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October 26

Smallpox Eradicated: Last Natural Case Confirmed (1977). Park Chung-hee Assassinated: South Korea in Chaos (1979). Notable births include Hillary Clinton (1947), Hillary Rodham Clinton (1947), Craig Shakespeare (1963).

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Smallpox Eradicated: Last Natural Case Confirmed
1977Event

Smallpox Eradicated: Last Natural Case Confirmed

Ali Maow Maalin, a 23-year-old hospital cook in Merca, Somalia, developed the telltale rash of variola minor on October 26, 1977, and became the last person on Earth to contract smallpox through natural transmission. He survived. The disease that had killed an estimated 300 million people in the twentieth century alone, more than all the century's wars combined, was finished. The World Health Organization's Intensified Eradication Program, launched in 1967 under the direction of American epidemiologist Donald Alas Henderson, had pursued the virus across every continent for a decade. The strategy was not mass vaccination, which would have been logistically impossible in remote regions of Africa and South Asia, but "ring vaccination": identify every new case, isolate the patient, and vaccinate every person within the surrounding area to break the chain of transmission. Teams traveled by jeep, helicopter, camel, and canoe to reach villages that had never seen a doctor. By the early 1970s, smallpox had been eliminated from South America, Asia, and most of Africa. The final holdouts were Ethiopia, where civil war complicated access, and Somalia, where nomadic populations moved across borders constantly. Maalin's case was traced to contact with two children he had escorted to a hospital. WHO teams vaccinated everyone in his district. When no new cases appeared after weeks of surveillance, epidemiologists began to believe they had reached the end. The WHO waited two full years after Maalin's recovery before declaring victory, maintaining global surveillance to ensure no hidden cases remained. On May 8, 1980, the World Health Assembly formally certified that smallpox had been eradicated, the first and still only human disease to be deliberately eliminated from nature. The eradication of smallpox remains the single greatest achievement in the history of public health. The campaign cost approximately $300 million over thirteen years, a fraction of what a single year of continued vaccination would have cost. Samples of the virus survive today in two high-security laboratories in the United States and Russia, and whether to destroy them remains one of the most contentious questions in bioethics.

Park Chung-hee Assassinated: South Korea in Chaos
1979

Park Chung-hee Assassinated: South Korea in Chaos

Kim Jae-gyu, the director of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency, drew a pistol during a private dinner at a KCIA safe house in Seoul on the evening of October 26, 1979, and shot President Park Chung-hee twice, killing the man who had ruled South Korea with an iron grip for eighteen years. The assassination plunged the country into political chaos and triggered a chain of events that would not resolve until South Korea's transition to democracy nearly a decade later. Park had seized power in a military coup in 1961 and subsequently won a series of elections that grew progressively less free. Under his authoritarian rule, South Korea underwent one of the most dramatic economic transformations in modern history, rising from a war-devastated agrarian country poorer than most of sub-Saharan Africa to an industrial powerhouse producing steel, ships, and electronics for global markets. Park's developmental dictatorship delivered extraordinary growth rates averaging 10 percent annually, but at the cost of brutal repression of political dissent, labor rights, and press freedom. By 1979, the contradictions of Park's system had become acute. Rising prosperity had created an educated urban middle class that demanded political participation. Labor unrest was spreading through the industrial cities. Student protests erupted regularly. In October, a major uprising in the cities of Busan and Masan was met with martial law and hundreds of arrests. Kim Jae-gyu's motives remain debated. He claimed at trial that he killed Park to restore democracy, but other evidence suggests he was losing a bureaucratic power struggle with Park's chief bodyguard, Cha Ji-cheol, who was also killed at the dinner. Kim was arrested within hours, tried by a military court, and executed the following May. Park's death did not bring democracy. General Chun Doo-hwan, commanding the Defense Security Command, seized control through a coup in December 1979 and imposed his own authoritarian government, which would not fall until the massive pro-democracy protests of June 1987. Park's legacy continues to divide South Korean society: admirers credit him with building modern Korea, while critics remember the torture cells, the disappeared dissidents, and the press censorship. His daughter, Park Geun-hye, served as president from 2013 to 2017 before being impeached and imprisoned for corruption.

Erie Canal Opens: NY Becomes America's Trade Hub
1825

Erie Canal Opens: NY Becomes America's Trade Hub

Governor DeWitt Clinton poured a keg of Lake Erie water into the Atlantic Ocean at Sandy Hook, New Jersey, on November 4, 1825, completing the symbolic "Wedding of the Waters" that celebrated the opening of the Erie Canal. The canal itself had opened for full navigation on October 26, when Clinton's flotilla departed Buffalo for the 363-mile journey to Albany, a trip that took nine days along a man-made waterway carved through wilderness, swamp, and solid rock. The Erie Canal was the most ambitious infrastructure project in the young American republic. Clinton had championed it for years despite widespread ridicule. Thomas Jefferson had dismissed the idea as "little short of madness," and critics called it "Clinton's Ditch." The canal required cutting a channel 40 feet wide and 4 feet deep across the entire breadth of New York State, from Lake Erie at Buffalo to the Hudson River at Albany, traversing a 571-foot elevation change through 83 locks. Construction began in 1817 using almost entirely manual labor: Irish immigrants, local farmers, and free Black workers dug the channel with shovels, picks, and horse-drawn scrapers. The engineering challenges were formidable. Workers cut through the Montezuma Marshes, a malarial swamp that killed hundreds from fever. At Lockport, they blasted through a solid rock ridge using newly developed black powder techniques. The entire project was completed in eight years at a cost of $7.1 million, roughly $200 million in today's dollars, without a single trained civil engineer on the payroll. Most of the builders learned engineering on the job, creating an entirely new profession in America. The canal's economic impact was transformational. Shipping costs between Buffalo and New York City dropped from $100 per ton to $10 per ton almost overnight. Grain from the Midwest could now reach Eastern markets cheaply, and manufactured goods flowed west at prices frontier settlers could afford. New York City, already a major port, became the undisputed commercial capital of the United States. Towns along the canal route, including Syracuse, Rochester, and Utica, boomed. The Erie Canal made New York the Empire State and demonstrated that public investment in infrastructure could generate enormous private wealth.

Israel-Jordan Peace Treaty Signed by Rabin
1994

Israel-Jordan Peace Treaty Signed by Rabin

Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Jordanian Prime Minister Abdel Salam Majali signed a formal peace treaty at a ceremony in the Arava Valley on the border between their two countries on October 26, 1994, with President Bill Clinton as witness. Jordan became only the second Arab state, after Egypt in 1979, to make peace with Israel, and the treaty marked the high point of the Oslo-era optimism that the Middle East's longest-running conflicts might finally be resolved through negotiation. The treaty was the public culmination of decades of secret contact. Jordan and Israel had maintained a covert relationship since the 1960s, with King Hussein meeting Israeli leaders privately on numerous occasions. The two countries shared intelligence, coordinated water management along the Jordan River, and maintained an unspoken non-aggression understanding even during the wars of 1967 and 1973. What the treaty formalized was largely what both sides had already been practicing quietly. The agreement established full diplomatic relations, settled border disputes dating to 1948, allocated water rights from the Jordan and Yarmouk rivers, and opened provisions for tourism, trade, and security cooperation. Jordan recovered small parcels of territory that Israel had occupied, and Israel agreed to respect Jordan's special custodial role over Muslim holy sites in Jerusalem, a point of immense symbolic importance for the Hashemite monarchy. King Hussein and Rabin, who had developed a genuine personal rapport, presented the treaty as proof that peace between Arabs and Israelis was achievable. The signing ceremony was deliberately held in the desert at the border crossing, with the barren landscape serving as a backdrop for the handshakes and embraces that television cameras broadcast worldwide. The broader peace that Rabin and Hussein envisioned did not materialize. Rabin was assassinated by an Israeli extremist in November 1995, and the Oslo process between Israel and the Palestinians gradually collapsed over the following decade. The Israel-Jordan treaty itself has endured, though it remains unpopular with much of the Jordanian public and has produced far less economic cooperation than its architects hoped. Jordan remains one of only two Arab states with a formal peace agreement with Israel, a fact that underscores both the treaty's durability and its isolation.

Boeing 707 Crosses Atlantic: Jet Age Takes Flight
1958

Boeing 707 Crosses Atlantic: Jet Age Takes Flight

Pan American World Airways Flight 114 lifted off from New York's Idlewild Airport at 7:20 p.m. on October 26, 1958, carrying 111 passengers across the Atlantic to Paris in just over eight hours. The Boeing 707 that made the journey was not the first jet airliner in commercial service; Britain's de Havilland Comet had beaten it by six years. But the 707 was the aircraft that made jet travel commercially viable, and its maiden transatlantic voyage marked the true beginning of the jet age. Boeing had gambled $16 million of its own money, roughly a quarter of the company's net worth, to build the prototype in 1954. The company's president, William Allen, bet that airlines would want a jet transport even though none had ordered one. The prototype, designated the Model 367-80 or "Dash 80," flew in July 1954 and immediately demonstrated performance that propeller-driven aircraft could not match: cruising speeds above 550 miles per hour at altitudes above 30,000 feet, cutting transatlantic flight times nearly in half. Pan Am's Juan Trippe, the most visionary airline executive of his generation, placed the first order for twenty 707s in 1955, triggering a rush of orders from competing airlines that could not afford to let Pan Am monopolize jet service. The 707's four Pratt & Whitney JT3C turbojet engines produced a combined 44,000 pounds of thrust, carrying up to 189 passengers in a pressurized cabin that was wider, quieter, and more comfortable than any propeller aircraft in service. The October 26 flight was a public relations triumph. Passengers paid premium fares for the privilege of being among the first transatlantic jet travelers. The flight arrived in Paris to enormous press coverage. Within two years, every major airline in the world was either flying 707s or ordering them. The 707 transformed air travel from a luxury into a mass-market service. Ticket prices dropped as the aircraft's greater speed and capacity reduced per-passenger costs. Transatlantic passenger traffic, which had been dominated by ocean liners, shifted overwhelmingly to aircraft within a decade. Boeing sold more than 1,000 707s and established a dominance in commercial aviation that the company maintained for half a century. The Dash 80 prototype hangs today in the Smithsonian's Udvar-Hazy Center, a monument to the bet that changed how the world moves.

Quote of the Day

“It's easy to be independent when you've got money. But to be independent when you haven't got a thing -- that's the Lord's test.”

Historical events

Gunfight at O.K. Corral: Lawmen Meet Outlaws in Legend
1881

Gunfight at O.K. Corral: Lawmen Meet Outlaws in Legend

Thirty seconds of gunfire in a vacant lot near Tombstone, Arizona, on October 26, 1881, produced the most famous shootout in the history of the American West, though nearly everything the public believes about the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral is wrong, starting with the name. The fight did not take place at the O.K. Corral but in a narrow alley next to C.S. Fly's photography studio, roughly six doors west of the corral's rear entrance on Fremont Street. Town Marshal Virgil Earp, his brothers Wyatt and Morgan, and their ally Doc Holliday walked down Fremont Street shortly after 3:00 p.m. to confront a group of Cowboys, the loosely organized faction of cattlemen and rustlers who had been feuding with the Earps for months. Ike and Billy Clanton and Tom and Frank McLaury were waiting in the lot. The two groups faced each other at a distance of roughly six feet. What happened next remains disputed despite more than a century of scholarship. The Earps claimed they were attempting a lawful disarmament under Tombstone's ordinance against carrying weapons in town. The Cowboys' allies insisted the Earps fired without warning. Roughly thirty shots were fired in thirty seconds. Billy Clanton and both McLaury brothers were killed. Virgil, Morgan, and Holliday were wounded. Wyatt was untouched. Ike Clanton, who was unarmed, fled at the first shot. The aftermath was more consequential than the fight itself. Ike Clanton filed murder charges against the Earps and Holliday. Justice of the Peace Wells Spicer conducted a 30-day hearing and ruled the killings justified. But the Cowboys retaliated: gunmen ambushed Virgil in December 1881, permanently crippling his left arm, and assassinated Morgan in March 1882, shooting him through the glass door of a billiard hall. Wyatt Earp then embarked on a vendetta ride, tracking down and killing several suspected Cowboys before fleeing Arizona Territory with warrants outstanding. The gunfight was largely forgotten until Stuart Lake's fictionalized biography of Wyatt Earp was published in 1931. Hollywood adopted the story enthusiastically, and the O.K. Corral became an American myth about frontier justice. The real story was messier: a local power struggle between competing factions in a mining boomtown, settled not by law but by bullets and revenge.

King George Declares Colonies in Rebellion
1775

King George Declares Colonies in Rebellion

King George III stood before both houses of Parliament on October 26, 1775, and declared the American colonies to be in open rebellion against the Crown, authorizing the full use of military force to suppress what he characterized as a treasonous insurrection. The speech, delivered six months after fighting had erupted at Lexington and Concord, formally ended any realistic prospect of reconciliation between Britain and its thirteen North American colonies. The king's address was unequivocal. He described the colonial resistance as "a desperate conspiracy" led by men who sought independence, not reform, and who had "raised troops, and are collecting a naval force" to wage war. He announced the enlargement of British land and naval forces and expressed confidence that his "brave and loyal" troops would "speedily put an end to these disorders." Parliament responded by passing the Prohibitory Act, which declared a naval blockade of the colonies and authorized the seizure of American ships. The speech reached America in January 1776, and its impact was profound. Moderates in the Continental Congress who had still hoped for a negotiated settlement were forced to confront the reality that the king himself had rejected compromise. The Olive Branch Petition, sent by Congress in July 1775 as a final appeal for peace, had already been refused without a reading. George's October address made clear that Britain viewed the conflict as a war, not a dispute. Thomas Paine's Common Sense, published just weeks after the speech arrived in America, drew heavily on the king's words to argue that monarchy itself was the problem and that independence was the only rational course. Paine's pamphlet sold an estimated 500,000 copies in a colonial population of 2.5 million. Within six months of the king's speech, the Continental Congress would vote for independence. George III's declaration transformed the nature of the conflict. Before October 1775, American leaders could plausibly claim they were fighting for their rights as British subjects. After the king declared them rebels, they were fighting for their lives, since rebellion was a capital offense. The speech made the Declaration of Independence not merely desirable but necessary.

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Born on October 26

Portrait of Schoolboy Q
Schoolboy Q 1986

Schoolboy Q was born in Germany on a military base.

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His family moved to Los Angeles when he was a toddler. He joined the 52 Hoover Crips at 12. He sold drugs through his twenties. His daughter was born when he was 23. He quit dealing and focused on rap. His stage name comes from his high school nickname. He's been sober since 2014.

Portrait of Uhuru Kenyatta
Uhuru Kenyatta 1961

Uhuru Kenyatta is the son of Kenya's first president.

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He was indicted by the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity before becoming president himself. The charges were dropped due to lack of evidence and witness intimidation. He served two terms. Kenya elected him anyway. Legacy is complicated.

Portrait of Evo Morales
Evo Morales 1959

Evo Morales grew up herding llamas in the Andes without electricity or running water.

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He became a coca farmer, then a union leader fighting U.S. drug eradication programs. He was elected Bolivia's first indigenous president in 2005. He served 14 years, rewrote the constitution, and fled to Mexico in 2019 after the military forced him out. He called it a coup. Others called it overdue.

Portrait of Bootsy Collins
Bootsy Collins 1951

Bootsy Collins redefined the role of the bass guitar with his signature star-shaped instrument and deep, syncopated grooves.

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As a foundational member of Parliament-Funkadelic, he pioneered the P-Funk sound that became the bedrock of modern hip-hop and dance music. His relentless innovation transformed the rhythm section from a background element into the primary engine of funk.

Portrait of Hillary Clinton

Hillary Clinton reshaped modern American politics across three decades, serving as First Lady, U.

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S. Senator from New York, Secretary of State, and the first woman to win a major party's presidential nomination. Born Hillary Diane Rodham on October 26, 1947, in Chicago, she grew up in the conservative suburb of Park Ridge, Illinois. She attended Wellesley College, where her 1969 commencement speech made national news for its directness and ambition. She earned her law degree from Yale in 1973, where she met Bill Clinton. She worked for the Children's Defense Fund and served on the House Judiciary Committee's impeachment inquiry staff during Watergate. As First Lady from 1993 to 2001, she took on a policy portfolio that was unprecedented for the role. She led the Task Force on National Health Care Reform, a comprehensive plan that collapsed under political opposition and industry lobbying in 1994. The defeat was politically devastating but many of the plan's principles resurfaced in the Affordable Care Act sixteen years later. She endured the public humiliation of the Monica Lewinsky scandal while maintaining her own political ambitions. She won a Senate seat from New York in 2000, the first sitting First Lady to run for elected office. She served on the Armed Services Committee and voted for the Iraq War authorization in 2002, a decision she later called a mistake. She ran for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2008 and lost to Barack Obama. As Secretary of State from 2009 to 2013 under Obama, she visited 112 countries and managed the diplomatic response to the Arab Spring. The September 2012 attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya, became the subject of multiple investigations. She won the 2016 Democratic nomination, the first woman to achieve this from a major party. She won the popular vote by nearly three million ballots but lost the Electoral College to Donald Trump, 304 to 227. Her campaign was affected by the FBI investigation into her use of a private email server while Secretary of State and by Russian interference operations targeting the American electorate.

Portrait of Hillary Rodham Clinton

Hillary Clinton shattered political barriers across three decades of American public life, serving as First Lady, U.

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S. Senator from New York, Secretary of State, and the first woman to win a major party's presidential nomination. Born Hillary Diane Rodham in Chicago on October 26, 1947, she grew up in Park Ridge, Illinois, in a conservative Republican household. She was class president at Maine South High School and attended Wellesley College, where she shifted leftward politically. Her 1969 commencement speech, in which she challenged the invited speaker, Senator Edward Brooke, made national news. She earned her law degree from Yale in 1973, where she met Bill Clinton. As First Lady from 1993 to 2001, she took on a policy portfolio unprecedented for the role, leading the administration's effort to reform the American health care system. The plan collapsed under political opposition and industry lobbying in 1994, but many of its principles resurfaced in the Affordable Care Act sixteen years later. Her active involvement in policy drew both admiration and fierce criticism from those who believed the First Lady should occupy a more traditional role. She won a U.S. Senate seat from New York in 2000, becoming the first sitting First Lady to run for and win elected office. She served two terms, sitting on the Armed Services Committee and voting in favor of the Iraq War in 2002, a vote she later called a mistake and that haunted her 2008 presidential campaign against Barack Obama. As Secretary of State from 2009 to 2013, she visited 112 countries, more than any previous Secretary. She managed the diplomatic response to the Arab Spring and was in the Situation Room during the Osama bin Laden raid. The 2012 attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya, which killed Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans, became a years-long political controversy. She won the Democratic presidential nomination in 2016, the first woman to achieve this from a major party, and won the popular vote by nearly three million votes but lost the Electoral College to Donald Trump.

Portrait of Milton Nascimento
Milton Nascimento 1942

Milton Nascimento was adopted as a baby by a white couple in Brazil.

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His adoptive mother was a music teacher who died when he was 18. He has a three-and-a-half-octave range. He sang in Portuguese when bossa nova artists were singing in English for American audiences. He's recorded 44 albums. Paul Simon and Wayne Shorter have called him the greatest singer alive.

Portrait of Madelyn Dunham
Madelyn Dunham 1922

Madelyn Dunham raised her grandson in a Honolulu apartment after his mother left for Indonesia.

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She worked her way up to bank vice president despite no college degree. She died two days before he was elected president. Obama cried when he spoke about her on election night. She never saw him win. She's why he got there.

Portrait of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi of Iran
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi of Iran 1919

Mohammad Reza Pahlavi became Shah at 21 when the Allies forced his father to abdicate.

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He survived an assassination attempt in 1949. He modernized Iran rapidly, educating women and redistributing land. He also ran a brutal secret police. The 1979 revolution overthrew him. He died in exile in Egypt. He was 60. His son still claims the throne.

Portrait of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi 1919

Mohammad Reza Pahlavi became Shah of Iran at 21 when the British and Soviets deposed his father in 1941.

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He was overthrown in a CIA-backed coup in 1953, restored to power, and spent the following twenty-six years modernizing Iran at a pace and in directions that alienated the religious establishment, the left, and eventually most of his own country. He fled in January 1979. Khomeini arrived in February. The Shah died in Cairo in July 1980, in exile, from non-Hodgkin lymphoma he'd been hiding from the public for six years.

Portrait of François Mitterrand
François Mitterrand 1916

François Mitterrand had a second family his wife knew about and the public didn't.

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He kept a mistress and daughter hidden for decades, housed them in state-funded apartments, used security services to protect the secret. French journalists knew. None published it. His daughter attended his state funeral, standing with his wife and legitimate children. France shrugged. He'd served 14 years as president, longer than anyone in French history. Private life was private.

Portrait of Konstantin Thon
Konstantin Thon 1794

Konstantin Thon designed the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in Moscow — 338 feet tall, gold domes, marble walls.

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It took 44 years to build. Stalin demolished it in 1931 to make room for a swimming pool. After the Soviet collapse, they rebuilt Thon's cathedral exactly as he'd drawn it. It opened in 2000. His blueprints had survived in a basement.

Portrait of Georges Danton
Georges Danton 1759

Georges Danton harnessed his booming voice and radical fervor to mobilize the Parisian masses, becoming the primary…

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architect of the French Republic’s defense against foreign invasion. As Minister of Justice, he wielded immense influence over the early Revolution, though his pragmatic push for moderation eventually led him to the guillotine at the hands of his own allies.

Died on October 26

Portrait of Arthur Kornberg
Arthur Kornberg 2007

Arthur Kornberg discovered DNA polymerase in 1956 — the enzyme that copies DNA.

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He won the Nobel Prize for it in 1959. His son Roger won the Nobel in 2006 for figuring out how RNA polymerase works. They're one of only four father-son pairs to both win. Arthur kept working until he was 89. He died in his lab.

Portrait of Charles J. Pedersen
Charles J. Pedersen 1989

Charles Pedersen was born in Korea to a Norwegian father and Japanese mother, worked for DuPont for 42 years, and…

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discovered crown ethers almost by accident. They're molecules that trap metal ions. He published his findings at 62, retired, then won the Nobel Prize at 83. He never got a PhD. His discovery revolutionized chemistry. DuPont barely noticed until Stockholm called.

Portrait of Park Chung-hee
Park Chung-hee 1979

Park Chung-hee was shot in the head by his own intelligence chief during dinner in 1979.

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He'd ruled South Korea for 18 years after seizing power in a coup. He turned the country into an export machine — GDP grew 10% annually. He also tortured dissidents and rigged elections. His daughter became president in 2013. She was impeached too.

Portrait of Semyon Budyonny
Semyon Budyonny 1973

Semyon Budyonny led cavalry charges in World War I and the Russian Civil War.

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Stalin made him a Marshal. He commanded the Southwest Front in 1941 when the Germans encircled 665,000 Soviet soldiers at Kiev — the largest encirclement in history. Stalin kept him in ceremonial positions after that. He survived every purge. He died in bed at 90, wearing his medals. Three other Civil War marshals were executed.

Portrait of Gerty Cori
Gerty Cori 1957

Gerty Cori discovered how the body converts glycogen to glucose and back again — the cycle that powers muscles.

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She won the Nobel with her husband Carl in 1947. Washington University paid her a fraction of his salary for the same work. She kept a list of students who studied under her: six of them won Nobels. She died of bone marrow disease at 61. The disease had been progressing for a decade while she worked.

Portrait of Itō Hirobumi
Itō Hirobumi 1909

Itō Hirobumi wrote Japan's first constitution in 18 months after touring Europe's monarchies.

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He gave the emperor supreme authority on paper, then structured the government so bureaucrats held real power. He was prime minister four times. A Korean nationalist shot him at a train station in Harbin—three bullets, close range. He died 30 minutes later. Korea made the assassin a national hero. Japan made Itō a martyr and annexed Korea the next year.

Portrait of Anna of Austria
Anna of Austria 1580

Anna of Austria was both Queen of Spain and daughter of the Holy Roman Emperor.

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She married her uncle — Phillip II was 21 years older and already widowed three times. She gave him five children in eleven years. Four died before she did. The one who survived became Philip III and expelled 300,000 Muslims from Spain.

Portrait of Alfred the Great
Alfred the Great 899

Alfred the Great was the only English monarch ever to be called 'the Great.

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' He earned it. When the Vikings occupied most of England in 878 he was hiding in the Somerset marshes with a handful of men. Six months later he'd rebuilt an army, defeated the Danish king Guthrum at the Battle of Edington, and made Guthrum accept baptism as a condition of peace. He spent the next twenty years translating Latin texts into English, reorganizing the law, and building a system of fortified towns that made England defensible. He died in 899.

Holidays & observances

Intersex Awareness Day was created in 2003 by Intersex International to commemorate the first public demonstration by…

Intersex Awareness Day was created in 2003 by Intersex International to commemorate the first public demonstration by intersex people, which took place in Boston in 1996. The date marks the protest outside a medical conference where doctors were discussing surgical interventions on intersex infants. About 1.7% of people are born with intersex traits. Many undergo unnecessary surgeries before they can consent. The day demands that stop.

Austrians celebrate National Day to commemorate the 1955 constitutional law that enshrined the country’s permanent ne…

Austrians celebrate National Day to commemorate the 1955 constitutional law that enshrined the country’s permanent neutrality. By formally rejecting military alliances and foreign bases, Austria secured the withdrawal of Allied occupation forces and established its modern identity as a sovereign, non-aligned bridge between the Cold War power blocs of Europe.

Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches honor Saints Lucian and Marcian today, two third-century martyrs execute…

Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches honor Saints Lucian and Marcian today, two third-century martyrs executed in Nicomedia. Their defiance against Roman persecution solidified the early Christian commitment to faith over imperial authority, establishing a template for martyrdom that bolstered the resolve of the burgeoning church during periods of intense state-sponsored suppression.

St. Fulk is a relatively obscure figure in the Roman Catholic calendar — one of numerous medieval saints whose feast …

St. Fulk is a relatively obscure figure in the Roman Catholic calendar — one of numerous medieval saints whose feast days appear in regional martyrologies without extensive documentation of their lives. Many such saints were local figures: a bishop whose cathedral survived, a hermit near a pilgrimage route, a patron whose name attached to a town. Their presence in the calendar is evidence not of widespread fame but of persistent local devotion. Communities maintained these names through prayers repeated for centuries when the written record had mostly gone.

Benin celebrates Armed Forces Day on October 26, commemorating the founding of its military after independence from F…

Benin celebrates Armed Forces Day on October 26, commemorating the founding of its military after independence from France in 1960. The country has experienced multiple coups—1963, 1965, 1967, 1969, and 1972—making it one of Africa's most coup-prone nations in its first decades. Major Mathieu Kérékou seized power in 1972 and ruled for nearly three decades. Now the military gets a parade. The institution that kept overthrowing governments became the one being honored.

Cedd was one of four brothers who all became bishops in Anglo-Saxon England, which is statistically improbable enough…

Cedd was one of four brothers who all became bishops in Anglo-Saxon England, which is statistically improbable enough to be worth noting. He studied under Aidan of Lindisfarne and was sent to convert the East Saxons in 653 AD. He founded monasteries at Bradwell-on-Sea and Lastingham. At the Synod of Whitby in 664, he initially argued for the Celtic position, then accepted the Roman ruling on the dating of Easter and converted his entire community to the Roman practice. He died of plague later that year. Bradwell-on-Sea still stands.

St. Albinus — Aubin of Angers — was a 6th-century bishop in western France who became known for negotiating the freed…

St. Albinus — Aubin of Angers — was a 6th-century bishop in western France who became known for negotiating the freedom of slaves and ransoming prisoners held by Frankish lords. He's one of a cluster of early medieval saints whose fame rests on practical acts of mercy rather than theological contribution or dramatic martyrdom. The Church in Gaul during this period functioned partly as a humanitarian institution, with bishops wielding moral authority to constrain the violence of secular rulers. Albinus used that authority more aggressively than most.

Jammu and Kashmir's Accession Day marks October 26, 1947, when Maharaja Hari Singh signed the Instrument of Accession…

Jammu and Kashmir's Accession Day marks October 26, 1947, when Maharaja Hari Singh signed the Instrument of Accession to India in exchange for military assistance against a Pakistani tribal invasion. The signing was conditional on a future plebiscite to determine the territory's final status. That plebiscite has never been held. The accession triggered the first India-Pakistan war and established the Line of Control that still divides the territory. Both India and Pakistan claim the entire region. Accession Day is celebrated in Jammu; across the Line of Control, Pakistan marks a different date.

Alfred the Great, King of Wessex, defeated the Vikings, established a navy, codified laws, promoted literacy, and tra…

Alfred the Great, King of Wessex, defeated the Vikings, established a navy, codified laws, promoted literacy, and translated Latin texts into English. He's the only English monarch called "the Great." He also burned cakes. According to legend, he was hiding from Vikings in a peasant woman's house and she asked him to watch her cakes baking. He let them burn. She scolded him, not knowing he was the king. The story is probably fiction. Everything else he did was real.

Demetrius of Thessaloniki was a Roman military officer who converted to Christianity and was martyred around 306 AD u…

Demetrius of Thessaloniki was a Roman military officer who converted to Christianity and was martyred around 306 AD under Diocletian's persecutions. His basilica in Thessaloniki is one of the oldest Christian churches still standing, dating to the 5th century. He is the patron saint of Thessaloniki and one of the most venerated military martyrs in the Orthodox tradition. Crusaders believed his relics helped them at the siege of Thessaloniki in 1185. He remains one of those saints whose cult outlasted the empires that tried to extinguish it.

Romans inaugurated the Ludi Victoriae Sullanae to celebrate Lucius Cornelius Sulla’s decisive victory at the Colline …

Romans inaugurated the Ludi Victoriae Sullanae to celebrate Lucius Cornelius Sulla’s decisive victory at the Colline Gate. These games transformed the dictator's military triumph into an annual state-sanctioned spectacle, cementing his political authority through lavish public entertainment and religious ritual for the Roman populace.

Nauru celebrates the day its population hit 1,500.

Nauru celebrates the day its population hit 1,500. Twice. German colonization and disease had reduced the island to 1,400 people by 1932—below the threshold they believed necessary for cultural survival. On October 26, 1932, a birth pushed them to 1,500. They called it Angam: 'coming home.' They hit it again in 1949 after World War II. Now the population is 12,000. They still celebrate the day they decided they'd survive.