What is the greatest moment in all of history?
The moment we started writing, obviously.
Normandy landings
The "shot heard 'round the world" - The Assasination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand.
Gavrilo Princip single-handedly set off a chain reaction which ultimately leads to the deaths of 80 million people.
With just a couple of bullets, this terrorist starts the First World War, which destroys four monarchies, leading to a power vacuum filled by the Communists in Russia and the Nazis in Germany who then fight it out in a Second World War.
Considering that all Princip wanted was to bring Bosnia under Serb control, it's a bit ironic that after a century of very messy history, it isn't. Everything about the world has changed drastically over the last century, except that.
Most historians consider the 20th century to have begun in 1914, so in essence, Gavrilo Princip is the man who created the 20th Century.
Some people would minimize Princip's importance by saying that a Great Power War was inevitable sooner or later given the tensions of the times, but I say that it was no more inevitable than, say, a war between Nato and the Warsaw Pact. Left unsparked, the Great War could have been avoided, and without it, there would have been no Lenin, no Hitler, no Eisenhower. Princip is one of the few individuals ever to make history.
>>35125
>moon landing
>a great moment of history
Nothing of note has ever happened as a consequence of a moon landing, and it has not marked in any way the birth of a new era. It's an irrelevance in the field of history, I'd argue. Perhaps it was a crowning achievement in science, but I'd presume getting into orbit/space in the first place was more important and this is simply an extension of that.
On topic, I'd argue the victory of Rome in the Punic Wars. In the first it showed Rome to be a major power for the first time and set the stage for the rest of their expansion; of which is still affecting modern society today.
>>35209
This and only this.
Fuck "greatness" and "moments" both.
>>35695
Mother fucker was eating a sandwich
Reminder that it was a meaningless bit of patriotism and meant nothing when it comes to modern space exploration or science. The greatest moment in history was when some woman planted seeds to make wheat grow
>>35570
>>35570
>>35570
>>35695
>implying great
monumental, sure, but not something for humanity to beam in pride at
My birth
Most impactful moment in human history is probably Columbus's discovery of the New World.
>>35125
When the first hominied saw something that touched him and tried to replicate that sensation by himself.
>>35836
>discovery
Subjective. For me it was the day I learned how to wank
>>35836
The other that occurs to me is the moment evolution by natural selection came together in Darwin's head.
>>35836
>colombus
>>35861
>>35947
>Where's the ramifications in historical terms? That's more a /sci/ great moment.
It answered the eternal question: where do we come from. Definitively and for all time.
>>35262
ayy lmao
>>35125
it was when Nathan Rothschild learned of Napoleon's defeat at waterloo a day before the English government and decided to publicize England's defeat instead, causing a massive stock market crash and allowing Rothschild to buy up the stocks at dirt cheap prices and simultaneously seize the bank of england.
This put an incredible amount of power into the hands of one family and grew the first head of the Illuminati
French revolution
>>36346
This
The world attacked France out of butthurt, and the world lost, unable to defeat the power of freedom
>>35125
Finland gaining independence. Obviously.
The first stone being cast by a man unto another, though that's pre-history.
>>35695
>The "shot heard 'round the world" -
Seconded. He was the fucker who triggered everything set up on previous decades.
>Some people would minimize Princip's importance by saying that a Great Power War was inevitable sooner or later given the tensions of the times, but I say that it was no more inevitable than, say, a war between Nato and the Warsaw Pact.
Unlike with WWI everyone and their dog were painfully aware that World Wars suck a lot if Cold War would have gone hot. 1914 everyone rushed to war with patriotic frenzy as everyone were sure they would win and come back home before Christmas. With nuclear weapons and sophisticated bombers everyone knew that WWIII would suck order of magnitude more than previous installations of World War.
>>35700
>Nothing of note has ever happened as a consequence of a moon landing, and it has not marked in any way the birth of a new era. It's an irrelevance in the field of history, I'd argue. Perhaps it was a crowning achievement in science, but I'd presume getting into orbit/space in the first place was more important and this is simply an extension of that.
Mankind literally landed on another rock in space. If mankind is ever going to expand beyond this planet it becomes far more important than just getting to orbit.
>>36970
If.
>>36510
This. tbqh.
Yuri Gagarin is my favorite man in history.
>>37042
It's going to happen sooner or later unless our species will commit collective suicide.
Apollo program had massive effect on technology. Material sciences, computers and lots of other shit advanced very rapidly and ended up having other practical applications. It's probably biggest ever scientific program done for science and propaganda value instead of warfare.
In historical order
>fire
>writing
>Internet
the birth of muhammad the anti christ
The agricultural revolution.
Tbh senpai
The first prehuman who took care of a dog
it even changes our DNA we are the mammal with the lowest sense of smell cause we have dogs to use it for us
The climax of an old era and the beginning of a new one
>>38041
Dogs were domesticated by anatomically modern humans.
>>36666
>the genesis of evil
>quad6
this is the work of the devil
>>35125
I think we all know what the greatest achievement in history was.
'murka
>>38180
>greatest