Nov 12, 2011
Scientific books and museum exhibits, historic novels and movies persuade us that there is nothing unknown about human history, and historians have answers almost to all questions. In fact, it isn’t so or not so for sure.
If we look at the past more closely, we will find a plenty of strange things and clashes. For example, why did Medieval Ages artists, usually attentive to historic details, paint biblical and antique characters as their contemporaries? How could ancient soldiers use bronze swords if bronze didn’t exist yet? Where did Egyptian iron weapon come from? Why did Ivan The Terrible call himself the direct descend from Imperator Augustus?
It would seem these and many other mysteries should have made historians look at the past more closely. But it didn’t happen yet, so it is obvious question: do we really know our history?
The application includes:
Great results of science research, approving theories, made by outstanding Russian scientists, the member of Russian Academy of Sciences Anatoly Fomenko and Ph. D. in Physics and Mathematics Gleb Nosovsky.