Today In History
February 7 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Thomas More, Empress Matilda, and Jacksepticeye.

Soviet Monopoly Ends: Communist Party Gives Up Power
The Central Committee of the Soviet Communist Party voted on February 7, 1990, to renounce Article 6 of the Soviet Constitution, which had guaranteed the Communist Party's 'leading and guiding role' in Soviet society since 1977. Gorbachev pushed the change as part of his perestroika reforms, believing that political competition would strengthen rather than destroy the system. He was catastrophically wrong. Once the monopoly was legally broken, the centrifugal forces that had been building in the Soviet republics accelerated beyond control. Lithuania declared independence within a month. Estonia and Latvia followed. The Baltic states' departure triggered a cascade: by December 1991, eleven of fifteen Soviet republics had declared sovereignty. Gorbachev had dismantled the one structural mechanism that held the USSR together, the party's monopoly on political power, without building anything to replace it.
Famous Birthdays
1478–1535
1102–1167
b. 1990
Desmond Doss
1919–2006
John Deere
1804–1886
Sinclair Lewis
1885–1951
Tawakkol Karman
b. 1979
An Wang
1920–1990
G. H. Hardy
1877–1947
Harry Nyquist
1889–1976
Oleg Antonov
1906–1984
Ramón Mercader
1914–1978
Historical Events
The Central Committee of the Soviet Communist Party voted on February 7, 1990, to renounce Article 6 of the Soviet Constitution, which had guaranteed the Communist Party's 'leading and guiding role' in Soviet society since 1977. Gorbachev pushed the change as part of his perestroika reforms, believing that political competition would strengthen rather than destroy the system. He was catastrophically wrong. Once the monopoly was legally broken, the centrifugal forces that had been building in the Soviet republics accelerated beyond control. Lithuania declared independence within a month. Estonia and Latvia followed. The Baltic states' departure triggered a cascade: by December 1991, eleven of fifteen Soviet republics had declared sovereignty. Gorbachev had dismantled the one structural mechanism that held the USSR together, the party's monopoly on political power, without building anything to replace it.
President Kennedy signed Proclamation 3447 on February 3, 1962, imposing a total embargo on all trade with Cuba, the most comprehensive economic sanctions the US had ever applied to a Western Hemisphere neighbor. The embargo banned all imports of Cuban goods, including sugar and tobacco, and prohibited American companies from doing business with the island. Fidel Castro's nationalization of US-owned refineries, banks, and sugar mills without compensation had triggered the initial freeze. The Bay of Pigs invasion's failure the previous year had eliminated the military option, leaving economic strangulation as Kennedy's primary tool. The embargo pushed Cuba deeper into Soviet dependence, culminating in the missile crisis nine months later. Over sixty years later, the embargo remains in effect, making it the longest-running trade embargo in modern history. Cuba estimates its cumulative economic damage at over billion. The sanctions have failed to dislodge the Castro regime.
Representatives of twelve European nations signed the Maastricht Treaty on February 7, 1992, transforming the European Economic Community into the European Union and committing members to a shared currency, a common foreign and security policy, and cooperation on justice and home affairs. The treaty introduced European citizenship for the first time, granting all nationals of member states the right to live, work, and vote in any EU country. The most controversial provision was the convergence criteria for the single currency, which required member states to limit government debt, inflation, and interest rates to specified thresholds before joining. Britain and Denmark negotiated opt-outs from the euro. The French ratified the treaty by a razor-thin margin of 51 percent in a referendum that revealed deep public skepticism. The Maastricht Treaty created the legal and institutional framework that would grow from twelve members to twenty-seven and bind 450 million people into the world's largest single market.
Pakistan's government established Bahria University through a presidential ordinance, creating a higher education institution affiliated with the Pakistan Navy. The university expanded rapidly across multiple campuses, producing graduates in engineering, business, and computer science who strengthened Pakistan's professional workforce and defense capabilities.
Two of Basil II's best generals turned on him at once. Bardas Phokas the Younger and Bardas Skleros — both from military aristocracy, both commanding armies, both with legitimate claims to power. They'd rebelled separately before. This time they joined forces. Basil was 29 and looked finished. The empire's eastern frontier collapsed. Rebel armies marched toward Constantinople. Basil had one option left: he asked the prince of Kiev for help. Vladimir sent 6,000 warriors. The price was Basil's sister in marriage and the conversion of Rus to Orthodox Christianity. Basil crushed the rebellion. But that deal? It created Russia as we know it.
Savonarola convinced Florence to burn their own stuff. Not just books — mirrors, wigs, musical instruments, paintings by Botticelli and other masters, dice, perfume, fancy dresses. People walked up and threw in family heirlooms. They'd built a sixty-foot pyramid of what they called vanities in the Piazza della Signoria. February 7, 1497. The fire burned for hours. Botticelli himself may have tossed in some of his own work. A year later, almost to the day, they burned Savonarola in the same square. Same spot. The Medici came back. Florence went right back to making art.
Sepé Tiaraju died defending land the Jesuits had already signed away. Spain and Portugal redrew South American borders in 1750, trading seven Guaraní missions like real estate. The Jesuits agreed. The 30,000 Guaraní living there didn't. Sepé led the resistance for six years. Spanish and Portuguese troops killed him in a skirmish on February 7, 1756. His people fought another five months before surrender. The Jesuits who'd protected them for a century watched from the sidelines.
Napoleon found Bennigsen's Russian army at Eylau on February 7, 1807. The French took the town after brutal street fighting in a blizzard. But the Russians didn't retreat. They formed up outside the walls and waited for morning. The next day became one of the bloodiest battles of the Napoleonic Wars — 25,000 dead in the snow, neither side winning, both claiming victory. Napoleon, who'd won every major battle for a decade, spent the night sleeping in a pile of Russian corpses. It was the first time his army saw him unable to break an enemy. The myth of invincibility started cracking at Eylau.
Napoleon fought the Russians at Eylau in a blizzard so thick his cavalry charged into their own infantry. The French killed 25,000 men. The Russians killed 25,000 men. Nobody won. Both sides held their ground through the night, then the Russians left at dawn. Napoleon claimed victory because he controlled the frozen field. But he couldn't pursue. A third of his army couldn't walk. Marshal Augereau's entire corps got lost in the snow and was destroyed in twenty minutes. It was the first time Napoleon's Grand Army had bled itself to a stalemate. He stopped mentioning Eylau in his bulletins home.
Two frigates met off the coast of West Africa and spent five hours trying to kill each other. The French Aréthuse and British Amelia were evenly matched — same guns, same crew size, same captain's stubbornness. They closed to pistol shot and fired broadside after broadside. Both masts came down. Both captains were wounded. Both ships were taking water. At nightfall they drifted apart, too damaged to continue, too damaged to chase. The Aréthuse limped to Brest. The Amelia made it to Plymouth. Neither could claim victory. Naval warfare had no referee, no bell to ring. Sometimes you just survived.
Two frigates met off French Guinea — Aréthuse and HMS Amelia, almost identical in guns and crew. They circled each other for five hours, firing broadsides at point-blank range. Neither could gain advantage. Both captains were wounded. Both ships were shredded. At nightfall they just... stopped. Sailed away in opposite directions, too damaged to continue, too evenly matched to win. The British lost 46 men, the French 70. Neither side could claim victory. Naval warfare usually ended with capture or sinking. This one ended with mutual exhaustion and a silent agreement to leave.
Raffles spent exactly four months in Singapore after founding it. He signed the treaty in February 1819, installed William Farquhar as Resident, then sailed away. He wouldn't return for four years. Farquhar built the actual city — roads, housing, trade regulations, the port that made it work. When Raffles finally came back in 1823, he hated everything Farquhar had done and fired him. The city Raffles gets credit for? Farquhar built it while Raffles was gone.
Ras Ali Alula crushed Wube Haile Maryam at Debre Tabor in 1842, but it didn't matter. Ali was regent for a child emperor nobody respected. Wube controlled Semien and Tigray and had actual soldiers. The battle should have settled who ran Ethiopia. Instead it just proved both men were too weak to hold the country together. Within three years, a minor noble named Kassa would beat them both and crown himself Emperor Tewodros II. He'd unify Ethiopia by force and drag it into the modern age. Ali and Wube's war was the last gasp of the old system—regional warlords fighting over a throne neither could keep.
Tasmania beat everyone to the secret ballot — including Britain, which ruled them. The Electoral Act of 1856 let voters mark their choices in private, no public declarations, no landlords watching. Before this, you voted out loud or raised your hand. Your boss knew. Your neighbors knew. Intimidation was the point. Tasmania's ballot had another first: the government printed it. Candidates couldn't hand out pre-marked papers anymore. Within two years, South Australia and Victoria copied it. By 1872, Britain adopted what they called "the Australian ballot." The empire learned democracy from a prison colony.
Wajid Ali Shah didn't fight the British. He wrote poetry instead. When the East India Company demanded his kingdom in 1856, he composed ghazals about loss and exile. He left Lucknow with 200 elephants, his entire court, and his personal zoo. The British said Awadh was "misgoverned." They really wanted the tax revenue — Awadh was one of India's richest states. A year later, his former subjects launched the largest rebellion against British rule in Indian history.
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.
Next Birthday
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days until February 7
Quote of the Day
“If there is no struggle, there is no progress.”
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