February 19
Holidays
13 holidays recorded on February 19 throughout history
Quote of the Day
“To know that we know what we know, and to know that we do not know what we do not know, that is true knowledge.”
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Pisces starts when the sun crosses 330 degrees of celestial longitude.
Pisces starts when the sun crosses 330 degrees of celestial longitude. That's the measurement — not vibes, not personality types. Ancient Babylonians mapped it 3,000 years ago as two fish tied together, swimming opposite directions. They saw it as the last constellation before spring, the end of the cycle. Modern astrology kept the symbol but moved the meaning: empathic, dreamy, escapist. The Babylonians just called it "the tails." They were tracking farming seasons, not dating compatibility.
Catholics honor Barbatus of Benevento and Conrad of Piacenza today, celebrating two distinct paths to sanctity.
Catholics honor Barbatus of Benevento and Conrad of Piacenza today, celebrating two distinct paths to sanctity. Barbatus famously converted the Lombards to Christianity during the seventh century, while Conrad abandoned his aristocratic life for a hermitage in Sicily. Their combined legacy provides the Church with enduring models of missionary zeal and radical renunciation of worldly wealth.
Maharashtra celebrates the birth of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj, the 17th-century warrior king who challenged the Mug…
Maharashtra celebrates the birth of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj, the 17th-century warrior king who challenged the Mughal Empire. By establishing the independent Maratha Kingdom and pioneering guerrilla warfare tactics, he created a resilient administrative and military structure that defined regional governance for generations and remains a foundational symbol of self-rule in Indian history.
Barbatus of Benevento convinced an entire Italian city to melt down their golden snake idol and turn it into a commun…
Barbatus of Benevento convinced an entire Italian city to melt down their golden snake idol and turn it into a communion chalice. This was 663 AD. The Lombards had worshiped the snake for generations, hanging it from a sacred tree. Barbatus said the snake or the siege — their choice. They chose the chalice. He's now the patron saint of Benevento, the city that destroyed its own god to survive.
February 19 is celebrated in Eastern Orthodox liturgics, commemorating significant saints and events, reflecting the …
February 19 is celebrated in Eastern Orthodox liturgics, commemorating significant saints and events, reflecting the rich traditions of Orthodox Christianity.
Bulgaria honors Vassil Levski, the Apostle of Freedom, celebrating his role in the fight for national liberation and …
Bulgaria honors Vassil Levski, the Apostle of Freedom, celebrating his role in the fight for national liberation and inspiring generations of Bulgarians.
Turkmenistan celebrates Flag Day on February 19.
Turkmenistan celebrates Flag Day on February 19. The flag is one of the most complex national flags in the world — five carpet patterns run down the left side, each representing a different tribe. In 1997, President Niyazov added an olive branch to symbolize neutrality. Then he wrote a spiritual guidebook called the Ruhnama and put an image of it on the flag itself. A book. On the national flag. When he died in 2006, his successor quietly removed it. The carpet patterns stayed.
The Mexican Army traces its official founding to February 19, 1913, during the Ten Tragic Days — a coup that overthre…
The Mexican Army traces its official founding to February 19, 1913, during the Ten Tragic Days — a coup that overthrew President Francisco Madero. But the date's ironic. The modern professional army was born from chaos, not glory. Madero was murdered. General Victoriano Huerta seized power. The revolution that followed lasted another seven years and killed a million people. Today, Army Day celebrates the institution that emerged from that violence — an army that's stayed out of politics since 1946, a rarity in Latin America. The date honors not the coup, but what came after: the decision to serve the constitution instead of generals.
Romania celebrates the sculptor who refused to work for Rodin.
Romania celebrates the sculptor who refused to work for Rodin. Constantin Brâncuși turned down the offer in 1907, saying "Nothing grows in the shadow of big trees." He spent decades reducing forms to their essence — his "Bird in Space" was so abstract U.S. customs refused to call it art and charged import tax on raw metal. He won the lawsuit. Romania marks his legacy today, honoring the man who made simplicity radical.
Bulgaria honors Vasil Levski, hanged by Ottoman authorities in 1873 near Sofia.
Bulgaria honors Vasil Levski, hanged by Ottoman authorities in 1873 near Sofia. He was 35. The executioner botched it — the rope was too long, so Levski didn't die instantly. He strangled slowly while the crowd watched. He'd founded a network of secret committees across Bulgaria, all funded by his own manual labor. He worked as a teacher and a monk to avoid suspicion. When they caught him, they found detailed plans for an uprising in his coat. Bulgarians call him the Apostle of Freedom. His body was never found.
Aquarius ends today — or tomorrow, or yesterday, depending on who you ask.
Aquarius ends today — or tomorrow, or yesterday, depending on who you ask. The sun doesn't care about zodiac boundaries. It moves through the ecliptic at its own pace, crossing from Aquarius to Pisces over about 36 hours. Different astrologers use different calculation methods: tropical, sidereal, whole-sign houses. Same sky, different interpretations. Your sun sign isn't fixed by date alone. It's determined by the exact minute you were born and which system your astrologer trusts.
Bulgaria stops on February 19 to remember the man they hanged for trying to free them.
Bulgaria stops on February 19 to remember the man they hanged for trying to free them. Vasil Levski organized a network of secret radical committees across Bulgaria when it was still under Ottoman rule. He traveled on foot, alone, disguised as a monk or merchant, building cells in nearly every Bulgarian town. He was caught in 1873 near Lovech after an informant sold him out for 500 Turkish lira. The Ottomans hanged him outside Sofia. No grave marker, no ceremony—they wanted him forgotten. Bulgaria named everything after him instead. The Apostle of Freedom, they call him. The man who died before the revolution he organized actually succeeded.
Discordians celebrate chaos today.
Discordians celebrate chaos today. The religion started as a joke in a California bowling alley in 1958 when two friends decided every religion took itself too seriously. They wrote a fake scripture called the Principia Discordia. It caught on. Now thousands observe five annual chaos holidays, worship a Greek goddess of discord, and follow one core belief: the opposite of chaos isn't order, it's boredom. The Church of the SubGenius borrowed from it. So did parts of Anonymous.