Today In History
February 2 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord, Nell Gwyn, and Duane Chapman.

Stalingrad Ends: Soviet Victory Turns WWII Tide
The German 6th Army under Field Marshal Friedrich Paulus surrendered at Stalingrad on February 2, 1943, after five months of fighting that killed nearly two million soldiers and civilians combined. Hitler had forbidden any retreat or breakout, condemning 300,000 encircled troops to starvation and Soviet artillery. Paulus became the first German field marshal ever to surrender, a fact that enraged Hitler, who had promoted him specifically expecting he would commit suicide instead. The Soviet victory at Stalingrad destroyed Germany's best-equipped army and eliminated any possibility of a German offensive victory in the East. The battle forced Hitler to shift to a purely defensive strategy that would steadily hemorrhage territory until Berlin fell two years later. Soviet losses were equally staggering, with over 1.1 million casualties, but the strategic initiative permanently shifted to the Red Army.
Famous Birthdays
1754–1838
d. 1687
Duane Chapman
b. 1953
Park Geun-hye
b. 1952
Salem al-Hazmi
b. 1981
Solomon R. Guggenheim
1861–1949
Than Shwe
b. 1933
Abba Eban
1915–2002
George Halas
1895–1983
Graham Nash
b. 1942
Howard Deering Johnson
d. 1972
Jean de Lattre de Tassigny
d. 1952
Historical Events
The German 6th Army under Field Marshal Friedrich Paulus surrendered at Stalingrad on February 2, 1943, after five months of fighting that killed nearly two million soldiers and civilians combined. Hitler had forbidden any retreat or breakout, condemning 300,000 encircled troops to starvation and Soviet artillery. Paulus became the first German field marshal ever to surrender, a fact that enraged Hitler, who had promoted him specifically expecting he would commit suicide instead. The Soviet victory at Stalingrad destroyed Germany's best-equipped army and eliminated any possibility of a German offensive victory in the East. The battle forced Hitler to shift to a purely defensive strategy that would steadily hemorrhage territory until Berlin fell two years later. Soviet losses were equally staggering, with over 1.1 million casualties, but the strategic initiative permanently shifted to the Red Army.
F.W. de Klerk stood before the South African Parliament on February 2, 1990, and delivered a speech that dismantled the legal architecture of apartheid in thirty minutes. He unbanned the African National Congress, the Pan Africanist Congress, and the South African Communist Party. He announced the imminent release of Nelson Mandela, who had been imprisoned for twenty-seven years. He lifted restrictions on the press and suspended executions. The speech stunned the chamber. De Klerk's own National Party had enforced apartheid since 1948; now its leader was tearing it down. His motivations were pragmatic rather than moral: international sanctions had crippled the economy, the Cold War's end removed the communist threat that had justified white minority rule, and the townships were becoming ungovernable. Mandela walked out of Victor Verster Prison nine days later. South Africa held its first multiracial elections in 1994.
Pedro de Mendoza established a settlement on the western bank of the Rio de la Plata in February 1536, naming it Santa Maria del Buen Ayre after the patron saint of fair winds. The colony nearly perished. Starvation drove settlers to eat rats, shoe leather, and reportedly each other. The indigenous Querandi, initially cooperative, turned hostile after the Spanish demanded food tributes. Attacks and disease reduced the settlement to a fraction of its original 2,500 colonists. Mendoza himself was dying of syphilis and sailed back toward Spain, perishing at sea. The survivors abandoned Buenos Aires in 1541, retreating upriver to Asuncion. The site was refounded in 1580 by Juan de Garay with sixty-three settlers and became the permanent colonial hub that would eventually grow into South America's most cosmopolitan capital, home to over 15 million people in its modern metropolitan area.
The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, signed on February 2, 1848, ended the Mexican-American War and transferred roughly 525,000 square miles of territory from Mexico to the United States, including all of present-day California, Nevada, Utah, and parts of Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and Wyoming. The US paid million and assumed .25 million in claims against Mexico. The treaty guaranteed that the roughly 80,000 Mexicans living in the ceded territory could choose American or Mexican citizenship and that their property rights would be respected. In practice, Anglo settlers systematically dispossessed Mexican landowners through legal chicanery, unfamiliar English-language courts, and outright violence over the following decades. The war itself was deeply controversial in the US: Abraham Lincoln challenged the war's legality as a congressman, and Henry David Thoreau went to jail for refusing to pay taxes that funded it.
Bertrand Russell was jailed twice — once for opposing World War I, once for protesting nuclear weapons — and won the Nobel Prize in Literature in between. He published his first major work at twenty-eight and his last at ninety-six. The man who co-wrote Principia Mathematica also wrote a pamphlet called Why I Am Not a Christian that got him fired from City College of New York. He was ninety-seven when he died. Still writing.
Bach premiered his chorale cantata Mit Fried und Freud ich fahr dahin in Leipzig, weaving Martin Luther's paraphrase of the Nunc dimittis into an intricate mix of vocal and instrumental voices. The work stands as one of over two hundred cantatas Bach produced during his tenure at St. Thomas Church, each one deepening the fusion of Lutheran theology and Baroque virtuosity.
The Dallas Mavericks traded Slovenian star Luka Doncic to the Los Angeles Lakers for Anthony Davis in one of the largest player swaps in American sports history. The blockbuster deal reshaped both franchises overnight and sent shockwaves through the NBA, altering the championship landscape for years to come.
Alaric II published a law code in 506 that wasn't for his own people. The Visigoths had their own customs. But they ruled over millions of Romans in southern Gaul and Spain who still lived by Roman law — except the Empire had collapsed and nobody knew which laws still applied. Alaric's scholars condensed a thousand years of Roman legal tradition into one book. They stripped out the obsolete parts, added explanatory notes, and made it portable. Within a generation, it was the only Roman law most of Western Europe knew. The Visigoths kept their own traditions. But they gave their subjects something the emperors never had: clarity.
Rodrigo of Castile marched to the Morcuera gorge near Miranda de Ebro with combined Christian forces. He was counting on the terrain — narrow passes, defensible positions. Muhammad I of Córdoba met him there anyway. The Emirate forces won decisively. Rodrigo died in the battle. His death destabilized the Christian north for years. Castile and Asturias had bet everything on coordinated resistance. They learned the hard way that coordination without overwhelming force just means losing together.
Louis III rode into Saxony with the Frankish army in 880. He was 18. The Norse Great Heathen Army had been raiding the region for months, and Louis wanted them gone. They met at Lüneburg Heath. The Franks had numbers and cavalry. The Norse had fought together for years and knew how to break a charge. Louis lost. His army scattered. He retreated back across the border. The Norse stayed in Saxony another year, raiding at will. A teenage king learned that wanting invaders gone and making them leave are different problems.
Otto I saved the Pope from a Roman mob, then showed up in Rome expecting payment. Pope John XII crowned him Holy Roman Emperor on February 2, 962. The title had been vacant since 924—nearly four decades of nobody claiming to rule Christendom. Otto got the crown. John got military protection and thought he could control a grateful king. Within a year, Otto was back in Rome deposing John for conspiracy. The Pope who created an emperor learned emperors don't stay grateful. The Holy Roman Empire lasted 844 years, until Napoleon dissolved it in 1806.
Stephen became the first English king captured in battle since Harold at Hastings. He'd seized the throne from his cousin Matilda in 1135, breaking his oath to support her claim. At Lincoln, he fought on foot after his horse was killed, swinging a battleaxe until it shattered, then a sword until that broke too. His own nobles had switched sides. Matilda held him prisoner for nine months. She never became queen. He got his throne back. They fought for fourteen more years.
King Stephen walked into Lincoln Castle to settle a property dispute. He walked out in chains. His own cousin, Matilda, had trapped him there with a surprise army. She controlled London within weeks. The Church recognized her as "Lady of the English." Then she demanded back taxes from Londoners during a banquet. They rioted. She fled on foot. Stephen was freed in a prisoner exchange eight months later. She never wore the crown.
Anna of Savoy spent six years ruling as regent, fighting John Kantakouzenos for control of Byzantium. She finally got the church to depose his ally, Patriarch Joseph. Victory seemed certain. That same night, conspirators opened the city gates. Kantakouzenos walked in. The civil war that had killed thousands and bankrupted the empire ended in hours. Anna's son stayed emperor in name only. She'd won the religious battle and lost everything else.
A 6.5 magnitude earthquake hit Catalonia on March 2, 1428. The epicenter was near Camprodon, but Barcelona took the worst damage — the cathedral's bell tower collapsed during mass. Over 800 people died in the city alone. The quake was felt as far as Marseille and Valencia. Catalonia was already struggling financially from decades of war with Castile. The reconstruction costs bankrupted several noble families. Some historians argue it accelerated Catalonia's eventual absorption into a unified Spain. One earthquake changed the political map.
Fun Facts
Zodiac Sign
Aquarius
Jan 20 -- Feb 18
Air sign. Independent, original, and humanitarian.
Birthstone
Amethyst
Purple
Symbolizes wisdom, clarity, and peace of mind.
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Quote of the Day
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