Bitcoin ‘Peace’ Defats ’Fiat’ War
There are many Layers of meaning in this gem artwork.
This object was found at the site of a fierce battle where an artillery duel between the Austro-Hungarian and Russian armies took place in 1914.
It is a fragment of a 76-mm Russian shrapnel shell that the Russians used to fire at the positions of the Austro-Hungarian army.
Here is a photo from the battlefield, where unexploded shells and a large number of shell fragments are still being found.
From this height, the Austro-Hungarian troops did not allow the Russian army to advance immediately
HERE IS A DESCRIPTION FROM THE BATTLEFIELD
A large-scale artillery duel began on Saturday, 1914, on the feast of the Intercession. Every day, from dawn to dusk, the guns fired continuously. As a result of the bombardment, many villagers’ houses burned down, and the middle part of the village suffered the most. People fled. Interesting information was gathered from witnesses at the time: on Sunday, the battlefield was quiet, no one fired from either side, so people who had left their homes visited the village, although the shelling started again on Monday. The Russians made two attempts to storm the Austro-Hungarian fortifications. Both attempts were unsuccessful. The Austro-Hungarian soldiers successfully mowed them down with shrapnel fire from the Kanon position and machine guns from Mount Ostrohirka.







