Fascinating Discoveries That Show A Different Side To History Than We Already Know

By Sarah Norman | September 20, 2023

A giant spider crab from Japan, 1904

Forget what you learned in the history books. More often than not they only tell one side of a story filled with nuance. The rare discoveries that have been collected here show a side of history that we rarely get to see. They peel back the layers of stories that we think we know to expose little known facts that make history all the more fascinating. If you are ready to see a different side to history than you already know, then click ahead...the truth awaits!

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Source: Wikimedia Commons

These giant spider crabs may look like something from a 1050s B-Movie, but they’re very real. These crustaceans live in the ocean around Japan, and they have the longest leg span of any arthropod. Considered a delicacy, the legs of a Japanese spider crab can reach up to 18 feet in length and the crab itself can weigh up to 42 lbs. The reason you don’t see these crabs all the time is because they live in holes within the deeper parts of the ocean, although they can still be caught when the head out to look for food, however the population has decreased due to overfishing. 

An Ottoman supply train still lays where it was ambushed by Lawrence of Arabia on the Hejaz railway during World War I


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Source: Wikimedia Commons

There were many feats of bravery carried out during World War I, but one of the most inspiring feats of the era was carried out by T.E. Lawrence, otherwise known as Lawrence of Arabia. In 1917 Lawrence was serving in the Middle East when he and a troupe of Arab followers began toppling trains that served the Ottoman supply chain. By the end of the war Lawrence and his troops had destroyed so many trains and railroad that it was impossible to use. Rather than move the vacated trains from their lines the Turkish people simply left them in the desert.