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The Statue of Liberty's torch was damaged in an explosion during World War I. |
U.S. History |
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By the Numbers | |||||||||
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Archduke Franz Ferdinand's license plate displayed the date of Armistice Day. | |||||||||
On June 28, 1914, Archduke Franz Ferdinand — heir to the Austro-Hungarian Empire — was assassinated while driving around Sarajevo in his open-topped touring car. The event was one of the first dominoes to fall in a complicated geopolitical web of alliances that eventually culminated in the Great War. In a striking coincidence, on the day the archduke was assassinated, the license plate number on his car displayed "A III 118." Many have since pointed out that the number could be read as "Armistice 11/11/18," a reference to Armistice Day, the day World War I came to an end in Western Europe. Even though the German word for "armistice" starts with a "w" ("waffenstillstand") and the three characters on the license plate are actually the letter "I" rather than the number "1," the plate has long been seen as a prophetic message foreshadowing the war. | |||||||||
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