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18 votes
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The Circassian genocide, Russian Empire's systematic mass murder, ethnic cleansing and expulsion of 95–97% of the Circassians, resulting in 1 to 1.5 million deaths during the Russo-Circassian War
26 votes -
List of unusual units of measurement
14 votes -
How one man rewrote one thousand years of history
6 votes -
Wikipedia’s king who doesn’t exist
9 votes -
Fun fact: Taiwan claims exclusive sovereignty over mainland China and Mongolia as well as parts of Russia, India, Myanmar, Pakistan, Bhutan, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, and Japan
Decided not to post a single link as there are tons of different articles about different aspects of it on Wikipedia. It's a whole thing! Exclusive mandate - Republic of China (Taiwan) and...
Decided not to post a single link as there are tons of different articles about different aspects of it on Wikipedia. It's a whole thing!
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Exclusive mandate - Republic of China (Taiwan) and People's Republic of China
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1992 consensus which established semi-official dialogue between ROC and PRC
It seems like this is a leftover from the Chinese civil war and/or Chiang Kai-shek's authoritarian and murderous rule because one of the above articles does mention that these territorial hopes haven't been worked towards for many years:
Originally placing high priority on reclaiming the Chinese mainland through Project National Glory, the KMT now favors a closer relation with the PRC and seeks to maintain Taiwan's status quo under the Constitution of the Republic of China. The party also accepts the 1992 Consensus, which defines both sides of the Taiwan Strait as "one China" but maintains its ambiguity to different interpretations.
It goes further back than that though, probably to 1966 when Project National Glory was abandoned:
[invasion of mainland China] as the initial stage of reunification was effectively abandoned after 1966, although the Guoguang planning organization was not abolished until 1972. The ROC did not abandon the policy of using force for reunification until 1990.
Thought this was all quite interesting, so I wanted to share! It is not exactly light reading though so I also wanted to ask for documentary recommendations about this, and of the Chinese civil war in general, if anybody knows of any good ones?
Don't mind me, just finding myself going into a lot of Wikipedia rabbit holes lately 😊
22 votes -
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The Barbegal Aqueduct included a watermill complex with water cascading through a total of sixteen wheels. It may have been "the greatest known concentration of mechanical power in the ancient world"
13 votes -
The Initial Teaching Alphabet (ITA)
6 votes -
The Gombe Chimpanzee War (1974-1978)
8 votes -
Adam Curtis documentaries
7 votes -
Mike the headless chicken
9 votes -
The Gävle goat
9 votes -
Dancing mania
5 votes -
Repeatedly clicking the first link on Wikipedia ends up at "Philosophy" 97% of the time
27 votes -
ValuJet Flight 592
6 votes -
Foundations of Geopolitics
10 votes -
Ido: A reformed and simplified offspring of Esperanto
12 votes -
Salami slicing
6 votes -
Pyrrhonism
6 votes -
The perfect solution fallacy (Nirvana fallacy)
3 votes -
Eugène François Vidocq
2 votes -
John Titor
11 votes -
Whataboutism
6 votes -
Twilight language
3 votes -
The Principle of Charitable Interpretation
13 votes -
Gwoyeu Romatzyh
6 votes -
China and Taiwan clash over Wikipedia edits
7 votes -
1968 Democratic National Convention Chicago police riots
4 votes -
Wikipedia editors have been fighting over corn for at least a decade
20 votes -
Basil Banghart, an incredibly interesting American criminal, burglar and prison escape artist
4 votes -
What would happen if historians made their research notes public?
9 votes