Dates That Made History

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Dates That Made History

Despite its worldwide fame, Lascaux is no longer considered to be the "Palace of Versailles" or the "Sistine Chapel" of prehistory, and is no longer considered to be the place of invention or creation of art.

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Season 2
The Roman world had been certain of the day of its foundation for more than 1000 years. The mythical tale was based on the struggle of its founding twins: sons to a god, Mars, and a virgin, Rhea Silvia.
What happened in the year 1000? Nothing: this date does not correspond to any major event. The passage from the first to the second millennium was not really an event for those who lived through it.
What if Blake and Mortimer had been right in the Mystery of the Great Pyramid? The history of the seventeen-year reign of Akhenaten, the tenth pharaoh of the 18th dynasty, sometimes still seems to be a historical mystery.
The defeat of Alesia, in 52 BC, marked the end of the well-known "Gallic War", immortalised by its winner, Julius Caesar. Year zero of our French national history, Alesia became the founding act of an improbable Gallic unit.
The expression "Spring of Nations" inspired the more recent "Arab Spring" of 2011. Also known as the Springtime of the Peoples, the period was characterised by a cascade of national claims.
The fall of Constantinople marked the end of the Byzantine Empire - a power descending from none other than ancient Rome. Its symbolism has long since transcended its actual significance.
The American revolution is sometimes watered down to the point where it can become an almost silent revolution.
The capture and looting of Emperor Qing Xianfeng's two summer palaces was the culmination of the Second Opium War; pitting the colonial powers of France and the United Kingdom against China.
Season 1
This event struck a chord worldwide, reminding us that South Africa, historically, was not only the first country to be colonised but also the last country to be decolonised.
The United States viewed the Hiroshima operation as a large-scale scientific experiment to avoid a Russian invasion of Japan. It became the first mass bombing in history: approximately 70,000 sustained fatal injuries.
Most tend to forget that the Tennis Court Oath was the key tipping point of the French Revolution, both from a symbolic and legal standpoint. What happened on that day in Versailles?
We'd like to believe in the idea of a lost civilisation in the case of the Angkor Wat. Yet the magnificent ruins of these monumental temples show no sign of any brutal disappearance.
Did the first outbreaks occur in China or in the Caspian Sea? Experts still argue. But how did the plague actually spread? After many controversies, it seems that the rat flea was the major carrier of this disease.
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