#worldwarhistory
Today we remember one of history’s most remarkable moments. On Christmas Eve 1914, soldiers on opposing sides of World War I laid down their weapons in a spontaneous ceasefire. How did it begin? What happened next? Watch the video...
#ChristmasTruce
#WorldWarHistory
#OnThisDay
December 25, 2025 at 1:01 PM
Here are some examples of AI channels that are cranking out slop at the rate of 2 videos per day. These are screenshots, but the complete lists are found in the alt text.

If you can determine the channel ID, rather than the name, it's even MORE powerful. Once entered, you can't even see it!

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December 2, 2025 at 3:41 AM
November 29, 2025 at 12:00 PM
AMS is delighted to announce the publication of an article on the #pillboxes of the #ShannonEstuary in TII's Seanda Ezine. Read the article➡️ buff.ly/CngdgVI #colimerick #askeaton #foynestolimerick #wwi #wwii #worldwarhistory #archaeology #irisharchaeology #Irishpillboxes #culturalheritage
The Forgotten Defenders - Pillboxes of the Shannon Estuary
www.tii.ie
October 6, 2025 at 4:43 PM
یہ ایک دلچسپ تاریخی واقعہ ہے۔ پہلی بار ٹینک کا استعمال 15 ستمبر 1916 کو برطانیہ نے پہلی جنگِ عظیم کے دوران سوم کی لڑائی (Battle of the Somme) میں کیا۔ اس وقت برطانوی فوج نے مارک 1 (Mark I) ٹینک متعارف کرایا
#WorldWarHistory #TanksInWarfare #PakistanMatters
September 15, 2025 at 11:21 AM
Traces of a world war at Garub
The desert sands of Garub, between Lüderitz and Aus in south-western Namibia, may seem unremarkable except for the old, abandoned railway station and the wild horses that slake their thirst at the waterhole. But a century ago Garub was an important water source in the desert and with its railway siding, borehole and flat-topped plateau, it was for a brief period a bustling South African military base with 10 000 soldiers and 6 000 horses. It’s mindboggling to imagine the scenario of this quiet section of the Namib-Naukluft Park where the east wind sometimes blows ferociously coating everything in sand. At the onset of World War One in 1914, at the behest of the British government to seize German South West Africa, the Union of South Africa forces landed in Lüderitzbucht (Lüderitz Bay) in support of the allied forces. When the German troops got wind of their imminent arrival they retreated eastwards through the desert, blowing up the railway line behind them. When they reached Garub, 101km away, they destroyed the railway line, water tanks and borehole and torched the station house before continuing to Aus, 25km to the east, where they dug themselves in, built fine fortifications and prepared to make a stand. The Union soldiers followed them eastwards as they retreated, repairing the railway as they progressed. It was difficult work with wind, sand and the absence of water. When they eventually reached Garub they paused for three months, repairing and redrilling the borehole and building a railway line from the railway house to the borehole, 4½km away. But there was another reason why they were halted – the rebellion in the Union when many South Africans, mostly Afrikaners, protested against the attack on the Germans who had supported them financially during the Anglo-Boer War. While the repairs were underway, men and animals at Garub were dependent on the train from Lüderitz which brought water – shipped from the Cape and from the desalination plant at the coast, supplies and fodder for the horses. It must have been quite a sight to see the heavily-laden train arrive at Garub where army tents dotted the sand in their hundreds and horses sent clouds of dust into the air. General Botha even paid a visit to the base to boost the morale of the troops. When the rebellion was quelled three months later, the Union soldiers continued to Aus. The anticipated confrontation between the forces never took place as the Germans, finding themselves outnumbered by Union soldiers approaching from several directions, moved north and evacuated their stronghold at Aus. Besides the odd skirmish and a bombing from the small German plane, which scattered the horses and created mayhem at the base, Garub didn’t see any action. The peace accord would eventually be signed at Khorab on 9 July 1915, ending the southern-African involvement in the war. Garub remained an important watering point in the desert on the Lüderitz to Keetmanshoop line until steam locomotives were replaced by diesel. The borehole was maintained by Consolidated Diamond Mines and the South African Railways. Another borehole was drilled by farmers for emergency grazing in the early 1960s. The area was part of the restricted diamond area until 1986 when this section of the Sperrgebiet was incorporated into the Namib-Naukluft Park. The original Garub borehole provided water for the wild horses until the end of 1991 when water troughs were built at the present-day Garub viewpoint, utilising the second borehole. What I didn’t know until recently when I was presented with an aerial photo of Garub, is that the remains of the Garub base on the plateau are still visible from above. The circles of rock from where tents were once weighted down are still clearly defined more than a hundred years later. They are bordered by a perimeter of rock ramparts and have pathways radiating outwards towards the blockhouses that were armed with machine guns. The stonework is still surprisingly clear and anyone who saw it from above might wonder who had built such a fortress in the desert so many years ago. From below, all that now remains is the old crumbling Garub railway station, which has become a picturesque landmark in the Namib Desert on the stretch between Aus and Lüderitz where travellers often stop for a photograph. A few stark tree trunks add to the evocative scene. The post Traces of a world war at Garub appeared first on The Namibian.
newsfeed.facilit8.network
May 23, 2025 at 10:46 AM
#History #WorldWarHistory #JanuaryHistory January 19, 1915, in the darkness of the night, two German Zeppelins--L3 and L4--bombed Great Yarmouth, Sheringham, King's Lynn, and Norfolk, England. This was the first strategic air offensive against Britain in the nation's history.
January 20, 2025 at 3:19 AM
#History #WorldWarHistory #EuropeanHistory On January 12th, 1919, the four leaders of the "Big Four" nations meet in Paris, including British prime minister David Lloyd George, French prime minister Georges Clemenceau, Italian prime minister Vittorio Orlando, and U.S President Woodrow Wilson.
January 13, 2025 at 8:31 AM