Victor Noir's grave in Père Lachaise cemetery by Patrick Magaud, 1984.
Noir is perhaps more famous for his death and grave than work. He was a journalist who was shot dead; the grave consists of a full-sized bronze statue of the man laying down as if he was just shot.
The statue became a fertility symbol - the story says those who kiss the statue on the lips, leave a flower in Victor's hat and rub the genital area will find themselves with enhanced fertility, a great sex life or find a husband within one year.
The lips and trousers' bulge on the grave are noticeably shiny from people kissing and rubbing them.
In 2004, a fence was built around the grave to prevent women from touching the statue but after many protests it was taken down.
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Unpacking the Mona Lisa after World War II and the intricate plan to keep it safe from theft during the war.
The concern of the theft of famous works of art was raised early in the war by art historians and museum directors throughout Europe as the Nazis began to rise to power.
Jacques Jaujard, director of France's National Museums saw that war m was inevitable in 1938 and realized the plundering had already begun. He teamed up with René Huyghe, Louvre curator and crafted a secret plan to evacuate almost all of the Louvre's art, which included 3600… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
Slave shackle being removed by a British sailor, 1907. The son of the man who took the photograph wrote the following account of what happened:
"The pictures were taken by my father who was serving aboard HMS Sphinx while on armed patrol off the Zanzibar and Mozambique coast in about 1907.
They caught quite a few slaver traders, and those particular slaves that are in the pictures were liberated while he was on watch. That night a dhow (sailing vessel) sailed by and the slaves were all chained together.
Instead of just drinking water, the monks decided to create a batch of extremely potent beer that was packed with carbohydrates and nutrients.
They then named the drink, sankt-vater-bier, which roughly translates to "Holy Father beer." In 2011, a journalist named J. Wilson contacted a local brewery in an effort to recreate this beer. He went on to drink it for 46 days during Lent & didn’t consume any solid food.
His diet consisted of drinking four glasses of beer each day during the weekdays and five glasses of beer each day on the weekends. Wilson noticed that during the first few days of his experiment that he would get quite hungry, however, his body quickly learned to adjust.
In 1982, when Mount Galunggung volcano in Indonesia erupted, British Airways flight 9, flown by Captain Eric Moody, flew right through it losing all four engines at 37,000ft and somehow landed safely.
On the evening of Jun. 24, 1982 when flight BA 009 took off from Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia, there had been no hint of trouble: in fact the weather forecast for the five-hour journey for Perth, Australia, was good and the crew were anticipating an uneventful flight.
As the Boeing 747 headed past Java over the south-eastern Indian Ocean at its cruising height, the first sign of trouble came.
The race was held at 3:00pm on a sweltering 32-degree celsius day, and took the runners over dusty, unpaved roads.
James Sullivan, the chief organiser of the St Louis Olympics, was interested in 'purposeful dehydration' — an ill-advised area of scientific research at the turn of the century — and ensured there was only one water station on the entire course.
At 4:31 AM, an unauthorized photo taken of Stalin inside of the Kremlin shows the very moment he was informed that Germany had began their invasion of the Soviet Union.
It was taken by Komsomolskaya Pravda, editor in chief. He was ordered to destroy it, but instead saved it. June 22, 1941.
Operation Barbarossa was the invasion of the Soviet Union by Nazi Germany and many of its Axis allies, starting on Sunday, 22 June 1941, during the Second World War. It was the largest land offensive in human history, with over 10 million combatants taking part.