ritaxis: (Default)
ritaxis ([personal profile] ritaxis) wrote2012-11-09 11:15 am

My research, let me show you it

What I found out today is:

It's highly improbable that narching soldiers can collaps a bridge by creating a resonance wave.

So the soldiers that did collapse a bridge probably did it by being too heavy for the bridge.

I tried to find out about archaic military discipline, but all I found out was that the goose step was invented to keep marchers at an even spacing, punishment in the middle ages and before was barbaric (who knew?), and armies tend to execute deserters. What I wanted to know was what happened to trainees in the time between the Franco-Prussian War and World War One when they screwed up in common ways, but I didn't. I did find out about the English army's "field punishment number one" and "field punichment number two" which are bondage exercises. But I have no idea if this has anything to do with eastern european practices, or practices in training.

I did find out lots of fascinating things about the Tsarist Army with respect to the Jewish draft.

Can you imagine a 25 year conscription? And they drafted little boys -- as young as 8, in the early 19th century (not just the Jews, other minorities), but they kept them in school till they were 18. And their children were deemed to belong to the Army also.

But again, the relevance is obscure, except that not-Poland is a fantasy world in which anything is grist for the mill.

If I post a word count will you promise not to laugh?

In the first eight days I did a bit less than 4000 words.

[identity profile] nojay.livejournal.com 2012-11-09 11:07 pm (UTC)(link)
I recall seeing film (it may have been Pathe News or similar newsreel footage) of the construction of the original Wembley Stadium. Once the stadium had been completed the engineers hired a large number of ex-WW1 soldiers to stamp up and down in unison to ensure the terraces were structurally sound.

And by the magic of the Internets and the all-knowing Google, here's a link to the footage, from 1923.

http://www.britishpathe.com/video/a-practical-test-wembley

[identity profile] ritaxis.livejournal.com 2012-11-10 12:10 am (UTC)(link)
That's a very cool clip, thank you! Also demonstrating Mythbusters' conclusion -- that failure is a matter of structural soundness, not resonance!