaparte in Italy 

-Edouard Detaille

1 month ago on 28 March 2013    via clawsandfangs   originally from fapoleon-bonerparte

gregorypecks:

demons:

Spectators stand upon couches, tables and chairs to get even a glimpse of the Versailles Treaty being signed, 1919

#look at that gqmf with his cane all like ‘i’m standing on this suede couch motherfuckers try and stop me

gregorypecks:

demons:

Spectators stand upon couches, tables and chairs to get even a glimpse of the Versailles Treaty being signed, 1919

2 months ago on 23 March 2013    via farneses   originally from demons

growhousegrow:

Some excellent party masks, Paris, 1950.

growhousegrow:

Some excellent party masks, Paris, 1950.

2 months ago on 21 March 2013    via sallygilmartins   originally from growhousegrow

unhistorical:

March 18, 1893: Wilfred Owen is born.

Wilfred Owen was a British poet who wrote primarily during (and on) World War I. In 1915, he enlisted in the British Army and left for the Western Front in early 1917, only to come face-to-face with the horrors of war and senseless slaughter that would become subjects for his most famous poems, including Dulce et Decorum est, “Anthem for Doomed Youth” and Parable of the Old Man and the Young; these were poems that condemned the war and condemned the romanticized notions of war that misled so many of his generation to their deaths. A few months into his service, Owen was diagnosed with shell-shock after a shell exploded near him, and he was sent to a war hospital in Edinburgh, where he met another English war poet - Siegfried Sassoon. The two struck up a friendship that was ultimately very creatively beneficial for Owen; Sassoon both inspired Owen as a poet and helped publicize his works, which were unknown at the time of his early death. 

Owen’s short but important output of war poetry was primarily written within a span of a year and a few months; in August of 1918, he returned to the Western Front. He was killed in action in France on November 4, 1918, one week before the signing of the Armistice that ended military hostilities all across Europe.

If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood 
Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs, 
Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud  
Of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues, 
My friend, you would not tell with such high zest  
To children ardent for some desperate glory, 
The old Lie: Dulce et Decorum est 
Pro patria mori.

2 months ago on 19 March 2013    via farneses   originally from unhistorical


“Members of the Young Women’s Republican Club of Milford, Conn., explored the pleasures of tobacco, poker, the strip tease and such other masculine enjoyments as had frequently cost them the evening companionship of husbands, sons and brothers.” 1941 (x)

“Members of the Young Women’s Republican Club of Milford, Conn., explored the pleasures of tobacco, poker, the strip tease and such other masculine enjoyments as had frequently cost them the evening companionship of husbands, sons and brothers.” 1941 (x)

2 months ago on 18 March 2013    via oakenshieldses   originally from vintagegal


Sem Presser, “East Berlin after the 2nd World War” (1954)

Sem Presser, “East Berlin after the 2nd World War” (1954)

2 months ago on 17 March 2013    via futurisms   originally from gnossienne

collectivehistory:

Children read the coming attractions of the traveling Silvan Drew Circus in Bristolville, Ohio, 1931 (National Geographic) 

collectivehistory:

Children read the coming attractions of the traveling Silvan Drew Circus in Bristolville, Ohio, 1931 (National Geographic

2 months ago on 17 March 2013    via stannisbaratheon   originally from collectivehistory

alldeadprincesses:

Ka’iulani (1875–1899), the last princess of Hawai’i

2 months ago on 17 March 2013    via alldeadprincesses   originally from alldeadprincesses


The Statue of Liberty being assembled in Paris before being shipped to the USA, 1885

The Statue of Liberty being assembled in Paris before being shipped to the USA, 1885

(Source: collectivehistory)

2 months ago on 16 March 2013    via rusalkas   originally from collectivehistory