- Joined
- Jan 19, 2021
It‘s also interesting because most of the dead were levies kitted out as cheaply as possible and asked to defend the walled town despite zero training. The Danes and Germans basically slaughtered them where they stood. A recent analysis of the dead showed that almost all of them had severe lower leg injuries, ranging from chipped bone, through breakages, and up to angled amputation.The site of the Battle of Visby in July 1361 is our biggest source for what medieval infantry armor looked like. Visby was a total one-sided rout where veteran Danish and German men-at-arms completely slaughtered an inexperienced peasant militia of local farmers. Most medieval armor was used until it wore out and then scrapped, but most of the bodies found in mass graves at Visby were thrown in still wearing their armor. The reason for this is unclear, but it may have been because of the massive amount of bodies (2000+ have been found so far) and the heat of the July day making the bodies decay prematurely.
Forensic analysis of the lower leg injuries showed that the attackers favoured an initial brutal strike at the lower leg (which untrained people tend to neglect) to immobilise, followed by ganking the victim on the ground at the attacker’s leisure.
This, in turn, proved that the attackers operated in a very open attack line rather than bunching together, as clumping would have interfered with the ability to use this tactic.
One of the burial grounds of the 2000+ dead is now under a major road, too.
Cyclone Gudrun, which hit Sweden in 2005, felled approximately 75 million cubic metres of trees. The Swedes collected as many as they could to make the world’s largest woodpile. It needs to be watered to prevent spontaneous ignition and dry rot and has been in constant use ever since with no signs of running out any time soon. If you’ve bought anything wooden or chipboard from IKEA that was made in Sweden in the last 10 years, there’s a high probability it was sourced from this pile.
Oh, and the world’s largest freshwater arthropod is the Tasmanian freshwater lobster, which can grow up to three feet long and weighs up to fifteen pounds.
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