62 results found for "vietnam"
- Marcus Wesson: The Horrific History Of The 'Vampire God'
After his honourable discharge from the Vietnam War, where he worked as an army medic, Wesson settled
- The 1984 McDonald's Massacre: A Tragic Day in San Ysidro
wounding him in the chest and arm, then ordered everyone onto the floor, calling them "dirty swine, Vietnam
- 1913: When Hitler, Trotsky, Tito, Freud and Stalin All Lived In The Same Place.
In January 1913, Vienna found itself at the intersection of history. Vienna in 1913: A Crossroads of Ideas and Revolution Vienna was not just the capital of an empire; it Vienna City Archives – Residency and census records, 1912–1914. Café Central Museum Vienna – historical notes on early 20th-century patrons. The Guardian – Vienna 1913: The Year Genius and Madness Shared a City, 2013.
- The Obsession of Oskar Kokoschka: Alma Mahler, Love Letters, and the Life-Size Doll
She returned to Vienna, only to find that Oskar had placed Gustav Mahler’s death mask in their living In a way, the doll embodied the essence of modernist Vienna, full of contradictions, eccentricity, and
- The Story of Paula Hitler: Unraveling the Life of Adolf Hitler's Sister
Paula relocated to Vienna and took up a position as a housekeeper at a dormitory for Jewish university Despite her proximity to Adolf's struggles as a painter in Vienna and later Munich, as well as his military service and early political ventures, they had little contact until their reunion in Vienna during the Following her interrogation, Paula was released from American custody and returned to Vienna.
- The Story of Ignaz Semmelweis, The Physician and Scientist That Was Ridiculed For Washing His Hands.
father was a prosperous grocer, and the young Ignaz was first sent to study law at the University of Vienna Drawn to obstetrics, he began work in 1846 as an assistant in the maternity wards of Vienna General Hospital Poor women in Vienna avoided Ward No. 1 if they could. Senior doctors in Vienna attacked his ideas, insisting that disease could not possibly be spread by gentlemen Vienna: C.A. Hartleben, 1861. (Original publication of his findings) Margotta, Roberto.
- Archduke Ludwig Viktor: A Habsburg Rebel in a Conservative Era
Born in Vienna’s Schönbrunn Palace on May 15, 1842, Ludwig Viktor was the youngest child of Archduke He established a personal salon where Vienna’s creative minds – composers, painters, writers – could He commissioned the Palais Erzherzog Ludwig Viktor on Vienna’s Schwarzenbergplatz – a grand city palace His Vienna palace (later converted into a Burgtheater venue) and his baroque summer residence at Schloss Scandal at the Baths and Exile from Vienna Ludwig Viktor’s open indulgence in his identity eventually
- The Goiânia Accident – How a Shiny Blue Glow Became One of the World’s Worst Radiological Disasters
Vienna: IAEA, 1988. Vienna: IAEA, 2002.
- Dora Ratjen: The Athlete Who Lived a Dual Identity
On 21 September 1938, she boarded an express train from Vienna to Cologne. Just days earlier, at the European Athletics Championships in Vienna, she had won gold for the German
- King Zog Named Himself The King Of Albania, Then Survived Over 50 Assassination Attempts
The Vienna Opera Shooting (1931) The most famous attempt came on 20 February 1931, outside the Vienna Struggle for Stability in Albania (1984) Contemporary reports in The Times (London), Neue Freie Presse (Vienna
- Cocaine and Sigmund Freud, A Long Friendship.
These achievements did little to distinguish him within Vienna’s crowded medical world. That Started It All In April 1884, Freud obtained his first supply of cocaine from Angel’s Pharmacy in Vienna
- Otto Skorzeny: Hitler’s ‘Most Dangerous Man in Europe’
The Early Life of Otto Skorzeny Otto Skorzeny was born on the 12th of June 1908 in Vienna, then part His ashes were interred in the family plot in Vienna.













