Thursday, 25 September 2025

Scenes from History

 See It On A Postcard's Thursday Postcard Hunt is looking at History

Der Rütlischwur (The Rütli Oath) - by Ernst Stuckelberg

One of the murals in William Tell's Chapel by Lake Lucerene tells the story of the Rutli Oath which was taken at the foundation of the Old Swiss Confederacy by the three founding cantons. It is named after the site of the oath, the Rütli, a meadow above the lake. 

The Greek War of Independence from Ottoman rule. The city of Missolonghi was one of the first to rise against the Turks in 1821. Trying to get the city back the sultan sent troops to suppress the revolution, which failed. He sent a larger force in 1825 and a siege of the city began, lasting a year. The Greeks could not get food through the Turkish encirclement and people started dying. Eventually the citizens decided to secretly leave the city on the night of 10th April 1826 but their plan was betrayed and when they opened the gates in the middle of the night the Turks attacked killing all the women and children and most of the soldiers.   (The stamp is  a painting entitled 'Flight from Missolonghi' from the 1982 Europa theme of Historic Events)
A view that spans the centuries in Rome, not a chariot in sight but there are some cute 20th century cars. The Pyramid of Cestius, built outside the city walls in 18-12 BC as a tomb for Gaius Cestius stands between two ancient roads.  The entrance at that time was named Porta Osttiensis after one  of the roads.  The famous entrance shown on the card was built in the 3rd Century and is known as Porta San Paulo This is the gate the Ostrogoth entered breaking the Siege of Rome 549-50 and sacking the city. They were let in by hungry and disillusioned guards who believed the promises of the Ostrogoth that they would not be harmed. 

3 comments:

Mail Adventures said...

Very interesting postcards! I like the third the best, because I remember a long walk in Rome just to see that pyramid :)

violet s said...

Sieges never end well. that Rome card really shows perspective with the few cars (not blocking any view)

marina said...

Great cards! I love the bits of history that accompany them.