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Jan 23 β€’ 17 tweets β€’ 6 min read β€’ Read on X
What are some battles that changed the course of history?

Western culture faced obliteration several times β€” and survived by a near miracle.

The 5 most critical battles, starting in 490 BC... 🧡 Image
If the Greeks had lost to the Persians in 490 BC, there's no telling what the world would look like now.

Vastly outnumbered by invading forces of Darius I, the Athenians struck first at the enemy camps... Image
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Inferior tactics and knowledge of terrain cost the Persians 6,400 men to the Greeks' 192, and they fled.

Pheidippides ran 25 miles back to Athens to announce victory. Image
That victory, liberty against despotism, preserved Greek independence and the nascent idea of democracy.

Undeterred by Persia's might, Athens emerged emboldened, entering a golden age of philosophy, art, and governance. Image
Without Marathon, the world might never have known Socrates, or even citizen participation in government.

John Stuart Mill went as far to say, "If the issue of that day had been different, the Britons and the Saxons might still have been wandering in the woods"... Image
Rome, inheritor of Greek culture and thought, came to the brink of collapse in 216 BC.

Hannibal of Carthage faced a Roman army twice as large as his own at Cannae β€” and obliterated it. Image
Hannibal's deception and encirclement tactics killed 50,000 Romans in one day, and changed military strategy forever.

It was bitter for the Romans, but they learned quickly... Image
Cannae inspired a generation of Roman commanders to avoid large-scale engagements and focus on war of attrition.

Hannibal, unable to capitalize by seizing Rome, turned Rome into a military monster that would demolish him β€” and seize the world. Image
When the Battle of Hastings concluded in 1066, it was a lot more than a military victory.

Norman elites went on to displace the Anglo-Saxon aristocracy... Image
Norman French blended with Old English to set the foundations for the modern English language.

England was brought closer with Europe, influencing governance, architecture, and social structures for centuries β€” and reshaping both sides forever. Image
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In 1571, Western Christendom faced an existential threat: 300 approaching Ottoman ships, intent on seizing Rome and tearing down its crosses.

Splintered leaders of Christian Europe set aside their quarrels to form a united front: the Holy League. Image
As the Battle of Lepanto approached, the Holy League knew it was up against insurmountable odds: a battle-hardened and much larger enemy force.

Christians all across Europe did what they could on the eve of battle β€” they prayed to the Rosary. Image
The Holy League met the Ottomans in a gigantic naval battle: 130,000 men in brutal hand-to-hand combat between ships.

Somehow, they crushed the Ottomans in a series of stunning manoeuvres, and seized so many ships that they freed 15,000 enslaved Christians. Image
That victory was so remarkable that it's celebrated by the Church as a true miracle to this day β€” a direct intervention by the Virgin Mary.

Christianity put all its trust in the Virgin, and won its most important victory over the Islamic world... Image
The other defining naval battle was the Battle of Trafalgar, 1805.

It didn't just thwart Napoleon's plans to invade Britain. It cemented British supremacy at sea and ushered in the Pax Britannica. Image
For the next century, Britain's dominance on the oceans changed everything, and maintained relative peace across much of the globe.

Horatio Nelson, who gave his life at sea, became a symbol of patriotic duty β€” and arguably Britain's greatest ever hero. Image
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More from @Culture_Crit

Jan 21
Is this the image of Jesus?

There's a lot of talk about the Shroud of Turin lately, so let's break down the evidence.

A new X-ray study suggests it's 2,000 years old β€” but that's just the beginning.

Buckle up... (thread) 🧡 Image
The Shroud of Turin is claimed to be the real burial cloth of Jesus, imprinted with a miraculous image.

It is the most studied artifact in HISTORY β€” what we now know about it is frankly astonishing… Image
Jesus of Nazareth was buried in a tomb owned by Joseph of Arimathea, just outside Jerusalem's walls.

He was covered, according to scripture, in a linen burial cloth. Image
Read 25 tweets
Jan 17
100 years ago, a German historian noticed something:

All cultures have a set life cycle β€” you can predict when (and how) they'll end.

The early 21st century, he predicted, will spell disaster for big cities...

And a new Caesar shall rise... (thread) 🧡 Image
Oswald Spengler saw cultures as distinct, living organisms.

They are destined to a cycle of birth, growth, decay and death... Image
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He smashed the idea of history as a linear progression, from ancient to medieval to modern.

In "The Decline of the West", he notes similarities across 8 cultures β€” from Babylonian to West European (Faustian). Image
Read 22 tweets
Jan 15
The 12 Apostles risked their lives to spread Christianity across the globe.

All but one were murdered for doing so β€” brutally.

Here's what happened to them, starting with Judas... (thread) 🧡 Image
Preaching the Gospel was a dangerous business in the first century Roman Empire (and beyond).

Christians were widely persecuted, and most Apostles faced brutal martyrdoms for their teachings... Image
Judas Iscariot, however, died before the Resurrection.

Consumed by guilt, he returned the 30 pieces of silver received to betray Christ, and hanged himself near Jerusalem. Image
Read 21 tweets
Jan 9
This is what angels look like according to the Bible.

A thread explaining the 9 types, and why they say when they appear:

"Be not afraid"... 🧡 Image
"Angel" (from the Greek "angelos") just means messenger.

We think of God's messengers as winged humanoids, but encounters in the Bible get far more interesting than that... Image
Theologians have spent centuries making sense of their various descriptions.

Aquinas identified 9 separate types of angel β€” from the mostly-humanoid to the much more abstract. Image
Read 23 tweets
Jan 8
X has the best educational content on the Internet.

What are your favorite accounts posting informative, unique and beautiful content?

My top accounts that you MUST follow in 2025... πŸ‘‡ Image
Literature & Philosophy:

Western literature, philosophy: @SirEvanAmato
Literature, philosophy: @oldbooksguy
Linguistics, literature, history: @colingorrie
Classic literature: @CoffeewClassics
Literature, philosophy: @SeanBerube4
History:

Western history: @thinkingwest
Medieval: @MedievalScholar
Ancient: @costofglory
Roman: @JeremyRyanSlate
Great people: @KnowledgeArchiv
Read 9 tweets
Jan 7
Like us, Ancient Rome had a birth rate crisis.

In 300 AD, Rome was a city of ~1 million people.

200 years later, hardly enough people lived there to fill the Colosseum.

And their story feels alarmingly familiar... (thread) 🧡 Image
Fertility has collapsed so rapidly in modern Italy that 1 million births in 1964 is down to <400k last year.

The state is even giving away homes for €1 to repopulate crumbling villages... Image
Italy's birth rate is 1.2, but the most catastrophic in the world is South Korea: 0.72 children per woman.

The number of births in South Korea will halve every 20 years at this rate. Image
Read 15 tweets

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