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August 24 in History

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Vesuvius Erupts: Pompeii Buried in Ash
79Event

Vesuvius Erupts: Pompeii Buried in Ash

Mount Vesuvius erupted on August 24, 79 AD, burying the Roman cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum under roughly 20 feet of volcanic ash and pumice. Pliny the Younger, watching from across the Bay of Naples, recorded the event in letters that remain the first detailed eyewitness account of a volcanic eruption. His uncle, Pliny the Elder, sailed toward the eruption to rescue friends and died from the toxic gases. Pompeii's roughly 11,000 inhabitants had roughly 18 hours to flee, and most did. Those who remained were killed by pyroclastic surges reaching temperatures of 300 degrees Celsius. The ash preserved the city in extraordinary detail: food on tables, graffiti on walls, bodies in their final moments.

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Historical Events

Mount Vesuvius erupted on August 24, 79 AD, burying the Roman cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum under roughly 20 feet of volcanic ash and pumice. Pliny the Younger, watching from across the Bay of Naples, recorded the event in letters that remain the first detailed eyewitness account of a volcanic eruption. His uncle, Pliny the Elder, sailed toward the eruption to rescue friends and died from the toxic gases. Pompeii's roughly 11,000 inhabitants had roughly 18 hours to flee, and most did. Those who remained were killed by pyroclastic surges reaching temperatures of 300 degrees Celsius. The ash preserved the city in extraordinary detail: food on tables, graffiti on walls, bodies in their final moments.
79

Mount Vesuvius erupted on August 24, 79 AD, burying the Roman cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum under roughly 20 feet of volcanic ash and pumice. Pliny the Younger, watching from across the Bay of Naples, recorded the event in letters that remain the first detailed eyewitness account of a volcanic eruption. His uncle, Pliny the Elder, sailed toward the eruption to rescue friends and died from the toxic gases. Pompeii's roughly 11,000 inhabitants had roughly 18 hours to flee, and most did. Those who remained were killed by pyroclastic surges reaching temperatures of 300 degrees Celsius. The ash preserved the city in extraordinary detail: food on tables, graffiti on walls, bodies in their final moments.

King Charles IX of France ordered the assassination of Huguenot (Protestant) leaders gathered in Paris for a royal wedding on August 24, 1572, the feast of Saint Bartholomew. What began as a targeted political killing quickly spiraled into a citywide massacre as Catholic mobs rampaged through Huguenot neighborhoods. Admiral Gaspard de Coligny, the most prominent Huguenot leader, was murdered in his bed. Violence spread to the provinces over the following weeks, killing an estimated 5,000 to 30,000 Protestants across France. Pope Gregory XIII struck a commemorative medal. The massacre destroyed any possibility of religious coexistence in France for a generation and reignited the Wars of Religion that would devastate the country until the Edict of Nantes in 1598.
1572

King Charles IX of France ordered the assassination of Huguenot (Protestant) leaders gathered in Paris for a royal wedding on August 24, 1572, the feast of Saint Bartholomew. What began as a targeted political killing quickly spiraled into a citywide massacre as Catholic mobs rampaged through Huguenot neighborhoods. Admiral Gaspard de Coligny, the most prominent Huguenot leader, was murdered in his bed. Violence spread to the provinces over the following weeks, killing an estimated 5,000 to 30,000 Protestants across France. Pope Gregory XIII struck a commemorative medal. The massacre destroyed any possibility of religious coexistence in France for a generation and reignited the Wars of Religion that would devastate the country until the Edict of Nantes in 1598.

British troops under Major General Robert Ross marched into Washington, D.C., on August 24, 1814, after routing American militia at the Battle of Bladensburg, which contemporaries mockingly called "the Bladensburg Races" because the defenders fled so quickly. The British burned the White House, the Capitol, the Treasury, and the Library of Congress. First Lady Dolley Madison famously rescued Gilbert Stuart's portrait of George Washington before fleeing. A sudden thunderstorm helped extinguish the fires, and the British withdrew within 26 hours. President Madison returned to find the executive mansion a smoking ruin. The building was restored and painted white to cover the fire damage, though the name "White House" predates the burning.
1814

British troops under Major General Robert Ross marched into Washington, D.C., on August 24, 1814, after routing American militia at the Battle of Bladensburg, which contemporaries mockingly called "the Bladensburg Races" because the defenders fled so quickly. The British burned the White House, the Capitol, the Treasury, and the Library of Congress. First Lady Dolley Madison famously rescued Gilbert Stuart's portrait of George Washington before fleeing. A sudden thunderstorm helped extinguish the fires, and the British withdrew within 26 hours. President Madison returned to find the executive mansion a smoking ruin. The building was restored and painted white to cover the fire damage, though the name "White House" predates the burning.

The International Astronomical Union voted on August 24, 2006, to reclassify Pluto as a "dwarf planet," stripping it of the planetary status it had held since Clyde Tombaugh discovered it in 1930. The decision was driven by the discovery of Eris, a trans-Neptunian object slightly more massive than Pluto, which forced astronomers to either accept dozens of new planets or create a stricter definition. The new criteria required a planet to have "cleared its orbital neighborhood," which Pluto, sharing the Kuiper Belt with thousands of similar objects, had not done. Only 424 of the IAU's roughly 10,000 members voted, and the decision provoked public outrage, particularly in New Mexico, where the state legislature declared that Pluto would always be a planet within its borders.
2006

The International Astronomical Union voted on August 24, 2006, to reclassify Pluto as a "dwarf planet," stripping it of the planetary status it had held since Clyde Tombaugh discovered it in 1930. The decision was driven by the discovery of Eris, a trans-Neptunian object slightly more massive than Pluto, which forced astronomers to either accept dozens of new planets or create a stricter definition. The new criteria required a planet to have "cleared its orbital neighborhood," which Pluto, sharing the Kuiper Belt with thousands of similar objects, had not done. Only 424 of the IAU's roughly 10,000 members voted, and the decision provoked public outrage, particularly in New Mexico, where the state legislature declared that Pluto would always be a planet within its borders.

King John of England married twelve-year-old Isabella of Angouleme in Bordeaux Cathedral on August 24, 1200, stealing a bride already betrothed to Hugh IX of Lusignan, a powerful French vassal. The Lusignans appealed to King Philip II of France, who summoned John to answer the complaint. When John refused to appear, Philip declared all English holdings in France forfeit and invaded Normandy. By 1204, John had lost Normandy, Anjou, Maine, and Touraine, reducing the once-vast Angevin Empire to a rump. The resulting financial pressure, as John taxed his English barons to fund failed reconquest campaigns, provoked the baronial revolt that forced him to seal the Magna Carta at Runnymede in 1215.
1200

King John of England married twelve-year-old Isabella of Angouleme in Bordeaux Cathedral on August 24, 1200, stealing a bride already betrothed to Hugh IX of Lusignan, a powerful French vassal. The Lusignans appealed to King Philip II of France, who summoned John to answer the complaint. When John refused to appear, Philip declared all English holdings in France forfeit and invaded Normandy. By 1204, John had lost Normandy, Anjou, Maine, and Touraine, reducing the once-vast Angevin Empire to a rump. The resulting financial pressure, as John taxed his English barons to fund failed reconquest campaigns, provoked the baronial revolt that forced him to seal the Magna Carta at Runnymede in 1215.

49 BC

Gaius Scribonius Curio crossed into Africa in 49 BC with two legions, chasing Pompey's allies, certain he had the upper hand. He didn't. Publius Attius Varus had allied with King Juba of Numidia, whose cavalry Curio had already underestimated once. At the second Battle of the Bagradas River, Juba's forces surrounded and destroyed Curio's legions. Curio refused to flee. He stayed with his men and died with them. Caesar, who had sent him there, wrote about the defeat without quite acknowledging how much of it was Curio's overconfidence. He'd been a tribune, a gifted speaker, a loyal partisan. He was 30.

455

Vandal king Genseric led his forces into Rome in 455 AD, and Pope Leo I negotiated a deal: no killing, no burning, in exchange for the gates being opened. The Vandals honored the terms on murder and arson but spent two weeks systematically stripping the city of its treasures, including sacred vessels from the Temple of Jerusalem.

1516

The Ottoman Empire under Sultan Selim I crushed the Mamluk Sultanate at the Battle of Marj Dabiq in 1516, seizing control of Syria and opening the road to Egypt. The victory doubled the Ottoman Empire's territory within two years and established Ottoman dominance over the Middle East for four centuries.

1662

The Crown mandated the 1662 Book of Common Prayer as the sole legal liturgy for the Church of England, instantly stripping over 2,000 clergy members of their positions. This enforcement triggered the Great Ejection, permanently fracturing English religious life by removing nonconformist voices from established parishes and pushing them into underground networks.

1682

William Penn received the lower counties — the area now comprising Delaware — from the Duke of York on August 24, 1682. Penn had already received Pennsylvania from Charles II the previous year and had been looking for a water route to the sea that didn't depend on other colonial powers. Delaware gave him the Delaware River mouth. He added it to Pennsylvania under a joint legislature. The two territories shared governance uneasily for decades. Delaware formally separated in 1704. Penn's Frame of Government gave both territories more religious freedom than anywhere else in the English colonies at the time. Delaware kept the framework. It became the first state to ratify the Constitution.

1690

Job Charnock of the East India Company established a trading post in Calcutta in 1690, an event long considered the city's founding — though in 2003, the Calcutta High Court ruled the city has no official birthday. Regardless of the ruling, the settlement Charnock built grew into one of the world's great cities and the capital of British India.

1743

The Swedish army surrenders to Russian forces in Helsinki on August 24, 1743, bringing the War of the Hats to a decisive close. This capitulation forces Sweden to cede significant territory and formally ends its brief attempt to reclaim dominance over Finland through the Lesser Wrath period that follows.

1781

A small force of Pennsylvania militia was ambushed by Native American warriors in 1781, devastating George Rogers Clark's planned expedition against the British-held fort at Detroit. The loss forced Clark to abandon one of the most ambitious American offensive operations of the Revolutionary War's western theater.

1812

A coalition of Spanish, British, and Portuguese forces finally lifted the Siege of Cádiz in 1812, ending a two-and-a-half-year French blockade of the city. Cádiz had served as the seat of the Spanish government-in-exile during the siege, and its defense became a symbol of Spanish resistance to Napoleon.

1814

British troops stormed Washington, D.C., setting the Presidential Mansion, Capitol, and Navy Yard ablaze in a desperate bid to break American resolve. This scorched-earth retaliation for earlier American raids on York forced President Madison to flee, leaving the capital in ruins until reconstruction began months later.

Fun Facts

Zodiac Sign

Virgo

Aug 23 -- Sep 22

Earth sign. Analytical, kind, and hardworking.

Birthstone

Peridot

Olive green

Symbolizes power, healing, and protection from nightmares.

Next Birthday

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days until August 24

Quote of the Day

“I cannot walk through the suburbs in the solitude of the night without thinking that the night pleases us because it suppresses idle details, just as our memory does.”

Jorge Luis Borges

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