Follow TV Tropes

Following

History YMMV / TheCartoonHistoryOfTheUniverse

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* UnintentionalPeriodPiece: ''The Cartoon History of the Modern World'' was written during the Aughts, and it shows. The Professor makes a few references to then-current events, such as criticizing PrivateMilitaryContractors (a reference to Blackwater) and "freedom fries."

to:

* UnintentionalPeriodPiece: ''The Cartoon History of the Modern World'' was written during the Aughts, [[UsefulNotes/The2000s Aughts]], and it shows. The Professor makes a few references to then-current events, such as criticizing PrivateMilitaryContractors (a reference to Blackwater) and "freedom fries."
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* UnintentionalPeriodPiece: ''The Cartoon History of the Modern World'' was written during the Aughts, and it shows. The Professor makes a few references to then-current events, such as criticizing PrivateMilitaryContractors (a reference to Blackwater) and "freedom fries."
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Science Marches On is trivia, not YMMV, and already listed on the work's trivia page.


* ScienceMarchesOn: The earlier books, especially on human evolution, suffer from this.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* MagnificentBastard: [[UnscrupulousHero Themistocles]] proves one of the most cunning and charismatic individuals Ancient Athens ever produced. Born the son of a vegetable vendor, he [[SelfMadeMan rises to become one of the city's leading political voices]], and ostracizes most of his major rivals. Recognizing that the Persian Empire still poses a threat, he recommends that Athens use a rich vein of silver to build a powerful navy. When [[UsefulNotes/GrecoPersianWars Persia invades Greece again]], he fails to gain command of the allied navy, but bribes Spartan admiral Eurybiades into going along with him. After the initial strategy to stop the Persians fails and Athens is destroyed, he successfully lures the Persian fleet into a trap at the [[DecisiveBattle Battle of Salamis]], turning the tide of the war. Once the Persians are defeated, the Athenians return to the rubble of their city to rebuild, but the Spartans forbid them to rebuild their city walls. But Themistocles successfully has them rebuilt on the sly by distracting the Spartans with fake negotiations. Not long after, he gets banished from Athens, but manages to bounce back by relocating to Persian territory, ending his days in the lap of luxury as Governor of Magnesia. One of the few major historical figures to never be portrayed in a demeaning light, Themistocles serves to demonstrate many of AncientGreece's greatest virtues and vices.

to:

* MagnificentBastard: [[UnscrupulousHero Themistocles]] proves one of the most cunning and charismatic individuals Ancient Athens ever produced. Born the son of a vegetable vendor, he [[SelfMadeMan rises to become one of the city's leading political voices]], and ostracizes most of his major rivals. Recognizing that the Persian Empire still poses a threat, he recommends that Athens use a rich vein of silver to build a powerful navy. When [[UsefulNotes/GrecoPersianWars Persia invades Greece again]], he fails to gain command of the allied navy, but bribes Spartan admiral Eurybiades into going along with him. After the initial strategy to stop the Persians fails and Athens is destroyed, he successfully lures the Persian fleet into a trap at the [[DecisiveBattle Battle of Salamis]], turning the tide of the war. Once the Persians are defeated, the Athenians return to the rubble of their city to rebuild, but the Spartans forbid them to rebuild their city walls. But Themistocles successfully has them rebuilt on the sly by distracting the Spartans with fake negotiations. Not long after, he gets banished from Athens, but manages to bounce back by relocating to Persian territory, ending his days in the lap of luxury as Governor of Magnesia. One of the few major historical figures to never be portrayed in a demeaning light, Themistocles serves to demonstrate many of AncientGreece's UsefulNotes/AncientGreece's greatest virtues and vices.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* MagnificentBastard: [UnscrupulousHero Themistocles]] proves one of the most cunning and charismatic individuals Ancient Athens ever produced. Born the son of a vegetable vendor, he [[SelfMadeMan rises to become one of the city's leading political voices]], and ostracizes most of his major rivals. Recognizing that the Persian Empire still poses a threat, he recommends that Athens use a rich vein of silver to build a powerful navy. When [[UsefulNotes/GrecoPersianWars Persia invades Greece again]], he fails to gain command of the allied navy, but bribes Spartan admiral Eurybiades into going along with him. After the initial strategy to stop the Persians fails and Athens is destroyed, he successfully lures the Persian fleet into a trap at the [[DecisiveBattle Battle of Salamis]], turning the tide of the war. Once the Persians are defeated, the Athenians return to the rubble of their city to rebuild, but the Spartans forbid them to rebuild their city walls. But Themistocles successfully has them rebuilt on the sly by distracting the Spartans with fake negotiations. Not long after, he gets banished from Athens, but manages to bounce back by relocating to Persian territory, ending his days in the lap of luxury as Governor of Magnesia. One of the few major historical figures to never be portrayed in a demeaning light, Themistocles serves to demonstrate many of AncientGreece's greatest virtues and vices.

to:

* MagnificentBastard: [UnscrupulousHero [[UnscrupulousHero Themistocles]] proves one of the most cunning and charismatic individuals Ancient Athens ever produced. Born the son of a vegetable vendor, he [[SelfMadeMan rises to become one of the city's leading political voices]], and ostracizes most of his major rivals. Recognizing that the Persian Empire still poses a threat, he recommends that Athens use a rich vein of silver to build a powerful navy. When [[UsefulNotes/GrecoPersianWars Persia invades Greece again]], he fails to gain command of the allied navy, but bribes Spartan admiral Eurybiades into going along with him. After the initial strategy to stop the Persians fails and Athens is destroyed, he successfully lures the Persian fleet into a trap at the [[DecisiveBattle Battle of Salamis]], turning the tide of the war. Once the Persians are defeated, the Athenians return to the rubble of their city to rebuild, but the Spartans forbid them to rebuild their city walls. But Themistocles successfully has them rebuilt on the sly by distracting the Spartans with fake negotiations. Not long after, he gets banished from Athens, but manages to bounce back by relocating to Persian territory, ending his days in the lap of luxury as Governor of Magnesia. One of the few major historical figures to never be portrayed in a demeaning light, Themistocles serves to demonstrate many of AncientGreece's greatest virtues and vices.

Changed: 1399

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Only Themistocles has been approved by the thread.


* MagnificentBastard: Quite a few of them, including Themistocles, Emperor Cyrus, and Sargon.

to:

* MagnificentBastard: Quite [UnscrupulousHero Themistocles]] proves one of the most cunning and charismatic individuals Ancient Athens ever produced. Born the son of a vegetable vendor, he [[SelfMadeMan rises to become one of the city's leading political voices]], and ostracizes most of his major rivals. Recognizing that the Persian Empire still poses a threat, he recommends that Athens use a rich vein of silver to build a powerful navy. When [[UsefulNotes/GrecoPersianWars Persia invades Greece again]], he fails to gain command of the allied navy, but bribes Spartan admiral Eurybiades into going along with him. After the initial strategy to stop the Persians fails and Athens is destroyed, he successfully lures the Persian fleet into a trap at the [[DecisiveBattle Battle of Salamis]], turning the tide of the war. Once the Persians are defeated, the Athenians return to the rubble of their city to rebuild, but the Spartans forbid them to rebuild their city walls. But Themistocles successfully has them rebuilt on the sly by distracting the Spartans with fake negotiations. Not long after, he gets banished from Athens, but manages to bounce back by relocating to Persian territory, ending his days in the lap of luxury as Governor of Magnesia. One of the few major historical figures to never be portrayed in a demeaning light, Themistocles serves to demonstrate many of them, including Themistocles, Emperor Cyrus, AncientGreece's greatest virtues and Sargon.vices.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:


* MagnumOpus: Gonick did his very first volume in comic book form (''Volume 1'') in 1977. That was published in the first collection in 1990. The final volume was published in 2009. That's '''32 years''' working on this, folks.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Moving to proper title.

Added DiffLines:

* AwesomeEgo: The portrayal of some figures, such as Ramses the Great.
* GeniusBonus: Often. Some jokes are pretty funny on their own... unless you know the full depths of what's being referenced; then they get ''hilarious''! For instance, volumes concerning Athenian democracy and the Roman republic are chock full of hints that will go over your head if you're not up to speed on American politics. Any section covering religion/philosophy will have short but sweet summaries of core beliefs and/or points of interest, often using modern idiom (Confucius' focus on protocol, ancient Greece's frequent festivals, Jesus' sayings are paraphrased to emphasize the variety of topics he covered and the variety of ways he did it, and Krishna revealing the mind-blowing nature of what is ''actually'' real to Arjuna in the ''Literature/BhagavadGita'' is truncated to "THIS is real!" [[ShowDontTell and a full-page picture]]). You could just as easily be learning these points by reading them, though.
* MagnificentBastard: Quite a few of them, including Themistocles, Emperor Cyrus, and Sargon.
* MagnumOpus: Gonick did his very first volume in comic book form (''Volume 1'') in 1977. That was published in the first collection in 1990. The final volume was published in 2009. That's '''32 years''' working on this, folks.
* ScienceMarchesOn: The earlier books, especially on human evolution, suffer from this.
----

Top