Today In History
March 22 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Goran Bregović, Marcel Marceau, and Emilio Aguinaldo.

Intel Ships First Pentium: Computing Revolution Starts
Intel Corporation shipped the first Pentium chips, delivering over 100 MIPS and a 64-bit data path that finally outpaced the aging 80486 architecture. This leap in processing power ignited the personal computer boom by enabling complex graphics, multimedia applications, and faster software execution for everyday users.
Famous Birthdays
b. 1950
1923–2007
Emilio Aguinaldo
1869–1964
George Benson
b. 1943
Robert Andrews Millikan
1868–1953
Des Browne
b. 1952
Els Borst
1932–2014
Euronymous
d. 1993
George Ferguson
b. 1947
John Otto
b. 1977
Pat Robertson
1930–2023
William Pulteney
1684–1764
Historical Events
Intel Corporation shipped the first Pentium chips, delivering over 100 MIPS and a 64-bit data path that finally outpaced the aging 80486 architecture. This leap in processing power ignited the personal computer boom by enabling complex graphics, multimedia applications, and faster software execution for everyday users.
Yuan Shikai's forced abdication in 1916 ended his brief eight-month attempt to restore imperial rule, instantly collapsing his warlord-backed monarchy. This sudden reversal plunged China back into a fragmented era of regional warlordism that would dominate the nation for decades rather than establishing a stable republic.
Arab leaders signed a charter in Cairo to establish the Arab League, creating a formal political body designed to coordinate regional policy and defend sovereignty against external interference. This alliance immediately reshaped Middle Eastern diplomacy by providing a unified platform that would later influence border disputes, resource management, and collective responses to colonial withdrawal across the region.
The trophy didn't even exist yet. When Montreal's AAA beat Ottawa 3-1, Lord Stanley's famous cup was still being engraved in London — it wouldn't arrive in Canada for another month. The players celebrated their championship without knowing what they'd actually won. Five teams had competed all season for a prize none of them had seen, based on a letter from Britain's Governor General promising "a challenge cup." When the silver bowl finally showed up, it stood just seven inches tall and cost ten guineas. Today it's grown to nearly three feet, covered in rings documenting every winner, because someone decided champions should add their names rather than pass along the original.
Workers shuffling out factory doors for lunch — that's what Auguste and Louis Lumière chose as humanity's first public movie screening. Not an epic battle. Not a royal coronation. Just 46 seconds of people leaving work on a spring afternoon in Lyon. On December 28, 1895, 33 Parisians paid one franc each at the Grand Café to watch ten of these mundane snippets, and most thought it was a magic trick with mirrors. Within three years, the Lumières had trained 200 operators who fanned across five continents filming everything from tsunamis to Tsar Nicholas II. The brothers thought cinema was "an invention without a future" and quit to focus on color photography. They'd accidentally created an industry worth $100 billion today by filming the most boring thing they could find.
The peace treaty lasted 54 years—longer than most modern alliances. When Governor John Carver sat down with Massasoit in March 1621, both men knew their people were desperate. The Pilgrims had lost half their number over winter. The Wampanoags needed allies against rival tribes. Squanto, who'd been kidnapped to England years before and spoke perfect English, brokered six specific terms: no weapons when visiting, return of stolen tools, mutual defense. It worked. The Wampanoags and Pilgrims didn't fight until 1675, after both original signers were dead. That's longer than America has kept most of its treaties with Native nations.
Powhatan warriors launched a coordinated surprise attack across multiple English settlements near Jamestown, killing 347 colonists in a single morning. The massacre eliminated a third of Virginia's English population and shattered any pretense of coexistence, triggering decades of retaliatory warfare that ultimately dispossessed the Powhatan Confederacy of its ancestral lands.
Morgan's men mutinied before the raid even started — they'd signed up to attack a coastal city with easy escape routes, not march inland through Cuban jungle. The Welsh privateer had to promise them double shares just to get his 700 buccaneers moving toward Puerto del Príncipe. When they finally sacked the town, residents had already hidden their valuables, and Morgan's crew netted only 50,000 pieces of eight — roughly 70 pieces per man after expenses. The disappointing haul taught Morgan a crucial lesson: he'd need better intelligence and faster strikes. Two years later, he'd use both to capture Panama City in the most audacious raid of the Caribbean's golden age of piracy. Sometimes failure makes the best teacher.
The fort's walls were made of upright logs, and inside, 950 Tuscarora people—warriors, women, children—had taken refuge against Colonel James Moore's South Carolina militia. Moore brought 33 white soldiers and nearly 1,000 Indigenous allies. Three days of siege. Then the assault. When Fort Neoheroka fell, Moore's men killed or enslaved roughly 950 people, effectively destroying Tuscarora resistance in a single blow. The survivors didn't vanish—they walked north and became the sixth nation of the Iroquois Confederacy in 1722, turning a crushing defeat in Carolina into membership in the most powerful Indigenous alliance on the continent. One colonial victory didn't end a people; it relocated their power base 500 miles away.
Parliament thought taxing paper was safer than taxing land. The Stamp Act of 1765 hit everything colonists touched—newspapers, playing cards, legal documents, even dice. Every sheet needed a revenue stamp, purchased in British sterling that most Americans didn't have. Benjamin Franklin, living in London as Pennsylvania's agent, initially downplayed colonial anger. He was wrong. Within eight months, stamp distributors were fleeing their posts, effigies burned in every port, and the Sons of Liberty had formed. Parliament repealed it in 1766, but on the same day passed the Declaratory Act insisting they could tax colonies "in all cases whatsoever." The British won the argument and lost an empire.
The borders drawn in London didn't include Athens. When Britain, France, and Russia sat down to carve out an independent Greece in 1829, they created a tiny state south of a line from Arta to Volos—excluding the ancient capital, Thessaly, and most islands Greeks actually lived on. Just 800,000 people. The diplomats weren't being generous; they were terrified a larger Greece would destabilize the Ottoman Empire they still needed for trade. It took another century and four more wars before Greece absorbed Athens, Crete, and Macedonia. The protecting powers weren't protecting Greece—they were protecting themselves from it.
He suspended habeas corpus to fight the Ku Klux Klan. That's what got Governor William Woods Holden impeached in 1871 — not corruption, not theft, but sending state militia against white supremacist terrorists who'd murdered over a hundred Black North Carolinians and their Republican allies. The North Carolina legislature, filled with former Confederates newly returned to power, convicted him on six of eight charges. His crime? Defending freedmen's right to vote. Holden lost his pension, his reputation, everything. But here's the twist: in 2011, 140 years later, North Carolina officially pardoned him. Sometimes history's villains become its heroes, just a century too late.
The self-proclaimed emperor wore yellow robes and claimed Buddha himself had ordained his rule. Phan Xích Long convinced hundreds of followers in Saigon that magic would protect them from French bullets — coconuts inscribed with mystical symbols would become grenades, he promised. Colonial police arrested him on March 27, 1913, but his devotees attacked anyway the next day. Armed with those coconuts and bamboo sticks, they charged French machine guns. The massacre lasted minutes. But here's what haunts: three decades later, when Ho Chi Minh organized Vietnam's independence movement, he studied Phan's uprising obsessively — not to copy the mysticism, but to understand exactly how peasant desperation could be channeled into rebellion. The failed prophet accidentally wrote the blueprint.
Roosevelt's first act as president wasn't about banks or jobs—it was legalizing beer. Nine days into office, he signed the Cullen-Harrison Act, bringing back 3.2% alcohol after thirteen years of Prohibition. The beer industry put 750,000 Americans back to work within months, from brewery workers to truck drivers to bartenders. April 7th became known as "New Beer's Eve," with crowds gathering outside taverns at midnight, waiting for the taps to flow again. FDR called it "a good beginning"—but really, he'd discovered something economists still cite: sometimes the fastest way to restart a broken economy is to give people back what they actually wanted in the first place.
Royal Navy escorts protecting a Malta-bound convoy fought off a superior Italian naval force in the Second Battle of Sirte, using smoke screens and aggressive destroyer attacks to drive back enemy battleships. Though the convoy suffered heavy losses from air attack after the battle, the engagement demonstrated that determined escort tactics could neutralize a larger fleet.
Fun Facts
Zodiac Sign
Aries
Mar 21 -- Apr 19
Fire sign. Courageous, energetic, and confident.
Birthstone
Aquamarine
Pale blue
Symbolizes courage, serenity, and clear communication.
Next Birthday
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days until March 22
Quote of the Day
“Nobody got anywhere in the world by simply being content.”
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