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November 27 in History

Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Chaim Weizmann, Charles Scott Sherrington, and Elizabeth Stride.

Pope Urban II Calls for Crusade: Jerusalem to Be Recaptured
1095Event

Pope Urban II Calls for Crusade: Jerusalem to Be Recaptured

Pope Urban II's call mobilized knights and peasants from across Western Europe to march on Jerusalem, where they captured the city in July 1099 after a brutal massacre of its inhabitants. This violent expedition established four Crusader states and reopened international trade routes between East and West that had been closed since the fall of the Roman Empire.

Famous Birthdays

Chaim Weizmann
Chaim Weizmann

1874–1952

Charles Scott Sherrington

Charles Scott Sherrington

1857–1952

Elizabeth Stride

Elizabeth Stride

1843–1888

Konosuke Matsushita

Konosuke Matsushita

1894–1989

Al Jackson

Al Jackson

d. 1975

Andries Pretorius

Andries Pretorius

1798–1853

Charles A. Beard

Charles A. Beard

b. 1874

Emperor Xiaozong of Song (d. 1194)

Emperor Xiaozong of Song (d. 1194)

b. 1127

Fe del Mundo

Fe del Mundo

1911–2011

Françoise d'Aubigné

Françoise d'Aubigné

1635–1719

Lars Onsager

Lars Onsager

1903–1976

Laurent-Désiré Kabila

Laurent-Désiré Kabila

d. 2001

Historical Events

Pope Urban II's call mobilized knights and peasants from across Western Europe to march on Jerusalem, where they captured the city in July 1099 after a brutal massacre of its inhabitants. This violent expedition established four Crusader states and reopened international trade routes between East and West that had been closed since the fall of the Roman Empire.
1095

Pope Urban II's call mobilized knights and peasants from across Western Europe to march on Jerusalem, where they captured the city in July 1099 after a brutal massacre of its inhabitants. This violent expedition established four Crusader states and reopened international trade routes between East and West that had been closed since the fall of the Roman Empire.

Ada Lovelace passed away in 1852 after spending her final years refining Charles Babbage's analytical engine, a project that cemented her legacy as the world's first computer programmer. Her visionary notes on how the machine could manipulate symbols beyond mere calculation laid the concrete foundation for modern software development.
1852

Ada Lovelace passed away in 1852 after spending her final years refining Charles Babbage's analytical engine, a project that cemented her legacy as the world's first computer programmer. Her visionary notes on how the machine could manipulate symbols beyond mere calculation laid the concrete foundation for modern software development.

Alfred Nobel signs his final will at the Swedish-Norwegian Club in Paris, redirecting his entire fortune to fund annual awards for those who advance humanity. This act instantly transforms a man known for inventing dynamite into the architect of global recognition for peace, literature, and science.
1895

Alfred Nobel signs his final will at the Swedish-Norwegian Club in Paris, redirecting his entire fortune to fund annual awards for those who advance humanity. This act instantly transforms a man known for inventing dynamite into the architect of global recognition for peace, literature, and science.

The French navy deliberately sinks its entire fleet at Toulon to deny Adolf Hitler a prize he desperately needed. This act of defiance strips the German Kriegsmarine of critical naval assets while proving that even under occupation, France would not surrender its sovereignty without a fight.
1942

The French navy deliberately sinks its entire fleet at Toulon to deny Adolf Hitler a prize he desperately needed. This act of defiance strips the German Kriegsmarine of critical naval assets while proving that even under occupation, France would not surrender its sovereignty without a fight.

Former supervisor Dan White gunned down Mayor George Moscone and City Supervisor Harvey Milk in San Francisco, triggering the "White Night" riots that erupted days later when a lenient sentence for the killer sparked outrage across the city. This tragedy galvanized the LGBTQ+ community into a powerful political force, directly fueling the passage of California's first statewide anti-discrimination law protecting sexual orientation just two years later.
1978

Former supervisor Dan White gunned down Mayor George Moscone and City Supervisor Harvey Milk in San Francisco, triggering the "White Night" riots that erupted days later when a lenient sentence for the killer sparked outrage across the city. This tragedy galvanized the LGBTQ+ community into a powerful political force, directly fueling the passage of California's first statewide anti-discrimination law protecting sexual orientation just two years later.

1975

Provisional IRA gunmen assassinated Ross McWhirter, co-founder of the Guinness Book of Records, at his London doorstep days after he publicly offered a reward for information on the IRA's English bombing campaign. The killing silenced one of the most prominent civilian voices opposing IRA violence and demonstrated the organization's willingness to target public figures on British soil.

25

Emperor Guangwu had just clawed back a dynasty from total collapse. After civil war shredded the Han empire apart, he didn't rebuild where his predecessors sat — he moved east, planting his court in Luoyang, a city 340 kilometers from the old capital Chang'an. That single decision reshaped Chinese civilization for nearly two centuries. Luoyang became a center of scholarship, Buddhism's early Chinese home, and a city of one million souls. But here's the twist: Guangwu wasn't restoring the Han. He was quietly building something new.

176

Commodus was fifteen. That's how old Marcus Aurelius trusted with command of Rome's entire military machine. The philosopher-emperor, famous for his restraint and wisdom, handed supreme military authority to a teenager who'd shown almost none of those qualities. And Rome noticed. Commodus would eventually rule as a god-emperor who fought gladiators and renamed the city after himself. But the real shock isn't what Commodus became — it's that the man who wrote *Meditations* chose legacy over merit.

511

Four sons. One kingdom. Zero agreement on who gets what. Clovis I had unified the Franks through brutal conquest and shrewd conversion to Christianity, but his death at Paris left everything he'd built instantly fractured. Theuderic, Chlodomer, Childebert, and Chlothar each grabbed a capital — Metz, Orléans, Paris, Soissons — and ruled in parallel. The division didn't destroy the Merovingians immediately, but it planted the instability that would slowly hollow them out. The man who united Francia spent his last years ensuring it couldn't stay that way.

602

Usurper Phocas forces Byzantine Emperor Maurice to watch the execution of his five sons before beheading the deposed ruler himself. This brutal coup shattered imperial stability, plunging the Eastern Roman Empire into a decade of chaos that drained resources and weakened defenses against Persian invasions.

602

Five sons. One father. All dead before he was. Emperor Maurice didn't just lose power in 602 — he watched his boys killed one by one before the blade finally reached him. The soldier who ordered it, Phocas, was a low-ranking centurion who'd mutinied over unpaid wages. Their heads went on public display in Constantinople. And that brutality backfired spectacularly — it gave Persia's Khosrow II the justification to launch a devastating war that would bleed Byzantium nearly to collapse.

1295

Lancashire almost didn't matter. Edward I didn't summon representatives out of democratic idealism — he needed money for wars in France and Scotland, and taxing people worked better with their reluctant cooperation. Two knights from Lancashire rode to Westminster, representing a county of farmers and mill towns. But that practical bargain — consent in exchange for cash — quietly rewired how power worked in England. The Model Parliament wasn't a gift to the people. It was a king's fundraising strategy that accidentally built modern democracy.

1382

Barquq ousted Al-Salih Hajji on November 27, 1382, to seize power for himself. This coup ended the Turkic Bahri Mamluk era and installed the Circassian Burji dynasty as Egypt's new rulers. The shift in leadership fundamentally altered the region's military and political landscape for centuries.

1542

Conspirators from the Jiajing Emperor's inner circle attempted a desperate regicide on November 27, 1542, only to fail spectacularly. The emperor survived the attack, but twelve palace women faced execution by slow-slicing in a brutal display of imperial retribution that cemented his paranoia and tightened control over the Forbidden City for decades.

1863

Meade had Lee exactly where he wanted him. The Union commander massed 69,000 men along Mine Run Creek in Virginia, ready to crush a Confederate force half that size. Then his generals looked closer at the rebel entrenchments — and went pale. The earthworks were simply too strong. Meade called the whole thing off, sparing thousands of lives. Lee reportedly waited, almost disappointed, for an attack that never came. And that restraint? It's why Meade kept his command long enough to face Lee again at the Wilderness.

Fun Facts

Zodiac Sign

Sagittarius

Nov 22 -- Dec 21

Fire sign. Optimistic, adventurous, and philosophical.

Birthstone

Topaz

Golden / Blue

Symbolizes friendship, generosity, and joy.

Next Birthday

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days until November 27

Quote of the Day

“It's funny the way most people love the dead. Once you're dead, you're made for life.”

Jimi Hendrix

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