40 long-alive historical photos: the tomb of the Egyptian pharaoh looked like a warehouse when opened
author:Curiosities History
In 1826, French inventor Joseph Nicephore Niepce proposed forever changing the way we see, experience, and remember the world and its history.
Snacks on Scandinavian Airlines flights, 1969
It was the birth of a camera that took the first photographs on a tar-coated piece of paper, with a view of the landscape from his window in Le Gras. Of course, it doesn't look at all similar to the camera we imagined.
New Zealand Maori Camp performs Haka ritual dance in Egypt, 1941, that face... Is it the grandfather of the rock?
Many other photographic inventions followed, each more fantastic than the last, but it wasn't until 1900 that people were able to use lightweight and portable cameras.
Berenice Abbott photographed the early IBM computer in 1948
From this photograph it became one of the most direct ways to record history, from snapshots of daily life in the past to the most memorable moments in human history, all recorded in the following photos.
The first black police officer in London in 1968
"American Gothic" model standing next to the painting (1942)
A 15-year-old black girl was taunted and harassed by white students after attending a white school. In 1957
In 1945, an American soldier shared rations with two Japanese children in Okinawa
2,000 years ago, Rome spliced a fish with mosaics, and the 3D effect is amazing!
A 2,000-year-old glass mosaic found in the Turkish city of Zeuma
Inuit warm their wives. Greenland, 1890s
A child's reaction to meeting Andre the giant (1970s)
The postman poses with his heavy Christmas mail and packages. Chicago, USA. 1929. Color
RV from 1922
The palette of the painter of the ancient Egyptian 3400 years, the time of Amenhotep III
Swedish warship Vasa
It sank in 1628 less than a mile on its maiden voyage and was salvaged from the ocean floor almost intact 333 years later. It is now in the Vasa Museum, Stockholm.
Japanese mini-submarines captured in the Aleutian Islands in 1943 and 2021
Dinner at the Astor Hotel. New york city. In 1904
William Halley and Arthur Davidson, 1914
This is what the tomb of Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamun looked like when it was opened, the dog is a statue of Anubis with everything piled together like a warehouse, photographed in 1922.
Detroit, Michigan in 1882 and 2017
Sir Winston Churchill, 1895, age 20
1800 years ago, a mother with a child. Rome
Manhattan, 1851 vs today
Man car charging. United States, 1973
Roman mosaic unearthed under vineyards in the Italian province of Verona. Dating back to the 3rd-4th centuries
Children cross the river with pulleys on their way to school, Italy, 1959
In 1907, a British blacksmith removed leg shackles from a slave
Newcastle Castle, UK, 1895-2022
Charlie Chaplin, 27, 1916
A man stands on a canal during the construction of the Panama Canal. In 1912
Piano designed for people who are bedridden. United Kingdom, 1935
Train collision at Montparnasse station. France, 1895
Castle on the island of Trakai, Lithuania. Built in the 14th century and restored from the 1950s to the 1960s
Australian soldiers after their release from Japanese captivity in Singapore in 1945.
Anderson was designing a global recycling logo when he was 23 years old. In 1970
Mr. Du Mingxin is a well-known contemporary Chinese composer, music educator, music master, and a leading figure in the mainland composition industry. In the seventies of the last century, there was a ballet that influenced an entire generation...
Mr. Li Qiankuan is a famous director, a national first-class director, the director of the movie "The Founding Ceremony", and a famous film artist. In the film industry, it is rare for two husbands and wives to be directors together.
At the Third Plenary Session of the 20th Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, General Secretary Xi Jinping profoundly expounded the important idea of the party's self-revolution and made it clear that the promotion of self-revolution is "to jump out of the historical cycle as the strategic goal"...