User:SDZeroBot/NPP sorting/History and Society/History
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![]() | 216 unreviewed articles as of 23 June 2025
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Created | Article | Extract | Class | Creator (# edits) | Notes |
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2024-12-18 | Abu'l-Hayja al-Hakkari (12th century Kurdish tribal chief and ruler) | Abu'l-Hayja ibn Abdullah ibn Abu Khalil ibn Marzuban Al-Hakkari better known by Abu'l-Hayja Al-Hakkari (died 1143) was a Kurdish ruler and tribal chief of Al-Hakkariyya tribe, he's the earliest recorded ruler of Hakkari. | Stub | Jackhanma69 (808) | |
2024-12-17 | Ibrahim al-Kurdi (Kurdish ruler and general of the Ayyubid Sultanate) | Ibrahim Al-Kurdi (died 1175) was a Kurdish ruler and a military commander of the Ayyubid Sultanate. He was appointed by Turan-Shah in 1173 as the ruler of northern Nubia, centered in Qasir ibrim. | Stub | Jackhanma69 (808) | |
2024-12-30 | Tafsir Mujahid (Eleventh-century commentary on the Quran) | Tafsir Mujahid (Arabic: تفسير مجاهد) is a Sunni tafsir by the Tabi' Mujahid ibn Jabr, and is among the earliest and most significant works of Qur'anic interpretation (tafsir). | Start | Bakkouz (278) | |
2024-12-26 | Kahl (god) (Arabian god) | Kahl is a god of pre-Islamic Arabia. He was the chief god (tutelary deity) of the city of Qaryat al-Faw, the capital of the Kingdom of Kinda, beginning in the 2nd century BC. Kahl is attested regularly, but the evidence is more sparse with respect to how Kahl was understood. | Start | Pogenplain (5373) | |
2025-01-12 | Four Quls (Islamic prayer) | Four Quls (Arabic: القَلاقِل, Persian: Chahar Qul [چهار قل]) are considered to be four Qur'anic suras, al-Kafirun, al-Ikhlas, al-Falaq, and al-Nas, all of which are begun with the, "qul" (that is, say). | Stub | 110 and 135 (639) | |
2024-12-07 | Chval of Lipá (Czech nobleman and marshal) | Chval of Lipá (also known as Chval of Zittau; born and died in the 13th century) was a Czech nobleman from the Ronovci family and the founder of the family of the Lords of Lipá . | Stub | Mbdfar (15909) | |
2025-01-16 | Battle of Frenkyazısı (1387) (1386 battle) | The Battle of Frenkyazısı occurred in late 1386 or early 1387, between an Ottoman army under Murad I and a Karamanid force under Alaeddin Ali Bey. The engagement took place outside of Konya and resulted in a decisive Ottoman victory. In the aftermath the Karamanids had to accept Murad I's suzerainty and Ottoman supremacy over the western part of Anatolia was secured for the time being. | Stub | Kilian2807 (475) | |
2025-02-09 | Jerusalemite Civil War (1152 civil war) | Jerusalemite Civil War was a civil war in the kingdom of Jerusalem between Baldwin III of Jerusalem and his mother, Melisende, Queen of Jerusalem during 1152. | Stub | علي العالم (145) | |
2025-01-26 | Mangi Ngamini (King of Machame, 1886-1888) | Ngamini or Mangi Ngamini Ndesserua Kombe (c.1870–1890s), also called Mangi Ngamini of Machame (Mangi Ngamini in Kichagga; Mfalme Ngamini in Swahili), was a well-known monarch of the Chaga in the last half of the 19th century. He was the son of Mangi Ndesserua of Machame and a king of the Chagga. | C | Mnazini (7818) | |
2025-02-07 | List of Mika X live performances | The New Zealand Maori singer, performance artist, actor, filmmaker, TV producer and comedian Mika X (born Terrance John Pou on 8 February 1962, later renamed Neil Gudsell, also known as Mika and as Mika Haka) has toured multiple times to support their albums. | Start | Bennyaha (8549) | |
2025-02-19 | Dura (region) (Bronze Age region of Anatolia) | Dura was an ancient region of Anatolia located west of the Kızılırmak River and one of the lands of the Assuwa coalition that opposed the Hittites. It is mentioned only in the Annals of Tudḫaliya, a text that chronicled the acts of Hittite monarch Tudḫaliya I. | Start | Permanentaccounts (3513) | |
2024-12-11 | Alfonso Castriota (15th century Albanian nobleman) | Alfonso Castriota (Albanian: Alfonso Kastriota), was an Albanian nobleman from the House of Kastrioti. | C | Arberian2444 (5749) | |
2025-02-22 | Treaty of Artaxata (Peace treaty between Roman republic and Kingdom of Armenia (66 BC)) | The Treaty of Artaxata, was signed in 66 BCE in the Armenian capital of Artaxata (modern-day Artashat), marked the end of hostilities between the Roman Republic and the Kingdom of Armenia under King Tigranes the Great. The treaty concluded the Armenian involvement in the Third Mithridatic War and established Armenia as a Roman client state, significantly reducing its territorial ambitions in the Near East. | C | Hay kamavor (747) | |
2025-02-04 | Siege of Venlo (1511) (1511 conflict during the Guelders Wars) | The siege of Venlo occurred in 1511 when a combined Habsburg and English force besieged Venlo in an attempt to capture the city and bring the Duchy of Guelders to its knees. | Start | VidarVN (609) | |
2025-02-23 | Svyataya Volya Ghetto | The Ghetto in Svyataya Volya (summer 1941 – March 1942) was a Jewish ghetto, established as a place of forced resettlement for the Jewish population of the village of Svyataya Volya, located in the Ivacevichy District of the Brest Region, as well as for Jews from nearby settlements. | Start | Rafi Chazon (1205) | |
2025-01-30 | Aysra | Aysra or 'esara (عيصره or عيصرا) is an archaeological village located in the northern district of the town of Sakib in Jerash Governorate, northern Jordan. Also known as Khirbet Aysra, it is situated near Mount Troun and contains remnants of ancient buildings and flowing water springs, highlighting its historical significance. | C | Historyfeelings (1203) | |
2024-12-20 | Siege of Valencia (1101–1102) (1101–1102 siege of Valencia in the Reconquista) | The siege of Valencia was fought between the Almoravids and the Lordship of Valencia. Valencia was defended by El Cid's widow, Jimena Díaz. After months of siege, the Almoravids occupied the city. | Start | عبدالرحمن4132 (5737) | |
2025-02-02 | Siege of Aiginion (Battle of the Third Macedonian War) | The siege of Aiginion took place in 168 BC in today's Kalabaka Aiginion was described as a town with formidable defenses Aiginions defenses where so strong where so strong that in the year 197 BC the Roman General Titus Quinctius Flamininus chose to bypass the town due to its strong defenses The siege ended in roman victory and the town was destroyed by the romans. | Stub | Sigma.212 (357) | |
2025-01-26 | Armorial of Georgia (country) | This is a list of coat of arms of Georgia. It includes historical coat of arms as well as the ones of Georgian dynasties and attributed to Georgia by various scrolls at some point in time. It can also include emblems of Georgia if used for similar purpose. | Start | Athoremmes (814) | |
2025-02-28 | Muqaddam al-Akrad (Military rank in the Mamluk army) | Muqaddam al-Akrād (Arabic: مقدم الأکراد Muqaddam al-Akrād; lit. 'commander of the Kurds') was a military rank in the Mamluk Sultanate's army, it was given to Kurdish tribal chiefs that served in the rank of the Mamluk army. | Stub | Jackhanma69 (808) | |
2025-03-10 | Capture of Bitlis (1855) (1855 battle) | The Capture of Bitlis was a military engagement that took place in January 1855 during the rebellion of Yezdanşêr against the Ottoman Empire. Leading a force of approximately 2,000 men, Yezdanşêr successfully occupied the city with minimal resistance from local Ottoman forces. | Stub | Canoooo.4 (448) | |
2024-12-30 | Ibn Sufi (A Shiite genealogist from the 11th century AD) | Ali ibn Muhammad Alawi Umari with the full name of Najmuddin Abul-Hasan Ali ibn Abul-Ghanaim Alawi Umari known as Ibn Sufi (born c. 1000 AD/CE—c. 390 AH in Basra, died c. 1068 AD/CE—c. 460 AH in Mosul) was a prominent Shiite genealogist and the author of the famous Arabic historical genealogy book "[[Al-Majdi fi Ansab al-Talibiy ... | C | Thellane (359) | |
2025-02-26 | List of claims to the title of the Roman Empire | This is a list of claims to the Roman Republic (509 BCE - 27 BCE), Roman Empire (27 BCE - 395 CE), and its successor states such as the Eastern Roman Empire (commonly known as Byzantium or the Byzantine Empire) or Western Roman Empire. | C | Skylerthegamer (30) | |
2024-12-02 | Paul I Mataranga (Medieval Albanian Lord of the Mataranga family) | Paul I Mataranga (Albanian: Pal Matrënga), also known as Paul Matarango or Paolo Matarango was an Albanian Lord and member of the Mataranga family. | C | Arberian2444 (5749) | |
2025-03-27 | Persian Revival Architecture | Persian Revival (also separated as Sasanian Revival and Achaemenid Revival) is a 19th-century architectural movement that began in Iran and draws inspiration from Achaemenid, Parthian and Sasanian architecture. In Iran, the movement was started by the Qajar Shahs to represent themselves as heir to the ancient Persian empire and to distance themselves from the Islamic architectural style used by previous Iranian dynasties. | Stub | Eugene de Blois (82) | |
2025-03-30 | Emblems of the Yugoslav Socialist Republics | The emblems of the Yugoslav socialist republics were defined by each of its six constituent republics. Emblems appeared as a symbol of statehood on the documents of republican level, for example on the signs of the republican institutions, on watermarks of school diplomas, etc. | Start | SaarPro (85) | |
2025-03-27 | Comassis (humanitarian organization based in Lisbon, Portugal, during World War II) | Comassis (an acronym for Comissão Portuguesa de Assistência aos Judeus Refugiados, or Portuguese Commission for Assistance to Jewish Refugees) was a humanitarian organization based in Lisbon, Portugal, during World War II. Its mission was to assist Jewish refugees transiting through Portugal. | Start | JPratas (3727) | |
2025-04-07 | Blacks and Quakerism: A Preliminary Report (Anthropological study) | "Blacks and Quakerism: A Preliminary Report" is an anthropological study published by Vera Mae Green in 1973. The Friends General Conference, or FGC, requested that Green conduct a study on how Quakerism could attract more Black members to the Society of Friends. | C | Clairemann (20) | |
2025-04-03 | Imerina enin-toko | Imerina enin-toko represents the subdivision of Imerina prior the conquest of Betsileo kingdoms, Antsihanaka and Ankay. | Stub | Gasybeaugosse2020 (1364) | |
2025-04-02 | Roman Ermelo | Roman Ermelo was a big roman camp (and possible fortification) in what is now Netherland. It was created under Augustus in the short-lived roman province of Germania. | Start | F123indam (58) | |
2025-04-10 | Battle of Bonavista (1704 naval battle) | The Battle of Bonavista was a naval battle, between the French and English, that occurred in morning hours of 29 August 1704, outside the settlement of Bonavista, Newfoundland Colony, that lasted 6 hours. | Start | LilJohnnyWimple (1821) | |
2024-12-20 | History of the Jews in Kizlyar (Ethnic group) | The Jewish community in Kizlyar, located in the Russian Republic of Dagestan, primarily consisted of Mountain Jews, a distinct Jewish group with their own language and customs, originating from the Caucasus region. Some Ashkenazi Jews also lived in Kizlyar, and they were the ones who mostly went into exile. | Start | Boxes12 (2467) | |
2025-02-03 | Battle of Karlowitz (1716 battle during the Austro-Turkish War (1716–1718)) | The Battle of Karlowitz was the first military engagement between the Ottomans and the Austrians. The battle ended with an Ottoman victory, routing an Austrian reconnaissance force. | C | عبدالرحمن4132 (5737) | |
2025-04-09 | South German Buffer State (Proposed country in Europe) | The South German Buffer State (German: Prinz-Eugen-Gau, Reichsgau Banat, Donauprotektorat, Schwabenland, Donaudeutschland, Autonomes Siebenbürgen) was a proposed country whose creation was planned by Danube Swabians in 1941. The state was supposed to include parts of Yugoslavia, Romania, and Hungary, namely the regions of Banat, Bačka, and Baranya. | Start | 9www (51) | |
2025-04-13 | Battle of Laba River (1739) (Kabardians (Circassians) and Kalmyk's against Crimean tatars, Russo-Turkish war (1735–1739)) | The Battle of Laba River was a military engagement that took place on August 20, 1739, during the final phase of the Russo-Turkish War (1735–1739). | Start | Drazze.greece (563) | |
2024-12-05 | Boglia Zaharia (Medieval Albanian Princess of the Zaharia family) | Boglia Zaharia (Albanian: Bolja Zahariajt), also known as Bolja Zakaria or Boya Zaharia was an Albanian Princess and member of the Zaharia family. | Start | Arberian2444 (5749) | |
2025-04-16 | Fuluohan (Xianbei tribal chief (died 218)) | Fuluohan (died 218) was a Xianbei chieftain who lived during the late Eastern Han dynasty period of China. He was a member of his grandfather Tanshihuai's tribe and later led his own branch after his elder brother, Budugen became chieftain. He was killed by a rival chieftain, Kebineng. | Start | Zangxuangao (5885) | |
2025-04-19 | Concubine Xun (concubine of Chinese Emperor) | Concubine Xun (Chinese: 遜嬪, Pinyin: Xùn pín ) of the Manchu Plain Yellow Banner Shen clan (沈氏; d. 31 December 1786), was one of the han chinese wives of Jiaqing Emperor. | Start | 16272js (3596) | Past AfD |
2025-04-23 | Flag of Sarajevo | The flag of Sarajevo (Bosnian: Zastava Sarajeva) is blue and is in proportions 2:1, it was adopted April 6, 1992. | Stub | QwertyZ34 (2769) | |
2025-04-12 | Lila Lebowitz (American anthropologist & author) | Lila Lebowitz (1930–1984) was an American anthropologist, author, and associate professor at Northeastern University. | Start | Silver1964 (29) | |
2025-04-24 | Circassian raid on Trebizond (Circassian raid against Trebizond in 1458) | The Circassian raid on Trebizond was a military assault carried out by a Circassian fleet under the command of Artabil against the Empire of Trebizond in 1458, during a period of instability on the Black Sea coast. The city was temporarily captured, and the unknown commander of the Trebizond army, his son, and several hundred people were reportedly killed during the attack. | C | Drazze.greece (563) | |
2025-03-31 | Medieval Abkhazia | Medieval Abkhazia refers to the historical period during which the region of Abkhazia, located in the western Caucasus, was influenced by various political entities, including the Byzantine Empire, the Kingdom of Abkhazia, and later, the Kingdom of Georgia. | C | Yahya khawaj (93) | |
2025-03-27 | Sack of Lindisfarne (793 Viking raid on the island monastery) | The Sacking of Lindisfarne was a Viking raid in 793 CE, targeting the monastery on Lindisfarne, an island off the northeastern coast of England. The attack was carried out by Norse seafarers and is often considered the beginning of the Viking Age. | C | Daniel Mizen (1278) | |
2025-04-16 | Battle of Malatya (1485) (Battle between the Ottomans and Mamluks in 1485) | The Battle of Malatya was fought in 1485 between the Ottoman Empire and the Mamluk Sultanate near the city of Malatya. It marked the first major engagement of the Ottoman–Mamluk War (1485–1491), ending in a Mamluk victory and setting the stage for further conflict in eastern Anatolia. | C | AE182 (657) | |
2025-04-15 | Papyrus Cotton | Papyrus Cotton is an ancient legal document discovered in the Judaean Desert and dating to approximately 129/130–132 CE, during the reign of Emperor Hadrian and on the eve of the Bar Kokhba revolt. It is the longest Greek-language papyrus found in the region and preserves the notes of a Roman prosecutor involved in a legal case against two Jewish defendants, Gadalias and Saulos. | C | Mariamnei (4113) | |
2025-04-30 | Þórdís Súrsdóttir (10th-century Icelandic woman and saga character) | Þórdís Súrsdóttir (anglicised as Thordis Sursdottir) was a tenth-century Icelandic woman who appears as a character in Gísla saga. She is noted for her depiction as a Viking Age woman who wields a sword. | C | SapientSquid (1428) | |
2025-02-22 | Siege of Erivan (1636) (Siege Part of the Ottoman–Safavid War (1623–1639)) | The siege of Erivan was a military engagement of the Ottoman–Safavid War (1623–1639). This was during the Safavids reconquest of Erivan. In 1635, in a conscious effort to emulate his warrior predecessors, Sultan Murad IV himself took up the leadership of the army. | Stub | Iranian112 (1381) | |
2025-04-22 | Murong Muyan (Murong-Xianbei chieftain) | Murong Muyan (fl. 244–281) was a chieftain of the Murong-Xianbei tribe who lived during the Three Kingdoms period of China. | Stub | Zangxuangao (5885) | |
2025-02-05 | Donald Emrys Strong (British archaeologist) | Donald Emrys Strong (1927–1973) was a British archaeologist, historian, and museum curator. | Start | Serblans (255) | |
2025-03-30 | Paheri (ancient Egyptian mayor of El-Kab) | Paheri (p3-ḫrỉ, "The Celestial" or p3-ḥr-r(w)-ỉ) was a local ancient Egyptian nomarch and mayor in Elkab from the close to the beginning of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt’s (New Kingdom around 1500 BC. | Start | Leoboudv (22110) | |
2025-02-25 | Eleanor Harper Caldwell (American film editor) | Eleanor Harper Caldwell (1910–1976) was an American film editor. | Stub | Colnstard (28) | |
2024-12-10 | Gellep-Stratum (Stadtteil of Krefeld in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany) | Gellep-Stratum is the southeasternmost district of Krefeld. The population is 2,485 (as of December 31, 2021). Until its incorporation into the city of Krefeld in 1929, Gellep-Stratum was a municipality in the Amt Lank of the Krefeld district. | C | BauhausFan89 (2032) | |
2025-04-13 | Battle of Tripoli (1367) (1367 battle) | The Battle of Tripoli was a military engagement between the Crusaders of Cyprus and the Mamluk garrison of Tripoli, Lebanon. The Crusaders were initially victorious, entering the city and sacking it. However, the Mamluks repelled the attack, ending the raid in a fiasco. | B | عبدالرحمن4132 (5737) | |
2025-04-04 | Bab Ali demonstration (1895 demonstration and massacre) | The Bab Ali demonstration was a peaceful protest by Armenian activists in Constantinople, Ottoman Empire, demanding reforms and an end to persecution. The demonstration, organized by the Hunchak party, culminated in a violent crackdown by Ottoman authorities. | GA | Hay kamavor (747) | |
2025-04-23 | Tappeh Cheshmeh Ali | Tappeh Cheshmeh-Ali (Cheshmeh-Ali mound) is an archaeological site located next to Cheshmeh Ali and the city wall of Ray in Ray in Iran. So far, artifacts from the late 6th millennium BCE to the Islamic period have been discovered at this site, which is mainly famous for its prehistoric layers. | Start | Peoplic (867) | |
2025-04-17 | Corbilo (ancient city) | Corbilo (Ancient Greek: Κορβιλὼν, romanized: Korbilon) was a trading city on the Loire river described by Polybius and Pytheas. Neither original sources have survived, but Pytheas is quoted by Polybius, who is in turn quoted by Strabo. | Start | Mellangoose (657) | |
2025-05-07 | Romanization in Menorca | The Romanization of Menorca refers to the process that involved the Roman military occupation, colonization, and the gradual acculturation of the indigenous Talayotic population, which, as a result, would lead to the definitive extinction of their culture as a distinct entity. | B | Mariatb1 (23) | |
2025-03-27 | Di Gaspar (Yugoslav and Macedonian artist (1938–2022)) | Di Gaspar (born Dimitrije Lorenca Gaspar, 12 April 1938 – 15 September 2022) was a Yugoslav and Macedonian artist known for blending surrealism, symbolism, and abstraction. | Start | Zonaart92 (36) | |
2025-05-09 | Protonaveta (Type of prehistoric tomb on Menorca) | A Protonaveta, according to some authors, is a triple-walled tomb, while according to others, it is a collective funerary structure built using Cyclopean technique (the use of large stones arranged in courses), of funerary nature and exclusive to the island of Menorca. | C | Mariatb1 (23) | |
2025-04-15 | 1881 Focșani Zionist Congress | The Focșani Zionist Congress was held on 30–31 December 1881 in Focșani, Romania. It is considered by many scholars and historians to be the first organized Zionist congress, preceding Theodor Herzl's First Zionist Congress in Basel by sixteen years. The congress marked a foundational moment for the Zionist movement, especially in promoting Jewish emigration and agricultural colonization of Eretz Israel (then under Ottoman rule). | C | Edward Mike005 (537) | |
2024-12-25 | Ashkash (Persian mythological hero of the epic poem Shahnameh) | Ashkash(Persian: اشکَش , Balochi: آسکَشّ) or Askas or Arsakes is a major figure in the Shahnameh. He is introduced by Ferdowsi as the general of Kay Khosrow's army. | C | Balash-Vologases (1381) | |
2025-03-29 | Ideographic rune (rune as an ideogram) | Ideographic runes (German: Begriffsrunen, Swedish: begreppsrunor, 'term/notion runes') are runes used as ideographs instead of regular letters, that is, instead of representing their phoneme or syllable, they represent their name as a word or term. | C | Blockhaj (5643) | |
2025-03-30 | Cereatae Marianae (Roman town and birthplace of Gaius Marius) | Cereatae, later distinguished as Cereatae Marianae, was a Roman-era municipium located in the region of Latium adiectum, in central Italy. It is chiefly known as the ancestral home of the Roman general Gaius Marius, from whom it derives its distinguishing epithet Marianae. | Start | Vineviz (988) | |
2025-05-07 | Shen Yi (Three Kingdoms) (Late Han and Three Kingdoms warlord who ruled parts of the Shangyong corridor) | Shen Yi (Chinese: 申儀; pinyin: Shēn Yí) was a war-lord of the Shen (申) clan active along the upper Han River at the end of the Eastern Han dynasty and during the early Three Kingdoms period. Initially the de-facto ruler of Fangling Commandery (房陵郡), he surrendered to Liu Bei in 219 CE but defected to Cao Wei the following year, helping to topple Liu Bei’s general Liu Feng and take control of the region. | Start | Simfish (3354) | |
2025-05-11 | Hermotimus of Colophon (Ancient Greek mathematician) | Hermotimus of Colophon (born c. 325 BC) was an Ancient Greek mathematician who lived and worked in Colophon. | Start | Basetialy (153) | |
2025-02-21 | Battle of Ochakov (1630) (Battle in Ukraine) | The Battle of Ochakov was a battle that took place in 1630 during a Cossack expedition to the Black Sea led by Taras Fedorovych. | Stub | Ömereditss (527) | |
2025-05-03 | Gedaliah Cordovero | Gedaliah Cordovero (1562 - 1625) was a medieval Jewish Talmudic scholar. | Stub | Basetialy (153) | |
2025-05-03 | Aelius Serenus (1st century AD Roman Grammarian) | Aelius Serenus was an Athenian grammarian of uncertain date. | Start | Basetialy (153) | |
2025-04-28 | Nasibis | The Nasibis (Arabic: النَّوَاصِب, romanized: al-nawasib) are a group that opposes Ali ibn Abi Talib and his family, and they harm them by word or deed. The Sunnis and the Twelver Shiites agree that the Nawasib believe that Ali ibn Abi Talib was immoral, but they do not believe that Ali ibn Abi Talib was an infidel like the Khawarij. | C | DivineReality (897) | |
2025-05-07 | Post-talaiotic period | The Post-Talayotic period, Final Talayotic, or Balearic period is the last chronological phase corresponding to protohistory of Talayotic culture, which developed in Menorca and Mallorca. Its chronology spans much of the Iron Age, from around 600-500 BCE, when it seems that some talayots begin to be abandoned, until 123 BCE, when the Roman conquest of the islands took place. | B | Mariatb1 (23) | |
2025-04-02 | Flag of Brabant (Belgium) | In black a lion of gold, nailed and tongued gules | Start | SEPB66 (260) | |
2025-05-19 | Deli Abdullah Pasha (Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire from late 1822 to early 1823) | Deli Abdullah Pasha or Abdullah Hamdullah Pasha was an Ottoman leader who served as grand vizier between November 1822 and March 1823 during the reign of Mahmud II. | Stub | Yilanhoca (1170) | |
2025-02-13 | Wishtasp-sast nask (Zoroastrian religious text) | The Wishtasp-sast or Vishtasp-sast nask was the 10th nask (volume) of the Sasanian Avesta. The work is now lost, but according to later references, it contained a detailed history of Vishtaspa, an early patron of Zarathustra. The Wishtasp-sast nask may, in whole or in parts, be preserved through the Wishtasp Yasht manuscripts. | C | Kjansen86 (4618) | |
2025-05-17 | Anu ziggurat (Ziggurat in Uruk, Iraq) | The Anu ziggurat is a ziggurat in the city of Uruk. | Start | Burner89751654 (873) | |
2025-01-31 | Raid on Barcelona (1115) (Almoravid raid against Barcelona (1115)) | In 1115, forces of the Almoravid Emirate under the commander Abu Bakr ibn Ibrahim ibn Tifilwit and acting on the orders of the Emir Ali ibn Yusuf, carried out a raid against the city of Barcelona, the main city of the County of Barcelona. | C | Andoria225 (187) | |
2025-04-22 | Battle of Praaspa (Part of the Roman–Parthian Wars) | The Battle of Praaspa was a military Conflict in 36 BC during the Antony's Atropatene campaign. It was organized by the Roman triumvir Mark Antony. The opposing sides were, on the one hand, the Roman Republic and its ally based on the Treaty of Artaxata the Kingdom of Armenia, and on the other hand,the Parthian Empire. | Start | Iranian112 (1381) | |
2025-04-21 | Yahya ibn Adam (Islamic scholar and jurist (d. 818)) | Abū Zakariyyāʾ Yahyā ibn Ādam ibn Sulaymān al-Qurashī al-Umawī al-Ahwal al-Kūfī (Arabic: أبو زكريا يحيى بن آدم بن سليمان القرشي الأموي الأحول الكوفي) commonly known as Yahya Ibn Adam was a renowned Islamic scholar, Hafiz, Quran Reciter and a jurist of Persian origins born and raised in Kufa.: 108–109 | C | Anas Riaz (643) | |
2025-02-19 | Siege of Shamakhi (1607) (1607 siege) | The siege of Shamakhi was a phase in the Ottoman–Safavid war (1603–1612) that resulted in the Safavid army's success and Shamakhi's return to Iranian rule after 28 years. During the siege, Baku and Derbent also surrendered to the Iranian army, allowing the Safavid state to regain control of Azerbaijan and Dagestan. | C | Iranian112 (1381) | |
2025-02-07 | Astrateias graphe (Ancient Greek law) | Astrateias Graphe (Ancient Greek: ἀστρατείας γραφή) refers to a legal charge in Ancient Athens brought against citizens who failed to appear for military service after being enrolled for a campaign. This offense was part of a broader set of military-related crimes, regulated under Athenian law, and was dealt with by the military authorities. | C | Archaeaoris (2116) | |
2025-01-31 | Battle of Hacihasanlar (1828 battle during the Russo-Turkish War) | The battle of Hacihasanlar was a phase of the Russo-Turkish War (1828–1829). On 24 September 1828, the Ottoman corps under the command of Omer Vrioni inflicted a major defeat at Hacıhasanlar near Varna on the Russian army's reconnaissance corps under General Harding, who was besieging Varna. | Start | LGT55 (558) | |
2025-02-06 | Siege of Azov (1695) | 'Siege of Azov, phase in the Azov Campaigns. | Stub | LGT55 (558) | |
2025-05-27 | Ed Heck (American painter) | Ed Heck (born March 26, 1963) is an American pop artist. | Stub | Fabian.aichwald (24) | |
2025-01-05 | Armorial of Armenia | This is a list of coat of arms of Armenia. It includes historical coat of arms as well as the ones of Armenian dynasties and attributed to Armenia by various scrolls at some point in time. It can also include emblems of Armenia if used for similar purpose. | Stub | Athoremmes (814) | |
2025-03-28 | Median invasion of Urartu (Median Invasion/campaign conducted by King Cyaxares against the Kingdom of Urartu) | The Median Invasion of Urartu refers to the military campaigns conducted by the Median Empire and King Cyaxares against the Kingdom of Urartu in the late 7th century BC to the early 6th century BC. These invasions were part of a broader series of conflicts involving the Medes, Scythians, and other groups that contributed to the downfall of Urartu and the eventual rise of the Median Empire as a dominant power in the region. | GA | Gueevkobani (214) | |
2025-05-20 | Muhammad Abdul Mohit (mountaineer) (Bangladeshi mountaineer) | Muhammad Abdul Mohit (Bengali: মোহাম্মদ আবদুল মুহিত, born 4 January 1970) is a Bangladeshi mountaineer who became the second Bangladeshi to conquer Mount Everest on 21 May 2011. Previously, Musa Ibrahim became the first Bangladeshi to conquer Everest on 23 May 2010. | Start | Matj560 (47) | |
2024-12-11 | Coat of arms of Ba'athist Syria (Coat of arms of Syria (1980–2024)) | The coat of arms of the Ba'athist-led Syrian Arab Republic (شعار الجمهورية العربية السورية) was adopted in 1980, following the 1977 dissolution of the Federation of Arab Republics, whose coat of arms had until then been used by its constituent states. | Start | Abo Yemen (16755) | |
2025-03-26 | Siege of Erivan (1616) (Siege Part of the Ottoman–Safavid War (1616–1618)) | The siege of Erivan took place in 1616 during the Ottoman–Safavid War (1616–1618) when the Safavids were at war with Kingdom of Kartli and Kingdom of Kakheti. Grand vizier Öküz Mehmed Pasha besieged Erivan. Shah Abbas harassed the Ottoman supply lines, and by the time winter was nearing, but even Shah Abbas was war with Kingdom of Kartli and Kakheti, Öküz Mehm ... | Start | Iranian112 (1381) | |
2025-03-01 | EuroGames editions | Stub | Zblace (1945) | ||
2025-04-07 | Hermandad de las Marismas | The Brotherhood of the Villas of the Navy of Castile with Vitoria, or simply the Brotherhood of the Marshes (Hermandad de las Marismas), was a federation of the main ports of the Cantabrian Sea that formed a first-rate naval power at the service of the Crown of Castile, maintaining autonomy in its international trade relations and, in some cases, even engaging in military confrontations with the kingdoms of France and England. | Start | Michel12A234 (129) | |
2025-03-01 | Siege of Livadeia (Military engagement in 1821 during the Greek Revolution) | The siege of Livadeia was a military engagement of the Greek War of Independence. | Start | Alka21 (4263) | |
2025-05-13 | Ningthou Kaksuba (King of Ancient Manipur (Kangleipak)) | Ningthou Kaksuba (also spelled Ningthou Kaksupa) was an early monarch of Ancient Manipur, historically known as Kangleipak. His reign is significant in the early dynastic history of the Meitei people. | Start | Victor Ningthemcha (389) | |
2025-06-02 | Jovan Kovrlija (Yugoslav and Serbian football manager and player (1942–2019)) | Jovan Kovrlija (Serbian Cyrillic: Јован Коврлија; 20 January 1942 – 24 August 2019) was a Yugoslav and Serbian football manager and player. | Start | ..::11soccero11::.. (3395) | |
2025-06-02 | Adamantia Grigoriadou | Adamantia Grigoriadou was a Greek revolutionary and soldier in the Greek War of Independence. | Start | User6987777777 (106) | |
2025-05-19 | TT219 (Ancient Egyptian tomb) | TT219, or "Tomb of Nebenmaat”, is the tomb of the ancient Egyptian artisan Nebenmaat and members of his family in Deir el-Medina, near modern Luxor, Egypt. Nebenmaat was the son of the owner of tomb TT218, Amennakht who, as Nebenmaat's father, was the first to build his tomb in this area. | B | Leoboudv (22110) | |
2025-06-02 | Anica Kovačič (Slovene holocaust survivor) | Anica Kovačič (née Mislej; March 28, 1923 – 2019) was a Slovenian woman who interacted with Anne Frank in Bergen-Belsen. Kovačič, is probably the only Yugoslav woman who knew Frank, and was her friend until her death. | Start | Supmblaz (25) | |
2025-04-18 | Battle of Ust-Labinsk (1761) (Circassian-Crimean battle in 1761) | The Battle of Ust-Labinsk was a major clash between the Crimean Khanate and a coalition of Circassian principalities, led by the Temirgoy tribe, on June 6, 1761 near the right bank of the Kuban River. | Start | Drazze.greece (563) | |
2025-06-01 | Eugenia Ruspoli (American socialite and Italian aristocrat) | Princess Eugenia Ruspoli (born Jennie Enfield Berry; 1861–1951) was an American socialite who married into the Italian aristocracy. | Start | Willthacheerleader18 (69934) | |
2025-05-21 | Bozburun Byzantine Shipwreck | The Bozburun Shipwreck is a Middle Byzantine merchant vessel discovered by Turkish sponge diver Mehmet Askin in 1973 off the Bozburun Peninsula in Turkey, and excavated by the Institute of Nautical Archaeology beginning in 1995. Based on dendrochronology, the wood from the ship was dated to AD 874. | Stub | Nattering Nabob of Nanofabrication (189) | |
2025-06-03 | Mādayān ī Hazār Dādestān (Zoroastrian legal compilation) | Mādayān ī Hazār Dādestān, (Book of a Thousand Judgements), is a significant primary document concerning the social and institutional history of Sasanian Iran and the only entirely legal treatise on pre-Islamic Sasanian jurisprudence to have survived from the Zoroastrian era. | C | Kansas Bear (51742) | |
2025-02-14 | Siege of Khokhanaberd (Siege in XIII century) | The siege of Khokhanaberd or Siege of Ishkanaberd was military conflict between Armenian and Mongol forces in XIII century during Mongol invasions of Georgia and Armenia. | Start | Armenian from Artsakh (469) | |
2025-04-21 | Ottoman campaign in the North Caucasus (1583 military operation) | The Ottoman campaign in the North Caucasus was a military operation conducted in 1583 by the Ottoman Empire and its vassal, the Emirate of Shirvan, aimed at crossing the North Caucasus and reaching Crimea via Circassian territory. | C | Drazze.greece (563) | |
2025-04-27 | Parnassus (mythology) (Figure in Greek mythology) | In Greek mythology, Parnassus (Ancient Greek: Παρνασσός, romanized: Parnassos) was the eponym of Mount Parnassus and of the Parnassian glen. | Stub | Markx121993 (34007) | |
2025-06-01 | Paula Müller-Otfried (German social reformer and politician (1865–1946)) | Paula Müller-Otfried (born Pauline Sophie Christiane Müller; June 7, 1865 – January 8, 1946) was a German social reformer, politician, and leading figure in the Protestant women’s movement. As long-time chairwoman of the German Evangelical Women’s Association (DEF), she promoted Christian-based social work, women's vocational training, and moral reform. | C | Gameking69 (1143) | |
2025-06-04 | Siege of Al-Hadiqat (632 siege in al-Yamama, now Saudi Arabia) | The Siege of al-Hadiqat, also known as the Siege of the Garden (ḥadīqat al-mawt), took place in December 632 CE during the Ridda Wars, shortly after the Battle of Aqraba. It occurred near the village of Aqraba in the region of al-Yamama, in present-day Saudi Arabia. | Start | Adesc7 (41) | |
2025-05-31 | Bertha Lane Scott (American anti-suffragist and socialite (1860–1938)) | Bertha Lane Scott (born Bertha Francis Lane; October 1860 – July 17, 1938) was an American anti-suffragist, socialite, and civic volunteer. She sometimes credited as Mrs. William Forse Scott, she is best known for heading the Publications Committee of the New York State Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage (NYSAOWS), she produced pamphlets, open letters, and newspaper essays that argued women’s political participation would undermine family life and was unnecessary b ... | B | Gameking69 (1143) | |
2025-04-02 | Flag of Flemish Brabant (flag of the Belgian province of Flemish Brabant) | "Sable a lion or armed and langued gules an escutcheon gules a fess argent"{{Infobox flag | Start | SEPB66 (260) | |
2025-06-04 | Inschfield stone circle (Recumbent stone circle in Aberdeenshire, Scotland) | Inschfield stone circle is a ruined recumbent stone circle situated near Insch, Aberdeenshire. Only three of the stones, including the broken recumbent stone, remain. The diameter of the original stone circle had a diameter of approximately 27.4 m (90 ft). | Stub | Atomdestroyers (770) | |
2025-05-19 | Siege of Tlemcen (1242) (1242 siege) | The siege of Tlemcen took place in 1242 and marked an important stage in the Campaigns of Abu Zakariya Yahya. It opposed the forces of the Kingdom of Tlemcen to those of the Hafsids, and ended with the defeat of Tlemcen, leading to its vassalization. | Start | Based tunisian (39) | |
2025-04-26 | Siege of Hatra (197–198) (Siege Part of the Roman–Parthian War of 194–198) | The siege of Hatra in 197–198 was the second siege of Hatra by Septimius Severus during the Roman–Parthian War of 194–198. He wanted to conquer Hatra because there was a temple there that had great wealth. However, this was without success, as many of his machines had been destroyed and many of his men were wounded. | Stub | Iranian112 (1381) | |
2025-06-06 | Princess Runan (Princess of the Tang dynasty (died 636)) | Princess Runan (汝南公主, c. 621 CE – 16 November 636 CE), her personal name was not recorded, was a royal princess of the Tang dynasty. She was the second or third recorded daughter of Emperor Taizong of Tang, the second emperor of the dynasty, through an unknown consort. | Start | AJMgirl (506) | |
2025-01-25 | Million Amazing Women | Celebrate Diversity: Capture portraits of women from all walks of life, backgrounds, ethnicities, and cultures - from daily laborers, professionals, and community leaders, to global icons, showcasing their unique stories. | C | Bharadwajdayala (62) | |
2025-02-20 | Raid on Varna (1620 raid) | The Raid on Varna was conducted by the Zaporozhian Cossacks after their raid on Istanbul, on 25 August 1620. | C | Ömereditss (527) | |
2025-02-26 | Moldavian campaigns (1593–1595) | The Moldavian Cossack campaigns of 1593–1595 were a series of expeditions by Zaporozhian Cossacks into Moldova, which was under the suzerainty of the Ottoman Empire. | Start | Fajowy (1043) | |
2025-04-15 | Wawat | Wawat (Ancient Egyptian: wꜣwꜣt) was the ancient Egyptian name for a region of Lower Nubia, extending roughly from the First Cataract near Elephantine to just north of the Second Cataract (in the area now submerged beneath Lake Nasser). | C | Golem08 (10405) | |
2025-05-31 | Fatma Ismail Salman | Fatma Ismail Salman (Arabic: فاطمة ريما February 14, 1937 – 2 June 2020) was a Palestinian activist and revolutionary | Start | User6987777777 (106) | |
2025-04-07 | Chaldean Hekate (Chaldean Herkate, a goddess described in the Chaldean Oracles) | Chaldean Hekate (also spelled Hecate) (Latinate form: /ˈhɛkəti/ HEK-ə-tee; Ancient Greek: Ἑκάτη; in Greek means Far Away; classical pronunciation: ) is a goddess worshipped in a theurgical mystico-magical tradition based in the Chaldean Oracles, which flourished from approximately 150 to 500 CE. | FA | Grammatophile (446) | |
2025-04-21 | Auðr Vésteinsdóttir (Saga character) | Auðr Vésteinsdóttir (anglicised as Aud) is a character in Gísla saga súrssonar. The loyal wife of the protagonist, Gísli, she harbours him during his outlawry, protects her nephews from him, and responds violently to attempts by his enemies to bribe her or to attack Gísli. | C | SapientSquid (1428) | |
2025-06-08 | Tziyyon ha-lo tishali (Hebrew-language Zion poem by Judah Halevi) | Tziyyon ha-lo tishali (Hebrew: צִיּוֹן הֲלֹוא תִשְׁאֲלִי, lit. 'Zion, do you not inquire'), also transcribed Siyyon ha-lo' Tishaliy, is a Hebrew-language poem composed by Judah Halevi (c. 1075–1141), one of the most prominent Jewish poets of medieval Spain. | Start | ReyNimrod (572) | |
2025-06-09 | Juoksáhkká (Female deity in Saami religion) | Juoksáhkká (also Juksakka, Joeksaahka lit. 'bow woman'; Stäukedne lit. 'bow mother') is a goddess in Sámi shamanism related to childbirth. She is one of the daughters of Máttaráhkká along with Sáráhkká and Uksáhkká and lived in the ground under the goahti, at the back according to some sources. | Start | Vilutar (514) | |
2025-06-06 | Máttaráhkká | Máttaráhkká (also Maderakka, Madderakka and Maadteraahka; lit. 'origin woman') is a mother goddess in Sámi shamanism. She lives in the ground under the goahti. She is connected to childbirth and has been said to give child its body and make female humans and animals fertile. | Start | Vilutar (514) | |
2025-06-09 | Jábmiidáhkká | Jábmiidáhkká (also Jabme-akka) is the female ruler of the underworld Jábmiidaibmu in Sámi shamanism. | Stub | Vilutar (514) | |
2025-06-07 | Sáráhkká (sami deity for birth) | Sáráhkká (also Sarakka, Saaraahka, Sadsla-akka and Saredne) is a goddess in Sámi shamanism connected to childbirth. She is one of the daughters of Máttaráhkká along with Juoksáhkká and Uksáhkká. After Radien-attje hands a fetus to Máttaráhkká who gives it life, she hands it over to Sáráhkká who puts it in the woman's womb and gives the fetus a body. | Start | Vilutar (514) | |
2025-06-09 | Uksáhkká (female deity in Saami religion) | Uksáhkká (also Uksakka, Oksaahka lit. 'door woman') is a goddess in Sámi shamanism related to childbirth. She is one of the daughters of Máttaráhkká along with Sáráhkká and Juoksáhkká and lived in the ground under the goahti, below the door specifically. | Start | Vilutar (514) | |
2025-04-26 | Siege of Uman (1674) | The siege of Uman or defence of Uman was a siege of the city of Uman conducted by the Ottoman grand vizier Kara Mustafa Pasha against the Cossack garrison in the city led by colonel Stepan Yavorsky during the 1674 campaign of Romodanovsky and Samoylovych. | Start | TheHistoryOFEUROPE (406) | |
2025-05-01 | Georgian–Shaddadid wars (Medieval wars between the Georgian kingdom and the Shaddadid dynasty in the South Caucasus) | The Georgian–Shaddadid wars were a series of medieval conflicts between the Kingdom of Georgia and the Muslim Shaddadid dynasty over control of strategic cities in the South Caucasus, particularly Ani and Tbilisi. Beginning in the early 11th century and lasting until the end of the 12th, these wars saw shifting alliances, repeated sieges, and decisive Georgian victories under kings like Bagrat IV, David IV, and Tamar. | GA | AE182 (657) | |
2025-06-09 | Chronicle of Gowa | Chronicle of Gowa or History of Gowa (Makassarese: Lontara’ Patturioloanga ri Tu-Gowaya) is a Makassarese lontara manuscript from the Gowa Kingdom. This chronicle is estimated to have been compiled in 1538 during the reign of Karaeng Tumapa'risi' Kallonna (1510-1546). | Stub | Mahali syarifuddin (757) | |
2025-06-07 | Scythian revolt against Mithridates VI (107 BCE revolt) | The Scythian revolt against Mithridates VI was a major Scythian revolt started in 107 BCE in Crimea, led by Saumacus against the occupying forces of the Bosporan Kingdom, and his ally Kingdom of Pontus led by Diophantus. In the end, the revolt was suppressed and Crimea stayed under the control of the Bosporan Kingdom. | Start | DesertGeneral (113) | |
2025-06-11 | List of Ashkenazi Jewish surnames | Stub | ReyNimrod (572) | ||
2025-06-09 | Urška Ferligoj (Slovenian sheperdess and seeress) | Urška Ferligoj, also known as Shepherdess Urška, was a Slovenian shepherdess and Marian seeress, born in 1526, Grgar, Slovenia and died in 1544, Grgar, Slovenia. | C | Ihana Aneta (69) | |
2025-04-26 | Çekem's Aq Qoyunlu campaign (Campaign led by Mamluk commander Çekem against the Aq Qoyunlu (1407)) | Çekem's Aq Qoyunlu campaign was a military expedition launched by the Mamluk rebel commander Emir Çekem against the Aq Qoyunlu confederation during 1407. The campaign ended in Çekem's defeat and death, and his rebellion was crushed by the central Mamluk authorities. | C | AE182 (657) | |
2025-06-11 | Archaeological site of Selbir | The Salbir archaeological settlement is a historical site located in the Qabala District, Azerbaijan, near the modern village of Chukhur Qabala. It's one of the three main archaeological areas that make up the ancient city of Qabala, which was once the capital of Caucasian Albania. | C | Lamminiaz (1063) | |
2025-06-06 | Najmeh Khatun | Najmeh Khatun is the mother of the eighth Shiite (Shia) Imam, Ali ibn Musa al-Rida, and Fatimah bint Musa (Fatemah Ma'soomeh), who has been given various names in hadith and historical sources. Ali ibn Musa al-Rida's mother's original name was Taktum, which was renamed Tahirah by Musa ibn Ja'far after the birth of the eighth Shiite Imam. | Start | 110 and 135 (639) | |
2025-06-12 | 1974 Family Law (Family code in South Yemeni law) | The 1974 Family Law, also known as the Family Code, was a landmark legal reform aimed at transforming personal status laws and advancing gender equality in the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen (PDRY). Introduced by the socialist government that came to power in the late 1960s, the legislation reflected the regime's broader objectives of social and economic modernization, including the emancipation of women. | GA | Paprikaiser (1706) | |
2025-06-12 | Catherine Pett (Australian school teacher (1864–1926)) | Catherine Pett née Cooper (17 November 1864 – 23 January 1926) was a teacher at the Darwin Public School for 22 years as well as acting as a community organiser in Darwin. Pett spent much of her life in the Northern Territory of Australia. | C | Aliceinthealice (5269) | |
2025-05-21 | Aqköbik Khan (Fomer leader of the Toksaba tribe of the Kipchaks) | Aqköbik Khan was the leader of the Toksaba tribe of the Kipchaks who lived in the 13th century. The conflict between him and Köten Khan, the leader of the Durut tribe, is described in historical sources. He is considered an ancestor of the Kazakh Kipchaks. | Stub | Sagzhan (108) | |
2025-01-31 | Ottoman conquest of Zeila (1557 conquest) | The Ottoman conquest of Zeila occurred in 1557 when the Ottoman Empire, under the command of Özdemir Pasha, successfully captured the port city of Zeila as part of its expansion into the Horn of Africa. This marked the establishment of Ottoman Zeila along with the Habesh Eyalet[page needed] | C | Samyatilius (550) | |
2025-06-07 | Maria Alexeievna Naryshkina | Maria Alexeievna Naryshkina (née Senyavina; 20 March [O.S. 9 March] 1762 - 3 January 1823 [O.S. 22 December 1822]) was a russian noblewoman, pupil of the Smolny Institute and a maid of honour to Catherine the Great. | C | EmilySarah99 (6117) | |
2025-05-17 | Second battle of Bhilsa (13th century battle in India) | The Second battle of Bhilsa was a battle fought between the Paramaras of Malwa under Devapala and the Delhi Sultanate under Iltutmish. It was a victory for Devapala, who reconquered Bhilsa and restored stability in the Paramara kingdom. | Start | Idkwhattosayboi (117) | |
2025-05-18 | Site Museum of Bashbaliq City, Silk Road (Archaeology / Cultural Heritage Museum in Xinjiang, China) | The Site Museum of Bashbaliq City, Silk Road, was inaugurated on 14 July 2022, with Beiting Ancient City—inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage “Silk Roads: Chang’an–Tianshan Corridor” list—as its focal point. | Start | Kerdipole (44) | |
2025-06-14 | Shuyuan Chen | Shuyuan Chen (5th century – September 19, 466), personal name unknown, was a consort of Emperor Xiaowu of Liu Song who carried the second rank of concubine Shuyuan. In 456 she bore Emperor Xiaowu his third son Liu Zixun. Neither she nor her son was favored by Emperor Xiaowu. | Stub | HenryXVII (6083) | |
2025-02-06 | Moldavian campaign (1574) | The Moldavian Campaign was a military operation carried out by the Ottoman Empire against the Principality of Moldavia, one of its vassal states, in 1574. | C | LGT55 (558) | |
2025-05-03 | Princess Changde of Ming dynasty (Princess of Ming dynasty) | Princess Changde (1424–1470) was a princess of the Ming Dynasty, personal name unknown. She was the third daughter of her father Emperor Xuanzong of the Ming Dynasty and only daughter of her mother Empress Sun and only full sister of the Emperor Yingzong. | Start | AJMgirl (506) | |
2025-06-16 | Siege of Gerger (1464–1465 siege of Gerger castle between Aq Qoyunlu and Mamluks) | Siege of Gerger was a military conflict in 1464–1465 where Aq Qoyunlu forces, under Uzun Hasan, captured Gerger castle from the Mamluks after breaking their siege. The event was part of the broader power struggles between regional powers in Eastern Anatolia and the Levant during the mid-15th century. | Start | AE182 (657) | |
2025-03-12 | Eva Erben (Czech-Israeli writer and Holocaust survivor, Holocaust survivor) | Eva Erben (Erbenová) (Hebrew: אווה ארבן; born October 24, 1930 as Eva Löwidt (Löwitová or Löwidtová)) is a Czech-Israeli writer and Holocaust survivor who serves as a witness to history. She gained international recognition through the publication of her book When I Was Missed: Memories of a Jewish Girl, in which she describes the ordeal of her family in concentration camps and on death marches. | B | Empiricus-sextus (570) | |
2025-06-02 | Urška Dolinarka (Slovene farmeress and heroine) | Urška Dolinarka, also known as Dolinarjeva Urška, was a Slovenian farmer and folk heroine born in 1457 in Češnjica, Slovenia. She is renowned for her resistance against the Ottoman Turks in the Selca Valley. | Start | Ihana Aneta (69) | |
2025-01-08 | Khālid ibn al-Bukayr | Khālid ibn al-Bukayr ibn ʿAbd Yā Lail ibn Nāshib al-Laythī (Arabic: خالد بن البكير بن عبد يا ليل بن ناشب الليثي), or also known as Ibn Abī al-Bukayr, was an early sahabi (companion) of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. He participated in the Battles of Badr, Uhud and the raid at Rajīʿ in Safar{{NoteTag|The intended meaning here is the name of a location in the land of Hudhayl, eight miles from 'Asfan, where the batt ... | Start | Karim Ibn Karim (148) | |
2025-02-08 | Elkunirša (Hittite god of a Canaanite origin) | Elkunirša (in Hittite: Del-ku-ni-ir-ša or Del-ku-ni-ir-ša-aš) is a Hittite god of a Canaanite origin. The god is known from a myth in Hittite, believed to be originated from Canaan, as well as one ritual tablet. | C | פעמי-עליון (1242) | |
2025-06-17 | Jami C. Shawley | Jamelle C. "Jami" Shawley is a United States Army major general who has served as the commanding general of Combined Joint Task Force - Horn of Africa, the only permanent American military base in Africa. On May 14, 2022, she became the first female U.S. commanding general on African soil, replacing Major Geneneral William Zana at Camp Lemonnier which is used to support counterterrorism efforts in neighboring Somalia. | Stub | Durindaljb (4748) | |
2025-05-29 | Rainald II Masoir (Lord of Margat) | Rainald II Masoir was the lord of Margat from c. 1140 to c. 1185. In 1133, his father lost his castle to the Muslims, but it was regained in 1140. Rainald was an avid supporter of Aimery of Limoges, taking his side against Bohemond III of Antioch during the latter's war with the church. | Stub | Reverosie (1350) | |
2025-06-14 | Princess Shou-En (State Princess Shou-En) | Princess Shou-En (December 7, 1830 – April 13, 1859) personal name unknown, was an Qing dynasty princess and the sixth daughter of Emperor Daoguang of the Qing dynasty and Consort Jing of the Borjigit clan.Initially titled Heshuo Princess,but she was later granted the title of Shou'en Gurun Princess. | Start | AJMgirl (506) | |
2025-06-15 | The Virgin Recommends the City of Siena to Jesus | The Virgin Recommends the City of Siena to Jesus (Italian: La Vergine raccomanda la cittá di Siena a Gesú) is the subject of a table of Biccherna painted by Neroccio di Bartolomeo de' Landi in 1480. | C | MrPersonHumanGuy (8714) | |
2025-06-04 | Saddam Hussain (Chhatra League) | Saddam Hussain (Bengali: সাদ্দাম হোসেন) is a Bangladeshi student leader and politician who served as the president of the Bangladesh Chhatra League (BCL), the student wing of the Bangladesh Awami League. He previously served as the general secretary of the Dhaka University unit of the Chhatra League and as assistant general secretary of the Dhaka University Central Students' Union (DUCSU). | Start | Hosuaaneera (113) | |
2025-06-17 | Kolobi | The Kolobi (also rendered Colobi) were an ancient people of northeastern Africa mentioned in both Ptolemy’s Geography and Strabo’s Geographica. Although classical sources provide only brief descriptions, both authors place the Kolobi near the Red Sea coast, and likely refer to the same group. | Start | Eren Gatiat (2346) | |
2025-04-27 | Facial Hair in Ancient Egypt | Facial hair in ancient Egypt, especially beards, remains a mystery in later periods, with significant religious implications. | C | علي بدر العتيبي (244) | |
2025-06-17 | Karl Wichmann | Karl Wichmann (1868–1948) was a German literary scholar, who served as professor of German at the University of Sheffield from 1901 to 1907, and then at the University of Birmingham from 1907 to 1917. His dismissal from Birmingham in the midst of the First World War has been the subject of scholarship. | Stub | Noswall59 (15148) | |
2025-04-30 | Battle of Tashir (Battle between Shaddadids and an Armenian–Georgian alliance in 1040) | The Battle of Tashir was fought in 1040 between the forces of the Shaddadid emirate of Dvin, led by Emir Abu'l-Aswar Shavur ibn Fadl, and the Bagratid Kingdom of Tashir–Dzoraget under King David I. | C | AE182 (657) | |
2025-04-09 | List of massacres of Bulgarians | This is a list of massacre against ethnic Bulgarians living in Bulgaria and outside of Bulgaria. | Start | Kessarevo (756) | |
2025-06-17 | List of ambassadors of Bulgaria to Serbia (List of Bulgarian ambassadors to Serbia) | This is a list of Bulgaria's ambassadors to Serbia. The ambassadors are based in Belgrade. | Start | Klačko (13374) | |
2025-06-06 | Doliche (Commagene) (Place) | Dülük, also known as Dolikhe or Doliche (Ancient Greek: Δολίχη; Armenian: Տլուք, romanized: Tlukʿ), or Tulupa, is an ancient city located in the Şehitkamil district of Gaziantep, in the neighborhood that bears the same name. Dülük is considered the oldest continuously inhabited settlement in Türkiye. | C | Erdalkara (83) | |
2025-06-14 | List of official overseas trips made by Catherine, Princess of Wales | This is a list of official overseas visits and Commonwealth tours made by Catherine, Princess of Wales. Catherine Middleton began undertaking official trips upon marrying into the British royal family in April 2011. She has since accompanied her husband, William, Prince of Wales, on visits and conducted solo overseas engagements on behalf of the United Kingdom. | GA | AndrewPeterT (3376) | |
2025-06-02 | Ewa Krasnodebska (Polish actress (born 1925)) | Ewa Krasnodebska (born 9 July 1925) is a Polish actress, known for her extensive career in film and television from 1949 to 2014. | Start | Adelberta (1846) | |
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 (3797) | |
2025-02-28 | Battle of Kompoti (1822 battle of the Greek War of Independence) | The Battle of Kompoti was a military engagement of the Greek War of Independence, with a victorious outcome for the Greeks. | Start | Alka21 (4263) | |
2025-01-13 | Sheikhan principality (Yazidi Kurdish principality, to 1832) | The Daseni Principality (Kurdish: میرگەها داسنیا, Mīrgaha Dāsiniyyā), also known as the Shaykhan (or Sheikhan) Principality as its administration was centered in the Sheikhan region (which included the primary Yezidi holy site of Lalish), was a semi-autonomous Yezidi Kurdish emirate. | C | Jackhanma69 (808) | |
2025-06-15 | Aq Qoyunlu campaign (1438) (1438 Mamluk military campaign into Aq Qoyunlu territory) | The Aq Qoyunlu campaign (1438) was a military expedition launched by the Mamluk Sultanate into eastern Anatolia in support of the exiled Aq Qoyunlu prince Jahangir Mirza. The campaign occurred during a period of internal civil conflict among the Aq Qoyunlu following the deposition of Ali Beg by his son Hamza Bey Bayandur. | B | AE182 (657) | |
2025-06-11 | Pami II (Egyptian Pharaoh) | Neferkare Pami or Pami II (Egyptian nfr-kȝ-rʿ p-my or pȝ-my, variant writings of pȝ-mjw) was an obscure pharaoh of the Tanite 23rd Dynasty, who was fully identified only in 2018. He reigned in the late 8th century BC. | B | StefThrax (1254) | |
2025-06-02 | Laurel Bestock (American Egyptologist, archaeologist, and academic) | Laurel Bestock is an archaeologist and Egyptologist, whose research focus is on kingship, violence, and art and architecture of ancient Egypt, Sudan, and the region of the Nile Valley. She is the Joukowsky Family Associate Professor of Archaeology and the Ancient World and Egyptology and Assyriology at Brown University, and she is also Executive Director of Excavations at Abydos and Visiting Research Professor at The Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. | C | Atalantaruns (128) | |
2025-02-12 | Rachel Crellin (Manx archaeologist) | Rachel Crellin is an archaeologist who specialises in archaeological theory and the prehistory of the British Isles. She joined the University of Leicester in 2015, and is an Associate Professor of Archaeology. She is also a metalwork wear-analyst. In 2020 she delivered the Prehistoric Society's annual Sarah Champion Memorial Lecture and in 2021 she delivered the Royal Anthropological Institute's Curl Lecture. | C | Ran21ran (4) | |
2025-06-06 | Debby Banham (English medieval social historian) | Debby Banham is a British historian of early medieval England, specialising in food production, diet, and medicine. She has published on Anglo-Saxon farming and food and drink, as well as on medieval sign language. | Start | SapientSquid (1428) | |
2024-12-20 | Rheinwg (Lost kingdom in southern wales) | The Kingdom of Rheinwg (Welsh: Teyrnas Rheinwg) was a Brittonic kingdom in wales, which is often thought to have been a union of the kingdoms of Dyfed and Brycheiniog | Start | Canyoulogmeinwikpediathankspls (3) | |
2025-06-07 | Lazistan Khanate | The Lazistan Khanate was a proposed buffer state suggested by the United Kingdom during the Congress of Berlin in 1878. The proposal envisioned the establishment of an autonomous or even independent state in the historical region of Lazistan. It aimed to resolve disputes regarding the status of Batum and its surrounding areas, which had been ceded to the Russian Empire after the Russo-Turkish War. | Start | AE182 (657) | |
2025-06-03 | Mary Ravenscroft (Scottish noblewoman and diarist (d. 1796)) | Mary Ravenscroft, 7th Countess of Traquair (died 1796), was an 18th-century Scottish noblewoman and diarist, known for her insights into family life at Traquair House. | Start | U15627r473 (726) | |
2025-06-14 | Mu'awiya I's Southern Campaigns (658-661) | The Mu'awiya I's Southern Campaigns were a series of raids and military expeditions of Mu'awiya I onto Hijaz, Yemen and other southern parts of the Arabian peninsula, after the failure of the arbitration talks after the Battle of Siffin. The campaigns against the Caliphate of Ali continued until the Assassination of Ali. | C | Ameer ul - Momeenen (367) | |
2025-06-13 | Battle of Diyarbakır (1436) (1436 battle between Aq Qoyunlu and Mamluks) | Battle of Diyarbakır was fought between the Mamluk Sultanate and the Aq Qoyunlu in 1436, The Mamluks, aided by Döğer Turkmens achieved a decisive victory, capturing Jahangir Mirza and forcing the Aq Qoyunlu to cede Harput. | Start | AE182 (657) | |
2025-05-22 | Salomea Genin | ![]() |
C | Grieselda (61) | |
2025-05-31 | TT218 (Ancient Egyptian tomb) | TT218 (Theban Tomb 218) is the title which identifies one of the Tombs of the Nobles located in the area of the so-called Theban Necropolis, on the western bank of the Nile in front of the city of Luxor[N 4][2], in Egypt. Intended for the burials of nobles and officials connected to the ruling houses, especially of the New Kingdom, the area was exploited as a necropolis since the Old Kingdom and, subsequently, up to the Saitic period (with the XXVI dynasty) and Ptolemaic period. | B | Leoboudv (22110) | |
2025-06-20 | Gregorius Coelius Pannonius | Gregorius Coelius Pannonius (Hungarian: Coelius Gergely; died 1552) was a 16th-century Hungarian Pauline monk and theological writer. | Stub | Norden1990 (52060) | |
2024-12-04 | List of Mozambican flags | The following is a list of flags of Mozambique. For more information, see Flag of Mozambique. | C | Felipe Fidelis Tobias (581) | |
2025-06-16 | Kharabet Ihrit (Archaeological site in Egypt) | Kharabet Ihrit, also known as Batn Ihrit, Batn el Harit (or simply Harit), often confused with the village of Batn-Ihrît approximately 3km to the North-West, is an archaeological site in Egypt's Faiyum Governorate on the site of the ancient settlement of Theadelphia. | Start | Giuliotf (875) | |
2025-06-14 | Vuk's reform | Vuk's reform (Serbian: Вукова реформа, Vukova reforma) was a reform of the Serbian Cyrillic alphabet and orthography conducted by Vuk Stefanović Karadžić in the first half of the 19th century. The reform aimed to standardize the literary language based on vernacular speech, in accordance with the principle of "one letter, one sound" and the motto "write as you speak, and read as it is written". | GA | Mmns21 (58) | |
2025-06-02 | Siege of Mirandola (1426) (1426 siege) | The siege of Mirandola in 1426 was a military conflict that involved Aiace, Giovanni I e Francesco III Pico, allies of Filippo Maria Visconti, Duke of Milan, against the Modenese of the anti-Viscontis league. | C | Holapaco77 (2756) | |
2025-06-19 | Qasr el Banat, Faiyum Governorate (Archaeological site in Egypt) | Qasr el Banat (Arabic: قصور البَنَات) is an archaeological site located between the archaeological sites of Theadelphia and Philoteris in Faiyum Governorate in Egypt, about 5km south of Lake Qarun. It is the site of the ancient village of Euhemeria. All that remains of the site today is the two tholos baths, the remains of an ancient wall, fragments of several buildings and scattered bricks and pottery after large part of the land was reclaimed in the first ... | Start | Giuliotf (875) | |
2025-04-26 | Wei Gui (Noble Consort of Tang) | Noble Consort Wei (Chinese: 貴妃 京兆韋氏/贵妃 京兆韦氏; 597–665), personal name Gui (珪), courtesy name Ze (澤), was a imperial concubine of Emperor Taizong of Tang. | Start | 16272js (3596) | |
2025-01-16 | Massa Marittima mural (13th-century fresco in Massa Marittima, Italy) | The Massa Marittima mural is a 13th-century fresco located on the rear wall of the Fonte dell’Abbondanza, a public fountain in the Tuscan town of Massa Marittima. Often called the “Tree of Fertility,” the image features a large tree bearing numerous phalluses, surrounded by women and black birds. | C | Benmuncy (42) | |
2025-06-20 | Conquest of Coron (1532) (Spanish–Italian campaign in Ottoman Greece) | The Conquest of Coron in 1532 was the core of an amphibious campaign led by Andrea Doria, grand admiral of King of Spain and Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, to divert the pressure of the Ottoman Empire on Eastern Europe. | GA | Baal Nautes (1475) | |
2025-06-20 | Battle of Antipaxos (1537 naval battle) | The Battle of Antipaxos of 1537 was a naval encounter between a fleet captained by Andrea Doria, grand admiral of King of Spain and Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, and an Ottoman flotilla led by Ali Çelebi. It frames in the Italian War of 1536–1538, but events in its course led also to the beginning of the Ottoman-Venetian War of 1737-1540. | C | Baal Nautes (1475) | |
2025-06-15 | Margery Davies (British doctor and Girl Guide executive) | Margery Davies (10 January 1895 – 20 December 1984) was a British doctor and Girl Guide executive. She was the first female doctor to have a practice in Worthing. She volunteered in post-war Germany with the Guide International Service (GIS) in 1945. | C | BJCHK (9838) | |
2025-06-19 | Wawa Runestone (Modern runestone with the Lord's Prayer) | The Wawa Runestone is a piece of bedrock stone covered in runes, discovered near Wawa, Ontario, Canada in 2018. The runes spell out a Swedish-language version of the Lord’s Prayer and are believed to have been carved in the early to mid-19th century, by a Swedish Canadian. | Start | Beneathtimp (2220) | |
2025-04-17 | Ottoman campaign in Circassia (1479) (First Ottoman-Crimean campaign against Circassia (1479); Ottoman victory) | The First Ottoman-Crimean campaign against Circassia took place in 1479 and marked the beginning of systematic Ottoman influence in the North Caucasus. During this period, the Ottomans promoted Islam among the mountain tribes, successfully converting mainly the aristocracy, while much of the general population remained pagan or Christian. | Start | Drazze.greece (563) | |
2025-06-19 | Magnus Broka (Swedish politician) | Magnus Broka (of the House of Bjälbo), was the son of the Swedish Jarl Knut Birgersson (died January 1208), and thus the grandson of Jarl Birger Brosa. Who he was married to is unclear, possibly to Sigrid Knutsdotter (according to Dick Harrison, who however considers it more likely that Sigrid was his mother). | Stub | Tokle (1188) | |
2025-06-07 | Francesca Forleo-Brayda (italian painter) | Francesca Forleo Braida (Francavilla Fontana, 18 January 1779 – 2 June 1820) was a Neapolitan artist. She was born in Francavilla Fontana, at that time in the Kingdom of Naples, now in the Province of Brindisi, in Puglia. | C | Mfran22 (19) | |
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 (506) | |
2025-06-12 | Peter Bernhard Weiss (German historian (1943–2025)) | Peter Bernhard Weiss (Weiß) (21 August 1943 in Munich – 25 March 2025 in Kiel) was a German historian and classical scholar. | Start | Procopius (227) | |
2025-06-20 | Battle of Guadiaro (1010 battle near Ronda in Spain) | The Battle of Guadiaro (21 June 1010) was a battle of the Fitna of al-Andalus , that took place in the Guadiaro River in Spain near Ronda, between the Berber forces of Sulayman ibn al-Hakam with the help of berber leaders such as Zawi ibn Ziri and other Zenata chiefs, against the combined forces of the Caliphate of cordoba led by the caliph Muhammad II of Córdoba and 9000 Catalan mercenaries. | GA | Wikiknight7 (102) | |
2025-06-07 | Duke of Durazzo (title) (14th-century noble title) | The Duke or Duchess of Durazzo (Albanian: Duka i Durrësit, Dukesha e Durrësit) also known as Duke or Duchess of Durrës was a noble title used by the rulers of Durrës (city in modern-day Albania) during the middle ages. The title was originally established by the House of Anjou-Durazzo following the decline of the Kingdom of Albania, and it was later adopted by the House of Thopia, one of the major noble families in medieval Albania. | GA | TaulantianKnight (619) | |
2025-04-02 | Siege of Damascus (1174) (Ayyubid victory in Syria) | The siege of Damascus took place in 15 May to 28 October 1174, following the death of Nur ad-Din Zengi. Saladin, the ruler of Egypt, marched on the city, claiming to act as the protector of Nur ad-Din's young son, As-Salih Ismail. With little resistance, Damascus surrendered to Saladin, allowing him to establish his rule over Syria. | Stub | Canoooo.4 (448) | |
2025-06-21 | Consort Jin (Qianlong) (Consort Jin) | Consort Jin (1785(?) – January 19, 1823) of the Šarhūda Fuca clan, was a Manchu woman of the Bordered Yellow Banner and was a consort of the Qianlong Emperor. | Start | AJMgirl (506) | |
2025-04-28 | Anamarija Basch (Yugoslav activist in the Belgian resistance and nurse in the Spanish Civil War) | Anamarija Basch (Baš; c. 1893–1979), also known as Ana-Marija, was a Yugoslav activist in the Belgian resistance and a nurse in the Spanish Civil War. | Start | TurboSuperA+ (2665) | |
2025-06-01 | Ottoman–Persian wars (1505–1517) (Early 16th-century conflict between the Ottoman Empire and Safavid Persia) | The Ottoman–Persian wars (1505–1517) were a series of military conflicts fought between the Ottoman Empire and the Safavid dynasty of Iran during the reign of Sultan Bayezid II and his son Selim I. Sparked by sectarian and territorial rivalries, the wars culminated in major Ottoman victories, including the pivotal Battle of Chaldiran (1514) and the subsequent conquest of Eastern Anatolia and northern Mesopotamia. | GA | AE182 (657) | |
2025-04-08 | Siege of Harput (1516) (1516 siege) | The siege of Harput (1516) took place between the Ottoman Empire and the Safavid State at Harput in March 1516. It concluded with the victory of the Ottoman Empire. | Start | Okanthegreat90 (266) | |
2025-04-12 | Battle of Ovacık (1515) (1515 battle) | Battle of Ovacık took place between the Ottoman army under the command of Bıyıklı Mehmed Pasha and the Safavid army under the command of Nur Ali Khalifa, and ended the life of Nur Ali along with the rebellion. | Start | Okanthegreat90 (266) | |
2025-04-19 | Battle of Koçhisar (1516) (1516 battle) | Battle of Koçhisar (1516) took place in May 1516 at the DedeKargın location near Mardin Kızıltepe, between Ottoman army under the command of Bıyıklı Mehmed Pasha and the Safavid army under the command of Ustaclu Kara Han. | Start | Okanthegreat90 (266) | |
2025-04-22 | Siege of Mosul (1517) (1517 siege) | Siege of Mosul (1517) took place when the Ottoman Empire captured the city from the Safavid Iran in 1517. | Stub | Okanthegreat90 (266) | |
2025-04-22 | Battle of Tabriz (1514) (1514 battle) | Battle of Tabriz (1514), a phase in the Ottoman–Persian Wars. | Start | Okanthegreat90 (266) | |
2025-06-22 | Principality of Abu 'Arish | The Principality of Abu 'Arish was a state in South Arabia. It was formed when the Sharif of Abu 'Arish, Muhammad bin Ahmed bin Khayrat, declared independence from the weakened Imamate of Yemen after being appointed governor of Abu 'Arish in 1730. | Stub | Abo Yemen (16755) | |
2025-06-22 | Battle of Écija (1039) (1039 battle near Écija in Spain) | The Battle of Écija (1039) was a battle that took place near the town of Écija in 3 October 1039, between the forces of the Taifa of Seville led by Ismail ibn Abbad and the allied forces of the Taifa of Málaga , Taifa of Granada and the Taifa of Carmona, the battle was a response to the Abbadid dynasty expansionist policies in the neighboring Taifas territories. | Start | Wikiknight7 (102) | |
2025-06-04 | Ivanka Škrabec Novak (Slovenian teacher and martyr) | Ivanka Škrabec Novak (17 March 1915, Hrovača - 4 June 1942, Zamostec) was a Slovenian teacher, martyr and Servant of God. | C | Ihana Aneta (69) | |
2025-06-22 | Battle of Lorca (1042) (1042 battle in Spain) | the Battle of Lorca (1042) was a battle that took place near the city of Lorca between the forces of the Taifa of Granada led by Samuel ibn Naghrillah and the combined forces of the Taifa of Valencia , the Taifa of Dénia and the Catalan mercenaries, it resulted in a decisive victory for the Zirid Taifa of Granada. | Start | Wikiknight7 (102) | |
2025-06-22 | Siege of Málaga (1065-1066) (1065-1066 siege of Málaga in Spain) | The Siege of Málaga (1065-1066) was a military conflict that took place between the year 1065 and 1066 in the city of Málaga that was under the rule of the Taifa of Granada, between the Taifa of Seville forces commanded by the Abbadid dynasty Prince Al-Mu'tamid ibn Abbad and the Taifa of Granada under the rule of Badis ibn Habus. | C | Wikiknight7 (102) | |
2025-06-21 | Battle of al-Funt (1038) (1038 battle in Spain) | The Battle of al-Funt (Friday 4 August 1038) was a battle that took place near modern-day Deifontes between the forces of the Taifa of Granada ruled by Badis ibn Habus against the forces of the Taifa of Almería lead by Zuhayr al-Siqlabi, it ended with a Granadan Zirid victory and the death of Zuhayr, marking an end to the hegemony of the Amirids in Eastern Andalucia. | Start | Wikiknight7 (102) | |
2025-06-22 | Catherine of Oldenburg ((1846-1866)) | Duchess Catherine Frederica Paulina ; (9 September 1846 - 11 June 1866) was the daughter of Duke Peter of Oldenburg and Princess Therese of Nassau-Weilburg, and a great-granddaughter of Paul I of Russia. | Start | Angelicvirgin (77) | |
2025-06-01 | Battle of the Cahul (1574) (1574 battle) | The Battle of the Cahul was a military engagement took place 9 June 1574 at the Cahul Lake during the Moldavian Revolt. The Ottoman-Crimean army fight against Moldavian-Cossack forces and defeat them. | C | Dushnilkin (8245) | |
2025-04-22 | Battle of Qarahamid (1510) (1510 battle of the Ottoman–Persian Wars) | The Battle of Qarahamid, also spelled Karahamid, (1510) was a battle between the Ottoman and Safavid armies that ended with a Safavid victory. | C | Okanthegreat90 (266) | |
2025-06-23 | Sibylle of Hessen (Baroness von Vincke) | Princess Sibylle Marguerite of Hesse-Kassel; 3 June 1877 – 11 February 1953) was a princess of Hesse-Kassel by birth. | Start | Angelicvirgin (77) | |
2025-05-29 | Pudjammer (Pudjammeret) | Pudjammeret (also spelled Pudjammer or Pudjammeret) was a royal woman of the Kingdom of Kush, likely from early Napatan period in ancient Nubia (modern-day Sudan), during the 8th to 7th century BCE. Her name is preserved through funerary inscriptions and archaeological remains at royal cemetery of El-Kurru, one of the earliest burial grounds used by the Napatan Dynasty. | Start | Gingerfruit (156) | |
2025-06-23 | Battle of Arjona (1041) (1041 battle in Spain) | The Battle of Arjona (1041) was a battle that took place near the city of Arjona in Al-Andalus between the Taifa of Granada forces ruled by Badis ibn Habus under command of Vizier Samuel ibn Naghrillah against the two well-known Andalusian Commanders Wasil and Muwaffaq supporting a Zirid rebel "Yaddyr" nephew of Habbus al-Muzaffar. | Start | Wikiknight7 (102) |
Last updated by SDZeroBot operator / talk at 13:41, 23 June 2025 (UTC)