Nazi tracked mine Goliath captured captured by the Polish troops during Warsaw Uprising in 1944. It carried 60 or 100 kilograms (130 or 220 lb) of high explosives, depending on the model, and was intended to be used for multiple purposes, such as destroying tanks, disrupting dense infantry formations, and demolition of buildings and bridges. Two of the strands were used to move and steer the Goliath, while the third was used for detonation. The Goliath had 650 metres (2,130 ft) of cable. Each Goliath was disposable, being intended to be blown up with its target.
Armor piercing shell from a 17-pdr gun embedded in a section of armor from a Tiger I tank
Life ring from the RMS Lusitania.
26-inch thick armor from Japanese Yamato class battleship, pierced by a US Navy 16-inch gun. The armor is on display at the US Navy Museum
Кликабельно. The only surviving A7V Sturmpanzerwagen (Germany’s first tank) from WWI in a glass dome.
V-2 rocket motor inside the rocket production facility at Dora Mittelbau concentration camp
Cargo of SS Empire Heritage which was torpedoed on 8 September 1944 and sunk by U-482 off the coast of Donegal in Ireland
Wreck of Do-17Z’s shot down on August 26, 1940. It’s ther only surviving Nazi ‘Flying Pencil’
Car in which archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria was assassinated in Sarajevo in 1914. The 1911 Gräf & Stift 28/32 PS Double Phaeton. Above rear wheel there is a bullet hole which killed Sophie, Duchess of Hohenberg
Helmet shaped like a griffin’s head, Italian, Milan or Brescia, ca. 1550
Medieval knight’s great helm. Germany, 13th century
Helmet of Philip the Handsome. Workshop of Negroli. Milan, c. 1495-1500. Etched, gilt, and silvered steel; brass, gold, filigree. Real Armería, Madrid.
Viking swords found in Ireland. c. 10th century AD
Original Jolly Roger pirate flag captured in 1789 from pirate’s Captain William Kidd.
The bullet that killed Vice Admiral Lord Nelson at the Battle of Trafalgar by piercing through his left shoulder and lodged two inches (5cm) below his right shoulder-blade in his back muscles
Anglo-Saxon iron sword and hilt of the late 9th or early 10th century
Visor of medieval helmet, Germany, c. 13th century AD
Viking Ballinderry sword, mid-ninth century, Ireland
Napoleon’s bicorne and overcoat, 19th century, France
Napoleon’s personal hat (bicorne).
Polish hussar armour, 17th century
The hat Abraham Lincoln wore on the night he was assassinated
Benjamin Franklin’s silk suit (1778)
The service weapon of J R R Tolkien, who served on the Somme before contracting trench fever in October 1916
Richard Helms letter to his son written on a captured sheet of Adolf Hitler’s personal stationery. 1945
Unfinished obelisk in Aswan, Egypt. 1500 BC
Unfinished obelisk in Aswan (Assuan), Egypt. Largest known ancient obelisk, ordered by Hatshepsut (1508–1458 BC)
Egyptian coffin from tomb KV63, 1337-1334BC
Head of a Mummified Cat Egyptian Late Period to Ptolemaic, c. 664–30 BC
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