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Homer

Homer (8th and 7th century BCE Greek poet)

“When men work in pairs, one sees advantages the other would
miss, while a man on his own may see the possibilities, but lack
the necessary imagination and intelligence.”

  • From The Iliad (Book 10) by Homer, translated by E. V. Rieu and edited by Peter Jones (Penguin Classics, 2014).

 

This Is A Photograph Of U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt

(A childhood photograph of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, c. 1884, [Public Domain] via Creative Commons)

 

If your parents have ever humiliated you by showing embarrassing photographs of you as a child, then rest assured, you have something in common with Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the thirty-second president of the United States, more commonly known as FDR. As a young boy, FDR was coddled to the extreme by his mother, and one of the unfortunate ways that she showed her affection for her son involved years of gender-neutral costumes.

As gender-neutral garb was all the rage in wealthy American households of the day, FDR’s mother kept the future president dressed up in this unfortunate garb until the poor chap was six years old. She had him trussed up in dresses and kept his hair long—see the picture above. Even though this style of dress was fairly common for young children from wealthy families of the time, it still might have been a bit awkward if Roosevelt’s political or foreign rivals found one of these old photographs. FDR eventually outgrew his gender-neutral dresses when he reached six years old and was introduced to a new wardrobe consisting of kilts and the dreaded sailor costume. Additionally, another childhood ceremony he had with his mother continued—she personally oversaw his daily bath until he was around nine years old.

So, if your parents have embarrassing stories or pictures of you from your childhood, don’t despair. Despite being photographed in dresses with curled hair and elaborate hats, FDR went on to become one of the most widely acclaimed presidents in the history of the United States.

 

Sources:

  • The Roosevelts: An Intimate History by Ken Burns, ep. 1. PBS, 2014.

Snorri Sturluson

Snorri Sturluson (c. 1179-1241)

“Then Third said, ‘Odin is the highest and oldest of the gods. He rules in all matters, and, although the other gods are powerful, all serve him as children do their father.'”

  • From The Prose Edda (Gylfaginning, chapter 20) by Snorri Sturluson, translated by Jesse Byock (Penguin Classics, 2005).

 

The Heart And Brain Of The WWII British Royal Air Force Fighters—Air Marshal Sir Hugh Dowding

(Photograph of Air Marshal Sir Hugh Dowding, circa 1935, [Public Domain] via Creative Commons)

 

One of the lesser-known heroes from World War Two is Sir Hugh Dowding. For much of the 1930s Dowding headed the research and development of the RAF. While he directed R&D, he backed the development of radar, and he also was involved in incorporating the Spitfire and Hurricane aircraft into RAF use.

Around 1937, Sir Hugh Dowding was appointed as head of Fighter Command. In this position, he strengthened the structure of the RAF and reworked British fighter strategy and doctrine.

By April 1940, when the Battle of Britain began, Dowding had been involved in developing, structuring and drilling doctrine into the RAF. Due to his mechanical and theoretical contributions to the Royal Air Force, Britain was well equipped to defend against the larger German Luftwaffe.

Written by C. Keith Hansley

Source:

  • Warfare in the Western World: Military Operations Since 1871 by Robert A. Doughty and Ira D Gruber et al. Massachusetts: D. C. Heath and Company, 1996.

The 16th-Century Unifiers Of Japan Deified Themselves

(Tokugawa Ieyasu, painted by Kanō Tan’yū (1602–1674), [Public Domain] via Creative Commons)

 

Near the end of the Sengoku Period (The Warring States Period) lasting from the mid-15th century to the mid-16th century, three successive warlords unified the warring daimyo lords of Japan under the authority of a single, powerful shogun—the supreme military leader of Japan that was generally supported by the Japanese Emperor. The first of the three unifiers was Oda Nobunaga. He brought around half of Japan under his control, and the stability he brought officially ended the Sengoku Period. Nevertheless, war did not end. He died in 1582 after his vassal, Aketchi Mitsuhide, betrayed him and rebelled. After Nobunaga’s death, power shifted to a brilliant peasant soldier named Toyotomi Hideyoshi, who was promoted to the rank of samurai. He avenged Nobunaga’s death by defeating Mitsuhide, and he expanded Nobunaga’s conquered territory to include all of Japan. Hideyoshi even tried to invade Korea several times, but died in 1598, shortly after the expeditions failed. With the death of Hideyoshi, Japan broke apart, once more, and a warlord named Tokugawa Ieyasu took command of one of the leading factions. In 1600, Ieyasu won the Battle of Sekigahara, making him shogun and cementing the unification of Japan. Nobunaga, Hideyoshi and Ieyasu, however, did much more than attain power—they also made themselves into gods.

Oda Nobunaga wanted to be seen as more than just a powerful daimyo. He labeled himself ‘tenka’ (the realm), and his vassals would address him as such. Nobunaga expanded his importance out of mundane conceptions of governments and titles into the spiritual realm. Oda Nobunaga encouraged the belief that being loyal and respectful to his rule would lead to good health and fortune in this life and the next.

After Nobunaga’s death, Toyotomi Hideyoshi worked hard to cultivate his own spiritual importance in Japan. First, the victorious Hideyoshi went to great lengths to make himself an equal of the Japanese emperor. He would have the emperor come visit him at his own palace, rather than journeying to the emperor’s own home in Kyoto. Hideyoshi also had his family members (his consort and his son) recognized as equal in status to the family of the emperor. Yet, like Nobunaga, Hideyoshi wanted to be more than a mere symbol of government—he wanted to be a divinity. Therefore, he put in place a plan that would bring about his deification after death. Once he died, he wanted to be known as the Great August Deity, and there would be a national network of shrines for his worship.

When Hideyoshi died, however, he had no mature, legitimate heirs, causing Japan to break apart into more war. When Tokugawa Ieyasu brought the other daimyo back into submission, he underwent steps to bring about his own godhood—and demolished Toyotomi Hideyoshi’s shrines in the process. As Ieyasu neared death, he prepared for his own deification. He wrote in his will that he wanted to be enshrined in an impressive memorial located at Nikkō. Like Hideoyshi, Ieyasu also prepared a divine name for himself—his impressive title was, “Great Incarnation, Shining Over the East.” The shrine at Nikkō remains one of the great tourist locations of Japan.

Source:

  • A Modern History of Japan: From Tokugawa Times to the Present (Third Edition), by  Andrew Gordon. New York: Oxford University Press, 2014.

The Buddha

The Buddha (6th-5th centuries BCE)

“If, like a piece of metal when struck,
you yourself do not resound,
can it be that you have achieved unbinding
– there is no anger found in you?”

  • The Dhammapada (Verses on the Way, Chapter 10), recorded in the 3rd century BCE. Translation by Glenn Wallis, 2004.

 

Herodotus’ Revealing Experience During the Festival Of Bastet

(Statues of Herodotus and Bastet, both [Public Domain] via Creative Commons)

 

While he traveled Egypt, the ancient Greek historian, Herodotus (c. 490-420 BCE), took notes on the local history, religion, mythology, and his own contemporary observations on the Egyptian countryside and people. One of the goddesses (and the worship surrounding her) that Herodotus described was Bastet, the popular feline goddess who was thought to protect women and homes, as well as being a general goddess of pleasure. The epicenter of Bastet’s worship was the city of Bubastis where a temple to the goddess was located, which also—interestingly enough—acted as a gigantic cat cemetery. Herodotus witnessed one of the annual festivals dedicated to Bastet in the city of Bubastis—it was a sight that he likely found baffling.

Herodotus’s description of the festival of Bastet is reminiscent of the modern day celebrations of Carnival and Mardi Gras. He wrote that when it was time for the festival, the Nile River and other waterways filled up with barges ushering hundreds-of-thousands of celebrants to the city of Bubastis, where they would make sacrifices and drink a lot of wine.

Herodotus gave a colorful description of the revelers traveling to Bubastis on their barges and boats. He wrote that as they sailed toward their destination, they would sing and play music with castanets and flutes, while those without instruments clapped along to the song. When their boat passed a village or town, the celebrants would steer up to the shore and have an interesting exchange with the local people. Sometimes, they would continue to just play music, but other times they acted quite salaciously.

According to Herodotus, female celebrants traveling on these boats to Bubastis would often shout at the women that they could see on the riverbanks. Herodotus did not go into much detail on what was shouted, but the line is frequently translated as shouting ‘abuse.’ Yet, the most shocking sights happened when some bold women in these boats heading for Bubastis stood up and expose their bare loins for all of the people observing from the riverbanks to see—and with allegedly hundreds-of-thousands of celebrants gathering in Bubastis, Herodotus may have seen a whole lot of exposed women around the festival of Bastet.

Written by C. Keith Hansley.

Sources:

Virgil

Virgil (Roman poet, 70-19 BCE)

“Come,
with the first light of day, our spirits high,
let’s explore the land.”

  • From The Aeneid (Book VII, approximately line 145) by Virgil, translated by Robert Fagles (Penguin Classics, 2010).

 

Geoffrey Chaucer

Geoffrey Chaucer (1342-1400)

“Properly pasted was this miller’s head,
Pale-drunk he was, he’d passed the stage of red;
Hiccupping through his nose he talked and trolled
As if he’d asthma or a heavy cold.”

  • From The Canterbury Tales (The Reeve’s Tale) by Geoffrey Chaucer, translated by Nevill Coghill (Penguin Classics, 2003).

 

In The Late 19th Century, China Was Divided Like A Pie Between Imperialist Powers

(French Political Cartoon “China — the cake of kings and… of emperors,” c. 1898, [Public Domain] via Creative Commons)

 

The diplomatic relationship between China and the colonizing powers of Europe and the United States underwent a dramatic plummet from the start to the end of the 19th century. At the beginning of the century, the Chinese thought the Western powers were little more than brutish barbarians. Western merchants were quarantined to the port of Guangzhou and any messages that the foreigners wanted to send to the Chinese authorities had to be funneled through a long arduous system of bureaucracy.

The tense balance of power, however, began to shift once the West’s desire to expand trade fused with their growing impatience over not being respected in China. Soon, the Westerners came to the conclusion that the threat of military force could achieve much more in China than debate and diplomacy, leading to events like the Opium Wars (1839-1842 and 1857-1860). As a result of the Opium Wars, Britain took control of Hong Kong and opened up more Chinese ports for trade.

Yet, even though China was defeated in the Opium Wars and suffered from repeated revolts and rebellions, the Western powers continued to regard Chinese leadership, led by Empress Dowager Cixi, with an underlying tone of respect. All of that respect vanished, however, when the small island-nation of Japan (which only really began modernizing in the 1850s) walloped China in the First Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895). When the war ended with the Treaty of Shimonoseki, China relinquished its control of large swaths of land, including Taiwan, Korea, and parts of Manchuria. Russia, Germany and France worked together to force Japan to return Liaodong, Manchuria, back to China, but it would provide no relief for the Chinese, because after the First Sino-Japanese War, the imperialist powers disregarded all of their former inhibitions regarding expanding into China.

Below are lists, organized by country, detailing what the various imperialist countries took from China during the late 19th century:

Japan

  • (1895) In the Treaty of Shimonoseki, China gave Japan land, money and trade ports.
  • (1896) Japan was allowed to develop industry within designated Chinese trade ports. The Western powers were given the same capability.
  • Japan built up an economic sphere of influence in Fujian.

Russia

  • Russia, with French and German help, had Japan release control of Liaodong.
  • Russia obtained permission to construct the Tran-Siberian Railway through Chinese territory.
  • (1898) Russia leased Port Arthur and Liaodong from China for twenty-five years.
  • (1895) Russia lent the Chinese government around 400 million francs, or 15.8 million pounds, in a race against other powers to control China through debt.

Germany

  • (1896) Together with Britain, Germany lent China around 16 million pounds, followed by another 16 million in 1898.
  • (1897) After an incident of banditry, Germany seized the Jiaozhou Bay and the city of Qingdao. China later leased the land to Germany for ninety-nine years.

France

  • (1895) France was given rights to operate in the provinces of Yunnan, Guangxi and Guangdong.
  • (1896) France was allowed to construct a railroad from Vietnam to Guangxi, China.
  • (1898) France leased the Guangzhou Bay for ninety-nine years.

Britain

  • (1897) Britain was permitted to operate in the Yunnan province and expand the Burmese railroad into the region.
  • Britain had China officially recognize British economic interests in the Yangtze Valley region.
  • Britain leased the area of Kowloon, near Hong Kong, for ninety-nine years.

Written by C. Keith Hansley

Source:

  • China’s Path to Modernization: A Historical Review from 1800 to the Present (Third Edition), by Ranbir Vohra. New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 2000.