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#Todayinhistory Reel by @veiled.jpg - 143 years ago today, Karl Marx passed away.

The German philosopher and economist helped reshape modern political thought through works like The Commu
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@veiled.jpg
143 years ago today, Karl Marx passed away. The German philosopher and economist helped reshape modern political thought through works like The Communist Manifesto and Das Kapital. His ideas on class struggle, labor, and capitalism influenced generations of political movements and debates across the world. In the film ‘A King in New York’, Charlie Chaplin poked fun at Cold War paranoia when a boy is questioned for reading Marx and responds, “Do I have to be a communist to read Karl Marx?” A reminder that ideas and curiosity often travel further than labels. Fun fact: Marx spent years studying and writing in the British Museum Reading Room, where much of Das Kapital was developed. Follow @veiled.jpg for more. . . . #veiled #KarlMarx #OnThisDay #PoliticalPhilosophy #History
#Todayinhistory Reel by @thetimelesscut - Time moves on, but some faces are etched in history forever.

 Using advanced AI, we've bridged the gap between the eras these icons lived in and the
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@thetimelesscut
Time moves on, but some faces are etched in history forever. Using advanced AI, we’ve bridged the gap between the eras these icons lived in and the world today. ​Princess Diana (1961–1997) ​Prince Philip (1921–2021) ​Queen Elizabeth II (1926–2022) ​Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother (1900–2002) ​Prince Rainier III (1923–2005)
#Todayinhistory Reel by @_today_inhistory - Today in history:
The first scientifically recorded rogue wave was observed on January 1, 1995, at the Draupner oil platform in the North Sea. Instrum
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@_today_inhistory
Today in history: The first scientifically recorded rogue wave was observed on January 1, 1995, at the Draupner oil platform in the North Sea. Instruments measured the wave at about 25.6 meters (84 feet) high, far exceeding the surrounding waves at the time. This direct measurement proved that rogue waves are real phenomena, not just sailors’ myths. The event transformed ocean science by improving wave modeling and offshore safety standards. *Video credit BBC https://youtu.be/me8YEZRBqiw?si=QPt0yOlRvf6WJb0O * . . . Follow for more historical facts . . . #todayinhistory #historicalfacts #history #funfacts #roguewave
#Todayinhistory Reel by @rickystrom - Donald Trump is the greatest president in the history of the United States of America. Today he honored three veterans who served with the Medal of Ho
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@rickystrom
Donald Trump is the greatest president in the history of the United States of America. Today he honored three veterans who served with the Medal of Honor. Our great POTUS had good reason not to enlist, but the way! He may have struggled but the necklaces, or dog collars, look beautiful. After crushing this he touted the White House ballroom to the media. Hooray for USA. Hooray for republicans. Go Trump! God bless the troops!
#Todayinhistory Reel by @amazexindia - 1700 years ago - Constantinople… and today - Istanbul 🌍 
Same land, but time has transformed it into two different worlds.

Once echoed by Roman empe
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@amazexindia
1700 years ago — Constantinople… and today — Istanbul 🌍 Same land, but time has transformed it into two different worlds. Once echoed by Roman emperors, where massive crowds gathered in the Hippodrome, where the greatest civilizations of history once breathed — today stands modern Istanbul, alive with the call to prayer, church bells, and endless city rhythms. This is not just a city… this is 1700 years of living history. This image reminds us — civilizations may change, but their soul remains eternal. 🕰️ From Constantine to Atatürk… 🌊 From Byzantium to Istanbul… this city has stood tall through every storm of time. If you love mysterious journeys of history and the universe, don’t forget to follow AmazeXIndia ✨ #AmazeXIndia #Istanbul #Constantinople #HistoryLovers #AncientCivilization WorldHistory ThenAndNow ByzantineEmpire RomanEmpire OttomanEmpire HistoricalPlaces LostCivilizations TimeTravel EarthMysteries HumanHistory Archaeology BeforeAndAfter HistoryFacts Civilization IncredibleEarth AncientWorld HistoryVisuals
#Todayinhistory Reel by @mindfulwithnina (verified account) - Happy International Women's Day ♥️

Many of these laws happened within just the recent generation.

Not centuries ago.
Not ancient history.

Within th
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@mindfulwithnina
Happy International Women's Day ♥️ Many of these laws happened within just the recent generation. Not centuries ago. Not ancient history. Within the lifetime of our mothers and grandmothers. And in some places, women are still fighting for basic rights. So today is a good day to pause and remember the women who pushed the world forward. To the women before us — we honor you. To every woman today — keep rising! Thank you SO much to all the amazing women who participated in this video!!! Love, Nina ♥️
#Todayinhistory Reel by @chronocities - Chicago didn't build itself overnight. 🌎

400 years ago this was wetlands.
Today it's one of the most iconic 
skylines on the planet.

Same river. Sa
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@chronocities
Chicago didn’t build itself overnight. 🌎 400 years ago this was wetlands. Today it’s one of the most iconic skylines on the planet. Same river. Same land. A completely different world. Which era would you want to live in? 👇 P.S. I documented the exact AI workflow behind videos like this — link in bio 🔗 #Chicago #CityEvolution #AIContent #History #UrbanEvolution
#Todayinhistory Reel by @interestinghistoryfact - The doctors took tissue from a dying Black woman in 1951. They never asked. They never told her family. Those cells are still alive today-and changed
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@interestinghistoryfact
The doctors took tissue from a dying Black woman in 1951. They never asked. They never told her family. Those cells are still alive today—and changed everything. Baltimore, Maryland. January 29, 1951. Henrietta Lacks felt the knot inside her. Deep. Wrong. Painful. She'd just given birth to her fifth child four months earlier—another boy named Joseph. But something wasn't right. Unexplained bleeding. Sharp pain. A hardness that shouldn't be there. At thirty-one years old, Henrietta knew her own body. This wasn't normal. Dr. Howard Jones examined her. What he saw shocked him. A purple mass on her cervix, shiny and firm. He'd never seen a tumor that looked quite like that. He took a biopsy. Sent it to pathology. The diagnosis came back: cervical cancer. Adenocarcinoma. Aggressive. Henrietta returned eight days later for treatment. Doctors inserted radium tubes—the standard cancer treatment at the time—directly into her cervix. Radiation to burn away the tumor. During that procedure, a surgeon sliced away two samples. One from the tumor. One from healthy cervical tissue nearby. Henrietta wasn't told. Wasn't asked. Had no idea. Those samples went to George Otto Gey's laboratory on the top floor of the hospital. For nearly thirty years, Dr. Gey had been trying to grow human cells in culture—to keep them alive outside the body long enough to study them. Every sample died within days. Then came Henrietta's cells. Gey's lab assistant, Mary Kubicek, labeled the sample "HeLa"—the first two letters of Henrietta's first and last name—and placed it in culture medium. She expected nothing. Just another failure. But the next day, something impossible happened. The cells multiplied.Today, Henrietta Lacks is called the mother of modern cell biology. Her contribution to science is immeasurable. Her cells have been involved in more than 75,000 studies. The polio vaccine. Cancer treatments. Gene mapping. Cloning. In vitro fertilization. HIV research. COVID-19 vaccine development. All of it traces back to Henrietta. The woman who was never asked. Who never consented. Who never knew. Whose cells refused to die.#biology #history #research #vaccine #genetic
#Todayinhistory Reel by @thebrieflymedia - "Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, but today is a gift." 🎁

Meet Eric Ernest Munn. At 101 years old, Eric still lives independently in Que
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@thebrieflymedia
“Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, but today is a gift.” 🎁 Meet Eric Ernest Munn. At 101 years old, Eric still lives independently in Queensland, Australia, and has become a global inspiration for his incredible vitality and positive spirit. Every day at 4:30 PM, Eric enjoys a glass of scotch while talking to a photo of his late wife, Freda. His secret to such a long, happy life? Living entirely in the present moment. In a world that never stops moving, Eric reminds us that the greatest success is simply appreciating the “now.” 📌 Sources & Crédits Speaker: Eric Ernest Munn (Born 1923) Location: Caloundra, Sunshine Coast, Australia Video Credit: The Project #EricMunn #101YearsOld #Wisdom #Gratitude #inspiration
#Todayinhistory Reel by @negin_explorecanada - The most beautiful moment in history. Millions of Iranians have carried pain for decades, and today they feel a breath of freedom.
Thank you to Donald
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@negin_explorecanada
The most beautiful moment in history. Millions of Iranians have carried pain for decades, and today they feel a breath of freedom. Thank you to Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu for standing beside the Iranian people. @realdonaldtrump @b.netanyahu تبریک به مردم شریف ایران 🫂🥳✌🏽♥️ #fyp #iran #iranrevolution #MIGA #irgcterrorists
#Todayinhistory Reel by @casarthakahuja (verified account) - I'll tell you the biggest problem with Indian GenZ today...

For the first time in the history of India... the #1 reason to take a personal loan is no
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@casarthakahuja
I’ll tell you the biggest problem with Indian GenZ today... For the first time in the history of India... the #1 reason to take a personal loan is not a medical emergency, home renovation or to buy an asset... But 27% of all personal loans in the first half of 2025 were taken for travel! Making it the most common purpose to take an unsecured loan for... 70% of all iPhones are being bought on EMI... And a great chunk of the GenZ are taking debt to fund flight tickets upwards of Rs 20,000 to attend overpriced concerts... It’s not just frivolous spends... by some estimates 39% of GenZ borrowed for essentials like rent, groceries and utilities in 2024... And there are two very big things that have led to this... 1/ Previous generations used to save for years to buy an actual financial asset like a house, but today, as house prices are such that a young Indian thinks how can I ever afford to pay a Rs 2 lakh EMI for 20 years to buy a simple house... that they rather spend money on buying happiness today in status driven consumer goods. 2/ The second is that today fintech companies have made borrowing so easy by enabling it as zero cost EMI and BNPL in the checkout page... such that consumer loans below Rs 50,000 are blowing up because they are approved in less than a minute. And when you compare this trend to how the GenZ are behaving in China... you’ll be further blown away... The Chinese generation went through this phase back in 2015 to 2019... of extreme borrowing for status consumption... And today, that generation has shifted from Revenge Spending to Revenge Saving... The GenZ in China is spending on Gold Beans where each bean is 1 gm of gold because they are now signalling intellectual capital... While Indians are thinking I should borrow today because I will earn tomorrow... Chinese are thinking let me save today because I may not have a job tomorrow. #casarthakahuja
#Todayinhistory Reel by @historywithcarter (verified account) - Send this to someone who's related to Genghis! Everyone knows the stat about Genghis Khan. Roughly one in 200 men alive today carries his Y-chromosome
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@historywithcarter
Send this to someone who’s related to Genghis! Everyone knows the stat about Genghis Khan. Roughly one in 200 men alive today carries his Y-chromosome. It sounds exaggerated. It sounds like myth. But it’s real. What people miss is where it actually starts. Genetically and historically, the trail doesn’t go back very far. There are no verifiable records before his father. No named ancestors. No traceable lineage. Which means, for all practical purposes, the bloodline begins one generation earlier. With Yesugei. Yesugei wasn’t an emperor or a unifier. He was a capable steppe warlord in a fractured world of clans and raids. Enough power to hold status, wives, and alliances. Enough to pass on a dominant male line. And then he was poisoned, his family collapsed, and his son grew up hungry, hunted, and angry. What followed was unreal. In barely twenty years, Genghis Khan built the largest contiguous empire in history, stretching from Korea to Eastern Europe, faster than Rome ever managed and with a fraction of the population. Rome expanded slowly and fractured under its own weight. Genghis moved with speed, discipline, and intent. His advantage wasn’t just brutality. It was precision. He promoted by merit, not blood. He shattered tribal loyalties and rebuilt them around himself. Intelligence, terror, diplomacy, and speed were all weapons. Cities that surrendered survived. Cities that resisted vanished so completely their names were erased. His armies moved faster than news. Enemies often surrendered before the Mongols arrived, broken by reputation alone. He understood fear, then controlled it. He absorbed engineers, generals, and administrators from conquered peoples and turned them into assets. Trade expanded. The Silk Road became safer. Laws were standardized. Religious freedom was enforced. Behind the violence was a system. And then there was the multiplication. Sons became rulers. Grandsons ruled regions. The empire didn’t die with him. It spread, generation after generation. Empires usually vanish. This one stayed in the gene pool. Genghis Khan made it unavoidable. His father made it possible. #history #genghis

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