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November 4 in History

Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Laura Bush, Sean Combs, and Joseph Rotblat.

Tutankhamun's Tomb Uncovered: Egypt's Secrets Revealed
1922Event

Tutankhamun's Tomb Uncovered: Egypt's Secrets Revealed

Howard Carter discovered a step carved into the bedrock of the Valley of the Kings on November 4, 1922, after six years of excavation funded by Lord Carnarvon. Clearing the staircase revealed a sealed doorway stamped with Tutankhamun's cartouche. When Carter peered through a small hole into the antechamber on November 26, Carnarvon asked 'Can you see anything?' Carter replied 'Yes, wonderful things.' The tomb was the most intact royal burial ever found in Egypt: four rooms containing over 5,000 objects, including the iconic gold death mask weighing 24 pounds of solid gold. Tutankhamun was a minor pharaoh who died at 19. His tomb was overlooked by grave robbers for 3,000 years precisely because it was small and buried under debris from later construction. The discovery ignited global 'Egyptomania' that persists today.

Famous Birthdays

Laura Bush

Laura Bush

b. 1946

Sean Combs

Sean Combs

b. 1969

Joseph Rotblat

Joseph Rotblat

1908–2005

Thomas Klestil

Thomas Klestil

d. 2004

Historical Events

Howard Carter discovered a step carved into the bedrock of the Valley of the Kings on November 4, 1922, after six years of excavation funded by Lord Carnarvon. Clearing the staircase revealed a sealed doorway stamped with Tutankhamun's cartouche. When Carter peered through a small hole into the antechamber on November 26, Carnarvon asked 'Can you see anything?' Carter replied 'Yes, wonderful things.' The tomb was the most intact royal burial ever found in Egypt: four rooms containing over 5,000 objects, including the iconic gold death mask weighing 24 pounds of solid gold. Tutankhamun was a minor pharaoh who died at 19. His tomb was overlooked by grave robbers for 3,000 years precisely because it was small and buried under debris from later construction. The discovery ignited global 'Egyptomania' that persists today.
1922

Howard Carter discovered a step carved into the bedrock of the Valley of the Kings on November 4, 1922, after six years of excavation funded by Lord Carnarvon. Clearing the staircase revealed a sealed doorway stamped with Tutankhamun's cartouche. When Carter peered through a small hole into the antechamber on November 26, Carnarvon asked 'Can you see anything?' Carter replied 'Yes, wonderful things.' The tomb was the most intact royal burial ever found in Egypt: four rooms containing over 5,000 objects, including the iconic gold death mask weighing 24 pounds of solid gold. Tutankhamun was a minor pharaoh who died at 19. His tomb was overlooked by grave robbers for 3,000 years precisely because it was small and buried under debris from later construction. The discovery ignited global 'Egyptomania' that persists today.

Hungarian students marched on Parliament in Budapest on October 23, 1956, demanding free elections, the withdrawal of Soviet troops, and the return of Imre Nagy as prime minister. Within days, the protest became a national revolution. Workers' councils took over factories. Armed civilians fought Soviet tanks. Nagy formed a coalition government and announced Hungary's withdrawal from the Warsaw Pact. On November 4, the Soviet Union responded with a massive invasion: 17 divisions and 1,000 tanks rolled into Budapest. Fighting lasted four days. An estimated 2,500 Hungarians were killed and 200,000 fled the country. Nagy was arrested, tried in secret, and executed in 1958. The West condemned the invasion but did nothing. The message was clear: the Cold War's boundaries would be enforced with tanks.
1956

Hungarian students marched on Parliament in Budapest on October 23, 1956, demanding free elections, the withdrawal of Soviet troops, and the return of Imre Nagy as prime minister. Within days, the protest became a national revolution. Workers' councils took over factories. Armed civilians fought Soviet tanks. Nagy formed a coalition government and announced Hungary's withdrawal from the Warsaw Pact. On November 4, the Soviet Union responded with a massive invasion: 17 divisions and 1,000 tanks rolled into Budapest. Fighting lasted four days. An estimated 2,500 Hungarians were killed and 200,000 fled the country. Nagy was arrested, tried in secret, and executed in 1958. The West condemned the invasion but did nothing. The message was clear: the Cold War's boundaries would be enforced with tanks.

Jane Goodall watched a chimpanzee she had named David Greybeard strip leaves from a twig and insert it into a termite mound to fish for insects on November 4, 1960, at Gombe Stream in Tanzania. Goodall was 26 and had no university degree; Louis Leakey had sent her to study chimps because he believed a woman without academic preconceptions would observe more clearly. When she telegraphed Leakey about the tool use, he responded: 'Now we must redefine tool, redefine man, or accept chimpanzees as humans.' The discovery shattered the prevailing definition of humanity as the only toolmaking species. Goodall went on to document chimps hunting, waging war, and showing empathy and grief. Her 60-year study at Gombe is the longest continuous study of any wild animal population in history.
1960

Jane Goodall watched a chimpanzee she had named David Greybeard strip leaves from a twig and insert it into a termite mound to fish for insects on November 4, 1960, at Gombe Stream in Tanzania. Goodall was 26 and had no university degree; Louis Leakey had sent her to study chimps because he believed a woman without academic preconceptions would observe more clearly. When she telegraphed Leakey about the tool use, he responded: 'Now we must redefine tool, redefine man, or accept chimpanzees as humans.' The discovery shattered the prevailing definition of humanity as the only toolmaking species. Goodall went on to document chimps hunting, waging war, and showing empathy and grief. Her 60-year study at Gombe is the longest continuous study of any wild animal population in history.

California social workers discovered Genie on November 4, 1970, a 13-year-old girl who had spent virtually her entire life locked in a small room, strapped to a potty chair during the day and caged in a crib at night. Her father, Clark Wiley, beat anyone in the household who spoke to her. She could not walk, speak, or chew solid food. Linguists at UCLA saw a unique opportunity to study whether language acquisition had a critical period. Genie learned vocabulary rapidly but never mastered grammar, supporting the hypothesis. The ethical controversy was fierce: were scientists helping her or exploiting her? Federal funding was cut in 1975. Genie bounced between foster homes where she was abused, and regressed. She spent the rest of her life in institutional care in California. Her father killed himself before going to trial.
1970

California social workers discovered Genie on November 4, 1970, a 13-year-old girl who had spent virtually her entire life locked in a small room, strapped to a potty chair during the day and caged in a crib at night. Her father, Clark Wiley, beat anyone in the household who spoke to her. She could not walk, speak, or chew solid food. Linguists at UCLA saw a unique opportunity to study whether language acquisition had a critical period. Genie learned vocabulary rapidly but never mastered grammar, supporting the hypothesis. The ethical controversy was fierce: were scientists helping her or exploiting her? Federal funding was cut in 1975. Genie bounced between foster homes where she was abused, and regressed. She spent the rest of her life in institutional care in California. Her father killed himself before going to trial.

Iranian students stormed the U.S. Embassy in Tehran on November 4, 1979, seizing 66 Americans. They demanded the return of the deposed Shah, who had been admitted to the U.S. for cancer treatment two weeks earlier. Thirteen hostages were released within weeks. The remaining 52 were held for 444 days. A rescue mission, Operation Eagle Claw, ended in disaster on April 24, 1980, when a helicopter collided with a transport plane in the Iranian desert, killing eight servicemen. The crisis consumed the final year of Jimmy Carter's presidency. ABC News launched a nightly program, 'America Held Hostage,' that evolved into Nightline. The hostages were released on January 20, 1981, minutes after Ronald Reagan's inauguration. Iran timed the release to deny Carter any credit. The embassy has been an anti-American museum since.
1979

Iranian students stormed the U.S. Embassy in Tehran on November 4, 1979, seizing 66 Americans. They demanded the return of the deposed Shah, who had been admitted to the U.S. for cancer treatment two weeks earlier. Thirteen hostages were released within weeks. The remaining 52 were held for 444 days. A rescue mission, Operation Eagle Claw, ended in disaster on April 24, 1980, when a helicopter collided with a transport plane in the Iranian desert, killing eight servicemen. The crisis consumed the final year of Jimmy Carter's presidency. ABC News launched a nightly program, 'America Held Hostage,' that evolved into Nightline. The hostages were released on January 20, 1981, minutes after Ronald Reagan's inauguration. Iran timed the release to deny Carter any credit. The embassy has been an anti-American museum since.

1825

Governor DeWitt Clinton poured Lake Erie water into New York Harbor in the "Wedding of the Waters" ceremony, marking the Erie Canal's completion after eight years of construction. The 363-mile waterway slashed shipping costs by 95 percent and transformed New York City into America's commercial capital.

2025

UPS Airlines Flight 2976, a McDonnell Douglas MD-11F cargo jet, crashed into multiple buildings shortly after takeoff from Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport, killing all three crew members and twelve people on the ground. The disaster prompted immediate federal investigations into aging freighter aircraft safety standards and takeoff procedures.

512

Riots erupt in Constantinople as citizens, enraged by Emperor Anastasius' removal of Chalcedonian patriarchs and liturgical shifts, attempt to crown Areobindus as their new ruler. This violent uprising forces the imperial court to confront deep religious fractures within the capital, ultimately accelerating the political instability that would define the end of Anastasius' reign.

1333

The water rose so fast that horses drowned inside their stables. Giovanni Villani watched Florence drown in 1333, scribbling furiously as the Arno swallowed bridges, mills, and entire neighborhoods. He counted the dead, measured the flood's height against city walls, and recorded losses worth 150,000 gold florins. But here's the twist — Villani was also a merchant, personally ruined by the same disaster he documented. His chronicle survived. His fortune didn't. The most reliable witness to catastrophe was also its victim.

1354

Paganino Doria's Genoese fleet annihilates Niccolò Pisani's entire Venetian armada at the Battle of Sapienza, seizing every ship in a single day. This crushing victory forces Venice to sue for peace and cedes control of the Aegean Sea to Genoa for decades, shifting the balance of Mediterranean trade power.

1501

She'd traveled for months, survived seasickness, and didn't even speak English. Catherine of Aragon finally met Arthur Tudor in November 1501 — a 15-year-old Spanish princess shaking hands with England's future king. Arthur was 15 too. They married days later at St. Paul's Cathedral. But Arthur died just five months afterward, probably from sweating sickness. And Catherine stayed. That decision — keeping her in England — eventually produced Henry VIII's most infamous chapter. Arthur's forgotten death shaped everything.

1576

Three days. That's all it took for Spanish troops to reduce Europe's wealthiest trading city to ash and corpses. Mutinying soldiers — unpaid, furious, completely out of control — killed roughly 8,000 Antwerp citizens and torched 1,000 buildings. Their own commanders couldn't stop them. The Spanish Crown called it a mutiny; history called it the "Spanish Fury." And Antwerp never fully recovered. The city that once handled 40% of world trade quietly surrendered its crown to Amsterdam. Spain's "victory" handed the Dutch their greatest recruitment tool.

1677

She was fifteen. He was twenty-six, smallpox-scarred, and barely spoke during the ceremony. Mary wept so hard witnesses thought something had gone wrong. But this awkward November wedding between a sobbing teenager and a Dutch prince nobody found charming would eventually reshape the entire British constitution. William and Mary didn't just share a throne — they accepted it under conditions that permanently limited royal power. The Glorious Revolution started here, in a tearful London chapel, with a bride who didn't want to go.

1791

Nearly 1,000 American soldiers died in a single morning. That's more than double the losses at Little Bighorn, yet most Americans have never heard of it. General Arthur St. Clair watched his army collapse along the Wabash River in minutes — ambushed by Miami, Shawnee, and Delaware warriors led by Little Turtle. Washington was furious. Congress launched its first-ever investigation of the executive branch. But here's the twist: the U.S. Constitution's oversight powers were essentially stress-tested by an Indigenous military victory.

1852

Cavour didn't want a unified Italy. Not at first. The calculating Piedmontese nobleman became prime minister of a small northern kingdom in November 1852 with one obsession: modernize Piedmont-Sardinia, not absorb nine fractured states. But alliances with France, wars against Austria, and one very inconvenient nationalist named Garibaldi kept escalating the stakes. Within nine years, a regional power play became a nation of 22 million people. He built the country almost by accident — then died before seeing it finished.

Fun Facts

Zodiac Sign

Scorpio

Oct 23 -- Nov 21

Water sign. Resourceful, powerful, and passionate.

Birthstone

Topaz

Golden / Blue

Symbolizes friendship, generosity, and joy.

Next Birthday

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days until November 4

Quote of the Day

“Even if you are on the right track, you’ll get run over if you just sit there.”

Will Rogers

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