
There is something special about getting an unfiltered peek at the past, the kind that rarely makes it into classrooms or school textbooks. Textbooks certainly do their best, but they can only hold so much, and the stories that get left out are often the ones that make history feel most human.
And when we do encounter the past through film or television, what we tend to get is a polished, dramatic version of events that prioritizes excitement over accuracy.
That is what makes posts like those from Rare Histories so refreshing. They fill in the gaps with real stories and moments that bring historical figures to life in ways no screenplay quite manages.
#3 Pierre Culliford (Peyo), Creator Of The Smurfs, Presenting His Finished Drawing Of A Smurf At A Studio In Brussels, Belgium, 1983

Take gladiators, for example. Most of what people picture when they hear the word comes straight from Hollywood, and that picture tends to be entirely male.
The reality, though, was a little more complicated. There is actual historical evidence, backed by Roman writers and a carved marble relief found in modern-day Turkey, that women did take part in gladiatorial combat.
The emperor Domitian reportedly arranged for female fighters to compete by torchlight at night, and in 200 AD, Emperor Septimius Severus formally banned women from the games, which tells its own story about how common the practice had become.
#5 Arnold Schwarzenegger On The Day He Received His American Citizenship

#6 A Pigeon Bus From Wwi Served As Collecting Point For Messenger Pigeons From The Front Lines

There is another widely held assumption about gladiators that turns out to be far less true than the movies suggest: that their fights almost always ended with someone losing their life.
In practice, gladiators were expensive to house, train, and feed, and their owners had every financial reason to keep them alive and fighting. When one gladiator admitted defeat, they would raise a finger, and that was usually the end of it.
A match that ended in a fatality was actually considered unusual. These were professional fighters with careers and a strict diet heavy in barley, which earned them the nickname “Barley Boys.”
Wealthy Roman women were apparently devoted fans, some even paying to have the sweat scraped from their favorite fighter’s skin after a bout, which they would then use as a luxury moisturizer.
#11 South Vietnamese Parents And Their Five Children Fleeing Toward Saigon, June 19, 1972

Florence Nightingale is one of history’s most celebrated figures, but there is a side of her that rarely gets talked about. Long before she became famous for her work during the Crimean War, she was already practicing her instinct for care on the animals around her.
She kept a little owl named Athena as a pet, which she had apparently trained to peck her sister when her sister was being annoying.
Over the course of her lifetime, she also adopted at least 60 cats, and she was a genuine advocate for using small animals to help hospital patients recover more quickly, which was quite a forward-thinking idea for the time.
#15 A Group Of Havana Schoolboys In 1937 The Boy With The Lollipop Is Fidel Castro

The Victorian era also gave us Charles Dickens, and while most people know him as one of the greatest novelists in the English language, fewer know that he had a very personal reason to fear train travel.
In 1865, he survived a serious rail accident when the train he was on plunged off a bridge. He escaped relatively unharmed, helped pull other passengers to safety, and then went back into the wreckage to retrieve the manuscript he had been working on, which would become Our Mutual Friend.
He never really got over the experience and largely avoided trains for the rest of his life.
#17 A Blind Couple Walking With Their Child In The Streets Of Budapest, 1984

#19 A Beautician Paints Stockings Onto A Customer's Skin During Stocking Rationing, London, England In 1941

Dickens knew London well, and the city he wrote about was not always a pleasant place to be. In the summer of 1858, it became almost unbearable. That period even got its own nickname: the Great Stink.
A combination of extreme heat and a total lack of proper sewage infrastructure caused the River Thames to produce a smell so overpowering that it brought the city to its knees.
With a population that had grown to millions over the previous decades, and no effective plumbing to handle the waste, the river had essentially become an open sewer.
















