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2
Dec

Manhattan Project Ignites Change: December 2, 1942

   Posted by: Trish    in Historical Events, History Blog, Military History, Military Technology, Modern History, Technology History, World History

Nagasaki Nuclear Bomb ExplosionThe Manhattan Project is infamous throughout the world as the spark that ignited irreversible change. It was a change that would end a world conflict and make nations wary of nuclear energy for all time.

Nuclear fission was first discovered in Germany in 1938, although several European scientists had been exploring the potential of the atom for years. Nuclear fission occurs when the nucleus of a single atom is split, cutting the atom in half and emitting deadly neutrons. A series of nuclear fissions is commonly known as a chain reaction and has the ability to produce or destroy, depending on the motives of its operators.

Nuclear Scientist Enrico FermiOn December 2, 1942 the first successful nuclear fission experiment took place at the University of Chicago underneath the college stadium.  Enrico Fermian Italian Nobel prize-winning scientist was the first physicist to experiment with the capabilities of neutrons. Once on American soil, Fermi partnered with Niels Bohr a fellow scientist who proffered the idea of a nuclear chain reactionThey worked together for the University of Chicago.

By 1939, Fermi, Bohr, Einstein and others were actively working on the consequences of nuclear power. There had been no successful experiment to date, but it seemed to all involved only a matter of time. As World War II engulfed the world in a violence it could hardly contemplate, the band of physicists realized just how dangerous their work on atoms, neutrons and chain reactions could be in the hands of Nazi Germany. What they had discovered could change warfare forever. They decided to inform the president.

Nuclear fission experiment apparatusAlbert Einsteinbeginning in 1939, wrote at least four letters to President Roosevelt explaining the implications of the experiments in America and in Europe on the properties of uranium and atomic division. As Einstein expounded on the possibilities of atomic energy to give the world new fuels, he simultaneously emphasized the potential harm of the same energy in the wrong hands.

Albert Einstein and Niels BohrThe Depression still dominated FDR’s administration and finding funds for aiding and supervising the Manhattan Project seemed temporarily unnecessary. That is until the attack on Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941 and America’s entry into the war. Funding for the Manhattan Project fueled experiments at colleges around the United States as scientists raced to stay ahead of the Nazis. So here then was the beginning of the arms race.

History Store: History Gifts Holiday Special - Save on Replica Guns, Replica Swords, Replica Ships, Medieval Armor, Replica Weapons and Museum GiftsOn a cold winter day in Chicago, unbeknownst by the majority of the world, the scientists set up their equipment under the racquetball courts of the college and were witness to the first self-sustained nuclear chain reaction. In those moments of brilliant light and scientific progress, a new darkness descended upon the planet: the possibility to destroy millions of people in the blink of an eye.

Today, at least eight countries admit to holding nuclear weapons: China, France India, Israel, Pakistan, Russia, UK and the USA. These are the countries that admit to harnessing the violent potential of nuclear energy. There is no way to know for certain if these are the only countries with nuclear arms. Those few brilliant scientists on December 2, 1942 could not have known how dangerous their research would become.

Tags: 12/2/42, 1942, Albert Einstein, Arms Race, Atomic Age, December 2, December 7, Enrico Fermi, FDR, Franklin Roosevelt, Germany 1938, Great Depression, History Gifts, history of nuclear bomb, History Store, holiday specials, Manhattan Project, Medieval Armor, Museum Gifts, Nagasaki Nuclear Bomb, Niels Bohr, nuclear chain reaction, Nuclear Energy, nuclear fission, nuclear fission and Nazi Germany, Nuclear Fission Experiment, nuclear physicists, Pearl Harbor, Pearl Harbor attack, President Roosevelt, Replica Ships, Replica Swords, Replica Weapons, Roosevelt, Save on Replica Guns, the Great Depression, University of Chicago, world war 2, World War II, World War two, WW2, WWII

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1
Dec

History of the Handbag - The Fashion of Handbags

   Posted by: Scribner    in Ancient History, Fashion History, History Blog, History Today, Medieval History, World History

Hermes Thrace Instanbul Archaeological MuseumThe handbag in our culture is so ubiquitous and the ranges of handbag styles is so expansive that we may take for granted the history of the handbag or the simpler pouch.  Examples of pouches used to carry objects or goods or money are seen in art from antiquity, such as in the sculpture of Hermes of Thrace found at the Istanbul Archaeological Museum.  Hermes, apart from being the messenger god, was also the god protectorate of commerce and trade and so, aptly, could be depicted carrying a pouch of money.

That a god would be represented carrying a pouch also demonstrates the metaphorical qualities of the pouch.  The idea that a bag serves as a container of things out of reach of others, that it may contain secretive items or objects of untold, perhaps even magical, value is part of its symbolic importance.  The pouch or bag has pragmatic uses but it is never just a pragmatic object, as we can see from the way handbags are adorned today and the industry that revolves around making handbags a hallmark of fashion display and status signifier.

Medieval Lovers Purse 1340 A.D.Even in its early history, the pouch was adorned in ways that attested to its transformational potential.  And often it has been the case that a bag’s outer adornment reflects a desire or intention or a meaning beyond its material purpose.  In the middle ages, for example, purses were often exchanged between couples as tokens of love and courtship and the purses themselves would often display embroidered images of lovers in courtship.  This was part of the medieval fashion to celebrate courtly love and romance and a bag with an embroidered image of this would serve to echo a cultural notion of the times.

History Store: History Gifts Holiday Special - Save on Replica Guns, Replica Swords, Replica Ships, Medieval Armor, Replica Weapons and Museum GiftsToday, we continue to attribute symbolism to the purse, most notably in terms of status establishment in the urban experience.  Although men and women would carry pouches during the middle ages, today the handbag is most significantly an accessory for the woman (although the man-purse sometimes makes its appearance.)  The variety of handbags and the pace of rapidly changing trends, compounding to constantly re-define what the “It” bag is, demonstrate how an object can extend its meaning beyond the purely functional to inhabit the space of the symbolic and transformative.

*image-  Hermes of Thrace
*image-  Silk embroidered lovers purse, c.1340

Tags: 1340, 1340 A.D., Fashion History, Hermes, Hermes God, Hermes Thrace Instanbul Archaeological Museum, history gift specials, history of handbags, History of Pouches, history shop, History Store, holiday specials, medieval fashion, Medieval Lovers Purse, Medieval Purse, middle ages, Thrace

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