Today In History logo TIH

On this day

June 28

Shot in Sarajevo: The Spark That Ignited WWI (1914). North Korea Seizes Seoul: Korean War Escalates (1950). Notable births include Hans Blix (1928), Muhammad Yunus (1940), Jon Nödtveidt (1975).

Featured

Shot in Sarajevo: The Spark That Ignited WWI
1914Event

Shot in Sarajevo: The Spark That Ignited WWI

A teenage assassin with a pistol and a borrowed sandwich stop killed an archduke and started a war that destroyed four empires. On June 28, 1914, Gavrilo Princip, a 19-year-old Bosnian Serb nationalist, shot Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife Sophie at point-blank range as their motorcade took a wrong turn in Sarajevo. The double murder triggered a chain of ultimatums, mobilizations, and treaty obligations that plunged Europe into the deadliest conflict the world had ever seen. Franz Ferdinand was heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne and had traveled to Sarajevo to observe military maneuvers, arriving on the Serbian national holiday of Vidovdan, a date loaded with symbolic provocation. A group of six assassins from the Black Hand, a Serbian nationalist organization, had positioned themselves along the archduke’s motorcade route. The first attempt, a bomb thrown by Nedeljko Čabrinović, bounced off the archduke’s car and exploded under the vehicle behind, wounding several people. Franz Ferdinand continued to city hall, furious but unharmed. The assassination succeeded only through an extraordinary accident. After the ceremony, the archduke’s driver took a wrong turn onto Franz Josef Street and stalled the car while trying to reverse. Princip, who had given up and wandered to a nearby delicatessen, found himself five feet from the stationary vehicle. He fired two shots: one struck Sophie in the abdomen, the other hit Franz Ferdinand in the neck. Both died within the hour. Austria-Hungary, backed by Germany, issued an ultimatum to Serbia that was designed to be rejected. Serbia’s partial acceptance was deemed insufficient, and Austria declared war on July 28. Russia mobilized to defend Serbia, Germany declared war on Russia and France, and Britain entered when Germany violated Belgian neutrality. Within six weeks, most of Europe was at war. By the time the fighting ended in 1918, more than 20 million people were dead, the Ottoman, Austro-Hungarian, German, and Russian empires had collapsed, and the political map of the world had been permanently redrawn.

North Korea Seizes Seoul: Korean War Escalates
1950

North Korea Seizes Seoul: Korean War Escalates

Seoul fell in three days, and the speed of the collapse stunned military planners who had assumed South Korea could hold for weeks. On June 28, 1950, North Korean forces captured the South Korean capital after crossing the Han River bridges, which South Korean engineers had prematurely demolished while thousands of their own retreating soldiers and civilian refugees were still crossing. An estimated 500 to 800 people died on the bridges, and much of the South Korean army’s heavy equipment was trapped north of the river. The North Korean advance was spearheaded by 150 Soviet-built T-34 tanks, against which the South Korean army had no effective defense. The Republic of Korea possessed no tanks, no anti-tank weapons capable of penetrating T-34 armor, and no combat aircraft. South Korean soldiers, many of whom had never seen a tank, broke and fled when the armored columns appeared. President Syngman Rhee’s government had evacuated Seoul the previous day, and the decision to blow the bridges was made in panic by a South Korean army colonel who was later court-martialed and executed. North Korean troops entering Seoul immediately began rounding up government officials, police officers, and anyone associated with the Rhee regime. Over the following three months of occupation, North Korean security forces executed an estimated 20,000 to 30,000 South Korean civilians, burying many in mass graves that were not discovered until after the city’s recapture. The occupation also destroyed much of Seoul’s infrastructure, as the retreating South Koreans had burned government buildings and the advancing North Koreans looted what remained. General MacArthur’s amphibious landing at Inchon on September 15, 1950, cut North Korean supply lines and forced the rapid abandonment of Seoul. The city was recaptured on September 28, then lost again to Chinese forces in January 1951, and retaken a final time in March 1951. By the end of the war, Seoul had changed hands four times, and roughly 75 percent of the city lay in ruins.

Tyson Bites Holyfield: Boxing Chaos Erupts
1997

Tyson Bites Holyfield: Boxing Chaos Erupts

Mike Tyson leaned into a clinch and bit a chunk out of Evander Holyfield’s right ear on live television, producing the most bizarre moment in boxing history and ending his own career as a credible heavyweight contender. The incident occurred during the third round of their WBA Heavyweight Championship rematch at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas on June 28, 1997, with more than 16,000 spectators and a pay-per-view audience of nearly two million watching in disbelief. Tyson entered the fight desperate to avenge his loss to Holyfield seven months earlier, a match that had been stopped in the eleventh round after Holyfield dominated with superior boxing skills and relentless head movement. Tyson’s camp had complained that Holyfield used deliberate headbutts throughout the first fight without penalty, and Tyson appeared to stew over the perceived injustice for months. When the rematch began, Holyfield again employed aggressive tactics that kept Tyson off balance. The first bite came two minutes into the third round. After a clinch, Tyson spat out his mouthpiece and bit down on Holyfield’s right ear, tearing off a piece of cartilage roughly one inch long and spitting it onto the canvas. Referee Mills Lane deducted two points but allowed the fight to continue, a decision he later called the biggest mistake of his career. Seconds later, Tyson bit Holyfield’s left ear. Lane stopped the fight and disqualified Tyson, who had to be restrained by security as a near-riot erupted in the arena. The Nevada State Athletic Commission revoked Tyson’s boxing license and fined him $3 million, the maximum allowed. His license was restored after fifteen months, but Tyson never recaptured the devastating form that had made him the youngest heavyweight champion in history at age 20. He fought for another eight years, losing to Lennox Lewis and Danny Williams before retiring in 2005. The ear-biting incident became the defining image of his career’s decline, eclipsing a record that included 44 knockouts in 50 victories.

Versailles Signed: WWI Ends, Seeds of War Sown
1919

Versailles Signed: WWI Ends, Seeds of War Sown

Delegates from 32 nations gathered in the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles to sign the treaty that ended the Great War and planted the seeds of an even greater one. On June 28, 1919, exactly five years after the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, Germany signed the Treaty of Versailles, accepting responsibility for the war and agreeing to punishing terms that would destabilize European politics for the next two decades. The treaty was the product of six months of negotiations in Paris, dominated by the "Big Four": Woodrow Wilson of the United States, Georges Clemenceau of France, David Lloyd George of Britain, and Vittorio Orlando of Italy. Their goals were fundamentally incompatible. Wilson wanted a just peace built around his Fourteen Points and a new League of Nations. Clemenceau, whose country had suffered 1.4 million dead and enormous physical destruction, demanded security guarantees and punitive reparations. Lloyd George navigated between them, seeking to weaken Germany without destroying it. The terms imposed on Germany were severe. Article 231, the "war guilt clause," forced Germany to accept sole responsibility for the conflict. The treaty stripped Germany of 13 percent of its territory and 10 percent of its population, eliminated its air force, reduced its army to 100,000 men, and imposed reparations eventually set at 132 billion gold marks, equivalent to roughly $400 billion today. Germany’s delegation was given no opportunity to negotiate and signed under threat of resumed hostilities. The treaty’s harshest critics proved prophetic. John Maynard Keynes resigned from the British delegation and published "The Economic Consequences of the Peace," predicting the reparations would cripple Germany’s economy and breed resentment. Marshal Ferdinand Foch of France took the opposite view, calling the treaty too lenient and predicting it would last only twenty years. The armistice he predicted expired almost exactly on schedule: Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939, twenty years and sixty-four days after Versailles was signed.

Nagashino Falls: Gunpowder Unifies Japan Under Nobunaga
1575

Nagashino Falls: Gunpowder Unifies Japan Under Nobunaga

Three thousand soldiers armed with matchlock rifles crouched behind wooden palisades and waited for the most feared cavalry in Japan to charge straight into their guns. At the Battle of Nagashino on June 29, 1575, Oda Nobunaga deployed massed firearms in a defensive formation that destroyed the mounted samurai of the Takeda clan, demonstrating that gunpowder weapons could neutralize even the most elite traditional warriors. The Takeda clan under Katsuyori, son of the legendary Takeda Shingen, had besieged Nagashino Castle in Mikawa Province to expand their territory at the expense of Nobunaga’s ally, Tokugawa Ieyasu. Nobunaga marched to relieve the siege with approximately 30,000 troops, including a contingent of 3,000 ashigaru armed with arquebuses. He chose a position behind the Shidaragahara, a narrow plain crossed by streams and marshland, and ordered the construction of wooden stockades to protect his gunners. Katsuyori, commanding roughly 15,000 troops including his elite cavalry, ordered a series of frontal charges against the stockades. The traditional account holds that Nobunaga arranged his gunners in rotating volleys, with each rank firing while the others reloaded, maintaining continuous fire. Whether this rotation system was actually used is debated by historians, but the result is not: Takeda’s cavalry was shredded by concentrated gunfire as they attempted to cross the open ground. Successive charges broke against the palisades, and the Takeda lost an estimated 10,000 men, including eight of Katsuyori’s senior generals. Nagashino did not introduce firearms to Japanese warfare, as guns had been present since Portuguese traders brought them in 1543. But the battle demonstrated their decisive potential when used in large numbers with proper tactical coordination. The Takeda clan never recovered from the defeat, and Katsuyori was destroyed by a combined Oda-Tokugawa campaign seven years later. Nobunaga’s integration of firepower with disciplined infantry became the template for the armies that would complete Japan’s unification.

Quote of the Day

“Of all losses, time is the most irrecuperable for it can never be redeemed.”

Historical events

Sarin Gas Kills Seven in Matsumoto: Cult Attack Undetected
1994

Sarin Gas Kills Seven in Matsumoto: Cult Attack Undetected

Members of the Japanese doomsday cult Aum Shinrikyo released sarin nerve gas from a converted refrigerator truck in a quiet residential neighborhood of Matsumoto, Nagano Prefecture, on the night of June 27, 1994, killing seven people and injuring roughly 660 others in what was later recognized as a rehearsal for the Tokyo subway attack nine months later. The target was a dormitory housing three judges who were about to rule against Aum Shinrikyo in a real estate dispute. Cult members parked a truck fitted with a heater and fan system near the apartment complex and released a cloud of sarin, a nerve agent originally developed by Nazi Germany, into the evening air. The gas drifted through open windows in the summer heat, causing victims to collapse with symptoms including constricted pupils, difficulty breathing, convulsions, and loss of consciousness. Japanese police initially suspected Yoshiyuki Kōno, a resident whose wife was among the most seriously injured victims, of manufacturing the gas from agricultural chemicals. Kōno endured months of media persecution and police surveillance while the actual perpetrators continued operating freely. Investigators found pesticide chemicals on his property and leaked information suggesting his guilt to reporters, destroying his reputation and career. His wife remained in a coma for fourteen years before dying in 2008. The Matsumoto attack should have unraveled Aum Shinrikyo’s operations. Soil samples from the site contained residues consistent with military-grade nerve agent production, and a chemical weapons expert publicly identified sarin as the poison within days. But police did not seriously investigate the cult until after the March 20, 1995, Tokyo subway attack, which killed thirteen people and injured thousands. Cult leader Shoko Asahara and twelve other members were eventually sentenced to death for the Matsumoto, Tokyo, and other attacks, with the executions carried out in 2018.

Ottomans Crush Serbia at Kosovo: Balkans Fall Open
1389

Ottomans Crush Serbia at Kosovo: Balkans Fall Open

Both leaders died on the same battlefield, and the myths born from their blood shaped Balkan politics for six centuries. At the Battle of Kosovo on June 28, 1389, Ottoman forces under Sultan Murad I defeated a coalition of Serbian, Bosnian, and other Balkan Christian forces led by Prince Lazar Hrebeljnović, in an engagement that determined the fate of southeastern Europe for the next five hundred years. The battle took place on the Kosovo Polje, the "Field of Blackbirds," near the modern city of Pristina. Murad’s Ottoman army, estimated at 27,000 to 40,000 troops, included elite Janissary infantry and heavy cavalry from across the expanding empire. Lazar’s coalition numbered perhaps 15,000 to 25,000, drawn from Serbian, Bosnian, Albanian, and other Balkan contingents. The battle was the largest military engagement in the region’s history and the first time a major European coalition had assembled specifically to stop Ottoman expansion. Murad was killed before or during the battle, stabbed by a Serbian knight named Miloš Obilić, who either infiltrated the Ottoman camp under false pretenses or fought his way to the sultan during the engagement. Command passed to Murad’s son Bayezid, who completed the victory and had Lazar executed after his capture. The losses on both sides were devastating, but the Ottoman Empire could replace its casualties from its vast territories, while Serbia could not. Kosovo did not immediately end Serbian independence, but it fatally weakened the Serbian state. Serbia became an Ottoman vassal within a decade and was fully absorbed into the empire by 1459. The battle acquired enormous mythological significance in Serbian culture, with Lazar cast as a Christ-like martyr who chose a heavenly kingdom over earthly victory. This mythology was deliberately revived by Serbian nationalists in the twentieth century, most notoriously by Slobodan Milošević in his 1989 speech at the 600th anniversary of the battle, which helped fuel the Yugoslav Wars of the 1990s.

Daily Newsletter

Get today's history delivered every morning.

Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Born on June 28

Portrait of Hussein bin Abdullah
Hussein bin Abdullah 1994

He was nineteen when his father, King Abdullah II, stripped his uncle Prince Hamzah of the crown prince title and handed it to him instead.

Read more

No ceremony. No announcement. Just a royal decree. Hussein had been studying at Sandhurst, England's elite military academy, weeks earlier. And now he was heir to one of the Middle East's most strategically critical thrones. In 2022, his wedding to Rajwa Al Saif drew 1,700 guests and briefly unified regional leaders who rarely share the same room.

Portrait of Mike White
Mike White 1970

He pitched *The White Lotus* after a brutal stretch of career disappointment — not triumph.

Read more

White had spent years writing broad studio comedies he didn't love, including *School of Rock* and *Nacho Libre*, before HBO gave him space to make something genuinely strange. Season one shot in a Hawaii hotel during COVID lockdown, cast and crew trapped together. That pressure bled into the show. It won ten Emmys. And the hotel — the Four Seasons Maui — reported a massive spike in bookings immediately after.

Portrait of Chayanne
Chayanne 1968

Before he was a solo star, Chayanne was a teenager in a Puerto Rican boy band called Los Chicos, rehearsing…

Read more

choreography in San Juan while most kids his age were in school. He left at 17. Alone. No guaranteed contract, no backup plan — just the bet that he could carry a stage by himself. He could. His 1988 self-titled debut went gold across Latin America, and his 1994 tour sold out arenas in countries where he'd never performed. He didn't just leave Los Chicos. He made them a footnote.

Portrait of Klaus von Klitzing
Klaus von Klitzing 1943

He discovered one of the most precise measurements in physics by accident, on a night he wasn't supposed to be running…

Read more

the experiment at all. February 1980, Grenoble. Klaus von Klitzing was filling in for a colleague when his data showed something impossible — electrical resistance snapping to exact, repeatable values. No variation. None. The quantum Hall effect rewrote how scientists define the ohm itself. Today, every electrical standard in the world traces back to that borrowed shift in a French laboratory.

Portrait of Chris Hani
Chris Hani 1942

A neighbor wrote down the license plate.

Read more

That's what caught the killer. Chris Hani — head of the South African Communist Party and the man many believed would succeed Mandela — was shot dead in his driveway on Easter Saturday, 1993. His assassin fled. But Retha Harmse, a white Afrikaner woman next door, saw the car and called police. Her note stopped a cover-up. Hani's murder nearly collapsed the negotiations ending apartheid. Instead, Mandela's televised response steadied the country. That handwritten plate number is in the Constitutional Court archives today.

Portrait of Muhammad Yunus
Muhammad Yunus 1940

He gave tiny loans to 42 villagers using $27 of his own money.

Read more

That's it. No bank. No collateral. No guarantee any of it would come back. But it did — every cent — and that experiment in a single Bangladeshi village in 1974 eventually became Grameen Bank, reaching over 9 million borrowers, 97% of them women. He didn't set out to build a financial institution. He was just a professor who couldn't stomach watching people starve outside his classroom window. The Nobel Committee's 2006 prize citation still sits in Dhaka.

Portrait of Leon Panetta
Leon Panetta 1938

Leon Panetta mastered the levers of Washington power, serving as White House Chief of Staff, CIA Director, and Secretary of Defense.

Read more

His career bridged the gap between fiscal policy and national security, ultimately overseeing the raid that killed Osama bin Laden. He remains a rare figure who successfully navigated the highest levels of both domestic and military governance.

Portrait of Harold Evans
Harold Evans 1928

He edited The Sunday Times for fourteen years and turned it into something that made governments nervous.

Read more

His team exposed the thalidomide scandal — a drug that caused thousands of birth defects — while the manufacturer's lawyers tried to silence them. The courts backed the lawyers. Evans ran the story anyway. He was eventually pushed out of Times Newspapers by Rupert Murdoch after just one year. But he left behind *Good Times, Bad Times*, a forensic account of that exit that Murdoch reportedly hated.

Portrait of Hans Blix
Hans Blix 1928

He spent years as Sweden's Foreign Minister, but that wasn't the job that put him in every living room on earth.

Read more

In 2003, Blix led the UN weapons inspection team hunting for WMDs in Iraq — and found nothing. Not hidden. Not buried. Nothing. His reports contradicted the intelligence driving a war that had already been decided. The invasion happened anyway. He retired and wrote *Disarming Iraq*, a 288-page account of being ignored at the exact moment it mattered most.

Portrait of Frank Sherwood Rowland
Frank Sherwood Rowland 1927

He asked a simple question nobody thought to ask: what happens to those chemicals after they float up into the atmosphere?

Read more

That question — posed at UC Irvine in 1973 — eventually dismantled a billion-dollar industry. Aerosol cans. Refrigerants. Products in 150 million American homes. Rowland's own colleagues thought he'd lost the plot. But the math held. The 1987 Montreal Protocol, which phased out CFCs globally, sits directly downstream of that one question. The ozone layer over Antarctica is still slowly healing today.

Portrait of P. V. Narasimha Rao
P. V. Narasimha Rao 1921

He didn't want the job.

Read more

When Rajiv Gandhi was assassinated in 1991, Rao was already packing to retire — literally preparing to leave Delhi for his hometown. He was 70, in poor health, and Congress drafted him anyway. What followed shocked economists worldwide: he handed a near-bankrupt India's economy to Manmohan Singh and quietly dismantled four decades of socialist licensing in 18 months. The "Permit Raj" — that strangling bureaucratic maze — was gone. And the $1.8 trillion economy that exists today traces its first breath directly back to that reluctant, half-retired old man.

Portrait of William Whitelaw
William Whitelaw 1918

William Whitelaw anchored Margaret Thatcher’s cabinet as her most trusted Deputy Prime Minister, acting as the…

Read more

essential political shock absorber for her radical reforms. His steady hand during the Northern Ireland peace negotiations and his mastery of parliamentary management stabilized the Conservative Party through its most turbulent years of the late twentieth century.

Portrait of Maria Goeppert-Mayer
Maria Goeppert-Mayer 1906

She built the model that explained why certain atoms are extraordinarily stable — and her university paid her nothing for decades.

Read more

Goeppert-Mayer worked as a "voluntary associate" at Johns Hopkins, then an unpaid assistant at Columbia, then a part-time lecturer at Chicago. Anti-nepotism rules kept blocking her because her husband kept getting the real jobs. But she kept calculating. Her nuclear shell model, finished in 1950, cracked open atomic structure in ways experimenters hadn't managed. In 1963, she became only the second woman to win the Nobel Prize in Physics. Her equations still anchor every modern nuclear physics textbook.

Portrait of Carl Andrew Spaatz
Carl Andrew Spaatz 1891

He witnessed Orville Wright fly at Kitts Devil Hills in 1909 and decided right there he had to fly.

Read more

That decision put him in command of the entire U.S. Army Air Forces in Europe by 1944. But here's the part nobody mentions: Spaatz was the only American general present at both the German surrender in Europe and the Japanese surrender in Tokyo Bay. Two tables. Two endings. Same man watching history close on itself. He kept the pen used to sign the Japanese surrender documents.

Portrait of Luigi Pirandello
Luigi Pirandello 1867

He asked to be cremated and have his ashes mailed to Sicily in a plain wooden box.

Read more

No funeral. No ceremony. No mourners. The Italian government wanted a state burial — he refused it in writing before he died. Pirandello spent his career dismantling the idea that identity is fixed or knowable, and he died the same way he wrote: refusing the official version. His 1921 play *Six Characters in Search of an Author* still runs worldwide. The wooden box made it to Agrigento.

Died on June 28

Portrait of Orlando Cepeda
Orlando Cepeda 2024

Orlando Cepeda was the first unanimous National League Rookie of the Year in 1958, playing for the San Francisco Giants.

Read more

He hit .297 over 17 seasons and was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1999 by the Veterans Committee after being repeatedly passed over by writers who factored in a 1975 drug conviction. He served time in prison, served his time, and became a marijuana legalization advocate. The Hall eventually got there. He was 86 when he died in 2024.

Portrait of Michael P. Murphy
Michael P. Murphy 2005

He radioed for help in the open — standing fully exposed on a rocky Afghan hillside because the mountains were blocking the signal.

Read more

Murphy knew what stepping into the clear meant. He did it anyway. Operation Red Wings, June 2005, left 19 Americans dead, including three of his SEAL teammates. But Murphy's deliberate move to transmit the call saved the rescue mission that recovered his body. The Navy named a warship after him. Then a pool. Then an entire fitness test.

Portrait of Countess Sophie Chotek
Countess Sophie Chotek 1914

She wasn't supposed to be there.

Read more

Sophie Chotek was considered too low-ranking to marry an archduke — the Habsburg court made Franz Ferdinand sign away their children's rights to the throne just to allow the marriage. But he refused to give her up. In Sarajevo, the royal couple sat together in an open car. She died first. Franz Ferdinand's last words were reportedly begged at her: "Sopherl, don't die." Their son Maximilian survived — and spent three years in Dachau.

Portrait of James Madison

James Madison was five feet four and weighed about a hundred pounds.

Read more

He was the smallest president in American history and possibly the most intellectually consequential. Born on March 16, 1751, in Port Conway, Virginia, he attended the College of New Jersey, now Princeton University, completing the four-year course in two years, a pace that reportedly damaged his health. He entered Virginia politics as a protégé of Thomas Jefferson and quickly established himself as the most thorough constitutional thinker in the new republic. His preparation for the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia in 1787 was extraordinary. He arrived with a detailed plan for a new government, based on months of studying the constitutions of ancient and modern republics. He spoke over 200 times during the convention, more than any other delegate, and kept the most complete record of the proceedings. The Virginia Plan, largely his work, provided the framework for the Constitution. When opposition to ratification threatened to derail the project, he co-wrote the Federalist Papers with Alexander Hamilton and John Jay, producing 85 essays in eight months that remain the most authoritative interpretation of constitutional intent. He authored the Bill of Rights, the first ten amendments to the Constitution, partly as a political necessity to secure ratification from reluctant states. As president from 1809 to 1817, he led the country through the War of 1812, a conflict that nearly destroyed the republic he had helped create. The British burned Washington, D.C., including the White House and the Capitol, in August 1814. His wife Dolley famously saved a portrait of George Washington from the flames. He died on June 28, 1836, at Montpelier, the last surviving member of the Constitutional Convention. The country his document created was still intact.

Portrait of Theodora I
Theodora I 548

Theodora I died, ending the reign of a former actress who rose to become the most powerful woman in Byzantine history.

Read more

As Justinian’s co-ruler, she fundamentally reshaped imperial law to expand property and divorce rights for women, ensuring her influence survived long after her passing. Her death left the emperor without his most astute political strategist.

Holidays & observances

Vincenza Gerosa gave away everything she owned before she turned 40.

Vincenza Gerosa gave away everything she owned before she turned 40. Not to a church. Not to an institution. Directly to the sick and the poor of Lovere, a small town on the shores of Lake Iseo in northern Italy. In 1832, she joined Bartolomea Capitanio to found the Sisters of Charity, despite having no formal religious training whatsoever. Bartolomea died just one year later. Vincenza kept going alone for 28 more years. She wasn't a scholar or a visionary. Just a woman who showed up every single day.

The Catholic Church has canonized over 10,000 saints — but the process used to be basically a popularity contest.

The Catholic Church has canonized over 10,000 saints — but the process used to be basically a popularity contest. Early saints were declared by local bishops, often within days of death, driven by crowd enthusiasm rather than careful review. Rome finally took control in 1234 under Pope Gregory IX, partly because too many dubious figures were getting through. Now it takes decades, a postulator, documented miracles, and a devil's advocate whose entire job is to argue against you. Sainthood got harder. The crowds got quieter. The miracles had to be real.

The Eastern Orthodox calendar doesn't just mark saints — it runs on an entirely different clock.

The Eastern Orthodox calendar doesn't just mark saints — it runs on an entirely different clock. While most of the Western world follows the Gregorian calendar, many Orthodox churches still use the Julian calendar, which now runs 13 days behind. So June 28 in the Orthodox world isn't June 28 anywhere else. Same sun, different day. The calendar split traces back to 1582, when Pope Gregory XIII reformed the old system — and the Orthodox Church simply refused. A 13-day gap that's been widening ever since.

Serbian Orthodox Christians observe Vidovdan to honor Saint Vitus and commemorate the 1389 Battle of Kosovo.

Serbian Orthodox Christians observe Vidovdan to honor Saint Vitus and commemorate the 1389 Battle of Kosovo. This day functions as a profound touchstone for Serbian national identity, linking medieval military resistance against the Ottoman Empire to the modern cultural consciousness of the Balkan region.

A riot started because people were tired of being arrested for dancing.

A riot started because people were tired of being arrested for dancing. The Stonewall Inn was a dive bar — sticky floors, no running water behind the bar, mob-owned — but for many gay New Yorkers in 1969, it was the only place they existed openly. When police raided it on June 28th, the crowd fought back instead of scattering. Six days of protests followed. And from that exhausted, furious refusal to disappear quietly, a global movement built its calendar around one sweaty, defiant night in Greenwich Village.

Ukraine's constitution almost didn't happen at all.

Ukraine's constitution almost didn't happen at all. Deputies argued for over 24 hours straight — through the night of June 27-28, 1996 — before finally signing it at 9:18 a.m., exhausted, some furious, many still arguing as the pen moved. President Kuchma had threatened to push the document through by presidential decree if parliament stalled any longer. That threat worked. The resulting constitution guaranteed rights, separation of powers, and Ukrainian as the sole state language. Decades later, those words would mean everything.

Saint Paul wasn't always Saint Paul.

Saint Paul wasn't always Saint Paul. He was Saul — a Roman citizen who hunted Christians, watched Stephen get stoned to death, and held the coats of the men throwing rocks. Then a blinding light knocked him off his horse on the road to Damascus. Three days of total blindness followed. And when his sight came back, everything else had flipped. The man who'd been executing a movement became its most prolific writer. Thirteen letters. Thousands of miles traveled. The persecutor built the church he'd tried to destroy.

Christians across the Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Lutheran traditions honor Irenaeus of Lyon today for his defense …

Christians across the Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Lutheran traditions honor Irenaeus of Lyon today for his defense of early orthodoxy. By writing his five-volume work Against Heresies, he established the theological framework for the New Testament canon and successfully countered Gnostic teachings that threatened to fracture the early church’s unified identity.

Saint Benignus wasn't supposed to be a saint at all — he was a child.

Saint Benignus wasn't supposed to be a saint at all — he was a child. A young Irish boy who, legend says, fell so completely in love with Patrick's preaching that he grabbed the missionary's feet and refused to let go. Patrick took him in. Benignus eventually succeeded Patrick as Bishop of Armagh, leading the Irish church his mentor had built. The kid who clung to a stranger's feet ended up inheriting his entire world.

Workers at the Stalin-named Cegielski factory in Poznań walked off the job on June 28, 1956 — not for ideology, but f…

Workers at the Stalin-named Cegielski factory in Poznań walked off the job on June 28, 1956 — not for ideology, but for unpaid wages and impossible production quotas. What started as a labor dispute turned into 100,000 people in the streets. Polish security forces opened fire. At least 57 died, possibly many more. The communist government called them criminals and provocateurs. But Poles remembered. And that memory — kept alive quietly for decades — helped fuel the Solidarity movement that eventually dismantled the regime. The "criminals" became the founding martyrs of modern Poland.

Irenaeus didn't set out to define Christianity — he just wanted to stop it from splintering.

Irenaeus didn't set out to define Christianity — he just wanted to stop it from splintering. Born around 130 AD in Smyrna, he watched Gnostic teachers pull believers toward secret knowledge and hidden gospels, and he fought back with ink. His *Against Heresies* became the early Church's sharpest weapon, systematically dismantling rival theologies. And here's the twist: a man devoted to preserving unity was himself forgotten for centuries. Pope Francis named him a Doctor of the Church only in 2022. It took 1,800 years to officially notice.

Serbians observe Vidovdan to honor Saint Vitus and commemorate the 1389 Battle of Kosovo.

Serbians observe Vidovdan to honor Saint Vitus and commemorate the 1389 Battle of Kosovo. This day functions as a profound national touchstone, linking the medieval defense of the Serbian realm against the Ottoman Empire to the modern identity and resilience of the Serbian people.

Pi gets all the glory, but mathematicians think it's the wrong constant.

Pi gets all the glory, but mathematicians think it's the wrong constant. Tau — 6.283..., exactly twice pi — describes circles more cleanly, since a full rotation is one tau, not two pi. Physicist Michael Hartl made the case in his 2010 Tau Manifesto, arguing that generations of students had been taught a needlessly awkward number. Celebrated on June 28th (6/28), Tau Day even comes with a better perk: you eat two pies instead of one. The joke lands. But the math underneath it is completely serious.

Marcella gave away everything.

Marcella gave away everything. Not symbolically — literally. Born into Roman wealth in 325 AD, she sold her estate, dressed in rough cloth, and turned her palatial home on the Aventine Hill into the first monastic community for women in the Western world. Jerome, the great biblical translator, called her his greatest student. But when the Visigoths sacked Rome in 410, they tortured her trying to find hidden gold. There was none left. She died weeks later. The woman who invented Western monasticism had nothing to steal.