iluvparis
Import Whisperer
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Just like in Civilization - get flight first = instant win!
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So of all those who have studied the military history of this continent, what would you say was the defining technology?
He taught Rommel well, didn't he? However he was just in the right place at right time doing the right thing.Monash's blitz Krieg
Cavalry>>>>>>Just like in Civilization - get flight first = instant win!
Russians and the Americans saved Britain.
Yeah I agree.
The airfields in the southeast were certainly under huge pressure, but that's only the forward airfields. Rendering those unusable was not a guaranteed ticket to air superiority over English soil.
The abilty to exploit fire.
From what? Germany couldnt even launch Sea Lion and gave up.
For what?The abilty to exploit fire.
For what?
Fire was used by the earths first peoples to combat the arctic conditions found in tasmania thousands of years ago..
For what?
Fire was used by the earths first peoples to combat the arctic conditions found in tasmania thousands of years ago..
The abilty to exploit fire.
According to the British gov study done by Charles Darwin. A study designed to avoid the new anti slave laws. Laws aimed at economically crippling America, as she takes her first tentative steps as a nation, while inheriting the war against the Indians.Has it not always been commonly accepted that Tasmanian aborigines had a very limited ability to exploit fire?
According to the British gov study done by Charles Darwin.
Been internet searching on this. Not a lot of info but what little I can find I suspect it is not that controversial anywhere on the planet that fire, once "tamed" was used for various purposes.... ......and with that leads to........Slightly controversial is that not? Has it not always been commonly accepted that Tasmanian aborigines had a very limited ability to exploit fire?
IIRC there is an argument that fire and the cooking of red meat was a key element in human evolution. Cant remember the specifics though.
Been internet searching on this. Not a lot of info but what little I can find I suspect it is not that controversial anywhere on the planet that fire, once "tamed" was used for various purposes.... ......and with that leads to........ .
I many many unread books but one that I thought of when you made this post was A Brief History of Science by Thomas Crump. I had a look and he devotes a couple of pages to fire and follows up with a page on ceramicist that he rates as a massive game changer in human history.
Have many unread books? Ha, I am a sucker for Euro history, struggle to walk past a bookshop without grabbing something and putting it on the unread pile.
Physiological changes too supposedly re fire / eating meat
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/1999/08/990810064914.htm
211 to read. I pathetically keep a record. I tend to have 1 to 3 on the go. Think I will carry on with the Crump book as it is impressive so far. An area I have not read much about. Love book shops and their slow demise is an utter tragedy.
Vast majority is euro history too though the "discovery" of China /Japan recently has been an eye opener. Tend to like English history as I lived there in my teens, massive admirer of Francis Pryor and have read a lot on the Civil War/3 Kingdoms plus the Stewart's. Euro history tends to be French and German with a like of The Reformation. 30 Year War is fascinating. Has a massive hold on the German psyche even to this day and that is little understood by others who only read on the WW's.
211 is way ahead of me! I am a fraction of that - maybe 20ish at most.
re 30 years war, I think I will get the below this week.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Christendom...istory-ebook/dp/B00IX6745W/ref=dp_kinw_strp_1
I quote from Wilson.....""Public opinion surveys carried out in the 1960s revealed that Germans placed the Thirty Years War as their country's greatest disaster ahead of both world wars, the Holocaust and the Black Death."
Having read many books and viewed many docos on Germany and the devastating effects of WW2 this statement caught me off guard.
Thirty Years war was a disaster for more than just Germany. The distrust the Czech people have for religion is traced back to that event (and Jan Hus). People forget just how evil Catholicism was?.
They're less evil now, if only because they have little power.