Posted on 10/14/2012 8:02:34 AM PDT by trailhkr1
What would they be? A gun? Then you are only allowed to bring 2 bullets..see how that works?? Some basic ground rules..has to be a realistic items you can get you hands on today..no tanks etc. You are going with just the clothes on your back + the 3 items to survive an mingle with the folks of the day. Never coming back.
Saw this question on another site and wanted to see what you guys would come up with..I will post that link tomorrow after everyone has a chance to come up with their ideas..some people came up with good ideas (detailed history text of the time in Europe, antibiotics) and other people's ideas..not so much.
Probably the highest grade stainless steel knife I could find.
The best general purpose teflon pan. (big enough to make soups, also able to fry eggs)
An extra pair of shoes. (counting that as one item, I think that still fits the rules)
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How about just after Gettysburg?
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Laughing at all of you bring computers etc..being burnt at the stake for being a demon...
2. Handbook/methods for steelmaking
Did you happen to watch Nova this week. Fascinating show about the Ulfberht sword, make around 900-1000 AD.
Made out of steel, the quality of which was not seen again for 1000 years.
Guy from Wisconsin figured out how they did it and recreated the sword. Smelted his own steel from iron ore, forged it, even did the inlaid name Ulfberht.
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Always a possibility but a lot more portable than the Encyclopedia Britannica!
A lot of pathogens that beset us today did not exist in 742 AD. AIDS is one obvious one, the common cold was not recorded prior to 1660. The plague only goes back to 1340, malaria maybe 1600. In prehistorical times, deadly pathogens would kill off a local population and then, they would die out because there was no one left to infect. Diseases like smallpox and leprosy persisted because they took longer to do kill a person. We are the descendants of the survivors, the people who had resistance to the worst pathogens. Native Americans, for instance, did not, so when they contacted Europeans, their populations had not been through the winnowing process.
a phased plasma rifle in the 40 watt range.
Good ideas but as the other site said you might be killed for being a heretic by the religious leaders of the day if you go overboard.
Native Americans were just as wormongering as Europeans. Why do you think they would have acted differently if the Aztec built ships and "discovered" Europe instead of the other way around?
Bringing a Bible makes sense...the ones available at the time were only hand-scribed by monks in monasteries, with only priests and abbotts/abbosesses had them.
Detailed medical volume.
Detailed chemistry volume.
English-Latin Dictionary.
That was the book I read, they actually made the rifle and the albeit smoky bullets but the chrome lined barrel gave them a problem.
But I would not try to advance Europe, I would rather start an empire in Australia, so by the time white man comes around the continent has superior tech, centuries ahead.
The Farmer’s Almanacs are all done specifically for the year in which they are published, as well as being specific to a geographic location. Not helpful for the 8th century AD.
I’d imagine such a time traveling person would be viewed with suspicion so a weapon or personal protection should be one of the three. I’d go for kevlar body armor, discrete, could be worn under period clothing to blend in. As big a box of antibiotics as permissible would be another, those were plague years. For the last, I’d go for a set of DIY books with a survivalist bent, like the Foxfire series.
Then, I’d have to swallow my American distaste for such things and engratiate myself to the local lord as quickly as possible, lol.
Solar powered Fleshlight
Solar powered Electromagnetic Laser Gun
The World’s Largest Yodel
So much for taking a bar of bath soap.
Penicillin making equipment with instructions.
Book of how to make stuff.
Extensive book of botanicals.
For example ... a Garmin GPS unit with a solar power supply would be a no-brainer to me, but am I assuming that there are satellites in orbit to make the Garmin work correctly?
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