Technology
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Our World 10 Ways Icelandic Culture Makes Other Countries Look Boring
Misconceptions 10 Common Misconceptions About the Victorian Era
Mysteries 10 Strange Unexplained Mysteries of 2025
Miscellaneous 10 of History’s Most Bell-Ringing Finishing Moves
History 10 Great Escapes That Ended Right Back in Captivity
Weird Stuff 10 Fascinating Things You Might Not Know About Spiders
Food 10 Everyday Foods You Didn’t Know Were Invented by the U.S. Military
History 10 Odd Things Colonial Americans Kept at Home
Weird Stuff 10 Superstitious Beliefs That Once Consumed Entire Cultures
Technology 10 Scientific Breakthroughs of 2025 That’ll Change Everything
Our World 10 Ways Icelandic Culture Makes Other Countries Look Boring
Misconceptions 10 Common Misconceptions About the Victorian Era
Who's Behind Listverse?
Jamie Frater
Head Editor
Jamie founded Listverse due to an insatiable desire to share fascinating, obscure, and bizarre facts. He has been a guest speaker on numerous national radio and television stations and is a five time published author.
More About Us
Mysteries 10 Strange Unexplained Mysteries of 2025
Miscellaneous 10 of History’s Most Bell-Ringing Finishing Moves
History 10 Great Escapes That Ended Right Back in Captivity
Weird Stuff 10 Fascinating Things You Might Not Know About Spiders
Food 10 Everyday Foods You Didn’t Know Were Invented by the U.S. Military
History 10 Odd Things Colonial Americans Kept at Home
Weird Stuff 10 Superstitious Beliefs That Once Consumed Entire Cultures
Another 20 Historical Oddities You Don’t Know
Our first list on Historical Oddities was very popular, so we are now presenting you with a second list! Here are 20 strange facts of history that you are probably not aware of.
1. Charles Darwin married his first cousin.
2. John F. Kennedy, Anthony Burgess, Aldous Huxley, and C.S. Lewis all died on the same day.
3. Officially, the longest war in history was between the Netherlands and the Isles of Scilly, which lasted from 1651 to 1986. There were no casualties.
4. Gay marriage was legally recognized in Rome, and Nero himself married at least two gay couples.
5. Adolf Hitler’s nephew, William Hitler, immigrated to the United States in 1939 and fought against his uncle.
6. Thomas Paine was elected to the first post-revolution French parliament, despite not speaking a word of the language.
7. William Howard Taft is the only US President to come third in his campaign for re-election, losing to eventual winner Woodrow Wilson and fellow Republican Theodore Roosevelt.
8. Technically, Henry VIII had only two wives. Four of his marriages were annulled.
9. King Richard II invented the handkerchief.
10. The Parliament of Iceland is the oldest still acting parliament in the world. It was established in 930.
11. The people who founded the Futurism art movement also founded the first Italian Fascist party in 1918.
12. Albert Einstein was offered the role of Israel’s second President in 1952, but declined.
13. New Zealand was the first country to enfranchise women. It gave them the vote in 1895.
14. The 27th amendment to the US constitution took 202 years to ratify, having been proposed in 1789 and finally ratified in 1992.
15. Until April 2008, the island of Sark remained the last feudal state in Europe.
16. Tomatoes were considered poisonous for many years in Europe and they were grown for ornamental reasons only. In fact, the leaves and stems of tomatoes are poisonous (but they can be used in moderation for food flavoring).
17. Soon after building started in 1173, the foundation of the Pisa tower settled unevenly. Construction was stopped, and was continued only a 100 years later. Therefore, the leaning tower was never straight.
18. Ancient Egyptians used slabs of stones as pillows.
19. People have been wearing glasses for about 700 years.
20. King Charles the Second often rubbed dust from the mummies of pharaohs so he could “absorb their ancient greatness.
Contributor: JT












