In today's world, User:SDZeroBot/NPP sorting/History and Society/History is a topic that has aroused great interest and debate in different areas. Whether academic, political, social or cultural, User:SDZeroBot/NPP sorting/History and Society/History has captured the attention of experts and citizens alike. Its relevance and meaning have evolved over time, showing its impact on contemporary society. This article aims to delve into the various dimensions of User:SDZeroBot/NPP sorting/History and Society/History, exploring its implications, challenges and possible solutions. From its origin to its impact on the present, User:SDZeroBot/NPP sorting/History and Society/History represents a crucial topic that deserves to be analyzed and discussed in depth.
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313 unreviewed articles as of 17 December 2025
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| Created | Article | Extract | Class | Creator (# edits) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 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 (3840) | |
| 2025-08-09 | Tatinac | Tatinac was a village above Užice in central Serbia. | Stub | Zoupan (68728) | |
| 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 (1296) | |
| 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 (157) | |
| 2025-08-25 | Uttarānandamātā (Female disciple of the Buddha who is foremost in abiding in dhyāna) | Uttarānandamātā was a laywoman and chief disciple of the Buddha. She is foremost among women disciples in meditative absorption. She is also referred to simply as Uttarā, with "Uttarānandamātā" used to make a distinction between other disciples with the same name. | Start | Invokingvajras (26216) | |
| 2025-09-07 | Sybil Haydel Morial (American civil rights activist and educator) | Sybil Haydel Morial (November 26, 1932 – September 3, 2024) was an American civil rights activist and educator. She was married to Ernest Morial, the first Black mayor of New Orleans and was the mother of Marc Morial, who served as Mayor of New Orleans from 1994 to 2002. | C | CaptainAngus (13765) | |
| 2025-08-04 | Anne Mae Beddow (nurse anesthetist and lieutenant in the Army Nurse Corps) | Anne Mae Beddow (1893 - 1974) was a nurse anesthetist. She was instrumental in the development and spread of intravenous anesthesia.[disputed – discuss] | Start | Rubystaramaryllis (2717) | |
| 2025-08-09 | Todor Bojinović (Serbian commander) | Todor Bojinović (Serbian: Тодор Бојиновић; 1750s–1813) was a Serbian revolutionary commander active in the First Serbian Uprising (1804–13) and a Serbian Free Corps veteran in the Austro-Turkish War (1788–1791). Bojinović was born in Gornji Dobrić in the Jadar region in the 1750s. | Start | Zoupan (68728) | |
| 2025-08-19 | Mariupol Bull Figurine (Looted Neolithic Funerary Art from Mariupol, Ukraine) | The Mariupol Bull Figurine is a Neolithic period funerary decoration discovered in Mariupol, Ukraine. Made of boar tusk ivory, the piece was discovered by archaeologist Mykola Makarenko in 1930 when investigating the history of prehistoric activity and settlement in the Baltic region. | B | NeverBeGameOver (2366) | |
| 2025-07-30 | Beheading in the Ottoman Empire (Executing the death penalty under classical Islamic law) | 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 (68728) | |
| 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 (474) | |
| 2025-08-06 | Yasakairi-hime (Empress consort of Japan) | Yasakairi-hime (八坂入媛命) was empress consort of Japan from 122 to 132, and later empress dowager from 132 until her death. Her father was Yasakairihiko no Mikoto, and her grandfather was Emperor Sujin. | Start | Camillz (1301) | |
| 2025-09-19 | Kerserdar | In the Ottoman Empire, Kerserdar (Turkish: kırserdar), referred to rural chief policemen, chiefs of village field sentinel, or private security forces that protected villages from robbery, in the 19th century. In 19th-century Wallachia, they were among those employed by the boyars, with a fixed salary. | Start | Zoupan (68728) | |
| 2025-08-11 | Hetta Howes (historian) | Harriet Elizabeth Howes (born 8 June 1990) is an English scholar of medieval and early modern literature. She is a senior lecturer at City, University of London and previously lectured at Queen Mary University of London. She is best known for her book Poet, Mystic, Widow, Wife: The Extraordinary Lives of Medieval Women (2024). | C | Vaderfader (87) | |
| 2025-09-11 | List of countries by informal GDP (nominal) | This article is a list of countries by their informal GDP. | Stub | EditingGuy564738 (1031) | Possible vandalism |
| 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 (1735) | |
| 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 (113) | |
| 2025-09-24 | Zhixian (fourth century) (Fourth-century Chinese Buddhist nun) | Zhixian (originally surnamed Zhao, ca. 300 – 370) was a Chinese Buddhist nun known for her resistance to anti-Buddhist pressures in the Jin period. | Start | SapientSquid (1693) | |
| 2025-06-24 | War Memorial (Angri) (monument in Angri, Italy) | The Monument to the Fallen of Angri is a public monument located in Piazza Doria, in the center of the town of Angri, dedicated to the fallen of the First and Second World War; an allegory of the sacrifice of the soldier for the homeland. | Start | GiovAngri (1212) | |
| 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 (7838) | |
| 2025-07-13 | Battle of Alcalá de Henares (1009 battle in Alcalá de Henares near Madrid, Spain) | The Battle of Alcalá de Henares (August 1009), was a battle of the Fitna of al-Andalus that took place in Alcalá de Henares near Madrid, between the Middle March forces of the Caliphate of Córdoba under general Wadih al-Siqlabi against the allied Berber-Castilian forces supporting Sulayman ibn al-Hakam's rebellion against Caliph Muhammad II of Córdoba. | C | Wikiknight7 (218) | |
| 2025-10-03 | Ilse Staiger (German BDM leader and Reichsbeauftragte (commissioner) in the SS-Helferinnenkorps) | Ilse Staiger (born 1915) was a German youth leader in the League of German Girls (BDM) who, from 1943, served as the Reichsbeauftragte, the highest office open to women, in the SS-Helferinnenkorps. In that role she oversaw the "feminine affairs" and welfare of SS female communications personnel and exercised supervisory authority across SS units employing SS-Helferinnen. | C | Gameking69 (1735) | |
| 2025-09-16 | Libyan-Punic Infantry (Military unit) | The Roman historian Livy described the Libyco-Punic infantry as mixtum Punicum Afris genus, probably taking Polybius as his source. They formed the most loyal and capable force of the Carthaginian army. By this expression, Livy meant "a Punic race mixed with Africans". | Start | Asmodim (1312) | |
| 2025-10-10 | Vanpuilala (Eastern Mizo chief ()) | Vanpuilala (c. 1840-1869) was a Mizo chief in the Eastern Lushai Hills (now Mizoram). He raised the issue of British land enterprises encroaching on traditional hunting grounds and ruled over more than 1,000 houses at Khawlian. His death oversaw a competing right to regency between his mother and his wife. | C | Taitesena (3157) | |
| 2025-08-25 | Shaban Jashari (Kosovar Albanian patriarch killed in the 1998 Attack on Prekaz) | Shaban Jashari (2 April 1924 – 5 March 1998) was a Kosovar Albanian farmer and patriarch of the Jashari family of Prekaz, Skenderaj. He is remembered for being killed, alongside dozens of relatives, during the Attack on Prekaz, an event considered a turning point in the Kosovo War. | Start | Waterking00 (109) | |
| 2025-10-10 | Luang Pho Sunthon Chandathero | Phra Khru Sophon Thirakhun (Thai: พระครูโสภณถิรคุณ), commonly known as Luang Pho Sunthon (หลวงพ่อสุนทร), Dharma name Chandathero (จนฺทเถโร), is a respected Thai Buddhist monk and meditation master. He serves as the abbot of Wat Nong Sadao in Nong Khae District, Saraburi Province. | Start | Lamp21 (4124) | |
| 2025-10-11 | Gabrielius | Gabrielius (Greek: Γαβριήλιος), also called Gabriel (Γαβριήλ), served as prefect of Constantinople during the reign of Emperor Justinian. He is also called Gabrielius the Prefect or Gabriel the Prefect. A poem by Leontius Scholasticus, honoring a statue of Gabrielius, is included in the Greek Anthology. | Stub | Archaeaoris (2855) | |
| 2025-08-20 | Archaeological site of Janavartepe | The Janavartepe archaeological settlement is located approximately 700 meters north of Tainaq village in the Aghjabadi District of Azerbaijan. The site lies on the right slope of the Shirkhan Gobu ravine and is positioned atop a natural hill that rises up to 4 meters in height. | Start | Lamminiaz (1128) | |
| 2025-10-11 | Sayf ad-Din Mashtub (Kurdish Emir of the Ayyubid Sultanate) | Sayf ad-Din ʿAlī al-Mashtub al-Hakkārī (Arabic: سيف الدين علي المشطوب الهكاري; c. 1130s – 6th November 1192 CE) was a Kurdish emir and one of the leading generals in Saladin's army. Born into the Hakkārī Kurdish princely family, he rose through the ranks under Nūr ad-Dīn Zangī and later served the Ayyubid state. | C | Jackhanma69 (854) | |
| 2025-10-13 | Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas (Labor center in the Philippines) | The Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas or the Peasant Movement of the Philippines, also known by its initials KMP is a national democratic mass organization and a labor center of peasants in the Philippines. The largest group of peasants in the country, it was established on July 24, 1985, in order to unite peasants on the issue of forwarding genuine land reform in the Philippines confronted by centuries-long feudalism and control of landlords and foreign [[Agribusiness|agribusines ... | C | Ryomaandres (5045) | |
| 2025-10-01 | Rehtee Begum | Rechte Begum is an alleged supercentenarian Indian woman. | Stub | 12akd (7858) | |
| 2025-10-10 | Luang Phor Choen Punyasiri (Thai Buddhist monk (1907-2000)) | Phra Mongkolwarachan (Thai: พระมงคลวราจารย์), commonly known as Luang Pho Choen (Thai: หลวงพ่อเชิญ), Dharma name Punyasiri (ปุญฺญสิริ), was a highly respected Thai Buddhist monk and meditation master from Ang Thong Province. He was the former abbot of Wat Khok Thong, Phra Nakhon Si Ayutthaya Province. | Start | Lamp21 (4124) | |
| 2025-10-18 | Goody Bassett (Connecticut woman accused of witchcraft (died 1651)) | Goody Bassett (died 15 May 1651) was a woman executed for witchcraft in the Connecticut Colony. The fourth of eleven executed witch hunt victims in the colony, Bassett's confession of there being a witch in Fairfield led to the arrest, trial, and execution of Goodwife Knapp. | C | Animaliak (2215) | |
| 2025-10-03 | Luang Pu Phueak Paññādaro (Thai Buddhist monk (1869–1958)) | Phra Khru Karunawihari, also known as Luang Pu Phueak (12 August 1869 – 29 March 1958), was a famous meditation master of Samut Prakan Province during the mid-Buddhist era. His amulets were believed to possess great spiritual power, bringing experiences of loving-kindness, protection from danger, and fulfillment of wishes. | Start | Lamp21 (4124) | |
| 2025-10-19 | Gerostratus | Gerostratus (Ancient Greek: Γηρόστρατος; fl. 4th century BC) was the king of Aradus, a Phoenician island city. He is primarily known for his role during the campaigns of Alexander the Great in the eastern Mediterranean. | Stub | Archaeaoris (2855) | |
| 2025-08-23 | Commentary of Ibn Ezra | Ibn Ezra's Commentary (Hebrew: פירוש אבן עזרא) is a commentary on the Bible written by Rabbi Abraham ibn Ezra during the 12th century, and it constitutes one of the most important commentaries ever written on the Bible. It was printed in the overwhelming majority of versions of the Mikraot Gedolot of the Bible, and over one hundred commentaries were written on it. | B | YosefLishansky (98) | |
| 2025-10-21 | Hitlal-Erra (King of Mari) | Hitlal-Erra (died c. 2017 BC) was a ruler of Mari. He was the brother of his successor Hanun-Dagan, who was another son of Puzur-Ishtar. During his reign, Mari might have been a vassal of Ur. | Stub | Lertaheiko (4178) | |
| 2025-10-21 | Cudon | Cudon or Cudo was a simple, close-fitting helmet resembling a skull-cap, made from leather or the skins of wild animals. | Start | Archaeaoris (2855) | |
| 2025-10-19 | Asenath Smith (American woman forced to undergo an abortion (1797–1848)) | Asenath Caroline Smith (1797–1848) was an American woman whose experience being forced to undergo an abortion led to the first state abortion law being implemented in the United States. | C | Animaliak (2215) | |
| 2025-10-03 | Luang Pu Thong Ayana (Thai Buddhist monk (1820-1937)) | Luang Pu Thong Ayana (Pali: Ayana, also known as Uṭṭhāyano; 1820 – 1937 CE; BE 2363 – 2480) was a highly revered Thai Buddhist monk and meditation master noted for his longevity, living to the age of 117. He was renowned for his strict practice, deep knowledge of Buddhist incantations and protective charms, and for being the teacher of Luang Pu Phueak Paññādaro. | Start | Lamp21 (4124) | |
| 2025-10-24 | Tithenidia (ancient festival for children in ancient Sparta) | Tithenidia (Ancient Greek: τιθηνίδια) was a festival celebrated at Sparta by the nurses (τιτθαί) who had charge of the male children of citizens. During this festival, the nurses carried the little boys out of the city to the temple of Artemis Corythallia, which was situated near the stream Tiasa. | Stub | Archaeaoris (2855) | |
| 2025-09-07 | Harima no Inabi no Ōiratsume (Empress consort of Japan) | Hirima no Inabi no Ōiratsume (播磨稲日大郎姫) was the first wife of Emperor Keikō and Empress of Japan from the year 72 until her death in 122. | Stub | Camillz (1301) | |
| 2025-10-24 | List of Tajik flags | Here is the list of flags used by Tajikistan | Start | Dilip kabiraj (150) | |
| 2025-10-22 | Federico Chiaramonte (Sicilian nobleman and fifth Count of Modica) | Federico Chiaramonte (c. 1310s — 1363) was a Sicilian nobleman of the Chiaramonte family and the fifth Count of Modica. He inherited the county in 1357 on the death without issue of his nephew Simone, the fourth count. During his brief tenure he was active in the turbulent politics of the mid-14th century, participating in the conflicts of 1356–61 alongside other members of the Latin faction of the Sicilian baronage. | GA | Kned Wiki (2642) | |
| 2025-10-25 | Estella Montgomery (American homicide victim (1882–1939)) | Estella Mary Montgomery Kent (née Estella Mary Montgomery; July 1882 – October 15, 1939) was an American homicide victim. She was the daughter of former slaves who founded the black community of Mound Bayou, Mississippi. She was killed by police in 1939 during a dispute over her father's estate. | Start | Eli Hanley (170) | |
| 2025-10-18 | Kharavela's invasion on the Satavahanas | Kharavela's invasion on the Satavahanas was a part of the Kharavela's campaigns. It was a military campaign launched by the Mahameghavahana Emperor Kharavela against Satavahana Empire to established his supremacy. The king of the Satavahanas at that time was Satakarni I who surrendered to Kharavela. | Start | Chandel itihasam zy (87) | |
| 2025-02-13 | Nicola Muzaka (Medieval Albanian lord of the Muzaka family) | Nicola Muzaka (Albanian: Nikola Muzaka), also known as Nicolas or Nicolao was an Albanian nobleman and member of the Muzaka family. | C | Arberian2444 (6341) | |
| 2025-04-19 | List of inscriptions in UNESCO Memory of the World Register from India | UNESCO's list of inscriptions in Memory of the World Register includes 14 inscriptions from India. The latest inscriptions listed in the register are Hindus texts of Bhagavad Gita and Natya Shastra. In India, Ministry of Culture oversees the task of promoting and preservation of arts and culture. | Start | WikiEdits2003 (7434) | |
| 2025-10-28 | Temple of Artemis Knakeatis (Temple) | The Temple of Artemis Knakeatis is an ancient Greek temple dating from the 6th century BCE, located near the village of Mavriki in Arcadia, at the site called Psilí Ráchi on Marmarovouni Hill, at an altitude of about 1,250 meters. It was dedicated to the goddess Artemis. | Start | Αρκάς (3367) | |
| 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) | |
| 2025-10-19 | Gadatas | Gadatas (Ancient Greek: Γαδάτας) was an Assyrian satrap who, according to Xenophon's Cyropaedia, defected to Cyrus the Great. His defection was motivated by a desire for revenge; the Assyrian king had made him a eunuch because one of the king's concubines had shown romantic interest in him, owing to his good looks. | Stub | Archaeaoris (2855) | |
| 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 (68728) | |
| 2025-10-28 | Phra Iam Sirivanno | Phra Ratchawatcharangsri (พระราชวัชรรังษี; also known as Iam Sirivanno, เอี่ยม สิริวณฺโณ) was a royal-ranked Thai Buddhist monk of the Mahanikaya order. He served as the assistant abbot of Wat Arun in Bangkok and was renowned as the compiler of the widely used Thai Buddhist chanting book Mon Phithi (Ritual Chants), which compiles essential chants used in religious ceremonies by monks and lay Buddhists throughout Thailand. | C | Lamp21 (4124) | |
| 2025-10-21 | Yuan Shu (Southern Song dynasty) (Chinese historian and official of the Southern Song dynasty) | Yuan Shu (simplified Chinese: 袁枢; traditional Chinese: 袁樞; pinyin: Yuán Shū; 1131–1205) was a Chinese historian and official of the Southern Song dynasty. He is best known as the author of the Tongjian jishi benmo (通鉴纪事本末/通鑑記事本末 "Historical events of the Comprehensive Mirror in their entirety"), a restructured version of the Zizhi tongjian (資治通鑑) that focuses on the sequential development of historical events. | Stub | Reiner Stoppok (4053) | |
| 2025-10-01 | Scythian invasion of Media (653–652 BCE invasion) | The Scythian invasion of Media was a military campaign by the Scythians, led by Madyes, which resulted in the establishment of Scythian rule over the Medes. Following the invasion, Media was under Scythian rule and paid them tribute between 652–624 BCE. | Start | DesertGeneral (142) | |
| 2025-09-22 | Historiography of the Spanish Inquisition | How historians and commentators have viewed the Spanish Inquisition has changed over time and continues to be a source of controversy. Before and during the 19th century, historical interest focused on who was being persecuted. In the early and mid-20th century, historians examined the specifics of what happened and how it influenced Spanish history. | C | Lfstevens (71835) | Possible vandalism |
| 2025-10-06 | Prunay Vase (Celtic Art) | The Prunay Vase is a pedestal pottery vase with Celtic La Tène decoration found at Prunay, Marne in northeastern France and is one of the best preserved and most remarkable vessels of its kind extant from this period. | Start | Jononmac46 (9280) | |
| 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 | 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 (731) | |
| 2025-07-03 | Princess Xincheng (Chinese princess (634–663)) | Princess Xincheng (新城公主; 634–663), formerly titled Princess Hengshan, was a royal daughter of the Tang dynasty. Her personal name was not recorded, she was the youngest child of Emperor Taizong of Tang and Empress Zhangsun, making her the full younger sister of Emperor Gaozong. | C | AJMgirl (731) | |
| 2025-11-02 | Kakushinni (Daughter of Shinran, founder of the Jōdo Shinshū sect) | Kakushinni (1224–1283) was the daughter of Shinran, the founder of Jōdo Shinshū (Pure Land) Buddhism and an important Buddhist cleric in her own right. She is considered de facto founder of the Honganji temple, which became one of Japan's most important religious institutions in subsequent centuries. | C | Javierfv1212 (31916) | |
| 2025-07-13 | Cao Gugu (Deity in Chinese folk religion) | 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 (823) | |
| 2025-09-25 | Sallie Fiske (American journalist and gay rights activist (1928–2004)) | Sallie Maranda Fiske (c. 1928 – February 19, 2004) was an American journalist, television host, and lesbian rights activist. She was among the first women to work in broadcast journalism in Los Angeles and later became a significant figure in California's LGBTQ+ political movement, particularly in West Hollywood. | C | Piñanana (5388) | |
| 2025-10-31 | Theme of Koloneia (Albania) | The Theme or Strategis of Koloneia, (Greek: Θέμα/Στρατηγίς Κολωνείας Ηπείρου) was an administrative division of the Byzantine Empire, one of the small frontier Themes created during the 11th and the 12th centuries. The seat of the division was in modern day Kolonjë (Greek: Κολωνεία), Albania. | Stub | Duke of liang (520) | |
| 2025-07-26 | Shaqir Smaka (Albanian guerrilla commander) | Shaqir Smaka (c. 1887 – 1916) was an Albanian guerrilla commander from the Drenica region of Kosovo. He played an important role in the resistance against Ottoman, Serbian, and Austro-Hungarian forces during the early 20th century. | C | SpeedyHaste (572) | |
| 2025-11-03 | Wenshet (ancient Egyptian princess) | Wenshet, alternatively spelled Weneshet, was an ancient Egyptian princess who lived around 2500 BCE, probably after the reign of Khufu in the 4th Dynasty, though likely prior to the 5th dynasty. Wenshet is buried within the Giza Necropolis at tomb G 4840, a mastaba with one burial shaft and two chapels. | C | Graearms (9942) | |
| 2025-11-03 | Hispanics in the Roman army | Peoples from the Iberian Peninsula played a vital role in the Roman army even before their Roman conquest was finished. The resultant province of Hispania would become the biggest source of military manpower for Rome, with Hispanics (Hispanorum) numbering only second to Italics in the imperial Roman army for the first two centuries AD, until being eventually displaced by recruited Germanic peoples in the mid-3rd century. | B | Baal Nautes (2212) | |
| 2025-11-03 | Servia (theme) | The Theme of Servia or the Strategis of Servia (Greek: Στρατηγίς Σερβίων) was an administrative division of the Byzantine Empire (Theme) during the 11th and 13th centuries. The Theme was created by the Emperor Basil II in 1020 after his victory against the Bulgarians, when he separated the region of Servia alongside the region of Stagoi (Kalambaka) and Trikala in Thessaly, from the Theme of Thessalonica and ecclesiastically incorporated the new subdvision into the Archbishopric of Ohrid. | Stub | Duke of liang (520) | |
| 2025-10-30 | Carmen de la Torre (Spanish poet (1931 – 2008) associated with Versos con faldas) | Carmen de la Torre Vivero (Madrid, 1931 – ibid., December 15, 2008) was a Spanish poet associated with the literary movement known as Versos con faldas. | C | Aldorwyn of Rivendell (3511) | |
| 2025-08-25 | Besarta Jashari (Kosovar survivor and eyewitness of the 1998 Attack on Prekaz) | Besarta Jashari is a Kosovar Albanian survivor and eyewitness of the Attack on Prekaz (5–7 March 1998), during which Serbian special police and Yugoslav forces besieged the Jashari family compound in the village of Prekaz. International outlets and human-rights organizations describe the assault as a pivotal event of the Kosovo conflict; Besarta was the only person to survive inside the house of her grandfather Shaban Jashari. | Start | Waterking00 (109) | |
| 2025-07-02 | Demetrius's Winter offensive in Southern Illyria (219 BCE offensive) | The Winter Offensive in Southern Illyria (late 219 BCE) was a daring naval and amphibious campaign orchestrated by the Illyrian ruler Demetrius of Pharos against Roman-protected territories in the southern Adriatic. Conducted during the traditionally inactive winter months, it violated the 229 BCE treaty terms from the First Illyrian War and represented the culminating Illyrian bid to reclaim maritime dominance. | B | Bardylis22 (113) | |
| 2025-09-20 | Divoš Tihoradić (Bosnian nobleman) | Divoš Tihoradić was Bosnian nobleman from the Usora, connected to the fortified town of Srebrenik. The form of the patronymic suggests that his father was Tihorad, who died between 1326-1329. His brother was Vitan Tihoradić, and his sons were Miloš, Sladoje and Dobroslav Divošević. | Stub | Santasa99 (27906) | |
| 2022-06-27 | Neva Paris | Neva Paris (died 1930) was an American aviator. She was killed when her Challenger Robin airplane crashed in the marshes of the Satilla River outside of Woodbine, Georgia. | Stub | Thriley (70059) | |
| 2025-10-30 | Elizabeth Ibrahim Ekaru (Kenyan human rights activist (1974–2022)) | Elizabeth Ibrahim Ekaru (c. 1974–2022) was a Kenyan human rights activist. Known for her defence of women's rights, particularly indigenous women, in Isiolo County, Ekaru was murdered in 2022 following a land rights dispute. | C | Animaliak (2215) | |
| 2025-10-25 | Hilda Clulow (British supercentenarian (1908–2019)) | Hilda May Clulow (née Heath; 15 March 1908 – 24 December 2019) was a British supercentenarian who was the oldest known living person in the United Kingdom from October to December 2019. | Start | Officialworks (1797) | |
| 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 | NEMURO (1292) | |
| 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 | NEMURO (1292) | |
| 2025-10-30 | Siege of Khiva (1922) (Siege during the Basmachi Movement) | The Siege of Khiva was a military engagement during the Basmachi Movement in Central Asia, led by Junaid Khan of Khiva and Molla Abdulkahhar against the Khorezm People's Soviet Republic. | C | Selim beg (898) | |
| 2025-11-09 | Xenodamus of Cythera | Xenodamus of Cythera (Ancient Greek: Ξενόδαμος ὁ Κυθήριος), was an ancient Greek musician and lyric poet, known as one of the leading figures of the second school of music that developed at Sparta under the direction of Thaletas. According to Pseudo-Plutarch (On Music), this second musical movement also included Thaletas the Gortinean, Xenocritus the Locrian, Polymnestus the Colophonian, and Sacadas the Argive. | Stub | Archaeaoris (2855) | |
| 2025-10-07 | Ravivarma of Kadamba (Dharmamahārājadhirāja) | Ravivarma c. 497 was king from Kadamba dynasty and son of Mrigeshavarma. | Start | Bongan (6088) | |
| 2025-10-11 | Iberian invasion of Armenia (35 CE invasion) | The Iberian invasion of Armenia in AD 35 was a campaign by Pharasmanes I, king of Iberia, to place his brother Mithridates on the Armenian throne. Supported by Roman Empire, Pharasmanes defeated Parthian forces led by Orodes, son of Artabanus II. The victory secured Mithridates as a Roman client king and briefly extended Iberian influence in the Caucasus. | Start | Gergos10 (701) | |
| 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) | |
| 2024-07-15 | Eastern Slavonia front (Front in the Croatian War of Independence) | The Eastern Slavonia Front was the only region of the Serbian Krajina which was under Serb control even after Operation Storm which had retaken almost all Serb-controlled territories in Croatia. The region was eventually peacefully reintegrated under full Croatian control after the signing of the Erdut agreement in November 1995. | C | Wrweewfw (129) | Past AfD |
| 2025-11-12 | Bettina Smetanová | Bettina Smetanová (née Ferdinandiová; 9 November 1840 – 14 December 1908) was the second wife of Bedřich Smetana. | Start | Yadsalohcin (18426) | |
| 2025-11-13 | Magdalena Zeger (Astrologer and calendar maker (1490/1–1568)) | Magdalena Zeger (1490/1–1568) was an astrologer and calendar maker working in Germany and Denmark. She produced yearly calendars with astrological prognostications in the 1560s, in an early instance of a woman making independent astronomical publications. | Stub | SapientSquid (1693) | |
| 2025-10-26 | Notes and Queries on Anthropology (British ethnographic manual) | Notes and Queries on Anthropology is an ethnographic manual (questionnaire) by the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, first published in 1874 under the title Notes and Queries on Anthropology, for the Use of Travellers and Residents in Uncivilized Lands. | C | Reiner Stoppok (4053) | |
| 2025-11-06 | 2025 UEC Cyclo-cross European Championships (Cyclo-cross championship) | The 2025 UEC Cyclo-cross European Championships was the 23rd edition of UEC European Cyclo-cross Championships. It was the annual edition of the European championships in the cycling discipline of cyclo-cross and was organized by UEC on 8 and 9 November 2025 in the coastal town of Middelkerke, in Belgium. | Start | Hg03u (1527) | |
| 2025-10-27 | Sicilian Error of Color | The Sicilian Error of Color (Italian: Errore di Colore Siciliano) is a rare postage stamp error from the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, issued in 1859. It is one of the most valuable and sought-after stamps in Italian philately, with one example selling for €1.8 million (approximately US$2.6 million) at auction in 2011. | Start | Wikyyy (149) | |
| 2025-11-11 | Sobieski Hours | The Sobieski Hours is a richly illuminated manuscript of a book of hours produced in 15th-century France, attributed mainly to the Bedford Master. In the 17th century, the manuscript came into the possession of the King of Poland, John III Sobieski. Through inheritance and the marriage of his granddaughter, Maria Clementina Sobieska, to James Stuart, it made its way to the British Isles. | Start | Marcelus (10811) | |
| 2025-11-08 | Joan Shepard | Joan Shepard (1932 – March 3, 2023) was an American theater actress and producer of summer stock and children's theatre productions. | Stub | Kwdojo (407) | |
| 2025-11-02 | Anchialos (theme) (theme (province) of the Byzantine Empire) | The Theme of Anchialos was a administrative division (Theme) of the Byzantine Empire, during the 11th and 12th centuries. | Start | Duke of liang (520) | |
| 2025-09-07 | Anusha Khan | Muhammad Anusha Khan (1643-late 17th century 80s) was the Khan of Khwarazm in 1663–1686. He was the only son of Abulgazi Muhammad Bahodir Khan. During his reign, Anusha Khan launched several attacks on the Bukhara Khanate and even once captured the city of Bukhara and preached a khutbah in his own name. | Stub | Dimalandia (108) | |
| 2025-11-11 | Isabel Martínez Blaya | Isabel Martínez Blaya (Vall de Uxó, 1914 – Castellón de la Plana, March 18, 1989) was a feminist, militiwoman, anti-fascist, and Spanish politician. | C | Aldorwyn of Rivendell (3511) | |
| 2025-11-14 | Chaim Aron Kaplan (Polish-Jewish educator, Hebraist, and Warsaw Ghetto diarist) | Chaim Aron Kaplan (Hebrew: חיים אהרן קפלן 19 September 1880 – December 1942 or January 1943) was a Polish-Jewish educator, Hebraist, diarist, and victim of the Holocaust. He is best known for his detailed diary chronicling daily life and mass persecution inside the Warsaw Ghetto, considered one of the most significant primary sources on the destruction of Warsaw Jewry during the Holocaust. | Start | Vernettoagain (82) | |
| 2025-09-11 | Buljubaša (Serbian Revolution) (Military rank of the Serbian Army during the First Serbian Uprising (1804–13)) | Buljubaša (Serbian: буљубаша, from Turkish: bölükbaşı, "head of division") was a military rank of the Serbian Army during the First Serbian Uprising (1804–13), adopted from Ottoman usage, traditionally used among the hajduks for commanders. | C | Zoupan (68728) | |
| 2020-12-27 | Post-Hittite states | The post-Hittite states were states which appeared in the ancient Near East following the collapse of the Hittite Empire. Post-Hittite states included the Neo-Hittite states (states which continued Hittite imperial tradition), and other states which were not Neo-Hittite, for example Aram-Damascus (an Aramean state) or Phrygia. | Stub | Sorabino (26226) | |
| 2025-10-24 | Vojvoda (Serbian Revolution) | Vojvoda (Serbian: Војвода, lit. 'war-leader') was a military rank of the Serbian Army during the First Serbian Uprising (1804–13) and Second Serbian Uprising (1815), adopted from traditional and medieval usage. It was the equivalent of general. | GA | Zoupan (68728) | |
| 2025-11-16 | Auvernier culture (Neolithic archaeological culture) | The Auvernier culture (also known as Auvernier-Cordé culture) is an archaeological culture of the Late Neolithic period, dating from 2700 to 2400 BC, that was widespread in Western Switzerland, particularly in the Three Lakes Region. | Start | 7804j (4160) | |
| 2025-11-15 | Jetzer affair (1507-1509 religious fraud case in Bern) | The Jetzer Affair (German: Jetzerhandel) was a theological-political controversy that took place in Bern between 1507 and 1509. The affair centered on a series of fraudulent religious apparitions and miracles staged by four Dominican friars at their monastery in Bern, using a young lay brother named Hans Jetzer as an unwitting participant and later victim. | B | 7804j (4160) | |
| 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. | C | 7804j (4160) | |
| 2025-11-14 | Fujiwara no Takaiko (consort of Emperor Seiwa and Japanese Empress dowager of Emperor Yōzei) | Fujiwara no Takaiko (藤原高子 842 - May 6, 910), commonly known as Empress Nijō (二条后), was the mother of Emperor Yōzei, the 57th emperor of Japan, who lived during the Heian period. The daughter of Fujiwara no Nagayoshi and sister of Fujiwara no Mototsune, she was the consort of Emperor Seiwa who later became the empress dowager. | C | Shelter3 (1851) | |
| 2025-10-14 | Serbian invasion of Kosovo (1912) (Invasion during the First Balkan war) | The Serbian invasion of Kosovo was an invasion done by the Serbian army alongside with the Montenegrin army with the goal of capturing Kosovo. | C | SpeedyHaste (572) | |
| 2025-11-10 | Operation Winterende (Last axis offensive against the Partisans in the Adriatic Littoral) | The Operation Winterende was the last operation conducted by the Germans and Chetniks against the Yugoslav Partisans in Slovenia. It was carried out between 10 March and 6 April 1945. | Start | SpeedyHaste (572) | |
| 2025-09-13 | Aćimović offensive (Military operation) | The Aćimović Offensive, also known as the Aćimović Pursuit, was a military operation of the Serbian State Guard and Chetniks of Kosta Pećanac against partisan detachments in Southeastern Serbia. It was named after Milan Aćimović, the Minister of Internal Affairs in the collaborationist government of Milan Nedić, who was entrusted with preparing the offensive. | C | SpeedyHaste (572) | |
| 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 (3713) | |
| 2025-11-02 | Salah al-Din al-Ala'i (14th century Sunni polymath) | Abū Saʿīd Khalīl b. Kaykaldī b. ʿAbdallāh al-ʿAlāʾī (Arabic: أبو سعيد خليل بن كيكالدي بن عبد الله العلائي), also known as Ṣalāḥ al-Dīn al-ʿAlāʾī (Arabic: صلاح الدين العلائي), was a Sunni polymath of the Mamlūk era. He was a distinguished Shāfiʿī jurist, legal theorist, ḥadīth master, historian, genealogist, Qurʾānic exegete, theologian, grammarian, philologist, poet, and man of letters. | C | Ayaltimo (2919) | |
| 2025-10-24 | Spanish War of Euric (473–475 war) | The Spanish War of Eurik was a military conflict at the end of the West Roman Empire, in which the Gothic rex Euric expanded its power over most of Hispania (present-day Spain and Portugal). | Start | Geoffrey F (1360) | |
| 2025-08-12 | Tears of Blood (Ratwała jaswa) (1952 narrative poem (song) and witness account by Papusza (Bronisława Wajs)) | Tears of Blood (Ratwała jaswa) is a song in the Homeric tradition, originally composed and performed orally for extended family Roma audiences at the close of and in the wake of World War II. Papusza wrote it down in 1952, as a witness account of the Kali Traš (Romani Holocaust), as experienced by her extended family in wartime Volhynia. | C | Hyrdlak (1875) | |
| 2025-10-31 | Theme of Philadelphia (Administrative division of the Byzantine Empire) | The Theme of Philadelphia (Greek: Θέμα Φιλαδέλφειας) was an administrative division (Theme) of the Byzantine Empire created during the 12th century. The Theme included the city of Philadelphia and the surrounding areas, and was also a division of the Empire of Nicaea. | Stub | Duke of liang (520) | |
| 2025-11-17 | Wali al-Din al-'Iraqi (Egyptian Islamic scholar (1361–1423)) | Walī al-Dīn Abū Zur'ah Aḥmad ibn 'Abd al-Raḥīm Arabic: ولي الدين أبو زُرعة أحمد بن عبد الرحيم, more commonly known as Walī al-Dīn al-'Irāqī Arabic: ولي الدين العراقي or sometimes Ibn al-'Irāqī Arabic: ابن العراقي; 723-804 AH/ 1323–1401 CE) was a Sunni Egyptian scholar and a prominent figure in the intellectual life of the medieval Islamic world. | C | Ayaltimo (2919) | |
| 2025-11-17 | Bilala dynasty | The Bilala dynasty is the royal lineage of the traditional leaders of the Bilala people, an ethnic group today concentrated around Lake Fitri in Chad. The Bilala monarchs have historically ruled different territories, and varied in authority and titles used. | B | Megartonius (2214) | |
| 2025-09-12 | Ottoman campaigns in Circassia (1501–1504) (Series of military expeditions against the Kabardian Principality) | The Ottoman campaigns in Circassia (1501–1504), were a series of military expeditions launched by the Ottoman Empire and its vassal, the Crimean Khanate, against the Kabardian Principality in Circassia. All of these campaigns ended in failure for the Ottomans and their Crimean allies. | Start | Drazze.greece (938) | |
| 2025-11-20 | Theresa Ericksen (nurse) | Theresa Ericksen (1867–1943) was an U.S. Army Nurse who served in the Philippines-American War and World War I. She was a founder of the Minnesota Nurses Association. Late in her life, she requested to be buried at Fort Snelling Military Cemetery, which then only served active service members attached to the post. | C | Kiranomimus (519) | |
| 2025-10-01 | Emily Goodridge Grey | Emily O. Goodridge Grey (~1834 – 1916) was an early Black settler and abolitionist who lived in St. Anthony, Minnesota. She is most well known for her role in the freedom case of Eliza Winston. She was the daughter of William Goodridge, a prominent abolitionist and conductor on the Underground Railroad. | C | Kiranomimus (519) | |
| 2025-08-23 | Capture of Julfa (Invasion in Armenia) | The Capture of Julfa took place on the night of 16–17 March 1722, during the Siege of Isfahan by forces of Mahmud Hotak. Following his victory at the Battle of Gulnabad, Mahmud concentrated his men against the Armenian suburb of Isfahan, Julfa. | Start | Afghan$652 (170) | |
| 2025-09-24 | Kaja Teržan (Slovenian poet) | Kaja Teržan was born in 1986 in Kranj, Slovenia, a Slovenian writer, poet, and novelist | Start | Chnitke (335) | |
| 2022-02-09 | Lexington Women's Liberty Monument (Historic Monument honoring women in Lexington, Massachusetts) | The Lexington Women's Liberty Monument (subtitle: Something Is Being Done!) is a monument in the main historic district of Lexington, Massachusetts that honors the contributions by Lexington women from the colonial era through to the twenty-first century. | C | Fothergilla (402) | |
| 2025-11-14 | Ezhar Cezairli (Turkish-German dentist (1962–2021)) | Ezhar Cezairli (born December 12, 1962, in Antakya; died February 9, 2021, in Frankfurt am Main) was a German-Turkish dentist, cultural activist, and, as a representative of secular Muslims, a member of the German Islam Conference and a local politician for the CDU in Frankfurt am Main. | Start | Alperen (2568) | Past AfD |
| 2025-11-16 | Eva Mackintosh (British political figure and mother of Michael Foot) | Eva Jane Mackintosh (8 November 1877 – 17 May 1946) was a British political activist and community figure, best known as the mother of the Labour leader Michael Foot and the wife of the Liberal politician Isaac Foot. | C | F Bman (452) | |
| 2025-11-21 | Battle of Rosinjača (Battle during Croatian war of independence) | The Battle of Rosinjača was a battle fought for the forest south of Osijek during the Croatian War of Independence. | Start | SpeedyHaste (572) | |
| 2025-11-22 | Grossgartach culture (Neolithic culture of Central Europe, c. 4750–4650 BCE) | The Grossgartach culture is characterized by distinctive pottery and stone tools. The ceramic repertoire included bowl-shaped vessels (Kümpfe) with sharply carinated profiles and lower walls than those of earlier Hinkelstein and Linear Pottery ceramics, as well as footed cup-shaped vessels typical of the Hinkelstein tradition. | Start | 7804j (4160) | |
| 2025-11-22 | La Hoguette culture (Neolithic ceramic archaeological culture, c. 5400–5000 BC) | La Hoguette culture is an Early Neolithic ceramic archeological culture dating to approximately 5400–5000 BCE, though radiocarbon dating remains uncertain. The culture derives its name from the site of La Hoguette in Calvados, Normandy. | Start | 7804j (4160) | |
| 2025-11-23 | Augusta Fane (1761–1838) (Countess of Lonsdale) | Lady Augusta Fane (18 September 1761 – 6 March 1838) was the daughter of John Fane, 9th Earl of Westmorland (5 May 1728 – 25 April 1774) and Augusta Bertie. She was born at Brympton House near Yeovil. Her brother was John Fane, 10th Earl of Westmorland. | Stub | Northernhenge (13976) | |
| 2025-10-27 | María Luisa Chicote (Spanish poet) | María Luisa Martí Menasalvas (Barcelona, 12 August 1920 – Madrid, 22 September 1989), who used the pen names María Luisa Chicote and Marisa Chicote, was a Spanish poet, associated with several literary groups including Versos con Faldas and Alforjas para la Poesía. | Start | Aldorwyn of Rivendell (3511) | |
| 2025-11-18 | Homo imaginatus (Proposed alternative name for Homo sapiens) | In philosophical anthropology, Homo imaginatus is a proposed alternative scientific name for Homo sapiens. It means “imaginative man” or “man that imagines”. A similar formulation would be Homo imaginans meaning “imagining man”. | Start | Vysha (274) | |
| 2025-11-03 | Selk'nam flag | The Selk'nam flag is the symbol identifying the Selk'nam people, an indigenous people originally inhabiting Tierra del Fuego in Argentina and Chile. The flag features a representation of the night sky with stars and a crescent moon, while the background of the flag is light blue. | Start | Swiãtopôłk (5652) | |
| 2025-11-08 | Khiva-Bukhara War of 1806 | The Khiva-Bukhara War Of 1806 was a short conflict fought between the Emirate of Bukhara under Emir Haydar and the Khanate of Khiva under Eltuzar Muhammad. The war arose from border raids and political tensions along the Amu Darya region. | Start | SolarKhan15 (93) | |
| 2025-11-21 | Tomb of Albertas Goštautas (16th-century Renaissance tomb in Vilnius) | The Tomb of Albrecht Goštautas is a Renaissance sculptural effigy of the Grand Chancellor of Lithuania Albertas Goštautas, located in Vilnius Cathedral. It was created by the Italian sculptor Bernardino Zanobi de Gianotis approximately between 1539 and 1541. | Start | Чаховіч Уладзіслаў (1128) | |
| 2025-05-22 | Salomea Genin (German writer (born 1932)) | Salomea Genin (born August 31, 1932) is a German book author. | C | Grieselda (93) | |
| 2025-11-23 | Battle of Čačak (1805) (Battle part of the first Serbian uprising) | The Battle of Čačak was undertaken by the Serbian rebel army detachments led by Lazar Mutap and Milić Drinčić against the town of Čačak, in the hands of the Dahije (renegade Janissaries). Čačak was situated in the frontier of rebel territory and serving as an entrance point to Šumadija. | C | Zoupan (68728) | |
| 2025-11-19 | Siege of Užice (1805) (Battle part of the first Serbian uprising) | The siege of Užice was undertaken by the Serbian rebel army led by Jakov Nenadović and Milan Obrenović against the city of Užice, in the hands of the Dahije (renegade Janissaries) supported by the Sanjak of Zvornik. Užice was an important city in the province, laying in the west of rebel territory and serving as a reinforcement point of the Dahije and their allies. | GA | Zoupan (68728) | |
| 2025-11-14 | Katarina Zupančič (Slovenian field worker, straw plaiter and folk singer) | Katarina Zupančič, also known as Živčkova Katra, (30 April 1860 – 2 November 1918) was a Slovenian field labourer, straw plaiter and folk singer. | C | Ihana Aneta (1025) | |
| 2025-08-12 | Draga Gregorič Rosenberg (Slovenian preschool teacher and kindergarten principal (1879–1965)) | Draga Gregorič Rosenberg (2 March 1879 – 28 March 1965) was a Slovenian preschool teacher and kindergarten principal. | Start | Ihana Aneta (1025) | |
| 2025-07-15 | Antonija Premrov (Slovenian nurse, organist, choirmistresses, martyr and Servant of God (1912–1949)) | Antonija Premrov, sister Karmela (2 June 1912 – disappeared 14 January 1949, died some days after) was a Slovenian nurse, organist, and choirmistress. She was martyred by Communists because of her successful work with youth in her parish. She is currently in process of beatification by the Episcopal Conference of Slovenia. | C | Ihana Aneta (1025) | |
| 2025-11-19 | 1591 uprising in Tunis (1591 coup d'état) | The Coup d'État of 1591 in Tunis was carried out by the yoldach (junior janissaries) and led to the creation of the office of the Dey. As a result, the Regency of Tunis became de facto independent from the Ottoman Empire. | Start | Based tunisian (52) | |
| 2025-11-25 | Battle of the Malacca Strait (1714) (1714 naval battle) | The Battle of the Malacca Strait was one of the last battles of the War of the Spanish Succession, fought between 8 and 10 of January in 1714, in violation of the Peace of Utrecht signed between France and Portugal in April 1713. | Stub | Javext (1092) | |
| 2025-11-15 | Al-maryamiyyun | Al-maryamiyyun or Maryamites an Arab Christian sect that appeared in the Arabian Peninsula believed in three gods: God, Jesus, and Mary. It is said that they believed in a trinity, with Mary being part of a trinity. It is believed that they were mentioned in the Quran, where their deification of Jesus and Mary was condemned. | C | Hzea (493) | |
| 2025-11-26 | Cornelia Hall Jones (Hawaiian philanthropist) | Cornelia Hall Jones (1842–1911) was a Hawaiian philanthropist and clubwoman. She was one of the founders of the Daughters of Hawaii. | Start | Willthacheerleader18 (76406) | |
| 2025-11-26 | Ramaglianti Road Synagogue (Former synagogue in Florence) | There was a synagogue on Via Ramaglianti (Italian: Sinagoga di via de' Ramaglianti) in the city of Florence. It is located in the Oltrarno district on the intersection of Via de Ramaglianti and Borgo San Iacopo. | Start | EytanMelech (8139) | |
| 2025-11-26 | Volkmar (Crusader) (11th-century German crusader) | Volkmar was a preacher-crusader who traveled in the People's Crusade movement initiated by the Peter the Hermit. He, alongside Emicho, are most infamous for their leadership in massacring the Jewish civilians on their way to the Jerusalem. Volkmar and his men were subsequently defeated by the Kingdom of Hungary. | Start | Bagabondo (2722) | |
| 2025-11-26 | Theodoros Griego (16th-century Greek seafarer) | Theodoros Griego (Greek: Θεόδωρος ο Έλληνας) was a Greek seafarer from an Aegean island and an explorer of the Americas. He is considered the first Greek person to ever set foot in America, on April 14, 1528.[attribution needed] | Start | Jeofe (138) | |
| 2025-11-26 | Ludwig von Baczko (German author and historian) | Ludwig Franz Adolf Josef von Baczko (8 June 1756 – 27 March 1823) was a German writer. | Stub | Yodin (16157) | |
| 2025-11-25 | Expedition to Najd (1910) | Expedition to Najd 1910, Hussein bin Ali the Sharif of Mecca, launched a campaign against the Najd region, specifically against the Emirate of Riyadh and Ibn Saud. He won the campaign and took control of it. | Start | Apo1 (149) | |
| 2025-09-26 | Stefania Budniak (Polish Auschwitz survivor) | Stefania Budniak (12 July 1912-16 July 1982) was a member of the Polish resistance who was voluntarily sent to Auschwitz in her husband's place during the Second World War. Budniak was liberated from Zwodau concentration camp by American soldiers on 7 May 1945. | C | Snugglebuns (1853) | |
| 2025-11-23 | Fondo Patturelli (archaeological site in Italy) | The Fondo Patturelli, also called the Fondo Petrara, is an archaeological site in Campania, Italy. The site, now located in modern Curti, was once situated nearby the city of Capua. | GA | Graearms (9942) | |
| 2025-11-01 | Damascena (Ancient region containing Damascus, Syria) | Damascena or Damascene (from Ancient Greek Δαμασκηνή Damaskēnḗ, short for ἡ Δαμασκηνή χώρα hē Damaskēnḗ khṓra, lit. 'the Damascene region'; Latin: Damascena, short for Syria Damascena, lit. 'Damascene Syria' or regio Damascena, lit. 'the Damascene region') was the ancient term for the territory surrounding the city of Damascus in Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine Syria. | C | Auteuil-Passy (3460) | |
| 2025-10-22 | Second Bedirkhanis Revolt (Kurdish uprising against the Ottoman Empire in 1877–1878) | The Second Bedirkhanis Revolt (Kurdish: دووەمین یاپەچوونی بێدهرخانی) was a Kurdish uprising against the Ottoman Empire that took place in 1877–1878, following the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878. The revolt was led by two sons of Bedir Khan Beg, Osman Pasha and Huseyin Kenan Pasha. | C | Zemen (1343) | |
| 2025-11-28 | First Assault on Rome | First Assault on Rome was fought between Roman Republic and the combined forces of Papal states, Second French Republic and Spanish Empire. | Start | Giovanni Messe (495) | |
| 2025-11-28 | Second Assault on Rome | On June 3, 1849 French troops commanded by marshal Nicolas Oudinot made their second attempt at invading Rome in the context of the ongoing conflict between French Forces and the Roman Republic. The assaults were launched with no preparatory signals and the intent of achieving a swift breakthrough into the city and restoring papal authority. | Start | Giovanni Messe (495) | |
| 2025-11-26 | Skirmishes in Plav and Gusinje | The Skirmishes in Plav and Gusinje were a series of guerrilla clashes and defensive actions between the Albanian nationalist Balli Kombëtar, supported by local Albanian and Muslim militias, and the communist-led Yugoslav Partisans in the Albanian-inhabited towns of Plav and Gusinje in southeastern Montenegro from 1943 to 1944. | Start | Bardylis22 (113) | |
| 2024-10-06 | Saxon paganism | Saxon paganism, sometimes known as Continental Saxon paganism or Saxon heathenism, refers to the religion of the Saxons before their Christianization in the wake of the Saxon Wars (772–804) of Charlemagne. Distinct from its closely related Anglo-Saxon counterpart, Saxon paganism was a polytheistic belief system and part of the larger Continental Germanic mythology, with a focus on the sacredness of pillar-like objects (such as Irminsul) and sacred groves, many of which were destroyed. | GA | Surtsicna (141309) | |
| 2025-11-27 | Sigemund the Wælsing (Character from Beowulf) | Sigemund the Wælsing is a character in a story within a story found in the Anglo-Saxon epic poem Beowulf, connected to the Sigmund figure of Germanic mythology. The earliest form of the Germanic dragonslayer story, the story includes Sigemund slaying an unnamed wyrm guarding a hoard of treasure, foreshadowing the hoard-guarding dragon found later in the poem. | Start | Bagabondo (2722) | |
| 2025-07-22 | Yasmin Surveyor (Indian academic, banker, and social worker) | 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) | |
| 2025-11-22 | Sabina Vela-Dragoni (Italian wife of sculptor Vincenzo Vela) | Sabina Vela-Dragoni (1 September 1822 – 30 October 1892) was an Italian woman best known as the wife of sculptor Vincenzo Vela and for her central role in managing his artistic activities and legacy. | Start | 7804j (4160) | |
| 2025-11-29 | Alice Gorgas | Alice Gorgas (1892–1951) was an American singer with a wide soprano range, best known as a theater actress. | Start | Brittp24 (12) | |
| 2025-09-04 | Strikçan Roman burial (Albanian archaeological site) | The Strikçan Roman burial is a Roman tomb in Strikçan, Bulqizë, Dibër, Albania. The excavation was carried out between August and September 2025 by the Academy of Albanological Studies, and planned by Erikson Nikolli. The burial is estimated to have been buried occurred between the 3rd and 4th centuries during the Roman imperial period. | Start | Devolver789 (2275) | |
| 2007-05-02 | Kingdom of Odoacer (Kingdom in 5th-century Italy) | The Kingdom of Odoacer, officially known as the Kingdom of Italy (Latin: Regnum Italiae), was a barbarian kingdom (476–493), that came into existence with the deposition of the last Roman emperor Romulus Augustulus at the battle of Ravenna in 476. The battle resulted in the self-proclamation as Rex by Odoacer. | C | Srnec (127832) | |
| 2025-11-22 | Battle of Al-Qahira (1569) (Clash during the Ottoman invasion of Yemen) | Battle of Al-Qahira It is the clash between Osman Pasha and Sinan Pasha and Al-Mutahhar during the invasion launched by the Ottomans in 1569 to gain control over Yemen. | Start | X.CelestialSapien (149) | |
| 2025-11-26 | Battle of Mystras (1464) (1464 battle) | The Battle of Mystras was one of the land battles that developed during the Venetian-Ottoman wars. | Start | X.CelestialSapien (149) | |
| 2025-11-25 | Siege of Corinth (1463) (1463 siege) | The Siege of Corinth was a battle took place during the Venetians' attack on the Morea, which was under Ottoman control. | Start | X.CelestialSapien (149) | |
| 2025-11-27 | Yosef ha-Nagid (Spanish rabbi (1035-1066)) | Yosef ben Shmuel ha-Levi ha-Nagid (Arabic: اأو حسين بن ٱلنغريلة, translit. Abū Ḥusayn ibn Naghrīla; 15 September 1035 – 1066) was a Jewish rabbi, scholar, poet and statesman in the Taifa of Granada in al-Andalus, and one of the early Rishonim of the post-Geonic period. | C | דאנקן לורנס (365) | |
| 2025-11-30 | Servius Cornelius Lentulus (consul 303 BC) (Political and military figure of the Roman Republic) | Servius Cornelius Lentulus (c. 340 - after 303 BC) was a political and military figure of the Roman Republic, and a consul of 303 BC | Stub | Edgar Aetheling 25 (1619) | |
| 2025-11-11 | Sthenia (festival) (Ancient festival of Zeus) | The Sthenia (Ancient Greek: σθένια) was a festival celebrated by the Argives in honor of Zeus Sthenius ("the Strong"). | Stub | Archaeaoris (2855) | |
| 2025-11-26 | Khirbet Jamjum (Archeological site located at the western part of Gush Etzion) | Khirbet Jamjum is an archaeological site located in the western Hebron Hills of the modern-day West Bank. The settlement occupies the summit and southern saddle of a prominent limestone ridge. The ruin preserves remains of a rural settlement occupied during several periods. | GA | Mariamnei (9056) | |
| 2025-11-27 | Sidamara Sarcophagus (3th-century AD Anatolian coffin) | The Sidamara Sarcophagus is a colossal Roman-era columnar sarcophagus known for its monumental size and decoration found in what is now Turkey. Dating from the 3rd century AD, it is considered one of the largest sarcophagi of the ancient world, and is known as the heaviest in the world, weighting 32 tons. | B | Mariamnei (9056) | |
| 2025-06-04 | John, Lord of Beaufort (13th-century English prince) | John, Lord of Beaufort was descended from one branch of the English royal dynasty of the Plantagenets. Born before May 1286, he was the third and youngest son of Edmund Crouchback, 1st Earl of Lancaster and Leicester, and Blanche of Artois. His father was the second son of King Henry III of England, making John the nephew of King Edward I of England and the cousin of King Edward II of England. | Start | AJ Marshall (1084) | |
| 2025-11-30 | Maria Mohylanka ((1591-1638)) | Maria Amalia Mohylanka (sometimes Marianna Mohylanka, born in 1591, died in 1638) was a daughter of Ieremia Movilă, Moldavian hospodar, wife of Stefan Potocki, voivode of Bratslav, and Mikołaj Firlej, voivode of Sandomierz, holder of the Kazimierz starosty in 1636–1638. | Start | Максим Огородник (7526) | |
| 2025-11-29 | Hino Muneko (official wife of Ashikaga Yoshinori) | Hino Muneko (日野宗子 possibly Mitsuko</ref>; year of birth unknown - June 12, 1447) was the wife of Ashikaga Yoshinori, the sixth shogun of the Muromachi shogunate. She was later separated from him and became a nun, taking the name Kanchiin. | Start | Shelter3 (1851) | |
| 2025-11-04 | Sharon Alston (New Zealand cartoonist, designer, artist and illustrator (1948-1995)) | Sharon Alston (13 March 1948 - 11 February 1995) was a New Zealand artist and lesbian feminist. She is most known for illustrating covers, posters, flyers, and comics for the New Zealand feminist magazine Broadsheet. Alston was also a leading member of the Women's Art Collective in Auckland and an early member of Auckland's Gay Liberation Front. | C | DCorwinUCLA (48) | |
| 2025-12-02 | Battle of Sansego (842 naval battle) | The Battle of Sansego was a naval engagement between the Venetians and the Aghlabids off the island of Sansego. The Venetians suffered a crushing defeat. | Start | عبدالرحمن4132 (6071) | |
| 2025-12-02 | Moldavian Campaign (1484–1486) | The Moldavian campaign was a military expedition by the Ottoman Sultan Bayezid II against the Principality of Moldavia. The Ottomans managed to conquer the fortress of Chilia and Cetatea Albă, confirming Ottoman supremacy of the Black Sea. | C | عبدالرحمن4132 (6071) | |
| 2025-12-02 | Moldavian Campaign (1538) | The Moldavian campaign in 1538 was a military expedition led by the Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent against the Moldavian prince Petru Rareș. The campaign was an Ottoman success, and Petru was deposed. The Ottomans also captured Suceava, South Bessarabia, and the northern Black Sea coast. | B | عبدالرحمن4132 (6071) | |
| 2025-10-23 | Vincentius (comes) (5th-century Roman comes Hispaniarum in the Visgothic Kingdom) | Vincentius, also spelled Vicentius, was a late Roman military commander who held the position of Comes Hispaniarum in Spain. As a provincial commander, Vincentius exercised both military and civil-administrative duties. The Iberian Peninsula was in a transitional phase in the second half of the 5th century. | Start | Geoffrey F (1360) | |
| 2025-11-20 | Okamura Fuku (Japanese Roman Catholic nun (1899–1982)) | Okamura Fuku (Japanese: 岡村ふく; June 3, 1899 – April 26, 1982), also known as Mother Helen Theresia, was a Japanese Roman Catholic nun born in the Empire of Japan. In 1944 she was the co-founder, with Fr. Vincent Totsuka Bunkyō (1892–1939, Bunkei Totsuka in some sources), of the Missionary Sisters of St. | Stub | Oh-Fortuna! (5491) | |
| 2017-06-03 | Serbs in Cyprus (Ethnic group) | Serbs in Cyrpus are Cypriot citizens of ethnic Serb descent and/or Serbia-born persons living in Cyprus. According to data from the 2011 census, there were 1,009 Serbia-born people living in Cyprus. The Serb diaspora in Cyprus is a small expatriate community, with roots tracing to post-Yugoslav migration waves in the 1990s and 2000s. | Start | Jerome501 (8060) | |
| 2025-07-27 | Battle of Marash (1161) (1161 battle) | 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. | C | عبدالرحمن4132 (6071) | |
| 2025-12-03 | Önundur vís (Ninth-century Icelandic settler) | Önundur vís (also víss), or Önundur the Wise, was an early Icelandic settler in Skagafjörður during the 9th and 10th centuries. First, he settled land in the eastern portion of Austurdalur (east valley). Then, according to the Landnámabók, he tried to claim the western part of the valley after becoming aware that Eiríkur Hróaldsson of Goðdalir intended to go and claim the that part of the valley for himself, Önundur rushed to shoot a flaming arro ... | Stub | SilkPyjamas (2740) | |
| 2025-11-30 | Expedition of Collo (1282 military expedition) | The Expedition of Collo was a short-lived Aragonese military operation led by King Peter III of Aragon in June 1282 on the North African coast. The expedition aimed to support the rebellious governor Ibn al-Wazir in seizing Constantine from the Hafsid Sultanate. | Start | Based tunisian (52) | |
| 2025-11-14 | Mary Barnett Poppenheim | Mary Barnett Poppenheim (September 4,1866-February 12,1936) was a clubwoman, social reformer, and editor who had great influence over women and South Carolina history. After studying at Vassar College, she went on to pursue leadership roles serving as the president of the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC), in both the South Carolina and national sectors of this organization. | C | Spongebob87643 (21) | |
| 2025-08-31 | Muhammad ibn Abi Muhammad al-Ansari | Muḥammad ibn Abī Muḥammad al-Anṣārī (Arabic: محمد بن أبي دمحمد الأنصاري) was a freed slave of Zayd ibn Thabit, a companion of the Islamic Prophet Muhammad. He is known as a Hadith narrator. However, he is considered Majhul (unknown) by most scholars. | Start | VenDei (235) | |
| 2025-11-29 | Manuela Delsors Mangrané (Spanish painter) | Manuela Delsors Mangrané (Tortosa 1918–2001), also known as Manolita Delsors, was a painter from Tortosa, Catalonia. She rose to prominence in the 1940s and early 1950s, but little is known of her life and work after this period. | Start | Flowersforsale (49) | |
| 2025-11-12 | Battle of Ovaro (1945 battle in the Italian Campaign) | The Battle of Ovaro was a battle between the Nazi-backed Cossacks who had settled in Northern Friuli (who had created the semi-independent entity of Kosakenland), and the Italian partisans on 1 May 1945, in Ovaro, with its culmination being on 2 May 1945. | GA | VitoxxMass (1344) | |
| 2025-11-04 | Antonio Gan Vargas (Maquis of the Spanish AGLA) | Antonio Gan Vargas ‘Cubano’ (Málaga, 31 July 1917 – Benagéber, 25 March 1947) was one of the anti-Franco guerrilla fighters of the Agrupación Guerrillera de Levante y Aragón (AGLA). | C | Mjimenezale (38) | |
| 2025-11-16 | Roman Camp, Wilkenburg (archeological site near Hannover, Germany) | The Roman Camp, Wilkenburg is one of the easternmost roman castrum inside Germany. Wilkenburg is a former ancient village (Ortsteil) in the actual city of Hemmingen, in the German state of Lower Saxony, in Germany. | C | 1948vito (160) | |
| 2025-11-03 | Brandon Contreras (21st century actor and writer) | Brandon Contreras (born March 20, 1990) is an actor and writer. They are best known as the co-creator of queer sketch comedy group The Homo Sapien Experience and for their Broadway and off-Broadway musical theatre roles. | Start | Engrigg22 (16658) | |
| 2025-11-11 | Margaret Ramsey (Tennessee businesswoman (1777 to 1854)) | Margaret Ramsey (June 15, 1777 – April 10, 1854) was a businesswoman and a civic leader in the Knoxville, Tennessee community. | GA | Livgroberts (46) | |
| 2025-10-27 | Bir ed-Duwali (Archaeological site in the central West Bank) | Bir ed-Duwali, Kh. Bir ed-Dawali or Kh. 'Awaad is an archaeological site located on the southwestern slopes of Beitunia, West Bank, just north of Giv'at Ze'ev. Founded in the Hasmonean period, likely under John Hyrcanus, it was a Jewish rural settlement of the Second Temple period, occupied through the Hellenistic and early Roman phases until its destruction in 67 CE during the First Jewish–Roman War; the site was reoccupied in the Late Roman, Byzantine, and Early Islamic periods. | GA | Mariamnei (9056) | |
| 2025-11-01 | Khirbet Abu ad-Danin (Archaeological site in the central West Bank) | Khirbet Abu ad-Danin, Horvat Abu a-Danin or Kh. Abu ed-Dinein is an archaeological site located in the central West Bank, just south of Modi'in Illit. The site represents a rural Jewish village from the late Second Temple period, founded in the 2nd century BCE and reaching its peak during the late Hellenistic and early Roman periods. | C | Mariamnei (9056) | |
| 2025-10-28 | Khirbet al-Biyar (Archaeological site in the central West Bank) | Khirbet al-Biyar is an archaeological site located near Beit Hanina, northwest of Jerusalem, at the foot of the Nabi Samwil ridge, in the West Bank. Covering roughly 20 dunams, the site preserves evidence of occupation, though not continuously, from the Iron Age through the Early Islamic period. | C | Mariamnei (9056) | |
| 2025-11-15 | Third Scutari-Ottoman War (Conflict between the Pashalik of Scutari and the Ottoman Empire) | The Third Scutari-Ottoman War (Albanian: Lufta e Tretë Shkodrano-Otomane; Turkish: Üçüncü İşkodra-Osmanlı Savaşı) was a war fought between 1830 and 1831 between the Ottoman Empire and primarily the Pashalik of Scutari. The war marked the final confrontation between Scutari and the Sublime Porte, resulting in the dissolution of the Pashalik of Scutari and the end of Bushati rule over most of northern Albania. | GA | GermanManFromFrankfurt (2304) | |
| 2025-12-05 | Saint Nicholas Church, Berezhany (Ukrainian church in Berezhany, Ukraine) | Saint Nicholas Church and Bernardine Monastery (Ukrainian: Церква Святого Миколая) is a historic complex in Berezhany, Ternopil Oblast, and an architectural monument of national importance. Founded by the Sieniawski family, owners of the city. | Start | Максим Огородник (7526) | |
| 2025-11-16 | Coat of arms of West Flanders (Heraldic symbol used by the Belgian province West-Flanders) | The coat of arms of West-Flanders is a heraldic symbol used by the Belgian province West-Flanders. Although the arms was already in use by the province in 1815 (under the United Kingdom of the Netherlands), the weapon was then topped with the arms of the Netherlands. | C | SEPB66 (288) | |
| 2025-11-05 | Dibyak (Minister in the Pala Court and the leader of Varendra Rebellion) | Dibyak (or Divyak) was a Samanta and the leader of the Varendra rebellion against the Pala Dynasty in North Bengal during the reign of King Mahipala II. He led a significant uprising that challenged the authority of the ruling Pala Empire. | Start | Hamir samanta (536) | |
| 2025-10-28 | Anne Lehoërff (French archeologist) | Anne Lehoërff (born 1968, Saint-Malo, France) is a French archaeologist and historian specializing in European Prehistory, particularly the Bronze Age and the study of ancient metallurgy. | C | Noura P (5) | |
| 2025-11-30 | Madame de Grancey (French courtier) | Louise-Elisabeth de Rouxel (1653 – 26 November 1711), known as Mademoiselle de Grancey and Madame de Grancey, was a French courtier. Madame de Grancey was the influential personal friend of Philippe I, Duke of Orléans and the mistress of his favorite Philippe, Chevalier de Lorraine. | Start | Aciram (131952) | |
| 2025-11-29 | Edith Maud Drummond-Hay | Edith Maud Drummond-Hay (1872–1960) was a Scottish Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD) nurse and amateur artist who documented her First World War experiences with detailed sketches of life in military hospitals in Scotland and France. She was awarded the Associate of the Royal Red Cross (RRC 2nd Class) medal in 1919 in recognition of her service in France. | C | Gillaween (871) | |
| 2025-12-05 | Battle of İznik | The Battle of İznik was a battle that took place during the Küçük Mustafa rebellion. | Start | X.CelestialSapien (149) | |
| 2025-10-23 | Macra of Reims (Legendary Christian (martyred c. 287)) | St Macra of Reims was an ancient Roman Christian woman from the city of Reims who was supposedly martyred in the year 287. According to legend, the emperors Diocletian and Maximian ordered the governor Rictius Varus to excise Christianity from Gaul. As part of this persecution, Varus supposedly attempted to torture the Christian woman Macra of Reims, although she refused to recant and reportedly—when asked ... | Start | Graearms (9942) | |
| 2025-10-22 | Central Caucasus Crisis (Russian, Kabardian and Nogais military campaign against the Caucasus 1562-1566) | Central Caucasus Crisis or Circassian conquest of Central Caucasus was a campaign directed against the Ingush, Ossetian societies of Digor, Kurtatin, and Tagaur regions, as well as the Ksani Eristavate in Central Ossetia and Turkic people, as a result of this campaign, the Ingush had to go to the mountains, after this campaign, Kabardian and Russian influence was spread throughout the Caucasus. | C | Drazze.greece (938) | |
| 2022-03-10 | Azov War (1501–1502) | The Azov War or Crimean-Circassian War of 1501–1502 was a military conflict between the Crimean Khanate and the Kabardian Principality. | Start | A poor son of Adam (1621) | Past AfD |
| 2022-03-10 | Crimean–Circassian War (1539–1547) | The Crimean-Circassian Wars of 1539–1547 refers to a series of military conflicts between the Crimean Khanate and the Kabardian Principality. | B | A poor son of Adam (1621) | |
| 2025-04-20 | Crimean–Circassian War (1518) (Military conflict) | Crimean–Circassian War of 1518 was a military conflict between the Crimean Khanate and the Kabardian Principality. The defeat paused Crimean attacks on Circassian states for a time | Start | Drazze.greece (938) | |
| 2025-08-26 | Sudzhuq-Kale raid (1787) (First Ottoman attempt to expand into Western Circassia) | In October 1787, during the opening phase of the Russo-Turkish War (1787–1792), a Kabardian detachment of about 500 armored horsemen (panzirniks) advanced toward the Ottoman fortress of Sudzhuq-Kale on the Black Sea coast. Acting in coordination with the forces of Russian commander Ivan Tekeļi, the Kabardians moved through the mountain passes of Kabarda and into the western Circassian lands. | Stub | Drazze.greece (938) | |
| 2025-06-13 | Shapur I's second Roman campaign (Conflict between Persia and Rome in the 200s CE) | Shapur I's second Roman campaign was the second of three victorious campaigns that the Persian king Shapur I led against the Roman Empire in the 3rd century AD. This campaign took place as part of the Roman–Persian wars, an escalation of the Roman–Parthian Wars. | Start | Wikaviani (15921) | |
| 2025-10-27 | Hatuqway Principality (Historical principality and province of Circassia) | The Hatuqway Principality was a historical principality and a province of Circassia. It was inhabited by the Hatuqway Circassian tribe and was ruled by the Cherchanuqo clan, which was the largest aristocratic family of the Hatuqways. The Hatuqway Principality was marked on period maps with various names (Hatukai, Codioci, Gatyukai), including the 1787 map by Johann Anton Güldenstädt and the 1675 map by Frederik de Wit. | GA | Liptink0 (897) | |
| 2025-12-02 | Battle of Gallipoli (1422) | The Battle of Gallipoli was the last battle that took place during Mustafa Çelebi's second rebellion. | Start | X.CelestialSapien (149) | |
| 2025-11-26 | Battle of Vrbica (Battle part of the first Serbian uprising) | The Battle of Vrbica (Serbian: Бој на Врбици/Boj na Vrbici) was a clash between the Dahije (renegade Janissaries) leader Kučuk-Alija and the Serbian rebel unit of supreme commander Karađorđe in March 1804 near Vrbica in the valley of the Venčac mountain. | C | Zoupan (68728) | |
| 2025-11-03 | Women in the FMLN | Women played a very crucial role in the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN) during the Salvadoran Civil War. Their involvement in the revolutionary movement was due to the country's conditions under the Salvadoran government's authoritarian military rule. | C | DanielaGarciaGiron (21) | |
| 2025-08-07 | Helen J. Claytor (American civil rights activist (1907–2005)) | Helen Jackson Claytor (born Helen Natalie Jackson, formerly Wilkins; April 12, 1907 – May 10, 2005) was an American racial justice activist and YWCA leader. Claytor served on the YWCA national board for decades, developing an explicitly racial justice-focused mission for the organization and serving as its president for 6 years. | GA | DontCallMeLateForDinner (5254) | |
| 2025-11-29 | Daphitas (Greek grammarian) | Daphitas (Ancient Greek: Δαφίτας) or Daphidas (Ancient Greek: Δαφίδας) of Telmessus was a Greek grammarian and epigrammatist known for his sharp and insulting manner of speech. He wrote against Homer, claiming that Homer lied in saying the Athenians fought at Troy. | Start | Archaeaoris (2855) | |
| 2025-11-23 | Yendi Dabari Archeological Site | The Yendi (Yani) Dabari archeological site is an important archeological evidence source in northern Ghana. The site was excavated by Peter Shinnie and Paul Ozanne in 1961 under sponsorship from the Ghana Volta Lake Project Fund which aimed to collect, catalogue, and preserve important archeological data and heritage for communities under the Volta Basin Research Project. | Start | Cornluck (30) | |
| 2025-11-12 | Eduard Rügemer | Eduard David Rügemer was a German major in the Wehrmacht who was posthumously honored by Yad Vashem as Righteous Among the Nations for rescuing Jews. | Start | TheGreatEditor024 (513) | |
| 2025-10-15 | Lillian Griggs (North Carolina librarian) | Lillian Baker Griggs was the first trained librarian to work in North Carolina, shaping both public and academic libraries in the state. She was Durham's library director from 1911-1923, updating the library system and establishing outreach programs. She organized and secured one of the first bookmobile services in the South, extending library service to rural North Carolinians. | B | Blustory (24) | |
| 2025-08-04 | Tauron (son of Machatas) (Macedonian aristocrat and commander) | Tauron (Ancient Greek: Ταύρων), son of Machatas and brother of Harpalus and Philip, was the commander of archers under the service of Alexander the Great. Along with Seleucus and Antigenes, he led a phalanx against Porus. | Stub | Sumxr (43) | |
| 2025-11-03 | Yang Zhihua (Chinese political organizer) | Yang Zhihua (Chinese: 杨之华; 1900 -1973) was a feminist voice and a Chinese Communist Party (CCP) labor organizer who is known for her role as the Director of the Women’s Bureau. An avid writer, Yang explored topics of gendered and class inequality in her works. | GA | Alice Gao 30 (32) | |
| 2025-12-02 | Janet Macmurdoch | Janet Macmurdoch (also recorded as Janet McMurdoche, McMuldroch, McMuldritche in the old records) was a Scottish woman tried and executed for witchcraft in Dumfries in 1671. She was accused of causing harm through witchcraft, a type of allegation known as maleficium, during a period of active witchcraft persecution in southwest Scotland. | Start | Nuwagaba Helena (49) | |
| 2025-12-08 | Mary John (Marie-Jeanne) (American former slave (died 1857)) | Mary John (c. 1785–1857), originally Marie Jeanne, was an American former slave who became a prominent figure in Arkansas following her emancipation. | Stub | Joeland7 (13) | |
| 2025-10-27 | Svinjarička Čuka (neolithic site near Leskovac, Serbia) | Svinjarička Čuka is an archaeological site in southern Serbia, near the village of Štulac in the municipality of Lebane. Cultural deposits at the site date to the Neolithic, Copper, Bronze, and Early Iron Ages. Discovered in 2017, it has been excavated since 2018 to investigate the initial spread of the Neolithic along the Vardar–Morava river corridor. | FA | AnonymeArchaeologin (29) | |
| 2025-11-20 | Bellum Dardanicum (75–73 BCE war) | The Bellum Dardanicum (Latin for "Dardanian War"; 75–73 BC) was a Roman military campaign against the Dardani, a Thracian-Illyrian tribe inhabiting the region of Dardania (modern Kosovo, northern North Macedonia, and southern Serbia). The war formed part of Rome’s efforts to secure the northern frontier of the province of Macedonia. | Start | Bardylis22 (113) | |
| 2025-11-09 | Drisvyaty Ghetto (WWII Jewish ghetto in Vitebsk, Belarus) | Drisvyaty Ghetto (Summer 1941 — September 1942) was a Jewish ghetto established during the Holocaust in the village of Drysviaty (agro-town), Braslaw District, and in nearby settlements of the Vitebsk Region of Belarus. | Start | Rafi Chazon (1571) | |
| 2025-11-26 | Antonija Thaler (Slovenian bobbin-lace maker, draughtswoman and designer (1914–2014)) | C | Ihana Aneta (1025) | ||
| 2025-11-01 | Abraham Eliezer Eliyahu Ha-Levi Igel (Austrian Galiczian Rabbi, of the town of Czernowitz and of province of Bukowina) | Abraham Eliezer Eliyahu Ha-Levi Igel (Hebrew: אברהם אליעזר אליהו הלוי איגל; German: Lazar Elias Igel; Italian: Lazaro Elia Igel; 28 February 1825, Lemberg – 26 March 1892, Czernowitz) was an Austrian modern Orthodox (sometimes described as Reformist) rabbi, born in Galicia (now Ukraine). | C | Edward Mike005 (1678) | |
| 2025-12-09 | Siege of Kiev (1036) (Siege of Rus' capital by nomads (1036 CE)) | The Siege of Kiev was conducted by Pecheneg Khanate against the capital of the Kievan Rus' defended by Prince Yaroslav the Wise, which took place in 1036. It ended in a crushing defeat for Pechenegs, which led to their annihilation. | Start | StephanSnow (2601) | |
| 2025-11-05 | Asociación de Mujeres Antifascistas (Spanish anti-fascist and feminist organization) | The Association of Anti-Fascist Women (AMA) (Spanish: Asociación de Mujeres Antifascistas (AMA)) was an anti-fascist and a feminist political organization established during Spain's Second Republic by the Communist Party of Spain (Spanish: Partido Comunista de España (PCE)) in 1933. | FA | Francescabrenn (39) | |
| 2025-12-07 | Crusading warfare | Crusading warfare, characterised by distinctive systems of recruitment, logistics, and strategy, formed a central element of the crusading movement from its origins in the late 11th century. | FA | Borsoka (48407) | |
| 2025-12-03 | Emily Plume Evans (American woman's rights activist) | Emily Plume Evans (May 9th, 1865 - April 4th, 1942) was a South Carolina women's activist and club woman in many organizations. She was the founder of the New Era Club, the South Carolina first suffrage club. She was also the founding member of the League of Women Voters of South Carolina. | Start | Golfingpanther (17) | |
| 2025-10-09 | Maria Springer (Polish female poet (1824–1872)) | Maria Springer, aka Maria z Gniezna, (1824–1872) was a Polish poet, philanthropist and fashion designer. | C | Wikibenchris (20926) | |
| 2025-11-21 | Charles J. Goodwin Award of Merit | The Charles J. Goodwin Award of Merit is an annual prize for outstanding publications in the field of classics given by the Society for Classical Studies (SCS). | B | 15lsoucy (2148) | |
| 2025-09-10 | Milovan Resavac | Milovan Resavac (Serbian: Милован Ресавац; d. 1809), also known as Bimbaša Milovan (Бимбаша Милован), was a Serbian revolutionary, a comrade of vojvoda Stevan Sinđelić. | C | Zoupan (68728) | |
| 2009-07-30 | Late modern period (Period from 1800 CE until the present) | In many periodizations of human history, the late modern period followed the early modern period. It began around 1800 and, depending on the author, either ended with the beginning of contemporary history in 1945, or includes the contemporary history period to the present day. | B | Reddi (58350) | Past AfD |
| 2025-11-05 | Kičevo Clashes (1943 partisan operations and clashes in Kičevo during World War II) | The 1943 Partisan Operations in Kičevo (Operacionet partizane në Kërçovë 1943; Партизански операции во Кичево 1943) were a series of resistance actions in and around Kičevo, western North Macedonia, during the Balkan campaign of World War II. The operations comprised two distinct phases: the bloodless disarmament of the Italian garrison on 9 September 1943, following Italy’s armistice with the Allies, and subsequent guerrilla clashes in November betw ... | C | Bardylis22 (113) | |
| 2025-12-01 | Ren Nikaido (Japanese ski jumper) | is a Japanese ski jumper. | Start | Citanoo (332) | |
| 2025-12-07 | Olha Duchyminska (Ukrainian writer and activist (1883–1988)) | Olha-Oleksandra Vasylivna Duchyminska (Ukrainian: Ольга-Олександра Василівна Дучимінськ; 8 June 1883 – 24 September 1988) was a Ukrainian writer, feminist, and political activist. She is best known for her 1911 poetry work A Bunch of Forget-Me-Nots and her 1945 novel Eti, which addressed the Holocaust. | GA | Apollo468 (5694) | |
| 2025-11-13 | Giuseppina Negroni Prati (Italian patriot and philanthropist) | Giuseppina Negroni Prati Morosini (3 February 1824 – 16 March 1909) was an Italian patriot and philanthropist who played a significant role in the Risorgimento movement and supported Italian independence during the 1848 revolutions. Born into a liberal aristocratic family, she maintained close ties with prominent 19th-century cultural figures, including composer Giuseppe Verdi and painter Francesco Hayez. | C | Oliwiasocz (3255) | |
| 2025-12-10 | Captaincies in Bosnia and Herzegovina | Captaincies in Bosnia and Herzegovina (Serbo-Croatian: Kapetanije) were military–administrative units (captaincies) within the Bosnia Eyalet of the Ottoman Empire. In Ottoman terminology they are also called "kapetanluk" (from Turkish. kaptanlık). A kapetanija was a sub-division within a sanjak and existed exclusively in the territory of the Bosnian Eyalet from the 16th century until 1835. | GA | Rijekaneretva (366) | |
| 2025-06-14 | Shuyuan Chen (Mother of Liu Zixun rival claimant of Liu Song, presumably Empress Dowager) | 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. | Start | HenryXVII (6181) | |
| 2025-06-05 | Madeline Cadotte | Madeline Cadotte (c. 1760 or 1770- between 1852 to 1860) was an Ojibwe woman of the prominent clan ajijaak dodem. | GA | CycoMa2 (33704) | |
| 2025-11-02 | Kharijite Rebellions against Ali (Uprisings of Theocratic Rebels Against Ali) | The Kharijite Rebellions were the uprisings instigated by the Kharijites against the Caliphate of Ali. Various rebellions took place throughout the Caliphate but were all militarily suppressed. However, a Kharijite dissident would assassinate Ali in 661 in retaliation, and subsequently Ali's son Hasan would abdicate the Caliphate to Mu'awiya I. | C | Legion of Liberty (1614) | |
| 2025-12-11 | Khirbet Mudayna (Wadi ath-Thamad) (Iron Age ruin in central Jordan) | Khirbet Mudayna (often distinguished as Khirbet Mudayna on the Wadi ath-Thamad, or simply Mudayna Thamad) is an archaeological site in central Jordan, located southeast of Madaba and northeast of Dhiban. The settlement occupies an oval hill on the southern bank of the Wadi ath-Thamad and dates primarily to Iron Age II, when it formed a fortified town within the kingdom of Moab. | B | Mariamnei (9056) | |
| 2025-12-10 | Tuzcuoğlu Rebellions (1832–1834 Laz revolt) | The Tuzcuoğlu Rebellions were a series of uprisings in the early 19th century led by the Tuzcuoğlu family in response to the Ottoman government’s attempts to curb the power of local ayans in the Black Sea region. Reacting to the central authority’s tax, land, and administrative policies that diminished their regional influence, the Tuzcuoğulları launched several revolts, further fueled by rivalry and pressure from the Hazinedaroğlu family. | B | BEFOR01 (524) | |
| 2025-08-27 | Louise Ward (French painter (1849–1930)) | Louise Ward, sometimes rendered Louise de Ward (9 July 1849 – 11 February 1930), known in the art world by her pseudonym Louise Dubréau or Louise Dubreau, was a French painter and Parisian society belle. | GA | RipplingRiver (1178) | |
| 2025-11-13 | Ellen Murray (abolitionist) (American abolitionist (1834–1908)) | Ellen Murray was an abolitionist, educator, and founder of the Penn School on St. Helena Island, South Carolina. Murray is remembered for dedicating her time to helping newly freed slaves gain an education and practice self-sufficiency. | C | C120p (38) | |
| 2025-12-08 | Marie Francoise Antoinette Petit de Coulange de Vilemont | Marie Françoise Antoinette de Petit de Coulange de Vilemont (September 23, 1732 – 1812) was the first European born in the Arkansas region, specifically at the Arkansas Post. She was born to Pierre Louis Petit de Coulange and Françoise Gallard de Chamilly. | C | PallasBennett (39) | |
| 2025-08-15 | 2025–26 Lion City Sailors FC youth season (Lion City Sailors Football team season) | The 2025–26 season is Lion City Sailors' 30th consecutive season in the Singapore Premier League and the 6th season since privatising from Home United. | C | EricChouu (3609) | |
| 2025-10-24 | Michael Smuss (Polish artist and Holocaust survivor (1926–2025)) | Michael Smuss (15 April 1926 – 21 October 2025) was a survivor of the Holocaust and an artist. Smuss was the last surviving resistance fighter of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. | GA | Mikeycdiamond (2649) | |
| 2025-11-28 | Fall of Rome (1849) | Fall of Rome (1849) was conflict between the Roman Republic and Papal Coalition of Pope Pius IX. | C | Giovanni Messe (495) | |
| 2025-08-24 | Ravno massacre (1991 massacre in Bosnia and Herzegovina) | In early October 1991, the village of Ravno in Herzegovina, inhabited mostly by Croats, was destroyed by the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) and associated reservists. In several days of violence marked by shelling, shootings, raids, and expulsions, 24 civilians were killed, 34 died of "natural" death, 11 were injured, and 18 were taken away to Trebinje. | C | Ulltrassai (123) | |
| 2025-12-10 | Richgard von Sponheim | Richgard of Sponheim, or Richardis (died 1151), was the wife of Rudolf I of Stade, Margrave of the Nordmark, and mother of Udo IV, Rudolf II, Margrave of the Nordmark, Archbishop Hartwig of Magdeburg, Lutgard of Salzwedel, and Richardis von Stade. | Start | Yadsalohcin (18426) | |
| 2025-11-22 | Battle of Karanovac (Battle part of the first Serbian uprising) | The Battle of Karanovac (Serbian: Бој на Карановцу/Boj na Karanovcu) was undertaken by the Serbian rebel army led by Karađorđe and Radič Petrović against the town of Karanovac (now Kraljevo), in the hands of the Dahije (renegade Janissaries) supported by the Sanjak of Novi Pazar. | FA | Zoupan (68728) | |
| 2010-04-28 | Princess Alice of Bourbon-Parma (1849–1935) (Princess Alice of Bourbon-Parma, Grand Duchess of Tuscany) | Princess Alice Marie Caroline Ferdinanda Rachel Johanna Philomena of Bourbon-Parma (27 December 1849 – 16 January 1935) was Grand Duchess of Tuscany through her marriage to Ferdinand IV, Grand Duke of Tuscany. She was also the third child of Charles III, Duke of Parma, and Princess Louise d'Artois. | C | LouisPhilippeCharles (13847) | |
| 2025-12-11 | Drita Çomo (Albanian poet (1958-1981)) | Drita Çomo (Tiranë, March 19, 1958 - February 19, 1981) was an Albanian poet. | Start | Kevjassintkevin (2078) | |
| 2025-10-15 | Blowing Smoke Rings (1938 painting by Isabel Bishop) | Blowing Smoke Rings is an oil on panel painting by Isabel Bishop (March 3, 1902 - February 19, 1988), created in 1938. Measuring 20 1/8 inches by 14 1/8 inches (51.1 x 35.9 cm). The painting depicts a young female office worker residing in the Union Square neighborhood, taking a brief smoke break. | C | Pastelparagraphs (44) | |
| 2025-12-11 | Sade Giyinen Hanımlar Cemiyeti (Turkish women's rights organization) | Sade Giyinen Hanımlar Cemiyeti was an Ottoman women's rights organization, founded in 1918. It focused on the liberation of women via dress reform, and played a part in the campaign against compulsory hijab (veiling) in Turkey. | Start | Aciram (131952) | |
| 2025-10-07 | Homenaje a las Mujeres de Aztlan (Mural by Judithe Hernández) | Homenaje a las Mujeres de Aztlán is a mural painted by Chicana artist Judithe Hernández. It was painted in 1976 as part of a project by Mechicano Art Center that was funded by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. Hernández's mural, and the other murals part of that project, are located in the Ramona Gardens housing project in Los Angeles. | Start | Sleepyitzpaplotl (42) | |
| 2025-04-30 | Siege of Edessa (610) (Part of the Byzantine–Sasanian War of 602–628) | The siege of Edessa was a siege of the city Edessa of the Byzantine Empire by the Sasanian Empire in 610 CE. | Stub | Iranian112 (1903) | |
| 2025-10-09 | Gothic revolt of Euric (468–471 revolt) | The Revolt of Euric was a military conflict between the Gothic king Euric and the Western Roman Empire between AD 468 and 471. The war marked the collapse of Roman authority in southern Gaul and led to the establishment of an independent Visigothic kingdom centered on Toulouse. | C | Geoffrey F (1360) | |
| 2025-12-09 | Stacey Merkt (American human rights activist (1954 –)) | Stacey Merkt (born 1954) is an American human rights activist imprisoned for her work on behalf of the Sanctuary movement. In 1984 she became a controversial national figure and part of a cause celébre for helping migrants from El Salvador seek refuge in the United States. | Start | Oh-Fortuna! (5491) | |
| 2025-11-10 | Siege of Theodoro (1475) (Part of the Ottoman wars in Europe) | The Siege of Theodoro is a military operation carried out by the Ottoman fleet under the command of Gedik Ahmed Pasha during the Crimean campaign in 1475, during which the Turkish troops captured the Mangup Castle, the center of the Greek Theodoro Principality in the south of the Crimean peninsula, thus integrating the aforementioned state into Ottoman territory. | Stub | Volkan Agha (63) | |
| 2025-12-13 | Vitalis of Castronovo (Christian hermit, recluse and monk (10th century)) | Vitalis of Castronovo (Italian: San Vitale) was 10th century Sicilian, Byzantine, Griko hermit, recluse, ascetic, abbot and saint who founded several monasteries in Basilicata and Calabria in the south of Italy (then Griko speaking parts of Byzantine Empire). | C | Roman Zacharij (2547) | |
| 2025-11-21 | Jane M. Rausch (Born:1940–12-12) | Jane Meyer Rausch (born 1940) is an American historian and professor emerita of history at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. A specialist in Colombian history and Latin American frontier studies, she is known for her research on the Llanos Orientales region and for her studies of Colombia during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. | C | Jenna Dorshi (20) | |
| 2025-11-20 | Princess Beatrice of Bourbon (Princess of Roviano) | Princess Beatrice of Bourbon, Princess of Roviano (21 March 1874 – 1 November 1961) was the third daughter and fourth child of Prince Carlos, Duke of Madrid, the Carlist claimant to the throne of Spain and the Legitimist claimant to the throne of France, and Princess Margherita of Bourbon-Parma. | C | SaturnoBoleyn (487) | |
| 2025-12-13 | Sabine Wienker-Piepho (German specialist in literature) | Sabine Auguste Marie Wienker-Piepho (9 October 1946 – 21 May 2025) was a German folklorist and literary scholar. | Start | Izlhyl (1023) | |
| 2025-01-24 | Lady Elizabeth Anson (political adviser) (Political adviser and correspondent) | Lady Elizabeth Anson (née Yorke; August 1725–1 June 1760) was a political adviser and correspondent. | Start | Cakelot1 (12081) | |
| 2025-11-30 | KLA spring offensives (1998) (Event during Kosovo war) | The KLA spring offensives, also known as the Kosovar spring uprising of 1998 were series of KLA uprisings and offensives in Kosovo. The Uprising was triggered by the Attack on Prekaz, which resulted in the Deaths of Adem and Hamëz Jashari and almost their entire family, which led to thousands of young Kosovo Albanians had begun to join the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), causing an uprising by the KLA that eventually erupted in the spring of 1998. | GA | AverageSkiptar (1133) | |
| 2025-11-30 | Alessandro Sebastiani (Italian archaeologist) | Alessandro Sebastiani (born in Grosseto in 1981) is an Italian archaeologist and Associate Professor of Roman Archaeology at the University at Buffalo, State University of New York (SUNY). His research focuses on Roman and late antique Italy, landscape archaeology, sanctuaries, and rural settlement patterns in southern Tuscany. | C | Trowel81 (23) | |
| 2016-03-16 | Princess Alice of Bourbon-Parma (1849-1935) (Princess Alice of Bourbon-Parma, Grand Duchess of Tuscany) | Princess Alice Marie Caroline Ferdinanda Rachel Johanna Philomena of Bourbon-Parma (27 December 1849 – 16 January 1935) was Grand Duchess of Tuscany through her marriage to Ferdinand IV, Grand Duke of Tuscany. She was also the third child of Charles III, Duke of Parma, and Princess Louise d'Artois. | C | AnomieBOT (7252166) | |
| 2025-12-14 | Olga Haring (Slovenian landlady and poet) | C | Ihana Aneta (1025) | ||
| 2025-12-12 | Werner Adolph von Haxthausen (German noble (1744-1823)) | Werner Adolph von Haxthausen (born 11 October 1744 in the Prince-Bishopric of Paderborn; died 23 April 1823 in Bökendorf near Brakel) was a princely-episcopal Paderborn drost (bailiff/administrative governor) in the district of Lichtenau. | C | X4VIER.OneTap (1914) | |
| 2025-11-11 | Varvara de Vesselitsky (Pioneer woman social researcher) | Varvara de Vesselitsky (1872 – 14 February 1927) was a pioneer social researcher who in the early 1900s undertook first-hand studies of the lives and conditions of working-class women in London. | C | Sartzbird (102) | |
| 2025-10-06 | Habib ibn Abd al-Malik al-Qurashi (Umayyad prince, general and governor of Toledo) | Abu Sulaymān Ḥabīb ibn ʿAbd al-Malik ibn ʿUmar ibn al-Walīd ibn Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan al-Qurashī al-Marwānī (حبيب بن عبد الملك بن عمر بن الوليد بن عبد الملك بن مروان القرشي المرواني) was an Umayyad prince and commander in al-Andalus during the reign of the Umayyad emir Abd al-Rahman I. | GA | Andalusi97 (2272) | |
| 2024-09-11 | List of battles involving Armenia | This is a list of battles involving Armenia and its predecessor states. | C | Nakhararakan (386) | |
| 2025-11-29 | Kalaylıkoz Hacı Ahmed Pasha (Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire in 1704) | Kalaylıkoz Hacı Ahmed Pasha (born:Kayseri ? - died:1715) was an Ottoman statesman who served as Grand Vizier for two months and twenty-seven days, and as governor and guard of many provinces, between 28 September 1704 and 25 December 1704, during the reign of Ahmed III. | Stub | Volkan Agha (63) | |
| 2025-12-14 | Battle of Rudnik (1815) (Battle of the Second Serbian Uprising) | The Battle of Rudnik (Serbian: Бој на Руднику/Boj na Rudniku) was undertaken by the Serbian rebel unit led by Arsenije Loma against the town of Rudnik, in the hands of the Ottoman Empire, in April 1815 in the prelude of general uprising. Rudnik was the centre of the Rudnik nahija in the main rebel territory of Šumadija in the previous uprising. | C | Zoupan (68728) | |
| 2025-12-14 | Dragačevo | Dragačevo (Serbian: Драгачево) is a historical subregion (or microregion) in Western Pomoravlje in central Serbia. It includes villages between Čačak, Požega, Lučani and Arilje, most belonging to the Lučani municipality. It was a knežina (administrative unit) in Revolutionary Serbia and was then organized as a srez of the Požega okrug in the Principality of Serbia. | C | Zoupan (68728) | |
| 2025-11-14 | Women's Court for the Former Yugoslavia (Symbolic feminist initiative, 2010–2015) | The Women's Court for Former Yugoslavia was a symbolic feminist initiative organized by regional women's groups from Yugoslavia as a platform for women to share their wartime and post-war experiences. Though not an official judicial body, it convened in Sarajevo in May 2015 in response to the gendered violence during the Yugoslav conflicts of the 1990s, including sexual violence, ethnic persecution, displacement, militarized abuse, and economic deprivation. | GA | Jadefaircloth (26) | |
| 2025-12-06 | Kalala Island, Zambia | Kalala Island is the southernmost island on the Kafue River in the Itezhi-Tezhi region. The Island retained a small permanent population throughout antiquity. | Start | AidDav (18) | |
| 2025-12-10 | Mankhamba (Archaeological site in Malawi) | Mankhamba is an archaeological site in Malawi. It was the capital of the Maravi Empire. It was settled from around the 13th century and abandoned in the late-18th or early-19th century.: 204–6 | Stub | Kowal2701 (24647) | |
| 2025-10-24 | Khok Phanom Di | Khok Phanom Di (โคกพนมดี) is a deeply stratified prehistoric mound located in the Chonburi Province, Central Thailand, situated on the eastern margin of the Bangkok Plain in the lower reaches of the Bang Pakong River. Excavations conducted in 1984–1985 by archeologist Charles F. W. Higham revealed a layer of cultural material seven meters thick, representing a long history of occupation. | C | Akcarter (155) | |
| 2025-12-14 | Mari Tarr ((ca.1934-2023) prompter) | Mari Tarr (Klotildliget, 1934 – March 14, 2023) was a Hungarian theater director. | Stub | OldFilmNerd (222) | |
| 2025-10-12 | Hasan Ceka (Albanian archaeologist and prehistorian) | Hasan Ceka (25 August 1900 – 2 November 1998) was an Albanian archaeologist, prehistorian and numismatist, regarded as one of the founders of scientific archaeological research in Albania. He played a preeminent role in establishing national archaeological institutions and in advancing the study of Illyrian culture and ancient Albanian coinage. | Start | Apj-NCH (28) | |
| 2025-12-01 | Jessie Mackintosh (Australian artist) | C | Kassigrace (481) | ||
| 2025-10-09 | Saverio Graziano | Saverio Graziano was an Italian medical doctor who lived in Rijeka then part of the Kingdom of Hungary. | Start | Bianower (46) | |
| 2025-08-10 | Wahhabi raids on Najaf (1801–1806 campaigns in modern Iraq) | The Wahhabi raids on Najaf (Arabic: الغارات الوهابيه على النجف, romanized: al-Ghārāt al-Wahhābiyyah ʿalā al-Najaf) were a series of Wahhabi campaigns directed at the sacred Shia city of Najaf, aimed at expanding the Emirate of Diriyah and spreading the Wahhabi doctrine. | GA | Apo1 (149) | |
| 2025-10-12 | Wei sanzi shijing jilu | Wei sanzi shijing jilu (simplified Chinese: 魏三字石经集录; traditional Chinese: 魏三字⽯經集錄; Wade–Giles: Wei san-tzu shih-ching chi-lu; roughly: Collection and Documentation of the Three-Character Stone Classics of the Wei Dynasty) is a collection of rubbings of Wei Stone Classics first published in 1937 by Sun Haibo 孙海波 (1911–1972) in Beijing by the Archaeological Society. | Start | Reiner Stoppok (4053) | |
| 2025-11-14 | Gwendolen Bishop (British actress (1874–1926)) | Gwendolen Bishop (1874–1926) was best known as an actress in the avant-garde theatre in the early years of the 20th century. Later, in 1912, she married Clifford Bax, the playwright, and also used the name Daphne Bax in publications and correspondence. | C | AbbotSteep (22) | |
| 2025-11-19 | Polly Jackson (American abolitionist) | Polly Jackson, also referred to as Aunt Polly Jackson, was an American abolitionist and Underground Railroad guide. A former slave, she would dress up as an older woman and fight off slave traffickers from the Reverse Underground Railroad using a butcher knife and a kettle of boiling water. | Start | Cornmazes (52306) | |
| 2025-12-15 | Nikola Vukićević (Serbian revolutionary) | Nikola Vukićević (Serbian: Никола Вукићевић; d. December 1814) was a Serb merchant from Svetlić in Šumadija that participated in Hadži-Prodan's rebellion (1814) against the Ottoman Empire in what is today Serbia. Nikola was the main merchant in Svetlić and he rose the Kragujevac nahiya in rebellion. | Start | Zoupan (68728) | |
| 2025-03-18 | Circassian-Kumyk wars (Series of wars in the Caucasus) | The Circassian-Kumyk Wars or Kabardian-Kumyk wars were a series of conflicts between the feudal lords of Kabardia and the Kumyks from the mid-16th century to the early 18th century. These wars were characterized by power struggles for dominance in the North-Eastern Caucasus. | C | Drazze.greece (938) | |
| 2025-07-02 | Maukharis of Gaya (Branch of the Maukhari dynasty) | 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 (5380) | |
| 2025-11-29 | List of countries by GDP (blended) | GDP (blended) is an official, but not specifically organized dataset used by the IMF in calculating 50% of each member state's quota. Quotas reflect the relative size of an economy and is denominated by special drawing rights (SDRs). The other 50% of the Quota is made up by: "openness (30 percent), economic variability (15 percent) and international reserves (5 percent)." | C | Lvxingzhe2718 (118) | |
| 2025-11-29 | Hamdanid Campaigns in Armenia (935-966) | The Hamdanid Campaigns in Armenia were a series of campaigns from 935 to 966 targeting Armenia. | C | Apo1 (149) | |
| 2025-11-11 | Melek Mehmed Pasha | Damat Melek Mehmed Pasha (b. 1719 - d. 1802 Istanbul) He was an Ottoman Bosnian Kapudan Pasha and who served as grand vizier During the reign of Selim III. between 1792 and 1794. | Stub | Volkan Agha (63) | |
| 2024-04-30 | Fire of Rome (192) (Conflagation in Ancient Rome) | In 192 AD, a fire destroyed a large portion of central Rome, including numerous warehouses and at least three libraries on the Palatine Hill and Trajan's Forum. Libraries destroyed included the Palatine library, the Domus Tiberiana library, and the Templum Pacis library. | C | Kazamzam (23169) | |
| 2025-11-29 | Elizabeth Dunbar (Daughter of George I, and Prioress of St Leonard's Nunnery, Perth, Scotland) | Lady Elizabeth Dunbar (born 1427 died before March 1494) was the prioress of Hospital of St Leonard's or St Leonard's Nunnery in Perth, Scotland. She had earlier been engaged to a future King of Scotland and was the subject of a play based on his rejection of her. | Start | Zenoak (149) | |
| 2025-10-21 | Ranoji (Maharana Raj Sahib of Jhalavad) | Maharana Raj Ranigdev, also known as Ranoji, was the 26th Maharana of Jhalavad. He deposed his step-brother Ajoji in 1500 and ruled until his death in 1523. | Start | Lordo'Web (744) | |
| 2025-12-16 | Pausistratus | Stub | Archaeaoris (2855) | ||
| 2021-11-12 | Dobor | The medieval town of Dobor is located along the left bank of the Bosna River, on a small hill, with an average height of 39 meters, which represents the rim of the Vučjak mountain. | Stub | Filiep (27893) | |
| 2025-06-27 | Kardoo, the Hindoo Girl (1869 book by Harriette G. Brittan) | Kardoo, the Hindoo Girl is a book written by Harriette G. Brittan in the year 1869. It was published by W. B. Bodge of New York and later anonymously by the Religious Tract Society as part of the Zenana Missionary Series. The book narrates the story of Kardoo, a young Hindu girl from Bengal who, after a series of personal tragedies, is rescued by Christian missionaries and converts to Christianity. | GA | Spoo ram (9) | |
| 2025-11-12 | Zambili Dlamini (Queen regent of Tembe Kingdom from 1886 to 1894) | Queen Zambili Dlamini (also spelt Dzambili) was a Swazi princess who served as Queen regent of the Tembe Kingdom from 1886 until 1894 when her son Prince Ngwanase Tembe came of age and installed as Chief of Tembe. | Start | ZS Khumalo (9204) | |
| 2025-11-04 | Dardanian raids during the Wars of the Diadochi (c. 284–281 BCE raids) | The Dardanian raids during the Wars of the Diadochi (c. 284–281 BC) were a series of opportunistic incursions launched by the Dardani, an Illyrian people of the kingdom of Dardania, into Upper Macedonia and northern Greece during the final phase of the Wars of the Diadochi. | Start | Bardylis22 (113) | |
| 2025-12-04 | Ali's Eastern Campaigns (Series of expeditions across the Indus Valley during the Caliphate of Ali) | The Ali's Eastern Campaigns were military expeditions sent by Ali ibn Abi Talib in the midst of the First Fitna of the Rashidun Caliphate to the eastern borders of the caliphate in order to subjugate rebels and secure military victories over the bandits across the Indus Valley region. | Start | Legion of Liberty (1614) | |
| 2025-12-14 | Battle of Karanovac (1815) (Battle of the Second Serbian Uprising) | The Battle of Karanovac was a series of skirmishes between the Ottoman mutesellim (mayor) of Čačak, Latif Agha, with support from the Sanjak of Novi Pazar, against the Serbian rebel army led by Miloš Obrenović in the area of Karanovac (now Kraljevo). | C | Zoupan (68728) | |
| 2025-11-20 | Albanian Expedition (1466) | The Albanian Expedition (1466) The Ottoman Turks campaign against Albania in the spring of 1466. | Stub | Volkan Agha (63) | |
| 2011-11-29 | Persian nationalism | Persian nationalism (Persian: ملیگرایی فارسی) is an ethnonationalist ideology that defines Iranian national identity primarily through the Persian people, language, and culture as the central foundations of political and national identity in Iran. | C | Farazparsa (61) | |
| 2025-11-20 | Maria Teresa Fasce | Maria Teresa Fasce (born in Torriglia on December 27, 1881; died in Cascia on January 18, 1947) was an Italian Augustinian nun. Fasce served in several roles at her convent in Genoa and was known for founding an orphanage and promoting the charism of Saint Augustine and Saint Rita of Cascia. | C | Lilyram18 (51) | |
| 2025-12-13 | The Wedding of Smailagić Meho (Bosniak oral epic poem) | The Wedding of Smailagić Meho (Serbo-Croatian: Ženidba Smailagić Meha; also translated as The Wedding of Meho, Son of Smail) is a South Slavic oral epic poem of the Bosniak epic tradition. It recounts the coming of age of the frontier hero Meho Smailagić, who leaves the Ottoman border fortress of Kanjiža to obtain official investiture as a military leader in Buda and to secure his marriage, overcoming ambush, treachery and a large scale battle on the Ottoman–Habsburg frontier. | FA | Rijekaneretva (366) | |
| 2025-11-12 | Ćaja-paša | Imşir Pasha (Serbian: Imšir-paša/Имшир-паша), commonly known as Ćaja-paša (Ћаја-паша, German: Chiaja Pascha), was an assistant (kethüda or kehya in common speech, sr. ćaja) of Sulejman Pasha Skopljak, the Vizier of Belgrade, to whom he was a brother-in-law. | Start | Zoupan (68728) | |
| 2025-11-29 | Dersim Incident (1877–1878) (Local Kurdish–Alevi tribal resistance) | The Dersim Incident (1877–1878) refers to a series of local uprisings, refusals of military support, and attacks on Ottoman positions carried out by several tribes in the Dersim region (modern Tunceli Province) during the Russo–Turkish War (1877–1878). | Start | NEMURO (1292) | |
| 2025-12-03 | Yugoslav counter-offensive in Kosovo (1998) (Yugoslavian military action in 1998) | The Yugoslav Army and Serbian Police launched a major counter-offensive against the Kosovo Liberation Army in mid July, 1998. The operation was backed by artillery, tanks and air support. The offensive had the goal of driving the KLA away from the positions it gained during the summer offensive. | GA | SpeedyHaste (572) | |
| 2025-12-14 | Duppi-Teššup (Ruler of Amurru) | Duppi-Teššup (c. 1310 BCE; Duppi-Tessup) was the ruler of Amurru on the Akkar Plain, during the reign of Mursili II of Hatti. | Stub | Raven rs (7944) | |
| 2025-11-12 | Chana Safrai (Israeli philosopher) | Chana Safrai (1946 – February 10, 2008) was an Israeli scholar, educator, and notable figure in Jewish feminist theology. Safrai was raised in an Orthodox Jerusalem household and later earned advanced degrees in Jewish studies, which shaped her focus on women's representation in rabbinic literature. | C | Sofiabron18 (42) | |
| 2025-12-16 | Bentesina of Amurru (Ruler of Amurru) | Bentesina (c. 1260-1235 BCE; Bentešina; Benteshina) was the ruler of the petty kingdom of Amurru (Akkar plain) in the 13th century BCE. He was the son and successor of Duppi-Tessup. | Stub | Raven rs (7944) | |
| 2025-11-23 | Rita Arauz | Rita Aráuz was a lesbian feminist that was a part of the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN). Her most prominent years were in the 1970s-80s when she advocated for gay and lesbian rights in Nicaragua as well as raising awareness towards the on going issue of AIDS. | C | W-.-Janiyah (45) |
Last updated by SDZeroBot operator / talk at 01:57, 17 December 2025 (UTC)