Most people in history probably lived and died within a 10 kilometer radius, what are some exceptions?

Most people in history probably lived and died within a 10 kilometer radius, what are some exceptions?
Favorite example would have to be Edward Day Cohota, Chinese guy who managed to find his way into the battlefields of the American Civil War. Also Ibn Battuta, who managed to travel everywhere between North Africa and China

Johann Schiltberger, born 1380 near Munich, went on a crusade, fought at the battle of Nicopolis, became a slave of the Turks, later fought as a Turkish soldier at the battle of Ankara, was taken prisoner by Timur, rode with Timur into Persia and India as a soldier, was made a gift to a Khan from the Golden Horde, traveled Siberia with the GH and then miraculously made it back home to Bavaria after 30 years of slavery.
He wrote a book about his experiences, and the countries he traveled. Pretty fucking awesome.

Aleksandar Lekso Saičić

The Samurai fear the Serbs

Yang Kyoungjong
He first had to fight for the Japanese, then got captured by the Russians and got put into the Red Army, then got captured by the Germans and got put into Wehrmacht, and then got captured by the Americans.

The original siamese twins. Two conjoined twins bought from their mother in thailand by a ship captain and presented around europe and north america as a freakshow. Eventually they settled down in North Carolina, married locals, bought land and slaves, had a dozen children and sent their sons to fight for the Confederacy.

Awesome

I thought interracial marriage was illegal back then

Miscegenation laws varied, but most states only banned marriage between blacks and whites and native americans and whites

>had a dozen children and sent their sons to fight for the Confederacy

dude

Interracial in America means black/white, haven't you been on pornhub.

Natives and whites could always marry, it was extremely common. Most Cherokee leaders were half white.

>deformed asian twins can get married to white women, have a dozen children, and be successful in a completely foreign land
>i can't even get a gf

Don't forget: Super Racist foreign land.

A;so, in the very early colonial history, white settler women frequently preferred the more egalitarian societies of East Coast native tribes

>tfw you'll never collect white women, slaves, and property with your conjoined thai twin

Did one of them stare at the ceiling while the other had sex?

lol that sounds like a polite way of explaining away indians kidnapping colonist women, which was extremely common in indian society. Most marriages were economic though, at least in the southeast. Indian tribes were matrilineal while europeans were patrilineal, therefore high status indian leaders could marry their daughters to high status white settlers so that the sons would inherit titles from both worlds.

Napoleon
Born in Corsica, lived all over Europe, died in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean

Irish weren't considered white so they technically weren't breaking any laws.

>Irish weren't considered white
Not this meme again

many people have heard of William Adams, the first white samurai, but there was also Yasuke, the first (and only) black samurai. He originally travelled to Japan as the servant to an Italian Jesuit missionary, but after a meeting Nobunaga Oda took such a liking to him he made Yasuke (original name unknown) into a retainer. He served until Nobunaga's death at Honnouji, known to have been spared by Akechi Mitsuhide but faded into history afterwards.

Only for whites and blacks/Native Americans.

Most states outside of the West never bothered drafting anti-misgenation laws for Asians (not enough of them around to justify it).

They actually had a rotating weeklong schedule on when they could have sex with their wives.

Ambassador Zhang Qian of Han Dynasty China was the first Chinese to go through an extensive whirlwind trip outside of China. Initially he was sent to secure an alliance with the Yuezhi versus the Xiongnu steppe nomad confederation, but the Xiongnu captured his party. They managed to escape and became hopelessly lost, wandering around Iranic Central Asia and bits of Iran itself and afghanistan.

Zhang Qian was unfazed however and kept an open report of the kingdoms he visited. He chatted with high officials, hill kings, and city state leaders and learned of other states such as Syria, Parthian Persia, India, and so on. His country of origin was recognized when he reached the place where the Ferghana Greek colonists lived and they promptly escorted him back to China. Of the 100 strong embassy sent to the Yuezhi, only Zhang Qian and his steppe nomad guide named Ganfu survived the trip home.

His reports and the maps he drew up pretty much led to the intensification of trade westwards by the Han Dynasty. Hence he is often erroneously considered the jumpstarter of the Silk Route.

This is a mural of Zhang Qian in some ministerial building of foreign affairs in China, I think.

Read a book nigger