User:SDZeroBot/NPP sorting/History and Society/History
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![]() | 257 unreviewed articles as of 1 August 2025
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Created | Article | Extract | Class | Creator (# edits) | Notes |
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2024-09-17 | Valborg Seeberg (Norwegian author (1851–1929)) | Valborg Seeberg (16 November 1851 – 1929) was a Norwegian author. | Stub | Spiderpig662 (14104) | |
2024-12-26 | Kahl (god) (Arabian god) | Kahl is a god of pre-Islamic Arabia. He was the chief god (tutelary deity) of the city of Qaryat al-Faw, the capital of the Kingdom of Kinda, beginning in the 2nd century BC. Kahl is attested regularly, but the evidence is more sparse with respect to how Kahl was understood. | Start | Pogenplain (5459) | |
2025-01-12 | Four Quls (Islamic prayer) | Four Quls (Arabic: القَلاقِل, Persian: Chahar Qul [چهار قل]) are considered to be four Qur'anic suras, al-Kafirun, al-Ikhlas, al-Falaq, and al-Nas, all of which are begun with the, "qul" (that is, say). | Stub | 110 and 135 (850) | |
2024-12-10 | Ethel Lote (British World War II nurse and yoga instructor (1920–2024)) | Ethel Lote (née Nutting; 28 November 1920 – 11 June 2024) was a British World War II nurse and yoga instructor. After the war, she became a dental nurse and founded the Dental Nurses Society. | C | Spiderpig662 (14104) | |
2024-12-17 | Bertha Grace Nurse (New Zealand nurse (1879–1962)) | Bertha Grace Nurse was a civilian and military nurse during World War I with the New Zealand Army Nursing Service Corps and the Samoan Expeditionary Forces in 1914. | B | Winnieswikiworld (1178) | |
2025-01-16 | Battle of Frenkyazısı (1387) (1386 battle) | The Battle of Frenkyazısı occurred in late 1386 or early 1387, between an Ottoman army under Murad I and a Karamanid force under Alaeddin Ali Bey. The engagement took place outside of Konya and resulted in a decisive Ottoman victory. In the aftermath the Karamanids had to accept Murad I's suzerainty and Ottoman supremacy over the western part of Anatolia was secured for the time being. | Stub | Kilian2807 (508) | |
2025-01-18 | Temple of Apollo (Naxos) (Ancient Greek temple on Naxos, Greece) | The Temple of Apollo, or Portara (Greek: Πορτάρα, meaning 'large door'), was an ancient Greek temple in Naxos, dedicated to the god Apollo. The temple was constructed in the 6th century BC by the tyrant Lygdamis. | Start | Ntsakalias (590) | |
2025-01-26 | Mangi Ngamini (King of Machame, 1886-1888) | Ngamini or Mangi Ngamini Ndesserua Kombe (c.1870–1890s), also called Mangi Ngamini of Machame (Mangi Ngamini in Kichagga; Mfalme Ngamini in Swahili), was a well-known monarch of the Chaga in the last half of the 19th century. He was the son of Mangi Ndesserua of Machame and a king of the Chagga. | C | Mnazini (7837) | |
2025-02-07 | List of Mika X live performances | The New Zealand Maori singer, performance artist, actor, filmmaker, TV producer and comedian Mika X (born Terrance John Pou on 8 February 1962, later renamed Neil Gudsell, also known as Mika and as Mika Haka) has toured multiple times to support their albums. | Start | Bennyaha (8637) | |
2025-02-13 | Nicola Muzaka (Medieval Albanian lord of the Muzaka family) | Nicola Muzaka (Albanian: Nikollë Muzaka), also known as Nikola, Nicolas or Nicolao was an Albanian nobleman and member of the Muzaka family. | C | Arberian2444 (5998) | |
2025-02-22 | Treaty of Artaxata (Peace treaty between Roman republic and Kingdom of Armenia (66 BC)) | The Treaty of Artaxata, was signed in 66 BCE in the Armenian capital of Artaxata (modern-day Artashat), marked the end of hostilities between the Roman Republic and the Kingdom of Armenia under King Tigranes the Great. The treaty concluded the Armenian involvement in the Third Mithridatic War and established Armenia as a Roman client state, significantly reducing its territorial ambitions in the Near East. | C | Hay kamavor (754) | |
2025-02-04 | Siege of Venlo (1511) (1511 conflict during the Guelders Wars) | The siege of Venlo occurred in 1511 when a combined Habsburg and English force besieged Venlo in an attempt to capture the city and bring the Duchy of Guelders to its knees. | Start | VidarVN (609) | |
2025-02-23 | Svyataya Volya Ghetto | The Ghetto in Svyataya Volya (summer 1941 – March 1942) was a Jewish ghetto, established as a place of forced resettlement for the Jewish population of the village of Svyataya Volya, located in the Ivacevichy District of the Brest Region, as well as for Jews from nearby settlements. | Start | Rafi Chazon (1305) | |
2024-12-20 | Siege of Valencia (1101–1102) (1101–1102 siege of Valencia in the Reconquista) | The siege of Valencia was fought between the Almoravids and the Lordship of Valencia. Valencia was defended by El Cid's widow, Jimena Díaz. After months of siege, the Almoravids occupied the city. | Start | عبدالرحمن4132 (5825) | |
2025-02-02 | Siege of Aiginion (Battle of the Third Macedonian War) | The siege of Aiginion took place in 168 BC in today's Kalabaka Aiginion was described as a town with formidable defenses Aiginions defenses where so strong where so strong that in the year 197 BC the Roman General Titus Quinctius Flamininus chose to bypass the town due to its strong defenses The siege ended in roman victory and the town was destroyed by the romans. | Stub | Sigma.212 (357) | |
2025-01-26 | Armorial of Georgia (country) | This is a list of coat of arms of Georgia. It includes historical coat of arms as well as the ones of Georgian dynasties and attributed to Georgia by various scrolls at some point in time. It can also include emblems of Georgia if used for similar purpose. | Start | Athoremmes (814) | |
2024-12-30 | Ibn Sufi (A Shiite genealogist from the 11th century AD) | Ali ibn Muhammad Alawi Umari with the full name of Najmuddin Abul-Hasan Ali ibn Abul-Ghanaim Alawi Umari known as Ibn Sufi (born c. 1000 AD/CE—c. 390 AH in Basra, died c. 1068 AD/CE—c. 460 AH in Mosul) was a prominent Shiite genealogist and the author of the famous Arabic historical genealogy book "[[Al-Majdi fi Ansab al-Talibiy ... | C | Thellane (359) | |
2025-04-02 | Roman Ermelo | Roman Ermelo was a big roman camp (and possible fortification) in what is now Netherland. It was created under Augustus in the short-lived roman province of Germania. | Start | F123indam (58) | |
2025-04-12 | Lila Lebowitz (American anthropologist & author) | Lila Lebowitz (1930–1984) was an American anthropologist, author, and associate professor at Northeastern University. | Start | Silver1964 (29) | |
2024-12-17 | Maria Tuci (Albanian laywoman and one of the 38 martyrs of Albania) | Maria Tuci was an Albanian laywoman and one of the 38 martyrs of Albania. She was tortured and killed by the communist regime of Albanian dictator Enver Hoxha. | Start | TaulantianKnight (712) | |
2025-05-07 | Romanization in Menorca | The Romanization of Menorca refers to the process that involved the Roman military occupation, colonization, and the gradual acculturation of the indigenous Talayotic population, which, as a result, would lead to the definitive extinction of their culture as a distinct entity. | B | Mariatb1 (23) | |
2025-05-07 | Shen Yi (Three Kingdoms) (Late Han and Three Kingdoms warlord who ruled parts of the Shangyong corridor) | Shen Yi (Chinese: 申儀; pinyin: Shēn Yí) was a war-lord of the Shen (申) clan active along the upper Han River at the end of the Eastern Han dynasty and during the early Three Kingdoms period. Initially the de-facto ruler of Fangling Commandery (房陵郡), he surrendered to Liu Bei in 219 CE but defected to Cao Wei the following year, helping to topple Liu Bei’s general Liu Feng and take control of the region. | Start | Simfish (3364) | |
2025-05-11 | Hermotimus of Colophon (Ancient Greek mathematician) | Hermotimus of Colophon (born c. 325 BC) was an Ancient Greek mathematician who lived and worked in Colophon. | Start | Basetialy (153) | |
2025-05-03 | Aelius Serenus (1st century AD Roman Grammarian) | Aelius Serenus was an Athenian grammarian of uncertain date. | Start | Basetialy (153) | |
2025-05-07 | Post-talaiotic period | The Post-Talayotic period, Final Talayotic, or Balearic period is the last chronological phase corresponding to protohistory of Talayotic culture, which developed in Menorca and Mallorca. Its chronology spans much of the Iron Age, from around 600-500 BCE, when it seems that some talayots begin to be abandoned, until 123 BCE, when the Roman conquest of the islands took place. | B | Mariatb1 (23) | |
2025-04-02 | Flag of Brabant (Belgium) | In black a lion of gold, nailed and tongued gules | Start | SEPB66 (261) | |
2025-05-19 | Deli Abdullah Pasha (Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire from late 1822 to early 1823) | Deli Abdullah Pasha or Abdullah Hamdullah Pasha was an Ottoman leader who served as grand vizier between November 1822 and March 1823 during the reign of Mahmud II. | Stub | Yilanhoca (1216) | |
2025-02-13 | Wishtasp-sast nask (Zoroastrian religious text) | The Wishtasp-sast or Vishtasp-sast nask was the 10th nask (volume) of the Sasanian Avesta. The work is now lost, but according to later references, it contained a detailed history of Vishtaspa, an early patron of Zarathustra. The Wishtasp-sast nask may, in whole or in parts, be preserved through the Wishtasp Yasht manuscripts. | C | Kjansen86 (4730) | |
2025-01-31 | Raid on Barcelona (1115) (Almoravid raid against Barcelona (1115)) | In 1115, forces of the Almoravid Emirate under the commander Abu Bakr ibn Ibrahim ibn Tifilwit and acting on the orders of the Emir Ali ibn Yusuf, carried out a raid against the city of Barcelona, the main city of the County of Barcelona. | C | Andoria225 (187) | |
2025-02-07 | Astrateias graphe (Ancient Greek law) | Astrateias Graphe (Ancient Greek: ἀστρατείας γραφή) refers to a legal charge in Ancient Athens brought against citizens who failed to appear for military service after being enrolled for a campaign. This offense was part of a broader set of military-related crimes, regulated under Athenian law, and was dealt with by the military authorities. | C | Archaeaoris (2301) | |
2025-02-06 | Siege of Azov (1695) | 'Siege of Azov, phase in the Azov Campaigns. | Stub | LGT55 (558) | |
2025-05-27 | Ed Heck (American painter) | Ed Heck (born March 26, 1963) is an American pop artist. | Stub | Fabian.aichwald (24) | |
2025-03-01 | Siege of Livadeia (Military engagement in 1821 during the Greek Revolution) | The siege of Livadeia was a military engagement of the Greek War of Independence. | Start | Alka21 (4263) | |
2025-06-02 | Jovan Kovrlija (Yugoslav and Serbian football manager and player (1942–2019)) | Jovan Kovrlija (Serbian Cyrillic: Јован Коврлија; 20 January 1942 – 24 August 2019) was a Yugoslav and Serbian football manager and player. | Start | ..::11soccero11::.. (3418) | |
2025-06-02 | Anica Kovačič (Slovene holocaust survivor) | Anica Kovačič (née Mislej; March 28, 1923 – 2019) was a Slovenian woman who interacted with Anne Frank in Bergen-Belsen. Kovačič, is probably the only Yugoslav woman who knew Frank, and was her friend until her death. | Start | Supmblaz (26) | |
2025-05-21 | Bozburun Byzantine Shipwreck | The Bozburun Shipwreck is a Middle Byzantine merchant vessel discovered by Turkish sponge diver Mehmet Askin in 1973 off the Bozburun Peninsula in Turkey, and excavated by the Institute of Nautical Archaeology beginning in 1995. Based on dendrochronology, the wood from the ship was dated to AD 874. | Stub | Nattering Nabob of Nanofabrication (191) | |
2025-06-03 | Mādayān ī Hazār Dādestān (Zoroastrian legal compilation) | Mādayān ī Hazār Dādestān, (Book of a Thousand Judgements), is a significant primary document concerning the social and institutional history of Sasanian Iran and the only entirely legal treatise on pre-Islamic Sasanian jurisprudence to have survived from the Zoroastrian era. | C | Kansas Bear (52211) | |
2025-05-31 | Bertha Lane Scott (American anti-suffragist and socialite (1860–1938)) | Bertha Lane Scott (born Bertha Francis Lane; October 1860 – July 17, 1938) was an American anti-suffragist, socialite, and civic volunteer. She sometimes credited as Mrs. William Forse Scott, she is best known for heading the Publications Committee of the New York State Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage (NYSAOWS), she produced pamphlets, open letters, and newspaper essays that argued women’s political participation would undermine family life and was unnecessary b ... | B | Gameking69 (1269) | |
2025-05-19 | Siege of Tlemcen (1242) (1242 siege) | The siege of Tlemcen took place in 1242 and marked an important stage in the Campaigns of Abu Zakariya Yahya. It opposed the forces of the Kingdom of Tlemcen to those of the Hafsids, and ended with the defeat of Tlemcen, leading to its vassalization. | Start | Based tunisian (44) | |
2025-06-07 | Scythian revolt against Mithridates VI (107 BCE revolt) | The Scythian revolt against Mithridates VI was a major Scythian revolt started in 107 BCE in Crimea, led by Saumacus against the occupying forces of the Bosporan Kingdom, and his ally Kingdom of Pontus led by Diophantus. In the end, the revolt was suppressed and Crimea stayed under the control of the Bosporan Kingdom. | Start | DesertGeneral (126) | |
2025-05-26 | Studio Zero (anime company) (Animation company in Japan from 1963-1971) | was a Japanese animation studio founded in 1963 by animator Shinichi Suzuki from Otogi Production and mangaka Shotaro Ishinomori, Fujiko Fujio, Jirō Tsunoda and Fujio Akatsuka in the Tokiwa-sō apartment. | Start | 6 A 23 KAUSTAV CHAKI (295) | |
2025-05-21 | Aqköbik Khan (Fomer leader of the Toksaba tribe of the Kipchaks) | Aqköbik Khan was the leader of the Toksaba tribe of the Kipchaks who lived in the 13th century. The conflict between him and Köten Khan, the leader of the Durut tribe, is described in historical sources. He is considered an ancestor of the Kazakh Kipchaks. | Stub | Sagzhan (108) | |
2025-05-18 | Site Museum of Bashbaliq City, Silk Road (Archaeology / Cultural Heritage Museum in Xinjiang, China) | The Site Museum of Bashbaliq City, Silk Road, was inaugurated on 14 July 2022, with Beiting Ancient City—inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage “Silk Roads: Chang’an–Tianshan Corridor” list—as its focal point. | Start | Kerdipole (45) | |
2025-06-14 | Shuyuan Chen | Shuyuan Chen (5th century – September 19, 466), personal name unknown, was a consort of Emperor Xiaowu of Liu Song who carried the second rank of concubine Shuyuan. In 456 she bore Emperor Xiaowu his third son Liu Zixun. Neither she nor her son was favored by Emperor Xiaowu. | Stub | HenryXVII (6093) | |
2025-01-08 | Khālid ibn al-Bukayr | Khālid ibn al-Bukayr ibn ʿAbd Yā Lail ibn Nāshib al-Laythī (Arabic: خالد بن البكير بن عبد يا ليل بن ناشب الليثي), or also known as Ibn Abī al-Bukayr, was an early sahabi (companion) of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. He participated in the Battles of Badr, Uhud and the raid at Rajīʿ in Safar{{NoteTag|The intended meaning here is the name of a location in the land of Hudhayl, eight miles from 'Asfan, where the batt ... | Start | Karim Ibn Karim (148) | |
2025-06-17 | Jami C. Shawley | Jamelle C. "Jami" Shawley is a United States Army major general who has served as the commanding general of Combined Joint Task Force - Horn of Africa, the only permanent American military base in Africa. On May 14, 2022, she became the first female U.S. commanding general on African soil, replacing Major Geneneral William Zana at Camp Lemonnier which is used to support counterterrorism efforts in neighboring Somalia. | Stub | Durindaljb (4752) | |
2025-05-29 | Rainald II Masoir (Lord of Margat) | Rainald II Masoir was the lord of Margat from c. 1140 to c. 1185. In 1133, his father lost his castle to the Muslims, but it was regained in 1140. Rainald was an avid supporter of Aimery of Limoges, taking his side against Bohemond III of Antioch during the latter's war with the church. | Stub | Reverosie (4190) | |
2025-06-17 | Kolobi | The Kolobi (also rendered Colobi) were an ancient people of northeastern Africa mentioned in both Ptolemy’s Geography and Strabo’s Geographica. Although classical sources provide only brief descriptions, both authors place the Kolobi near the Red Sea coast, and likely refer to the same group. | Start | Eren Gatiat (2371) | |
2025-06-17 | List of ambassadors of Bulgaria to Serbia (List of Bulgarian ambassadors to Serbia) | This is a list of Bulgaria's ambassadors to Serbia. The ambassadors are based in Belgrade. | Start | Klačko (14652) | |
2025-06-06 | Doliche (Commagene) (Place) | Dülük, also known as Dolikhe or Doliche (Ancient Greek: Δολίχη; Armenian: Տլուք, romanized: Tlukʿ), or Tulupa, is an ancient city located in the Şehitkamil district of Gaziantep, in the neighborhood that bears the same name. Dülük is considered the oldest continuously inhabited settlement in Türkiye. | C | Erdalkara (92) | |
2025-02-28 | Battle of Kompoti (1822 battle of the Greek War of Independence) | The Battle of Kompoti was a military engagement of the Greek War of Independence, with a victorious outcome for the Greeks. | Start | Alka21 (4263) | |
2025-06-11 | Pami II (Egyptian Pharaoh) | Neferkare Pami or Pami II (Egyptian nfr-kȝ-rʿ p-my or pȝ-my, variant writings of pȝ-mjw) was an obscure pharaoh of the Tanite 23rd Dynasty, who was fully identified only in 2018. He reigned in the late 8th century BC. | B | StefThrax (1297) | |
2025-06-14 | Vuk's reform | Vuk's reform (Serbian: Вукова реформа, Vukova reforma) was a reform of the Serbian Cyrillic alphabet and orthography conducted by Vuk Stefanović Karadžić in the first half of the 19th century. The reform aimed to standardize the literary language based on vernacular speech, in accordance with the principle of "one letter, one sound" and the motto "write as you speak, and read as it is written". | GA | Mmns21 (64) | |
2025-01-16 | Massa Marittima mural (13th-century fresco in Massa Marittima, Italy) | The Massa Marittima mural is a 13th-century fresco located on the rear wall of the Fonte dell’Abbondanza, a public fountain in the Tuscan town of Massa Marittima. Often called the “Tree of Fertility,” the image features a large tree bearing numerous phalluses, surrounded by women and black birds. | C | Benmuncy (42) | |
2025-06-16 | Kharabet Ihrit (Archaeological site in Egypt) | Kharabet Ihrit, also known as Batn Ihrit, Batn el Harit (or simply Harit), often confused with the village of Batn-Ihrît approximately 3km to the North-West, is an archaeological site in Egypt's Faiyum Governorate on the site of the ancient settlement of Theadelphia. | Start | Giuliotf (2314) | |
2025-05-17 | Second battle of Bhilsa (13th century battle in India) | The Second battle of Bhilsa was a battle fought between the Paramaras of Malwa under Devapala and the Delhi Sultanate under Iltutmish. It was a victory for Devapala, who reconquered Bhilsa and restored stability in the Paramara kingdom. | Start | Idkwhattosayboi (169) | |
2025-03-27 | Di Gaspar (Yugoslav and Macedonian artist (1938–2022)) | Di Gaspar (born Dimitrije Lorenca Gaspar, 12 April 1938 – 15 September 2022) was a Yugoslav and Macedonian artist known for blending surrealism, symbolism, and abstraction. | Start | Zonaart92 (42) | |
2025-06-25 | Voisava Arianiti (15th century Albanian Princess) | Voisava Arianiti (Albanian: Vojsava Arianiti) also known as Voisava Arianiti Comneno, Donna Voisava, Lady Voisava, Goisava or Gojisava was a 15th century Albanian princess from the House of Arianiti. She became Princess Consort of Zeta after her marriage with Ivan Crnojević who was the Lord of Zeta from 1465 until 1490. | B | Arberian2444 (5998) | |
2025-06-22 | Siege of Málaga (1065-1066) (1065-1066 siege of Málaga in Spain) | The Siege of Málaga (1065-1066) was a military conflict that took place between the year 1065 and 1066 in the city of Málaga that was under the rule of the Taifa of Granada, between the Taifa of Seville forces commanded by the Abbadid dynasty Prince Al-Mu'tamid ibn Abbad and the Taifa of Granada under the rule of Badis ibn Habus. | C | Wikiknight7 (159) | |
2025-06-08 | Tziyyon ha-lo tishali (Hebrew-language Zion poem by Judah Halevi) | Tziyyon ha-lo tishali (Hebrew: צִיּוֹן הֲלֹוא תִשְׁאֲלִי, lit. 'Zion, do you not inquire'), also transcribed Siyyon ha-lo' Tishaliy, is a Hebrew-language poem composed by Judah Halevi (c. 1075–1141), one of the most prominent Jewish poets of medieval Spain. | Start | ReyNimrod (715) | |
2025-06-07 | Lazistan Khanate | The Lazistan Khanate was a proposed buffer state suggested by the United Kingdom during the Congress of Berlin in 1878. The proposal envisioned the establishment of an autonomous or even independent state in the historical region of Lazistan. It aimed to resolve disputes regarding the status of Batum and its surrounding areas, which had been ceded to the Russian Empire after the Russo-Turkish War. | Start | AE182 (861) | |
2025-06-25 | Timeline of ancient Israel and Judah | 1208 BCE | Start | ADeeperUnderstanding (392) | |
2025-06-06 | Princess Runan (Tang dynasty princess (died 636)) | Princess Runan (汝南公主, c. 621 CE – 16 November 636 CE), her personal name was not recorded, was a royal princess of the Tang dynasty. She was the second or third recorded daughter of Emperor Taizong of Tang, the second emperor of the dynasty, through an unknown consort. | Start | AJMgirl (630) | |
2024-12-20 | Rheinwg (Lost kingdom in southern wales) | The Kingdom of Rheinwg (Welsh: Teyrnas Rheinwg) was a Brittonic kingdom in wales, which is often thought to have been a union of the kingdoms of Dyfed and Brycheiniog | Start | Canyoulogmeinwikpediathankspls (3) | |
2025-05-31 | TT218 (Ancient Egyptian tomb) | TT218 (Theban Tomb 218) is the title which identifies one of the Tombs of the Nobles located in the area of the so-called Theban Necropolis, on the western bank of the Nile in front of the city of Luxor., in Egypt. Intended for the burials of nobles and officials connected to the ruling houses, especially of the New Kingdom, the area was exploited as a necropolis since the Old Kingdom and, subsequently, up to the Saitic period (with the XXVI dynasty) and Ptolemaic period. | C | Leoboudv (22338) | |
2025-06-04 | Mindhal mata temple (Village and pilgrimage site in Himachal Pradesh, India) | The temple of Chámunda or Mindhal Básan Devi in Pángí is situated on the left bank of the Chándra-Bhágá, opposite Sách (32° 59' N. and 76° 27' E.). This shrine has been a place of pilgrimage from ancient time. A mela is held here in Bhádon, and is frequented by people from all the neighbouring valleys. | Start | Jverma explorer (86) | |
2025-06-07 | Movimiento Acción Poética (Mexican artistic movement) | The Movimiento Acción Poética (English: Poetic Action Movement) is a Mexican literary and artistic phenomenon that began in 1996. Its founder is the poet Armando Alanís Pulido and it consists of labeling and intervening on different walls and walls of cities, with fragments of poetry, mainly in Spanish. | Start | Ramaxel (850) | |
2025-06-22 | Battle of Écija (1039) (1039 battle near Écija in Spain) | The Battle of Écija (1039) was a battle that took place near the town of Écija in 3 October 1039, between the forces of the Taifa of Seville led by Ismail ibn Abbad and the allied forces of the Taifa of Málaga , Taifa of Granada and the Taifa of Carmona, the battle was a response to the Abbadid dynasty expansionist policies in the neighboring Taifas territories. | Start | Wikiknight7 (159) | |
2025-06-21 | Battle of al-Funt (1038) (1038 battle in Spain) | The Battle of al-Funt (Friday 4 August 1038) was a battle that took place near modern-day Deifontes between the forces of the Taifa of Granada ruled by Badis ibn Habus against the forces of the Taifa of Almería lead by Zuhayr al-Siqlabi, it ended with a Granadan Zirid victory and the death of Zuhayr, marking an end to the hegemony of the Amirids in Eastern Andalucia. | Start | Wikiknight7 (159) | |
2025-06-23 | Battle of Arjona (1041) (1041 battle in Spain) | The Battle of Arjona (1041) was a battle that took place near the city of Arjona in Al-Andalus between the Taifa of Granada forces ruled by Badis ibn Habus under command of Vizier Samuel ibn Naghrillah against the two well-known Andalusian Commanders Wasil and Muwaffaq supporting a Zirid rebel "Yaddyr" nephew of Habbus al-Muzaffar. | Start | Wikiknight7 (159) | |
2025-03-10 | Capture of Bitlis (1855) (1855 battle) | The Capture of Bitlis was a military engagement that took place in January 1855 during the rebellion of Yezdanşêr against the Ottoman Empire. Leading a force of approximately 2,000 men, Yezdanşêr successfully occupied the city with minimal resistance from local Ottoman forces. | Stub | Canoooo.4 (448) | |
2025-02-22 | Siege of Erivan (1636) (Siege Part of the Ottoman–Safavid War (1623–1639)) | The siege of Erivan was a military engagement of the Ottoman–Safavid War (1623–1639). This was during the Safavids reconquest of Erivan. In 1635, in a conscious effort to emulate his warrior predecessors, Sultan Murad IV himself took up the leadership of the army. | Stub | Iranian112 (1381) | |
2024-12-04 | List of Mozambican flags | The following is a list of flags of Mozambique. For more information, see Flag of Mozambique. | C | Felipe Fidelis Tobias (581) | |
2025-06-30 | Guérin of Aumale (11th-century Norman nobleman and founder of the House of Aumale) | Guérin (Latin: Guérinus; c. 1040 – c. 1100) was a Norman nobleman who became the first Count of Aumale, founding the medieval House of Aumale. He inherited the county through his mother, Adelaide of Normandy, half-sister of William the Conqueror, and played a documented role in late 11th-century Anglo-Norman aristocratic networks. | Start | Dickle Chin42069 (198) | |
2025-06-15 | Böri (Elite guard unit in early Turkic states) | Böri (Old Turkic: wolf; also spelled Börü) was an elite guard unit in early Turkic states, responsible for the close protection of the Khagan (ruler). The term derives from Chinese transcriptions fu-li (拂梨) in Tang‑dynasty records. | Start | Franrasyan~trwiki (27) | |
2025-07-02 | Battle of Scerdilaidas (3rd-century BCE battle) | Battle of Scerdilaidas was a military engagement fought in the early 3rd century BCE between the forces of the Illyrian king Scerdilaidas and the Greek Aetolian League. The battle took place along the Adriatic coast in the region inhabited by the Illyrians, although the precise location remains uncertain. | Start | Bardylis22 (40) | |
2025-06-01 | Paula Müller-Otfried (German social reformer and politician (1865–1946)) | Paula Müller-Otfried (born Pauline Sophie Christiane Müller; June 7, 1865 – January 8, 1946) was a German social reformer, politician, and leading figure in the Protestant women’s movement. As long-time chairwoman of the German Evangelical Women’s Association (DEF), she promoted Christian-based social work, women's vocational training, and moral reform. | C | Gameking69 (1269) | |
2025-06-18 | List of visits by foreign leaders to the United States under Joe Biden | List of foreign visits by foreign leaders to Joe Biden catalogs all official visits to the United States by heads of state or government that involved meetings with President Joe Biden during his tenure as the 46th President of the United States. These visits—ranging from state and working visits to official and summit participations—highlight the diplomatic engagements between the Biden administration and global leaders. | Start | Fillboy 0625 (626) | |
2025-07-02 | Battle of Devol (c. 1108 battle) | The Battle of Devol (circa 1108–1109) was a military engagement between the Principality of Arbanon, an early autonomous Albanian polity, and the Byzantine Empire. The battle took place near the fortress of Devol, a strategic site near the modern-day border between Albania and North Macedonia. | Start | Bardylis22 (40) | |
2025-02-08 | Elkunirša (Hittite god of a Canaanite origin) | Elkunirša (in Hittite: Del-ku-ni-ir-ša or Del-ku-ni-ir-ša-aš) is a Hittite god of a Canaanite origin. The god is known from a myth in Hittite, believed to be originated from Canaan, as well as one ritual tablet. | C | פעמי-עליון (1247) | |
2025-06-02 | Urška Dolinarka (Slovenian farmer and heroine) | Urška Dolinarka, also known as Dolinarjeva Urška, was a Slovenian farmer and folk heroine born in 1457 in Češnjica, Slovenia. She is renowned for her resistance against the Ottoman Turks in the Selca Valley. | Start | Ihana Aneta (238) | |
2025-07-01 | Role of Aisha in Hadith Transmission | Aisha Bint Abu Bakr is a renowned and special figure in Islam and revered by Sunni Islam. For her contributions to narrating over 2,210 hadithes to multiple Sunni Hadith collections like Sahih Bukhari, Sahih Muslim, Sunan Abi Dawood and others. She was the third and youngest wife of the Islamic Prophet Muhammad.Her father was Abu Bakr, the first caliph of Islam and revered by Sunnis. | B | Editorofwiki9998 (42) | |
2025-05-13 | Ningthou Kaksuba (King of Ancient Manipur (Kangleipak)) | Ningthou Kaksuba (also spelled Ningthou Kaksupa) was an early monarch of Ancient Manipur, historically known as Kangleipak. His reign is significant in the early dynastic history of the Meitei people. | Stub | Victor Ningthemcha (842) | |
2025-06-17 | Yoimongba (Ancient Prince of Ningthouja dynasty) | Yoimongba (Old Manipuri: ꯌꯣꯢꯃꯣꯡꯄ, romanized: Yoimongpa) was a prince of the NIngthouja dynasty of Ancient Kangleipak. His father was King Khuyoi Tompok, and his younger brother was King Taothingmang. | Start | Victor Ningthemcha (842) | |
2025-06-14 | Pamingnaba (First king and founder of the Luwang dynasty) | Pamingnaba (also spelled Pamingnapa), also known as Luwang Ningthou Pamingnaba, was the first king and founder of the independent Luwang dynasty in ancient Kangleipak (present-day Manipur). He is traditionally recorded as the brother of King Aalong, the founder of the Khuman dynasty. | Start | Victor Ningthemcha (842) | |
2025-07-04 | Donja Branjevina (Archaeological site in Odžaci, Serbia) | Donja Branjevina is an archaeological archaeological site located near the village of Deronje in the municipality of Odžaci. It is classified as a cultural monument of great importance. Archaeological excavations were conducted successfully from 1965 to 1995. | Start | Crrawsome (44) | |
2025-06-18 | Podruga | Podruga or podrugi with the meaning of second in order is a term used to describe "a wife in a second marriage". Until the end of the twentieth century, this word referred to a second wife whom a husband brought into the house, in the case when he had no children with his first wife. | Start | Laslovarga (3807) | |
2025-06-24 | Dhulnunid conquest of Valencia (1065 conquest of Valencia in Spain by Toledo) | the Dhulnunid conquest of Valencia was a military conquest of the city of Valencia capital of the Taifa of Valencia by the Dhulnunid dynasty of the Taifa of Toledo, the conquest was led by Al-Mamun of Toledo emir of Toledo, eventually annexing the Taifa of Valencia with its capital adding it to the Taifa of Toledo realm in 1065. | Start | Wikiknight7 (159) | |
2025-05-03 | Gedaliah Cordovero (Safed-born Talmudic scholar (1562 - 1625)) | Gedaliah Cordovero (1562 - 1625) was a medieval Jewish Talmudic scholar. | Stub | Basetialy (153) | |
2025-07-06 | Margaux woman | Margaux Woman is a prehistoric woman who lived during the mid-ninth millennium B.C. in the Meuse Valley of Belgium near Dinant. Initially, anthropologists have named her, Mos'anne, after the French name for the valley where researchers discovered her remains buried in the Margaux Cave during archaeological excavations in 1988. | Start | 83d40m (12663) | |
2024-12-01 | Lisa Grabarek (American educator and Baptist preacher) | Louise "Lisa" Norris Grabarek is an American educator and Baptist preacher. She taught at St. Catherine's School in Richmond, Virginia and at St. Mary's School in Raleigh, North Carolina. A graduate of Yale Divinity School, Grabarek was the fourth woman to be ordained as a preacher with the approval of the Southern Baptist Convention. | Start | Willthacheerleader18 (70868) | |
2025-05-17 | Anu ziggurat (Ziggurat in Uruk, Iraq) | The Anu ziggurat is a ziggurat in the city of Uruk. | Start | Burner89751654 (915) | |
2025-06-09 | Chronicle of Gowa | Chronicle of Gowa or History of Gowa (Makassarese: Lontara’ Patturioloanga ri Tu-Gowaya) is a Makassarese lontara manuscript from the Gowa Kingdom. This chronicle is estimated to have been compiled in 1538 during the reign of Karaeng Tumapa'risi' Kallonna (1510-1546). | Stub | Mahali syarifuddin (759) | |
2025-06-07 | Duke of Durazzo (title) (14th-century noble title) | The Duke or Duchess of Durazzo (Albanian: Duka i Durrësit, Dukesha e Durrësit) also known as Duke or Duchess of Durrës was a noble title used by the rulers of Durrës (city in modern-day Albania) during the middle ages. The title was originally established by the House of Anjou-Durazzo following the decline of the Kingdom of Albania, and it was later adopted by the House of Thopia, one of the major noble families in medieval Albania. | GA | TaulantianKnight (712) | |
2024-10-13 | Sunizade Seyit Mehmet Emin Efendi (Ottoman scholar) | Sunizade Seyit Mehmet Emin Efendi was a seventeenth-century Ottoman scholar and calligrapher and briefly Shaykh al-Islam. | Start | Yilanhoca (1216) | |
2025-05-31 | Fatma Ismail Salman | Fatma Ismail Salman (Arabic: فاطمة ريما February 14, 1937 – 2 June 2020) was a Palestinian activist and revolutionary | Start | User6987777777 (153) | |
2025-05-29 | Pudjammer (Pudjammeret) | Pudjammeret (also spelled Pudjammer or Pudjammeret) was a royal woman of the Kingdom of Kush, likely from early Napatan period in ancient Nubia (modern-day Sudan), during the 8th to 7th century BCE. Her name is preserved through funerary inscriptions and archaeological remains at royal cemetery of El-Kurru, one of the earliest burial grounds used by the Napatan Dynasty. | Start | Gingerfruit (156) | |
2025-07-07 | Mamka of Kibosho (Queen consort of Kibosho) | Mamka (c.1850s-1900s) or Mamka Msele-Kiwoso, also known as Mamka of Kibosho (Nkamangi Manka in Kichagga; Malikia mamka in Swahili) served as the first wife of Mangi Lokila of Kibosho from the 1860s to 1870. She never had any children, but she became regent to one of his sons after his death in 1870. | C | Mnazini (7837) | |
2025-07-03 | Princess Xincheng (Chinese princess (634–663)) | Princess Xincheng (新城公主,634–663) ,previously Princess Hengshan , personal name unknown, was a princess of tang dynasty and the youngest daughter of Emperor Taizong of Tang and Empress Zhangsun and the full younger sister of Emperor Gaozong. | Start | AJMgirl (630) | |
2025-07-07 | Leonore Lemmon (American socialite (1923–1989)) | Leonore Lemmon (May 11, 1923 – December 30, 1989) was an American socialite, best known as the reported fiancée of actor George Reeves, star of the 1950s television series Adventures of Superman. She was present in Reeves' home on the night of his controversial death in 1959, which sparked decades of speculation and conspiracy theories. | Start | Baadangrysheep (62) | Past AfD |
2025-06-11 | Archaeological site of Selbir | The Salbir archaeological settlement is a historical site located in the Qabala District, Azerbaijan, near the modern village of Chukhur Qabala. It's one of the three main archaeological areas that make up the ancient city of Qabala, which was once the capital of Caucasian Albania. | C | Lamminiaz (1082) | |
2025-07-04 | Polish-Jewish Relations during the Second World War (Historical essay by Emanuel Ringelblum) | Polish-Jewish Relations during the Second World War: Notes and Observations (Polish: Stosunki polsko-żydowskie w czasie drugiej wojny światowej. Uwagi i spostrzeżenia) is a historical essay by Emanuel Ringelblum, written in hiding in late 1943. It attempts to describe and evaluate Polish-Jewish relations during World War II, particularly Polish attitudes toward the Holocaust. | GA | Oliwiasocz (2947) | |
2025-06-22 | Principality of Abu 'Arish | The Principality of Abu 'Arish was a state in South Arabia. It was formed when the Sharif of Abu 'Arish, Muhammad bin Ahmed bin Khayrat, declared independence from the weakened Imamate of Yemen after being appointed governor of Abu 'Arish in 1730. | Stub | Abo Yemen (18302) | |
2025-06-15 | The Virgin Recommends the City of Siena to Jesus | The Virgin Recommends the City of Siena to Jesus (Italian: La Vergine raccomanda la cittá di Siena a Gesú) is the subject of a table of Biccherna painted by Neroccio di Bartolomeo de' Landi in 1480. | C | MrPersonHumanGuy (9528) | |
2025-07-07 | Seal of Karaganda (Symbol of city in Kazakhstan) | The Seal of Karaganda (Kazakh: Қарағанды қаласының елтаңбасы) is the official symbol of the city of Karaganda, Kazakhstan. The author of the coat of arms is Aibek Begalin. | C | Quarot (708) | |
2025-04-09 | South German Buffer State (Proposed country in Europe) | The South German Buffer State (German: Prinz-Eugen-Gau, Reichsgau Banat, Donauprotektorat, Schwabenland, Donaudeutschland, Autonomes Siebenbürgen) was a proposed country whose creation was planned by Danube Swabians in 1941. The state was supposed to include parts of Yugoslavia, Romania, and Hungary, namely the regions of Banat, Bačka, and Baranya. | Start | 9www (53) | |
2025-02-26 | List of claims to the title of the Roman Empire | This is a list of claims to the Roman Republic (509 BCE - 27 BCE), Roman Empire (27 BCE - 395 CE), and its successor states such as the Eastern Roman Empire (commonly known as Byzantium or the Byzantine Empire) or Western Roman Empire. | C | Skylerthegamer (30) | |
2025-01-09 | Noof Al Maadeed (Qatari women's rights activist (1995–unknown)) | Noof Al Maadeed (Arabic: الحياة المادية, 1995 – disappeared March 2023) is a Qatari young woman who attracted international attention after her disappearance in 2021. | Stub | TiffanyAlThani (68) | |
2025-06-26 | Franco-Roman War of 486 | The Franco-Roman War of 486 was a military conflict between the Franks led by Clovis I and a "Roman army" under Syagrius. The war took place in the provinces Gallia Lugdunensis with the exception of Gallia Lugdunensis I (present-day Burgundy), Belgica Prima and Germania Prima. | C | Geoffrey F (1039) | |
2025-07-01 | Paul Boua Spata (Medieval Albanian Nobleman of the Spata family) | Paul Boua Spata (Albanian: Pal Bua Shpata), also known as Pavlos was an Albanian nobleman who was the Lord of Angelokastron & Naupaktos from 1403 to 1407. He was a member of the Spata family. | GA | Arberian2444 (5998) | |
2025-07-06 | Raeberry Castle (castle in Kirkcudbright, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland, UK) | Raeberry Castle was a medieval stronghold located on the rugged coast of Kirkcudbrightshire, Galloway, Scotland. Once the principal seat of the Scottish Clan MacLellan, the castle stood on a dramatic promontory overlooking the Solway Firth, southwest of the town of Kirkcudbright. | B | Mcclellan28 (184) | |
2025-07-08 | Maliq Pasha Gjinolli (Albanian military commander (1760–1824)) | Maliq Pasha Gjinolli (1760–1824) was one of the most well-known figures of the noble Gjinolli family, which played a decisive role in the political, military, and administrative life of Kosovo at the end of the 18th century and the beginning of the 19th century. | Start | SpeedyHaste (185) | |
2025-07-04 | Bronze Tablet | The Bronze Tablet, also known as the Kurunta Treaty, (Bo 86/299) is a bronze tablet with a Hittite language cuneiform inscription dating to the Bronze Age and setting forth a vassal treaty between Hittite King Tudhaliya IV and his cousin, King Kurunta of Tarhuntassa. | Start | Csffoley (86) | |
2025-07-01 | Saoqing Niang | Saoqing Niang (Chinese: 驪扫晴娘; lit. 'Cloud-Sweeping Lady' or 'Clear-Sky Maiden') a weather deity in Chinese folk religion, often invoked to sweep away clouds and bring fair weather, especially during important festivals, weddings, or farming periods. The practice of invoking Saoqing Niang is historically documented across regions of northern China, and she is often represented as a paper effigy, usually in the form of a colorfully dressed woman holding a broom. | Start | SongRuyi (735) | |
2025-05-19 | TT219 (Ancient Egyptian tomb) | TT219, or "Tomb of Nebenmaat”, is the tomb of the ancient Egyptian artisan Nebenmaat and members of his family in Deir el-Medina, near modern Luxor, Egypt. Nebenmaat was the son of the owner of tomb TT218, Amennakht who, as Nebenmaat's father, was the first to build his tomb in this area. | B | Leoboudv (22338) | |
2025-06-02 | Siege of Mirandola (1426) (1426 siege) | The siege of Mirandola in 1426 was a military conflict that involved Aiace, Giovanni I e Francesco III Pico, allies of Filippo Maria Visconti, Duke of Milan, against the Modenese of the anti-Viscontis league. | C | Holapaco77 (2761) | |
2025-06-02 | Adamantia Grigoriadou | Adamantia Grigoriadou was a Greek revolutionary and soldier in the Greek War of Independence. | Start | User6987777777 (153) | |
2025-06-20 | Gregorius Coelius Pannonius | Gregorius Coelius Pannonius (Hungarian: Coelius Gergely; died 1552) was a 16th-century Hungarian Pauline monk and theological writer. | GA | Norden1990 (53529) | |
2025-06-22 | Battle of Lorca (1042) (1042 battle in Spain) | the Battle of Lorca (1042) was a battle that took place near the city of Lorca between the forces of the Taifa of Granada led by Samuel ibn Naghrillah and the combined forces of the Taifa of Valencia, the Taifa of Dénia and the Catalan mercenaries, it resulted in a decisive victory for the Zirid Taifa of Granada. | Start | Wikiknight7 (159) | |
2025-07-07 | Giulio Farina (Italian egyptologist (1889-1947)) | Giulio Farina (Frascati, May 31, 1889 – Trofarello, December 23, 1947) was an Italian Egyptologist, archaeologist and sociologist. Farina is considered one of the leading scholars of Italian Egyptology of the early twentieth century for his methodical rigor, precision in his research and breadth of knowledge, which earned him the direction and Superintendence of the Egyptian Museum of Turin. | C | Leoboudv (22338) | |
2025-06-24 | Laodice and Hyperoche | In Greek mythology, Laodice (Λαοδίκη) and Hyperoche (Ὑπερόχη) were maidens from the land of the Hyperboreans, sent along with five male escorts to deliver offerings to Delos. All of them died there, and the Delians honored them with special ceremonies. | Stub | Archaeaoris (2301) | |
2025-06-17 | Protocol 13 to the European Convention on Human Rights | Protocol 13 to the European Convention on Human Rights abolishes the death penalty, even in times of war, annulling Article 2 of the Convention, which permitted death to be inflicted "in execution of a capital sentence pronounced by a court of law where the offence is punishable by that penalty by law." | Stub | Taraa Scott (1364) | |
2025-06-22 | Catherine of Oldenburg ((1846-1866)) | Duchess Catherine Frederica Paulina ; (9 September 1846 - 11 June 1866) was the daughter of Duke Peter of Oldenburg and Princess Therese of Nassau-Weilburg, and a great-granddaughter of Paul I of Russia. | Start | Angelicvirgin (161) | |
2025-07-07 | Battles of Ladyzhyn (1674) | The battles of Ladyzhyn or defence of Ladyzhyn (Ukrainian: Ладижинська оборона) were two battles over the city of Ladyzhyn in the Right-bank Ukraine between the Ottoman troops and the Cossacks who pledged their loyalty to Ivan Samoylovych as a part of the ongoing Russo-Turkish war. | C | TheHistoryOFEUROPE (620) | |
2025-07-10 | Women's poetry in Spain | Women’s poetry in Spain encompasses the poetic works written by women from the late medieval period to the present day. Long marginalized within the literary canon, women poets have contributed significantly to Spain’s cultural and intellectual history, often challenging dominant aesthetic, social, and political norms. | B | César Reis (112) | |
2025-01-05 | Armorial of Armenia | This is a list of coat of arms of Armenia. It includes historical coat of arms as well as the ones of Armenian dynasties and attributed to Armenia by various scrolls at some point in time. It can also include emblems of Armenia if used for similar purpose. | Stub | Athoremmes (814) | |
2024-12-18 | Abu'l-Hayja al-Hakkari (12th century Kurdish tribal chief and ruler) | Abu'l-Hayja ibn Abdullah ibn Abu Khalil ibn Marzuban Al-Hakkari better known by Abu'l-Hayja Al-Hakkari (died 1143) was a Kurdish ruler and tribal chief of Al-Hakkariyya tribe, he's the earliest recorded ruler of Hakkari. | Stub | Jackhanma69 (810) | |
2025-06-14 | First Class Attendant Ping (Member of the Irgen Gioro clan (died 1856)) | First Class Attendant Ping (19th century – 1856),personal name unknown, was a member of the Irgen Gioro clan from the Manchu Bordered Yellow Banner. She was the eldest daughter of Yan Chang, a former sacrificial wine official at the Imperial Academy, and the granddaughter of Ying Chun, a court official. | Start | AJMgirl (630) | |
2025-07-07 | Salama ibn Sa'd (Ibadi Muslim scholar (fl. 752)) | Salama ibn Sa'd (Arabic: سلمة ابن سعد, fl. 752) was an Islamic scholar, considered the first Ibadi preacher to arrive in the Maghreb to promote this school of thought. He studied under Jabir ibn Zayd and Abu Ubayda Muslim ibn Abi Karima. | Start | Riad Salih (5175) | |
2025-07-13 | Cao Gugu | Cao Gugu (Chinese: 曹姑姑; lit. 'Aunty Cao') is a bodhisattva or deity in Chinese folk religion. In the ancient Huiji Temple, located in a small mountain village in Shanxi, Cao Gugu is venerated as a flesh-bodied bodhisattva—a 16-year-old girl who is said to have attained Buddhahood through selfless sacrifice. | Start | SongRuyi (735) | |
2025-03-30 | Paheri (ancient Egyptian mayor of El-Kab) | Paheri (p3-ḫrỉ, "The Celestial" or p3-ḥr-r(w)-ỉ) was a local ancient Egyptian nomarch and mayor in Elkab from the close to the beginning of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt’s (New Kingdom around 1500 BC. | C | Leoboudv (22338) | |
2025-06-14 | Princess Shou-En (State Princess Shou-En) | Princess Shou-En (December 7, 1830 – April 13, 1859) personal name unknown, was a Qing dynasty princess and the sixth daughter of Emperor Daoguang of the Qing dynasty and Consort Jing of the Borjigit clan.Initially titled Heshuo Princess,but she was later granted the title of Shou'en Gurun Princess. | Start | AJMgirl (630) | |
2025-06-11 | List of Ashkenazi Jewish surnames | B | ReyNimrod (715) | ||
2025-06-23 | Charlotte Grimm (Sister of Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm, 1793–1833) | Charlotte Amalie "Lotte" Hassenpflug, née Grimm (10 March 1793 – 15 June 1833), was the sister of the Brothers Grimm (Jacob and Wilhelm) and their younger brother Ludwig. | B | Harold9595959 (4470) | |
2025-07-11 | Elin i Staxäng (Swedish farmer's wife executed for witchcraft) | Elin i Staxäng née Elin Andersdotter (died in Kungälv 22 June 1671), was a Swedish folk healer. She was one of the people accused of witchcraft during the witch hunt known as the Great noise, which took place in Sweden in 1668–1676. | C | Aciram (129279) | |
2025-06-25 | Ljubka Šorli (Slovenian poet, writer and teacher) | Ljubka Šorli (February 19, 1910, Tolmin – April 30, 1993, Gorizia) was a Slovenian writer, poet and teacher. She is known for her resistance against fascism, her poetic evocations of the Slovene Littoral landscape, her patriotic and religious verses, and her love poetry for her husband Lojze Bratuž, who was killed by the fascists. | GA | Ihana Aneta (238) | |
2025-07-11 | Patrizia Arnaboldi (Italian politician (1946–2025)) | Patrizia Arnaboldi (27 November 1946 – 1 July 2025) was an Italian politician. Coming from the Proletarian Unity Party, in the 1980s she was part of the national leadership of Proletarian Democracy, where she ran for regional councilor in the 1985 Lombard regional election, receiving 2008 votes but was not elected. | Start | Lui Editor (230) | |
2025-02-19 | Siege of Shamakhi (1607) (1607 siege) | The siege of Shamakhi was a phase in the Ottoman–Safavid war (1603–1612) that resulted in the Safavid army's success and Shamakhi's return to Iranian rule after 28 years. During the siege, Baku and Derbent also surrendered to the Iranian army, allowing the Safavid state to regain control of Azerbaijan and Dagestan. | C | Iranian112 (1381) | |
2025-06-12 | Peter Bernhard Weiss (German historian (1943–2025)) | Peter Bernhard Weiss (Weiß) (21 August 1943 in Munich – 25 March 2025 in Kiel) was a German historian and classical scholar. | Start | Procopius (236) | |
2025-07-11 | Ambush of Aigan and Rufinus (534 ambush) | The Ambush of Aigan and Rufinus was a clash between various Berber forces under the command four tribal chieftains spearheaded by the Mastraciani and their chief Cutzinas, and a force of Byzantine cavalry led by the acclaimed Hunnic commander Aigan and Rufinus. | Stub | Whatever748 (1279) | |
2025-07-15 | Danzig Ghetto (Jewish ghetto in Danzig during the Holocaust) | The Danzig Ghetto was a Jewish ghetto located in Danzig (today Gdańsk), operational from 1939 to 1940 in a retirement home and from 1940 to 1945 in a former granary on Speicherinsel. | Start | Luxtaythe2nd (4220) | |
2025-07-14 | John Shaw (schooner) (Shipwreck in Lake Huron, Michigan, United States) | John Shaw was a large, three-masted wooden schooner built in 1885 at West Bay City, Michigan. On November 13, 1894, while being towed across Lake Huron by the steam barge John F. Eddy with a cargo of coal, the schooner encountered a snowstorm and foundered off Harrisville, Michigan. | C | Saltymagnolia (19311) | |
2025-07-07 | Ikrima ibn Abd Allah al-Barbari (Muslim scholar (c.645-723)) | Ikrima ibn Abd Allah al-Barbari (Arabic: عكرمة ابن عبد الله البربري) was a Muslim scholar of Berber descent, he was a mawla of Ibn Abbas. | Stub | Riad Salih (5175) | |
2025-07-06 | Victimulae (Roman settlement) | Victimulae (Ancient Greek: Ἰκτουμούλων, romanized: Iktoumoúlōn) also spelt Victumulae, Victimula, Victimuli or Ictimuli was a Roman settlement (probably pre-Roman in origin) located in Piedmont, in the south-west area of Biella, not far from Lake Viverone. It is believed to have been located on the slopes of the Serra Morenica d'Ivrea near the Bessa plateau. | C | Mellangoose (941) | |
2025-05-19 | Mihaela Adelgundis Černic (Slovenian nun and painter (1913–2016)) | Mihaela Černic, sister Marija Adelgundis (29 September 1913 – 28 August 2016), was a Slovenian painter and teacher of painting and art. She was an important figure among Slovenian minority in Italy and was important in preserving Slovenian culture in Gorizia région. | Start | Ihana Aneta (238) | |
2025-04-02 | Siege of Damascus (1174) (Ayyubid victory in Syria) | The siege of Damascus took place in 15 May to 28 October 1174, following the death of Nur ad-Din Zengi. Saladin, the ruler of Egypt, marched on the city, claiming to act as the protector of Nur ad-Din's young son, As-Salih Ismail. With little resistance, Damascus surrendered to Saladin, allowing him to establish his rule over Syria. | Stub | Canoooo.4 (448) | |
2025-06-07 | Francesca Forleo-Brayda (italian painter) | Francesca Forleo Braida (Francavilla Fontana, 18 January 1779 – 2 June 1820) was a Neapolitan artist. She was born in Francavilla Fontana, at that time in the Kingdom of Naples, now in the Province of Brindisi, in Puglia. | C | Mfran22 (20) | |
2025-06-06 | Debby Banham (English medieval social historian) | Debby Banham is a British historian of early medieval England, specialising in food production, diet, and medicine. She has published on Anglo-Saxon farming and food and drink, as well as on medieval sign language. | Start | SapientSquid (1443) | |
2025-07-09 | Carian War (280–279 BCE war) | Carian War is the conventional name for the conflict between the Hellenistic states of the Ptolemies and the Seleucids, dated to 280–279 BC. | C | Alikkabalik (86) | |
2025-07-09 | Ottilie Bach (German author (1836-1905)) | Ottilie Bach (6 July 1836 – 27 May 1905) was a German writer. She also wrote under the pseudoname O. Bach and Otto Ulrichs. | Start | Lanzesplorf (15) | |
2025-07-18 | Cymba (boat) | Cymba or Cumba (also Cymbe or Cumbe; Ancient Greek: κύμβη), from κύμβος meaning "a hollow", was a small boat, probably originally made from a hollowed-out tree trunk. It was commonly used on rivers and lakes, especially by fishermen. According to Pliny the Elder, the cymba was invented by the Phoenicians. | Stub | Archaeaoris (2301) | |
2025-07-02 | Maukharis of Gaya | The Maukharis of Gaya were a branch of the Maukhari dynasty that ruled the Magadha region. They were likely the original branch of the Maukharis and a later branch split off from them to establish the more prominent Maukharis of Kannauj. They have been dated from the fifth to the early sixth centuries. | C | Ixudi (4560) | |
2025-03-12 | Eva Erben (Czech-Israeli writer and Holocaust survivor, Holocaust survivor) | Eva Erben (Erbenová) (Hebrew: אווה ארבן; born October 24, 1930 as Eva Löwidt (Löwitová or Löwidtová)) is a Czech-Israeli writer and Holocaust survivor who serves as a witness to history. She gained international recognition through the publication of her book When I Was Missed: Memories of a Jewish Girl, in which she describes the ordeal of her family in concentration camps and on death marches. | B | Empiricus-sextus (570) | |
2025-06-30 | Gunhilda of Dunbar (12th-century Scottish noblewoman) | Gunhilda of Dunbar (also spelled Gunnild or Gunhild; c. 1120 – 12 May 1166) was a 12th-century Scottish noblewoman. She was the daughter of Waltheof of Allerdale and married Uhtred of Galloway, becoming the matriarch of a branch that influenced the Anglo-Norman and Gaelic-Norse frontier of medieval Scotland. | Start | Dickle Chin42069 (198) | |
2025-06-30 | Christina of Galloway (12th-century Scottish noblewoman) | Christina of Galloway (fl. late 12th century) was a Scottish noblewoman and member of the ruling dynasty of Galloway. She was the daughter of Uhtred of Galloway, Lord of Galloway (d. 1174), and the wife of William de Brus, 3rd Lord of Annandale (d. 1212). | Start | Dickle Chin42069 (198) | |
2025-07-16 | Aurès campaign (539) (539–540 military campaign) | The Aurès campaign of 539 was a military expedition led by the magister militum of Roman Africa, Solomon against the Berbers (referred to as "Moors" at the time) of the Aurès mountains, especially the Kingdom of the Aurès, during the Byzantine–Moorish wars. | C | Whatever748 (1279) | |
2025-07-14 | Defiance (schooner) (Shipwreck in Lake Huron, Michigan, United States) | Defiance was a wooden two-masted schooner built in 1848 at Perrysburg, Ohio, by Captain Roby. She was a grain-hauling vessel that met her fate on October 20, 1854, in a fatal collision with the brig John J. Audubon off Presque Isle in Lake Huron. Defiance sank shortly after the collision, but all crew survived. | C | Saltymagnolia (19311) | |
2024-12-12 | Josephine Morcashani (Black British singer and entertainer) | Josephine Morcashani (28 January 1870 – 1929) was a British entertainer and singer. Famous for her baritone voice and her play with gender expression, she was touring Europe and the world between 1898 and the 1920s. She was one of the few non-American Black entertainers touring Central Europe before World War I. | Start | Shikeishu (2614) | |
2025-06-02 | Ewa Krasnodebska (Polish actress (born 1925)) | Ewa Krasnodębska (born 9 July 1925) is a Polish actress, known for her extensive career in theatre, film and television from 1949 to 2014. | Start | Adelberta (2200) | |
2025-04-18 | Baba'i ben Farhad (Persian-Jewish historian) | Baba'i ben Farhad (Persian: بابایی بن فرهاد, Hebrew: באבאי בן פרהאד) was a Persian-Jewish chronicler, poet, and historian, the author of the Kitāb-i Sar Guzasht-i Kāshān dar bab-i 'Ibri va guyimiyi Sani (The Book of Events in Kashan Concerning the Jews; The Second Conversion), a chronicle of the forcible conversion event of the Jews of Kashan, Isfahan, and Hamadan, and related hardships from 1721–31, particularly in 1729 and 1730. | Start | AndreJustAndre (43123) | |
2025-07-08 | Dufvans Margareta (Swedish maidservant) | Margareta Matsdotter, known as "Dufvan" ("[The] Dove") or Dufvans Margareta ("Margaret the Dove"), was a Swedish maidservant. She was one of the people accused of witchcraft in the Katarina witch trials during the witch hunt known as the Great noise, which took place in Sweden in 1668–1676. | Start | Aciram (129279) | |
2025-06-24 | Principality of Mataranga (Medieval Albanian Principality (1358–1367)) | The Principality of Mataranga (Albanian: Principata e Matarangës; 1358–1367) was a short-lived medieval Albanian principality located between the Shkumbin and Seman rivers, in what is today the Myzeqe region of southwestern Albania. Initially under the overlordship of the Serbian Empire, the principality emerged following the empire's decline after the death of Stefan Dušan in 1355. | GA | Arberian2444 (5998) | |
2025-07-09 | Partitioning of Prussia | In German historiography, the partitioning of Prussia (Preußische Landesteilung) refers to the time when the historic lands of Prussia proper, the former Teutonic State, were divided between Ducal Prussia and Royal Prussia. | Start | Tino Cannst (2450) | |
2025-04-22 | Battle of Praaspa (Part of the Roman–Parthian Wars) | The Battle of Praaspa was a military Conflict in 36 BC during the Antony's Atropatene campaign. It was organized by the Roman triumvir Mark Antony. The opposing sides were, on the one hand, the Roman Republic and its ally based on the Treaty of Artaxata the Kingdom of Armenia, and on the other hand,the Parthian Empire. | Start | Iranian112 (1381) | |
2025-07-13 | Dominican–Spanish Treaty (1855) (1855 treaty between the Dominican Republic and the Kingdom of Spain) | The Dominican–Spanish Treaty (1855) (Spanish: Tratado Dominico-Español de 1855) was an international treaty between the Dominican Republic and the Kingdom of Spain. This treaty, signed on February 8, 1855, marked Spain's formal recognition of the independent nation, which had finally declared its sovereignty in 1844. | C | BlkGeneral2000 (3625) | |
2025-06-09 | Urška Ferligoj (Slovenian shepherdess and seeress) | Urška Ferligoj, also known as Shepherdess Urška, was a Slovenian shepherdess and Marian seeress, born in 1526, Grgar, Slovenia and died in 1544, Grgar, Slovenia. | C | Ihana Aneta (238) | |
2025-07-16 | Maymunah bint Ali | Maymunah bint ʿAlī (Arabic: مَيْمُونَة بِنْت عَلِيّ),was one of the daughters of ʿAlī ibn Abī Ṭālib, the fourth caliph of Islam and the cousin and son-in-law of the Prophet Muhammad. Historical accounts indicate that ʿAlī named her after Maymunah bint al-Harith, one of the wives of the Prophet Muhammad, also known as a Mother of the Believers. | Start | Sahina78 (74) | |
2025-02-25 | Eleanor Harper Caldwell (American film editor) | Eleanor Harper Caldwell (1910–1976) was an American film editor. | Stub | Colnstard (28) | |
2025-07-02 | Miriam Frink (American educator (1892–1977)) | Miriam Frink (August 4, 1892 – August 23, 1977) was an art educator in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Frink and her lifelong partner, artist Charlotte Partridge, established the Layton School of Art in 1921, acting as the school's co-directors for over thirty years until their joint resignation in 1954. | C | Bubudu57 (512) | |
2025-02-19 | Cuman laws (1279 laws) | The Cuman laws were two provisions, issued on 23 June 1279 and 5 or 10 August 1279, regulating the social status and lifestyle of the Cumans, a nomadic people in the 13th-century Kingdom of Hungary. | FA | Norden1990 (53529) | |
2025-07-02 | Marie of Blois, Duchess of Burgundy (Medieval noblewoman) | Marie of Blois or Marie of Champagne (1128–1190) was duchess of Burgundy and then abbess of Fontevraud. She was the daughter of Theobald II, Count of Champagne and Matilda of Carinthia, who was the daughter of Engelbert, Duke of Carinthia. | Start | Reverosie (4190) | |
2025-07-20 | East Frisian-Gueldrian War (1531–1534) | The East Frisian-Gueldrian War of 1531–1534, also known as the Gueldrian Feud was a conflict between Counts Enno II and Johan I of East Frisia on the one hand, and Balthasar von Esens and Duke Charles II of Guelders on the other. In this war, which lasted from 1531 to 1534, East Frisia suffered severe devastation. | C | TotaFrisia (1353) | |
2025-06-01 | Battle of the Cahul (1574) (1574 battle) | The Battle of the Cahul was a military engagement took place 9 June 1574 at the Cahul Lake during the Moldavian Revolt. The Ottoman-Crimean army fight against Moldavian-Cossack forces and defeat them. | GA | Dushnilkin (8302) | |
2025-02-26 | Moldavian campaigns (1593–1595) | The Moldavian Cossack campaigns of 1593–1595 were a series of expeditions by Zaporozhian Cossacks into Moldavia, which was under the suzerainty of the Ottoman Empire. | Start | Fajowy (1046) | |
2025-02-20 | Raid on Varna (1620 raid) | The Raid on Varna was conducted by the Zaporozhian Cossacks after their raid on Istanbul, on 25 August 1620. | C | Ömereditss (694) | |
2025-02-21 | Battle of Ochakov (1630) (Battle in Ukraine) | The Battle of Ochakov was a battle that took place in 1630 during a Cossack expedition to the Black Sea led by Taras Fedorovych. | Stub | Ömereditss (694) | |
2025-06-25 | Jane Verin (Early colonial American woman whose case established women's religious liberty) | Jane Verin (née Reeves; c. 1610s – after 1640) was an early settler of Providence in New England (present-day Providence, Rhode Island). In a 1638 Providence town meeting the assembly disenfranchised her husband, Joshua Verin, for preventing her from attending religious meetings, marking the first recorded instance in the colonies in which a woman's freedom of conscience was legally recognized as independent of her spouse's authority. | GA | Diogenes99 (7779) | |
2025-02-06 | Moldavian campaign (1574) | The Moldavian Campaign was a military operation carried out by the Ottoman Empire against the Principality of Moldavia, one of its vassal states, in 1574. | C | LGT55 (558) | |
2025-07-16 | On Buildings (Contemporary work about Byzantine construction) | On Buildings (in Medieval Greek: Περὶ κτισμάτων, in Latin: De aedificiis) is a work by the Byzantine historian Procopius, dedicated to the Emperor Justinian I's (r. 527–565) construction activities. Due to its subject matter and the wealth of information it contains, this treatise holds a unique place in Byzantine literature. | FA | Kseni-kam (2145) | |
2025-07-23 | Menas (Byzantine general) (7th century Byzantine general) | Menas (Greek: Μηνᾶ στρατηλάτου; d. June 637) was a Byzantine general (magister militum) and patrikios who commanded the garrison at Chalkis and died in the Battle of Hazir. Although his exact title is unknown, al-Tabari and Ibn al-Adim both attest that he was the second-in-command after Emperor Heraclius. | Start | ILoveHirasawaYui (2806) | |
2025-07-22 | Gallo di Ramperto (9th-century gilded and silvered copper weathercock in Brescia, Italy) | The Gallo di Ramperto (Ramperto's Rooster) is a weathercock made of copper sheet, originally gilded and silvered, created in the year 820 or 830 on commission of Bishop Ramperto to adorn the top of the bell tower of the Santi Faustino e Giovita in Brescia. | GA | Luizadnts (823) | |
2025-07-07 | Siege of Gulbarga | The Siege of Gulbarga was a siege battle where Hussain Nizam Shah I of Ahmadnagar and Ibrahim Quli Qutb Shah Wali of Golconda joined together to capture the fort of Gulbarga from Adil Shah. The fort was well protected with high walls and a deep ditch full of water. | GA | Lion of Ariana (2460) | |
2025-01-30 | Aysra | Aysra or 'esara (عيصره or عيصرا) is an archaeological village located in the northern district of the town of Sakib in Jerash Governorate, northern Jordan. Also known as Khirbet Aysra, it is situated near Mount Troun and contains remnants of ancient buildings and flowing water springs, highlighting its historical significance. | C | Historyfeelings (1203) | |
2025-07-22 | Trudi Witta (Swiss socialist politician and women's suffrage activist (1908–2002)) | Trudi Witta (born Gertrud Marie Humm; 13 October 1908 – 15 November 2002) was a Swiss socialist politician and activist who played a central role in the campaign for women's suffrage in Switzerland. She served in numerous leadership positions within the socialist movement and women's organizations in the Canton of Solothurn and was instrumental in maintaining political support for women's voting rights from the 1940s through its eventual adoption in 1971. | C | 7804j (3399) | |
2025-06-27 | Svetlana Jergenia (politician) | Svetlana Iradionovna Dzhergenia (Abkhaz: Светлана Ирадион-иԥҳа Џьергениа; Georgian: სვეტლანა ჯერგენია; born October 1, 1950) is an Abkhaz politician and widow of the first president of Abkhazia, Vladislav Ardzinba. | Start | Ihavetoentermyusername (706) | |
2025-07-23 | Sylvie d'Avigdor (British translator (1873–1954)) | Sylvie d'Avigdor Clapcott[note 1] (1873 – 10 June 1954) was a British translator. She is known for her English translation of Theodor Herzl's Der Judenstaat, as well as many of Herzl's speeches. | Start | SapientSquid (1443) | |
2025-07-23 | Emir Bayındır Tomb (Tomb in Ahlat, Bitlis, Turkey) | The Emir Bayındır Tomb (Turkish: Emir Bayındır Kümbeti), also known as the Parmaklıklı Tomb, is the tomb of Emir Bayındır bin Rüstem, a bey of the Aq Qoyunlu dynasty, located in Ahlat. According to its inscription, the mausoleum was commissioned by his wife, Şah Selime Hatun, following Bayındır's death in October or November of 1481. | Start | Lionel Cristiano (4043) | |
2025-07-16 | Offa's imitation dinar | In the late 8th century, King Offa of Mercia issued a coin inspired by an Abbasid gold dinar. This coinage reflects early contact between Anglo-Saxon England and the Islamic world. The presence of Islamic silver coins (dirhams) in England further supports this interaction during the period. | Start | BEFOR01 (400) | |
2025-07-22 | Yugoslav Offensive on Prizren (Battle during the Kosovo War) | On 16-17 May 1999, the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia carried out an offensive against the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) in several Regions in Prizren, during the Kosovo War. | Stub | Diti04ZOP (269) | |
2025-07-14 | M.F. Merrick (schooner) (Shipwreck in Lake Huron, Michigan, United States) | M.F. Merrick was a wooden two‑masted schooner built in 1863 by John Oades in Clayton, New York, for Fowler & Esseltyne and later part of the Reindeer Line of Detroit. She measured approximately 139 ft in length, 26 ft in beam, and had a gross tonnage of about 295 GRT. | C | Saltymagnolia (19311) | |
2025-07-24 | Trumpilini | The Trumpilini were an ancient tribe that settled in Val Trompia, one of three main valleys in the Province of Brescia in Northern Italy. | Stub | Pakeha (429) | |
2025-06-26 | Izabella Tabarovsky (American historian) | Izabella Tabarovsky (b. 1969 or 1970) is a Soviet-born writer and activist specializing in Eastern European history and contemporary antisemitism. She is the Kennan Institute Senior Advisor on Regional Partnerships and Programming. | C | Allthemilescombined1 (4155) | |
2025-06-06 | Najmeh Khatun | Najmeh Khatun was the mother of the eighth Shiite (Shia) Imam, Ali ibn Musa al-Rida, and Fatimah bint Musa (Fatemah Ma'soomeh), who has been given various names in hadith and historical sources. Ali ibn Musa al-Rida's mother's original name was Taktum, which was renamed Tahirah by Musa ibn Ja'far after the birth of the eighth Shiite Imam. | Start | 110 and 135 (850) | |
2025-07-14 | SS Messenger (1866) (Shipwreck in Lake Huron, Michigan, United States) | Messenger was a wooden steam barge originally launched as a propeller-driven steamer in 1866 by E.M. Peck at Cleveland, Ohio. After over two decades of service across the Great Lakes, she caught fire while docked at Rogers City, Michigan, and sank offshore on November 11, 1890. | B | Saltymagnolia (19311) | |
2025-06-21 | Consort Jin (Qianlong) (Consort Jin) | Consort Jin (1785(?) – January 19, 1823) of the Šarhūda Fuca clan, was a Manchu woman of the Bordered Yellow Banner and was a consort of the Qianlong Emperor. | Start | AJMgirl (630) | |
2025-07-22 | Yasmin Surveyor | Yasmin Khurshedji Surveyor was an Indian academic, banker, and social worker who is recognized as Asia’s first woman commerce graduate. She graduated from Sydenham College, Mumbai in 1925 at a time when participation of women in higher education, especially in commerce, was extremely rare. | Start | Suyashsave15 (47) | |
2025-07-15 | Adila Khatun (Daughter of Ahmed Pasha (died 1768)) | Adila Khatun (died in 1182 AH / 1768 AD) is the daughter of Ahmed Pasha, son of Hassan Pasha, and the wife of Suleiman Pasha Abu Laila, the governor of Baghdad. She built several mosques in Baghdad, including the Adiliya Mosque near Al-Nahr Street in Al-Mustansiriya district, and the Adila Khatun Mosque near Al-Sarafiya Bridge. | Start | Ravan (324) | |
2025-07-25 | Paul (comes) (400s Roman military commander) | Paul (or Paul comes) was a high-ranking Roman official or soldier in the 5th century, with the rank of Comes, freely translated as count. As historical figure he is difficult to place, because the information that has been preserved about him is unclear. | Start | Geoffrey F (1039) | |
2025-07-23 | Neolithic in Switzerland (Neolithic period in Switzerland from c. 6500 to 2200 BCE) | The Neolithic period in Switzerland spans approximately from 6500 to 2200 BCE, marking the transition from hunter-gatherer societies to agricultural communities. This period is characterized by the introduction of farming, animal domestication, pottery production, and the development of permanent settlements, particularly the famous lake dwellings or palafittes found throughout the Swiss plateau. | B | 7804j (3399) | |
2015-06-25 | Alija Gušanac | Alija Gušanac ("Alija from Gusinje"; fl. 1804–05), known in epic poetry as Gušanac-Alija, was an Albanian Ottoman brigand (krdžalija) who served the Dahije, the renegade Janissaries who had taken the rule of the Sanjak of Smederevo following a coup. | Stub | Zoupan (66630) | |
2025-07-26 | Heracleon of Egypt (ancient grammarian) | Heracleon of Egypt (Ancient Greek: Ἡρακλέων; also spelled Herakleon), also known as Heracleon of Tilotis, was an ancient Greek grammarian from the village of Tiloteus or Tilotis in Egypt, which belonged to the Heracleopolis. He taught in Rome, probably in the period of the Augustus, and is known to have written a commentary on Homer, organized by rhapsody. | Stub | Archaeaoris (2301) | |
2025-06-04 | Siege of al-Hadiqat (632 siege in al-Yamama, now Saudi Arabia) | The Siege of al-Hadiqat, also known as the Siege of the Garden (ḥadīqat al-mawt), took place in December 632 CE during the Ridda Wars, shortly after the Battle of Aqraba. It occurred near the village of Aqraba in the region of al-Yamama, in present-day Saudi Arabia. | Start | Adesc7 (46) | |
2025-07-25 | Janet Hepburn (Scottish religious patron and possible convent founder) | Jane (Janet) Hepburn, Lady Seton (c. 1480– c.1558) was a Scottish woman who was a religious patron and possibly the founder of the Dominican convert of Sciennes, Edinburgh, sometimes before 20 January 1518. | Start | Rehamaltamime (11) | |
2025-07-27 | Battle of Piombino Channel | The Battle of Piombino Channel was a military engagement between the Papal fleet and the Tunisian corsairs. The Papal fleet was ambushed by the Corsairs, losing their flagship and the capture of their commander. | Start | عبدالرحمن4132 (5825) | |
2025-06-07 | Marisol Pérez Lizaur (Mexican social anthropologist (1994–2024)) | Marisol Pérez Lizaur (December 17, 1994 – February 8, 2024) was a Mexican social anthropologist. Her research focused on kinship, business networks, and social organization in Mexico. She worked as a professor and researcher at Universidad Iberoamericana and collaborated with various academic institutions in Latin America. | Start | Fatimald (109) | |
2025-06-14 | Mu'awiya I's Southern Campaigns (658-661) (658–661 military campaign) | Mu'awiya I's Southern Campaigns were a series of raids and military expeditions of Umayyad forces onto Hijaz, Yemen and Iraq after the failure of the arbitration talks after the Battle of Siffin. The campaigns against the Caliphate of Ali continued until the Assassination of Ali. | C | Ameer ul - Momeenen (367) | |
2025-04-28 | Nasibis | The Nasibis (Arabic: النَّوَاصِب, romanized: al-nawasib) are a group that opposes Ali ibn Abi Talib and his family, and they harm them by word or deed. The Sunnis and the Twelver Shiites agree that the Nawasib believe that Ali ibn Abi Talib was immoral, but they do not believe that Ali ibn Abi Talib was an infidel like the Khawarij. | C | DivineReality (900) | |
2025-07-27 | Battle of Klis (1583) | The Battle of Klis was a military engagement between the Habsburgs and the Ottomans at Klis. The Uskoks under the authority of the Habsburgs attempted to capture the city of Klis from the Ottomans; however, their attempt was repulsed. | Start | عبدالرحمن4132 (5825) | |
2025-07-25 | Albertina Escher (19th-century Cuban-born freed slave of Swiss plantation owner) | Albertina Escher (c. 1842 – after 1891) was a Cuban-born woman who was freed from slavery by the will of her presumed father, Swiss coffee plantation owner Friedrich Ludwig Escher. Born on the Buen Retiro plantation near Artemisa, Cuba, she later became part of Havana's wealthy free people of color elite and inherited considerable property, including enslaved people. | C | 7804j (3399) | |
2025-07-27 | Duljevo monastery | The Duljevo monastery (Serbian: манастир Дуљево) is a Serbian Orthodox monastery dating to the 14th century located in Kuljače in south Montenegro. It includes a church dedicated to St. Stephen. It is situated on the foothills of the Paštrovo mountain at the height of 450m, overlooking seaside Budva. | Start | Zoupan (66630) | |
2024-12-16 | Marguerite Inman Davis (First Lady of Virginia) | Marguerite Grace Davis (née Inman; 1870 – July 15, 1963) was an American socialite, nurse and political figure. She was the First Lady of Virginia from 1918 to 1922 as the wife of Westmoreland Davis. Her time in the role was during the Spanish flu outbreak and the end of World War I, which both shaped her public life. | GA | DMVHistorian (1161) | |
2025-02-14 | Siege of Khokhanaberd (Siege in XIII century) | The siege of Khokhanaberd was military conflict between Armenian and Mongol forces in XIII century during Mongol invasions of Georgia and Armenia. | C | Armenian from Artsakh (589) | |
2025-07-20 | Battle of Monastir (1540) | In 1539, Andrea Doria succeeded in recapturing the cities of Kelibia, Sousse, Monastir, and Sfax on behalf of the Hafsid prince. However, Kairouan remained in open revolt, and the Hafsid ruler sought to avenge his earlier defeat at the hands of the Chabbia tribes. | Start | Based tunisian (44) | |
2025-07-27 | Slavery in Switzerland (History of slavery and slave trade involvement in Switzerland) | Slavery in Switzerland encompasses the historical practice of slavery within Swiss territories from the Roman era through the Middle Ages, as well as Swiss involvement in the Atlantic slave trade and plantation slavery in the Americas during the early modern period. | B | 7804j (3399) | |
2025-07-27 | Bienandanzas e Fortunas | Bienandanzas e Fortunas (History of the Prosperities and Fortunes), by the factionalist Oñacino lord Lope García de Salazar, is a work in 25 volumes that blends history, legend, and tradition. It spans from the creation of the world up to the mid‑15th century. | Start | Ar3h (80) | |
2025-07-25 | Maria Leonor Madinya | María Leonor Madinyá Andrade (15 February 1936 – 7 September 2006) was an Ecuadorian poet and radio presenter. Her deeply introspective, sonnet-driven poetry – noted for its emotional depth and spiritual themes – made her a respected voice in 20th-century Ecuadorian literature. | C | Barcelonista454 (180) | |
2025-07-24 | Ilona DeVito di Porriasa (Hungarian-born countess) | Ilona DeVito di Porriasa (April 23, 1939 – April 15, 2013), born as Ilona Mária Teleki von Szék in Cluj-Napoca, Romania, was a Hungarian-born countess who built a successful life in finance in the United States after fleeing the Communist regime in Romania. | Start | Nd663 (2) | |
2025-07-02 | Roman civil war of 461 | The Roman Civil War of 461 was an internal conflict within the Western Roman Empire that arose from a coup by the influential general Ricimer. As a result, Emperor Majorian was deposed. Because Ricimer was of Germanic origin, he was not eligible for the throne. | C | Geoffrey F (1039) | |
2025-05-27 | Buildings archaeology (Archaeological discipline) | Buildings archeology or archaeotecture is a branch of archaeology that focuses on the study of above-ground structures, or elevations, of various types of buildings. These include religious structures (churches, abbeys), civil constructions (houses, apartment buildings, industrial, commercial, and agricultural structures, transportation infrastructure, and hydraulic works), and military edifices (castles, fortifications). | C | Leeanah (878) | |
2025-06-30 | Coins of Augustus (Coins minted during the reign of Roman Emperor Augustus) | Coins of Augustus were coins of the Roman Empire minted during the reign of Augustus. According to the catalogue The Roman Imperial Coinage, from the Battle of Actium in 31 BC, when power was fully consolidated under Augustus, until his death in 14 AD, 550 distinct coin types of various denominations were issued. | FA | Kseni-kam (2145) | |
2025-07-02 | Noemi Szac-Wajnkranc (Polish Jewish Holocaust survivor) | Noemi Szac-Wajnkranc (September 22, 1919—January 28, 1945) was a Jewish resistance fighter and diarist | Start | User6987777777 (153) | |
2025-06-28 | Mir Muhammed Rebellion (Kurdish uprising led by Muhammad Pasha of Rawanduz against the Ottoman Empire in 1830–1838, aiming to expand his autonomy and assert control over neighboring territories) | The Mir Muhammed Rebellion was a Kurdish uprising led by Mir Muhammed of Rawanduz between 1830 and 1838 against the Ottoman Empire. Mir Muhammed, seeking autonomy and inspired by Muhammad Ali of Egypt, launched a campaign to unify Kurdish tribes and expand his influence in Upper Mesopotamia. | GA | BEFOR01 (400) | |
2025-07-16 | List of Manx monarchs | This article lists the monarchs who have ruled the Isle of Man. The island has been ruled by Brythonic, Irish, Scottish, Hiberno-Norse, English, and British monarchs. Currently, the island is ruled by the Lord of Mann, Charles III, who is represented by Lieutenant Governor, Sir John Lorimer. | GA | Pickled Pigeon (414) | |
2025-07-28 | Mildred Alexandra Symons | Sister Mildred Symons was an Australian nurse. She was a pioneer in the aged care sector in New South Wales, and set up the Chesalon Aged Care homes in Sydney. She was also responsible for the establishment of the Parish Nursing Service. | Start | Eothan (3628) | |
2025-06-30 | House of Ponthieu (Medieval noble dynasty of northern France) | The House of Ponthieu was a Frankish noble dynasty that ruled the County of Ponthieu, a strategically important coastal territory in what is now the Somme, Hauts-de-France, from the late 10th century until its integration into the Crown of Castile–León in 1279 through dynastic marriage. | Start | Dickle Chin42069 (198) | |
2025-03-19 | List of Gambian flags | This is a gallery of flags used in the Republic of The Gambia. | C | Omnigrade (637) | |
2025-05-10 | Tuzcuoğlu family (Laz family) | Tuzcuoğlu family was a prominent Ottoman-era family of regional notables (ayan) from the eastern Black Sea region, particularly active in Western Georgia and the Trabzon Eyalet. The family was known for its military leadership, tax farming (iltizam), and participation in local uprisings Against the Ottoman Empire. | C | AE182 (861) | |
2025-06-06 | Athanasie Cadot (Ojibwe trader and diplotmat (1736-1776)) | Athanasie Cadot (1736-1776) was a Nipissing Ojibwe trader, diplomat, and first wife of the fur trader Jean-Baptiste Cadot. | GA | CycoMa2 (32383) | |
2025-01-27 | Olga Stastny (physician in Nebraska, active in Czech-American, military-support and community associations) | Olga Stastny (September 13, 1878 – August 28, 1952) was an American physician from Nebraska. She is known for her service to the American Medical Women's Association (AMWA) during World War I through the American Women's Hospitals (AWH). After the war, Stastny brought her talents to Greece to provide medical care to survivors of the Greek Genocide. | Start | MolecularPilot (3917) | |
2025-07-27 | Battle of Marash (1161) | The Battle of Marash was a military engagement between the Crusader force of Antioch led by Raynald of Châtillon and the Zengid forces from Aleppo. Raynald launched a raid against the Zengids, capturing cattle, but was intercepted and captured by the Muslim forces. | Start | عبدالرحمن4132 (5825) | |
2025-07-06 | Uprising of Mukhtar (685 rebellion against the Umayyad Caliphate) | Uprising of Mukhtar (685–686) After the death of Husayn ibn Ali and his family and companions in the Battle of Karbala in 680, there was a state of anger and sadness in the Muslim community | GA | Abdalluh23 (57) | |
2025-07-25 | Johanna Rosine Wagner (Mother of the composer Richard Wagner (1774-1848)) | Johanna Rosine Wagner, née Pätz (19 September 1774, Weißenfels) - 9 January 1848, Leipzig), was the mother of the composer, writer, theater director, and conductor Richard Wagner (1813–1883). Four of her other children became actresses or opera singers. | C | Yadsalohcin (16497) | |
2025-04-08 | Siege of Harput (1516) (1516 siege) | The siege of Harput (1516) took place between the Ottoman Empire and the Safavid State at Harput in March 1516. It concluded with the victory of the Ottoman Empire. | Start | Okanthegreat90 (284) | |
2025-04-12 | Battle of Ovacık (1515) (16th century battle between Ottomans and Safavids) | The Battle of Ovacık took place between the Ottoman army under the command of Bıyıklı Mehmed Pasha and the Safavid army under the command of Nur Ali Khalifa, and ended the life of Nur Ali along with the rebellion. | Start | Okanthegreat90 (284) | |
2025-07-29 | Louis Arie Pincus (Israeli politician) | Louis Arie Pincus (Hebrew: לואי אריה פינקוס 1912 – July 26, 1973) was an Israeli Zionist leader. | Stub | Folkezoft (23018) | |
2025-07-27 | Action off Elba (1504) | The Action of Elba was a naval engagement between the Barbarossa brothers and the Papal galleys near the island of Elba. The corsairs ambushed two Papal ships and captured them. The engagement was the first naval victory achieved by the Barbarossa brothers. | Start | عبدالرحمن4132 (5825) | |
2025-05-31 | Ghaznavid conquest of Sistan (Ghaznavid-Saffarid war (1002)) | In 999–1002 Mahmud of Ghazni invaded Sistan, ruled by the Saffarids. The last Saffarid ruler, Khalaf ibn Ahmad, carried out campaigns in Ghaznavid territories, capturing Fushanj, Bust, Kuhistan which prompted Ghaznavid Sultan Mahmud to lead campaign against the Saffarids. | C | Beylarbey (1647) | |
2025-06-20 | Battle of Guadiaro (1010 battle near Ronda in Spain) | The Battle of Guadiaro (21 June 1010) was a battle of the Fitna of al-Andalus, that took place at the Guadiaro River near Ronda, between the Berber forces of Sulayman ibn al-Hakam with the help of berber leaders such as Zawi ibn Ziri and other Zenata chiefs, against the combined forces of the Caliphate of cordoba led by the caliph Muhammad II of Córdoba numbered at 30,000 fighter and 9000 Catalan mercenaries. | GA | Wikiknight7 (159) | |
2025-07-09 | War of the Armenian Succession (201-200 BC) (Ancient conflict in the Kingdom of Armenia) | War of the Armenian succession of 201-200 BC was an ancient conflict between the last Orontid armenian king Yervand (Orontes) IV the Last and Artaxias I, who was led by his nanny Smbat Bagratuni, in the Kingdom of Armenia. The conflict spread to some regions of Greater Armenia, including Ayrarat and Utik. | C | Armenian from Artsakh (589) | |
2025-07-29 | Pipina Vallosi (Greek journalist, essayist, and philanthropist (1850–1913)) | Pipina D. Vallosi (Greek: Πιποίνα Βαλλώση; 20 January 1850 – 17 October 1913) was a Greek journalist, conservative magazine editor and philanthropist. She edited Η Οικογένεια (The Family), a periodical launched in 1897. | C | Gameking69 (1269) | |
2025-07-30 | Mašići Rebellion (1806) (1806 rebellion) | The Mašići Rebellion (Serbian: машићка буна) was a Serb rebellion against Ottoman authorities in Bosanska Krajina region that broke out in 1806 in the Mašići village near Gradiška. | Start | Zoupan (66630) | |
2025-07-29 | Deir ed-Darb (Ancient rock-cut tomb in the northern West Bank) | Deir ed-Darb (Arabic: دير الدرب, lit. 'The monastery of the road') is a monumental rock-cut tomb in the village of Qarawat Bani Hassan in the West Bank. The tomb displays architectural elements typical of late Second Temple Judea, with notable similarities to tombs from the same period in Jerusalem; based on these features, scholars date it to the 1st century BCE. | GA | Mariamnei (4532) | |
2025-07-30 | Beheading in the Ottoman Empire | Decapitation was the normal method of executing the death penalty under classical Islamic law. It was also, together with hanging, one of the ordinary methods of execution in the Ottoman Empire. | Start | Zoupan (66630) | |
2025-07-30 | Umm al-Amad, Jerusalem (Ancient rock-cut tomb in Jerusalem) | Umm al-'Amed (Arabic: أُمّ العَمَد, lit. 'Mother of the columns'), or Mugharet Umm el-Amed (Arabic: مغارة أُمّ العَمَد, lit. 'Cave of the mother of the columns'), is a monumental rock-cut tomb located in Wadi Ramot, north of ancient Jerusalem. Part of the necropolis of Second Temple-era Jerusalem, the tomb features a classical façade and finely carved masonry, characteristic of the elite Jewish burial architecture of late Second Temple Judea. | C | Mariamnei (4532) | |
2025-06-21 | Drenica Uprising (1945) (Rebellion in Albania) | The Drenica Uprising was an armed rebellion by ethnic Albanian fighters in the Drenica region of central Kosovo against the newly established Yugoslav Partisans and the communist government of Democratic Federal Yugoslavia. The uprising began on 22 January 1945 and ended with its suppression on 18 February 1945. | GA | Bardylis22 (40) | |
2025-07-27 | Claire Moses (American feminist historian (born 1941)) | Claire Goldberg Moses (born 1941) is an American historian and women's studies scholar who is Professor Emerita at the University of Maryland, College Park. She was a founding faculty member of the university's women's studies program in 1977 and served as Editorial Director of Feminist Studies from 1977 to 2011. | C | Particleshow22 (1007) | |
2025-07-29 | Mushkara (Maharaja) | Mushkara (IAST: Muṣkara) was a ruler of the Western Ganga dynasty who reigned from approximately 579 to 604 CE. He succeeded his father, Durvinita, and continued the dynasty’s policies of regional consolidation, religious patronage, and literary encouragement. | Start | Adipatil0909 (449) | |
2025-07-30 | Republic of Benevento | The Republic of Benevento was a short-lived unrecognised revolutionary state in southern Italy which unilaterally declared independence from the Papal States in 1820. It de facto administered the Papal exclave of Benevento until 1821 when it was occupied by the Austrian Empire and returned to the Papal States. | Start | IdaDactyl (59) | |
2025-07-19 | Lino Cassani (Italian priest, historian and archaeologist) | Lino Cassani (born July 8, 1869, dead November 30, 1963) was an Italian priest, historian and archaeologist, known for his works on history and art of Province of Novara. He is considered one of the fathers of Novara historiography. | C | UmbraSolis (1597) | |
2025-07-01 | Flavius Earinus (Greek eunuch and imperial favorite) | In Book IV of his Silvae, Statius wrote a lengthy poem of 106 verses on the life of Earinus, which constitutes the richest source of biographical details about the young eunuch. According to Statius, Earinus was born in Pergamon, probably in the latter half of the 70s CE, and was sent to Rome at an early age. | C | Rafe87 (4622) | |
2025-07-31 | Euphrasius of Antioch (Patriarch of Antioch from 521 to 526) | Euphrasius of Antioch was the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch from 521 to 526. He was elected after Paul the Jew abdicated and was milder than his predecessor in his persecution of the Oriental Orthodox of his diocese. According to Evagrius Scholasticus, Euphrasius was from Jerusalem. | Stub | Rigadoun (35340) | |
2025-07-31 | Khirbet es-Samra (Archaeological site in northern Jordan) | Khirbet es-Samra (Arabic: خربة السمراء, lit. 'the dark ruin'; ancient Hatita on the Tabula Peutingeriana) is an archaeological site comprising a Roman and Byzantine era village and an adjacent roadside station (mansio) located along the Via Traiana Nova in northern Jordan. | GA | Mariamnei (4532) | |
2025-07-31 | Battle of Zila (1513) | Shortly before the 1513 siege of Aden, the Portuguese governor of India Afonso de Albuquerque detached a two-ship squadron to scout Zeila. | Stub | Sha19999 (420) | |
2025-05-11 | Christianity in the Sasanian Empire (Brief history of Christianity in the Sasanian Empire (Iraq and Iran modern territory)) | Christianity in the Sasanian Empire was the religion of a Christian minority in the state of the Sasanians, which existed in the territories of modern-day Iraq and Iran from 224 to 651 CE. There is no reliable information about the initial spread of Christianity beyond the eastern border of the Roman Empire. | FA | Kseni-kam (2145) | |
2025-07-31 | Marika Filippidou (Greek stage actress, poet and journalist) | Marika K. Filippidou (Greek: Μαρίκα K. Φιλιππίδου; born 1877) was a Greek stage actress, poet and journalist. She made her debut at Athens’s Royal Theatre in 1904 and subsequently trained at the Conservatoire de Paris. Filippidou published poetry and founded the magazine Neos Parthenon. | C | Gameking69 (1269) | |
2025-07-28 | Princess Anqing (Chinese princess (14th century)) | Princess Anqing, personal name unknown, was a princess of the Ming dynasty. She the fourth daughter of Hongwu Emperor and his second by Empress Ma. | C | AJMgirl (630) | |
2025-07-27 | Armenian Revolt (850–855) (Armenian uprising against the Abbasid authority in 850–855) | Armenian Revolt (850–855) (Arabic: ثَوْرَةُ الأَرْمَن) was an armed rebellion by Armenian nobles against Abbasid administrative control over Arminiya. The revolt was triggered by the imposition of harsh tax policies by Abbasid governors. It was ultimately crushed by the Abbasid general Bugha al-Kabir, resulting in the capture of numerous Armenian nobles of so many of Armenian nobles who were sent to Samarra and the reimposition of Abbasid authority over the region. | GA | R3YBOl (1869) |
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