50 years ago today in Lintong County, Shaanxi Province, a group of farmers—Yang Zhifa, his five brothers, and his neighbor Wang Puzhi—were digging in the countryside when they struck upon the Mausoleum of the First Emperor: containing the famed Terracotta Army. Totally unique in world culture, 8,000 painted figures, 170 chariots, and 520 horses guard the slumbering emperor for eternity, and the necropolis in which the emperor rests has never been opened. READ why… (1974)
Built as a microcosm of the emperor’s palace in life, the site has been proven through ground-penetrating radar to be 98 square kilometers (38 square miles) to total. The extravagance of the mausoleum rivals the Great Pyramids, and while lacking 2.5 million sandstone cubes of the pharaohs’ resting place, was said to be an underground palace complex of towers, walls, and keeps, through which 100 rivers of mercury ran under starry skies built of gemstones.
The extraordinarily high mercury content in the surrounding soil lends credence to this tale, but as mercury is highly toxic, no further excavations have taken place to uncover the palace proper for fear of permanent contamination.
This was all built to eternalize Qin Shi Huangdi, the first emperor to ‘unify’ China. Qin set the blueprint for the classic Eastern despot, and his ‘unity’ was unwanted by all who fell to the conquerer’s sword. He commissioned the building of the Great Wall, the Lingqu Canal, and the Terracotta Army, and no sooner had his successor taken the throne than the countryside erupted in revolt.
Each of the thousands of figures is different; no two are alike, and consist of handpainted soldiers, commanders, archers, jugglers and acrobats, wrestlers, and court officials. WATCH a video tour of the site… (1974)
MORE Good News on this Date:
- The Republic of Switzerland was established (1798)
- The Knights of Columbus was founded by a Catholic priest to encourage benevolence and racial tolerance among its members (1882)
- Turkey (a nation of Muslims) officially recognized Israel (1949)
- Vietnam began celebrating Veterans’ Day (1973)
- Led Zeppelin saw all six of their albums in the US Top 100 chart in the same week, including their newest album Physical Graffiti at No.1—certified 16 times Platinum (1975)
- Beatles records officially went on sale in the Soviet Union (1986)
- Serbs & Croats signed a cease-fire to end the war in Croatia (1994)
- 35 countries and over 370 cities shut off lights for 60 minutes during Earth Hour for the first time (2008)
- Marriage became legal for gay couples in England and Wales (2014)
Happy Birthday to Eric Idle, who turns 81 today. Member of the groundbreaking Monty Python comedy troupe and author of the hit Broadway musical Spamalot, the actor, singer-songwriting musician, and author was bullied throughout his school years, which he called the perfect comic training ground. Idle studied English at Cambridge University a year behind future fellow Pythons Graham Chapman and John Cleese. A competent guitarist, Idle composed many of the group’s most famous musical numbers, most notably “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life“.
During the television series, Idle had many of the major roles in the various sketches, such as the aggrieved traveler in “The Travel Agent,” Arthur Nudge from the “Nudge, Nudge” sketch, and the Australian philosophy teacher who sings the drunken philosopher song.
Colleague Graham Chapman acknowledged Idle as ‘the master of the one-liner’ among the other Pythons, along with his ability to deliver extensive, sometimes maniacal monologues with barely a breath, such as in “The Money Program”. Watch the Travel Agent… (1943)
63 years ago today, residents of Washington, D.C. were finally given the right to vote in U.S. presidential elections.
As the U.S. capital city, the District of Columbia is a special ‘federal district’, not a state, and therefore never had voting representation in Congress like people living in the 50 states. The adoption of a new compromise, the Twenty-third Amendment to the Constitution, officially granted the District the same number of electoral votes to be cast for the President and Vice President as that of the least populous state. This right was first exercised by DC citizens in the 1964 presidential election won by Lyndon Johnson. (1961)
Also, 229 years ago today, German pianist Ludwig van Beethoven debuted at the age of 24 in Vienna. He surpassed his pianist father to become a virtuoso and one of the most influential composers of all time.
He started going deaf several years later and by his mid-40s could hear almost nothing, yet still composed some of his greatest works. He had not performed for 13 years, until he conducted the premiere of his Ninth Symphony. They had to turn him around to see the tumultuous applause of the audience because he could hear neither it nor the orchestra. The masterpiece Ninth Symphony, his final one, also became known as “the Choral Symphony,” because it was the first to use voices– singing the verses of a poem, “Ode to Joy” by Friedrich Schiller, with additions by Beethoven. Three years after the premiere, he died at the age of 56 in Vienna. Franz Schubert, who died the following year and was buried next to Beethoven, was one of the torchbearers. (1795)
And 157 years ago today, the U.S. Congress commissioned the Lincoln Memorial to be built.
Originally it was conceived as a monument to Union victory and the abolition of slavery–and would have placed Lincoln atop a tower made up of grateful freedmen as well as abolitionists, and Union generals. But, when Congress approved a memorial in 1911, an entirely different set of values dictated the project. Lincoln represented union–not victory. Its frieze would feature the names of every state, north and south. The winning architect Charles McKim, argued that every effort should be made to make the man transcend his worldly origins – thus the Greek temple design. (1867)
And 65 years ago today, Some Like It Hot, the romantic comedy starring Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, and Jack Lemmon, was released. Considered to be the greatest comedy of all time, it received six Academy Award nominations, including Best Actor, Best Director (Billy Wilder) and Best Adapted Screenplay.
The story is about two musicians who dress in drag in order to escape from mafia gangsters whom they witnessed commit a crime. They befriend a singer named Sugar on a train (Ms. Monroe), and have to struggle to remember that they are supposed to be girls and cannot make a pass at her. WATCH the clip… (1959)
And, 44 years ago today, Pink Floyd’s album The Dark Side of The Moon spent its 303rd week on the US album chart, becoming the LP that spent the most time on the Billboard chart.
It broke the record set by Carole King’s 1971 album Tapestry and remained on the charts for 741 weeks from 1973 to 1988—longer than any other LP in chart history. WATCH the hypnotic, ethereal Breathe… (1980)
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