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untitled by laineylamonto on Flickr.
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A look ahead… 60 years ago.
ca. 1867, “The Shirt of the Emperor, Worn during His Execution”, François Aubert
This grisly photograph depicts the bullet-riddled shirt of the Austrian Archduke Maximilian I, who was appointed Emperor of Mexico by Napoleon III in 1864. Maximilian’s puppet regime lasted only three years; when the French army withdrew from Mexico in 1867, he was captured, tried, and executed by the nationalist supporters of Benito Juarez. Aubert, a French photographer working in Mexico, photographed Maximilian’s corpse and clothing, producing a sensational and somewhat gruesome record of the execution and the politically charged relics of the slain emperor.
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I kinda want to make a movie just so I can cast this man as the conveyer of a life-morphing wisdom that allows the hero to complete his quest.
Eek, really with the Magical Negro cliche? dang.
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Laurel aitken

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