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On this day

December 29

200 Lakota Fall: Wounded Knee Massacre (1890). Luftwaffe Fire Rains: London Burns After 200 Die (1940). Notable births include Madame de Pompadour (1721), Andrew Johnson (1808), William Ewart Gladstone (1809).

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200 Lakota Fall: Wounded Knee Massacre
1890Event

200 Lakota Fall: Wounded Knee Massacre

U.S. cavalrymen opened indiscriminate fire on an unarmed Lakota encampment, slaughtering over 200 men, women, and children in a single morning. This massacre extinguished organized armed resistance on the Great Plains and cemented federal control over Native lands through brutal force rather than treaty.

Luftwaffe Fire Rains: London Burns After 200 Die
1940

Luftwaffe Fire Rains: London Burns After 200 Die

The Luftwaffe unleashed a devastating barrage of firebombs on London during the Second Great Fire, claiming nearly 200 civilian lives and leaving vast swathes of the city in ruins. This attack shattered any lingering hope that the capital could remain untouched, compelling Britain to confront the brutal reality of total war against an enemy willing to target non-combatants directly.

Khmer Rouge Apologizes: A Century of Blood
1998

Khmer Rouge Apologizes: A Century of Blood

Leaders of the Khmer Rouge issued a public apology for the 1970s genocide that claimed over 1 million lives, offering a belated acknowledgment of crimes that devastated Cambodian society. This rare admission provided a fragile foundation for national reconciliation, allowing survivors to finally hear official recognition of their suffering after decades of silence and denial.

Feynman Envisions Nanotech: Plenty of Room at the Bottom
1959

Feynman Envisions Nanotech: Plenty of Room at the Bottom

Richard Feynman delivered his visionary lecture "There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom" at Caltech, proposing that machines could manipulate individual atoms to build structures from the molecular level up. The speech anticipated the entire field of nanotechnology by decades and is now recognized as the intellectual starting point for technologies worth hundreds of billions of dollars annually.

Havel Elected President: Czechoslovakia Goes Free
1989

Havel Elected President: Czechoslovakia Goes Free

A playwright who'd spent years in prison for his words walks into Prague Castle as president. Václav Havel never led an army or ran a campaign — he wrote essays the secret police confiscated and staged plays the government banned. Four months earlier, he was still considered a criminal. But the Velvet Revolution moved so fast that by December 29, parliament chose him: 323 votes, zero shots fired. His first act? Amnesty for 22,000 prisoners. His second? Apologizing to the nation for the crimes committed in its name. The man who signed letters from jail with "yours in hope" now signed laws.

Quote of the Day

“A man has cause for regret only when he sows and no one reaps.”

Historical events

Born on December 29

Portrait of Ross Lynch
Ross Lynch 1995

His mom homeschooled all five Lynch kids in a house that doubled as a recording studio.

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Ross wrote his first song at 13, taught himself guitar by watching YouTube videos, and spent his teens juggling Disney Channel shoots with touring in R5—the family band where all four siblings played instruments. The van rides between gigs became songwriting sessions. He'd go from acting as a squeaky-clean teen idol to playing Jeffrey Dahmer at 22, a role he researched so intensely he stopped sleeping normally for months. Now he fronts The Driver Era with his brother Rocky, making music that sounds nothing like the pop-rock that made him famous. The homeschooled kid who learned guitar from strangers on the internet turned into someone who can't be pinned down.

Portrait of Danny McBride
Danny McBride 1976

A kid from Statesboro, Georgia spent his college years making a movie about a taekwondo instructor with a mullet.

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It cost $70,000, mostly borrowed. That instructor was Kenny Powers — well, not yet. First came *The Foot Fist Way*, which nobody saw until Will Ferrell's production company bought it. Then HBO gave McBride a show about a washed-up baseball player so vulgar, so specific, so weirdly human that it launched an entire comedy empire. Now he runs a production company called Rough House Pictures, churns out hit after hit, and still plays every character like they're one bad decision away from a parking lot meltdown. The mullet guy made it.

Portrait of Pimp C
Pimp C 1973

His mother bought him a keyboard at eight.

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Chad Butler taught himself to produce in Port Arthur, Texas, recording tracks in his bedroom while his friends played outside. By sixteen, he'd partnered with Bun B to form UGK — Underground Kingz — and they'd spend the next two decades defining Southern hip-hop's sound. He produced almost everything they made: those slow, heavy beats that made car speakers rattle across Houston and eventually the whole country. When he died at thirty-three in a Los Angeles hotel, he'd just finished recording tracks for what would become their final album together. Port Arthur named a street after him.

Portrait of Dexter Holland
Dexter Holland 1965

The kid who'd grow up to scream "You're gonna go far, kid" spent his early years as a valedictorian and molecular…

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biology student at USC—researching HIV on a government grant while playing punk shows in Orange County garages. Holland didn't drop out to chase music; he published in peer-reviewed journals first, then shelved his PhD when "Come Out and Play" went platinum. Thirty years later, between albums, he finished that doctorate. His dissertation on HIV sequencing sits in the same house as his gold records. Not the typical punk rock trajectory.

Portrait of Francisco Bustamante
Francisco Bustamante 1963

Born into a family of nine kids in Tarlac where backyard billiards tables outnumbered schools.

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Started playing at eight on a table his father built from scrap wood and salvaged felt. At fifteen, hustling games in Manila pool halls, he'd pocket more cash in a night than his father made in a week. Became "Django" after locals said he moved around the table like a gunslinger. Won his first world title at thirty-seven—unusually late—then collected four more. The Philippines calls him a national treasure now, but he still plays in the same smoky Manila halls where he learned to make impossible shots look easy. Turned pool from bar sport to national pride.

Portrait of Thomas Bach
Thomas Bach 1953

Thomas Bach was born in December 1953 in Würzburg, Germany.

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He won the gold medal in fencing at the 1976 Montreal Olympics, part of West Germany's épée team. He moved into sports administration, eventually becoming President of the International Olympic Committee in 2013. His tenure has been dominated by questions about the IOC's relationship with authoritarian states — the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, the Russian doping scandal, the decision on athlete eligibility. He became, in the eyes of critics, the person who managed the contradiction between the Olympic ideals and the countries that hosted them.

Portrait of Cozy Powell
Cozy Powell 1947

Colin Flooks showed up to his first proper gig with a kit he'd built himself from scrap metal and animal skins.

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The name change came later — "Cozy" because he'd fall asleep on bandmates' couches between shows. By 1973 he was hitting a bass drum so hard on "Dance With the Devil" that session engineers kept checking if their equipment was broken. He recorded with everyone: Black Sabbath, Rainbow, Whitesnake, even Jeff Beck. Speed killed him at 50 — not drugs, an actual car crash in bad weather. But that opening fill on "Stargazer" still sounds like someone kicking down a cathedral door.

Portrait of Rick Danko
Rick Danko 1943

He was singing in bars at 14, lying about his age in small Ontario towns.

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By 17, Rick Danko was backing Ronnie Hawkins with four other unknowns who'd soon become The Band. His voice — that raw, aching tenor on "It Makes No Difference" — could break your heart in three notes. And his bass lines, melodic and wandering, never sat still. He played Woodstock, toured with Dylan, helped invent Americana before anyone called it that. The drugs nearly killed him multiple times. Cancer actually did, at 56. But listen to "Stage Fright" today. That's a kid from Simcoe who never stopped singing like the bar was closing and this was his last song.

Portrait of Ray Thomas
Ray Thomas 1941

His grandmother gave him a harmonica at seven.

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He turned it into a flute obsession by fourteen. Ray Thomas joined The Moody Blues as their flautist in 1964, back when they were still a rhythm and blues band playing Birmingham pubs. Then came "Nights in White Satin" in 1967—his flute opening became one of rock's most recognized intros. He wrote "Legend of a Mind," the band's tribute to Timothy Leary, and sang lead on dozens of album tracks across their progressive rock transformation. After thirty years with the Moodies, he retired in 2002 to paint and sculpt. The flute player who helped invent symphonic rock spent his last decade creating art nobody expected.

Portrait of Yi Gu
Yi Gu 1931

Yi Gu was born in a Tokyo hospital while his mother, Korea's last crown princess, lived under house arrest by the…

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Japanese government that had annexed her homeland. His father was confined to a separate residence. The baby who should have been Korea's future king instead grew up stateless — too Korean for Japan, too Japanese for Korea. He studied architecture at MIT, worked for an American firm, married a Japanese commoner. When South Korea finally let him visit in 1963, he didn't speak Korean. He died in 2005, the same year as his mother, having spent his entire life as a prince without a country, proof that empires don't just conquer territory — they erase futures.

Portrait of Shlomo Venezia
Shlomo Venezia 1923

Shlomo Venezia was 21 when the Nazis forced him into the Sonderkommando at Auschwitz — the Jewish prisoners who worked…

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inside the gas chambers. For eight months, he removed bodies, cleaned killing rooms, and burned the dead. He survived by pure chance: the SS needed translators who spoke Greek, Italian, and Ladino. After the war, he stayed silent for 50 years. Then he started talking. His 2007 memoir broke open one of the Holocaust's most buried truths: that Jews were forced to participate in their own people's murder. He testified until he died, carrying a guilt that was never his to bear.

Portrait of Dobrica Ćosić
Dobrica Ćosić 1921

He grew up barefoot in a Serbian village, reading by candlelight.

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Then he joined Tito's partisans at nineteen, fought through World War II, and became Yugoslavia's most celebrated novelist — writing epics that defined Serbian identity for a generation. But his books turned critical of communism, got him expelled from the party in 1968, and thirty years later he became the first president of what remained after Yugoslavia tore itself apart. The writer who imagined a nation ended up leading its fragments. He died at ninety-two, having watched every version of Yugoslavia he believed in disappear.

Portrait of Tom Bradley
Tom Bradley 1917

Tom Bradley broke racial barriers as the first African American mayor of Los Angeles, holding the office for twenty years.

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By forging a powerful coalition of Black, Jewish, and white liberal voters, he transformed the city into a global economic hub and oversaw the massive infrastructure expansion required for the 1984 Summer Olympics.

Portrait of Ronald Coase
Ronald Coase 1910

Ronald Coase revolutionized economics by proving that property rights and transaction costs dictate how markets function.

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His insights into why firms exist and how private parties resolve externalities earned him the 1991 Nobel Prize. By shifting the focus from government regulation to the mechanics of exchange, he fundamentally altered modern legal and economic analysis.

Portrait of Nie Rongzhen
Nie Rongzhen 1899

A teenager fleeing Qing dynasty collapse, he studied chemistry in Belgium on a work-study program — mixing compounds by…

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day, reading Marx by night. Factory work radicalized him faster than any classroom could. He joined the Communist Party in France at 23, not China. Decades later, as marshal, he commanded the development of China's atomic bomb and first satellite. The scientist-soldier who never got his degree built the weapons that changed Asia's power balance. His lab partners became revolutionaries. His chemistry became geopolitics.

Portrait of Venustiano Carranza
Venustiano Carranza 1859

His family called him "the one who reads too much.

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" A ranch boy from Coahuila who memorized legal codes for fun and wore round glasses that made him look like a schoolteacher. He was. Then mayor at 28, then senator, then the man who drafted Mexico's 1917 Constitution — still in force today, one of the world's first to guarantee labor rights and public education. But he refused to give up power when his time ended. His own generals hunted him through the mountains in 1920, caught him sleeping in a village hut, and shot him in his pajamas. The constitution survived him.

Portrait of William Ewart Gladstone
William Ewart Gladstone 1809

His father owned 2,500 enslaved people across Caribbean plantations.

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Gladstone's first speech in Parliament defended slavery—he was 24 and representing a pocket borough his father controlled. But something shifted. He'd go on to serve as Prime Minister four separate times, more than anyone in British history, and became the Liberal Party's conscience on reform. Pushed through secret ballots, universal education, Irish land rights. Disraeli called him a "sophisticated rhetorician, inebriated with the exuberance of his own verbosity." He read 20,000 books in his lifetime and chopped down trees for stress relief. The man who started by defending bondage ended by trying to give Ireland home rule.

Portrait of Andrew Johnson
Andrew Johnson 1808

His father died saving two men from drowning when Andrew was three.

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His mother bound him to a tailor at age ten — not apprenticed, bound, meaning he couldn't leave. He ran away at fifteen with a $10 bounty on his head. Never spent a day in school. His wife taught him to write. He became president because he was the only Southern senator who refused to abandon the Union when his state seceded. Congress tried to remove him anyway — missed by one vote.

Portrait of Charles Goodyear
Charles Goodyear 1800

The man who'd turn rubber from a curiosity into an industry spent his early years as a hardware merchant's son in…

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Connecticut, going bankrupt at 30 trying to sell farming tools. Obsessed with making rubber usable — it melted in summer, cracked in winter — Charles Goodyear accidentally dropped a rubber-sulfur mixture on a hot stove in 1839. The sample charred at the edges but stayed flexible in the center. He'd discovered vulcanization. He died $200,000 in debt in 1860, never profiting from his patent. Fifty years later, a tire company borrowed his name without paying his heirs a cent.

Portrait of Madame de Pompadour

Madame de Pompadour rose from the Parisian bourgeoisie to become the most powerful woman in France as the official…

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mistress and chief advisor to Louis XV. Her patronage of Voltaire, Diderot, and the porcelain works at Sevres shaped the cultural life of the Enlightenment, while her political influence over foreign policy helped steer France into the Seven Years' War.

Portrait of Ali al-Ridha
Ali al-Ridha 765

His father kept him hidden for eleven years.

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Authorities were hunting Shia leaders, and the eighth imam couldn't be exposed — not yet. Ali al-Ridha grew up in shadows, learning in secret, until he emerged as one of the most respected scholars in Abbasid Persia. Caliph al-Ma'mun eventually named him heir to the entire empire, a political chess move that backfired when Shia communities erupted in celebration. Two years later, Ali died suddenly on a journey to Baghdad. Pomegranate, some say. Poison, say millions who still pilgrimage to his golden-domed shrine in Mashhad, Iran's second-holiest city.

Died on December 29

Portrait of Jimmy Carter

Jimmy Carter died in December 2024 in Plains, Georgia, one hundred years old.

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He was, at his death, the oldest person ever to have served as U.S. President. He was also the president with the longest post-presidential career — forty-three years of building Habitat for Humanity houses, monitoring elections in conflict zones, negotiating with North Korea on his own initiative, and eradicating Guinea worm disease from Africa. He lost reelection in 1980 in a landslide. He spent the next four decades building what some historians call the most consequential post-presidency in American history.

Portrait of Gil de Ferran
Gil de Ferran 2023

Gil de Ferran dominated the early 2000s as a two-time CART champion and the 2003 Indianapolis 500 winner, securing his…

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legacy as one of Brazil's most successful racing drivers. The French-born Brazilian passed away on December 29, 2023, ending a career that redefined speed and strategy in American open-wheel racing.

Portrait of Harold Macmillan
Harold Macmillan 1986

Four publishers rejected his first book.

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His wife had a decades-long affair with his best friend, and he knew. Harold Macmillan, the unflappable British PM who told Americans "you've never had it so good" during postwar boom years, spent his final decades in the House of Lords writing memoirs that sold better than those early novels ever did. He outlived most of his Cabinet, watched Thatcher reshape his party into something he barely recognized, and died still quotable: asked about his biggest challenge, he'd said "events, dear boy, events." The publisher's son became the publisher.

Portrait of Wilhelm Maybach
Wilhelm Maybach 1929

He designed the first Mercedes.

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Not just "worked on it" — designed it, from scratch, in 1900. Before that, he'd invented the spray-nozzle carburetor that made modern engines possible. Gottlieb Daimler got the fame, but Maybach built the machines. After Daimler died, Wilhelm left to start his own company with his son. They made dirigible engines — the massive Zeppelins crossing the Atlantic ran on Maybach power. Then luxury cars so expensive only royalty could afford them. His son Karl kept the company going until the Nazis took over. Today a Maybach costs half a million dollars. The name survived, barely. The engineering didn't need to — it's in every car.

Portrait of Thomas Robert Malthus
Thomas Robert Malthus 1834

He predicted humanity would starve itself into extinction by 1900.

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Population, he calculated in 1798, grew geometrically while food supplies grew arithmetically — a mathematical inevitability ending in mass famine. The world population then: 1 billion. Today: 8 billion. But he missed the agricultural revolution entirely: mechanization, fertilizers, crop rotation, selective breeding. His error wasn't just wrong. It spawned a century of cruel policy, from forced sterilizations to denying famine relief because "nature's check" was simply taking its course. He died wealthy, wrong, and more influential than almost any economist who got it right.

Portrait of Thomas Becket

Four knights murdered Archbishop Thomas Becket on the altar of Canterbury Cathedral, acting on what they interpreted as…

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King Henry II's frustrated outburst against his former ally. Becket's martyrdom transformed Canterbury into medieval Europe's premier pilgrimage destination and forced Henry into a humiliating public penance that subordinated royal authority to the Church for generations.

Portrait of Empress Genmei of Japan
Empress Genmei of Japan 721

She ruled Japan for eight years, then did something no empress had done before: abdicated to her own daughter.

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Genmei commissioned the Kojiki in 711—Japan's oldest surviving book, a collection of myths and genealogies that would define Japanese identity for thirteen centuries. She also moved the capital to Nara in 710, creating the city that would give its name to an entire era. After stepping down in 715, she lived six more years watching her daughter Gensho rule, the only time in Japanese history a mother empress directly passed power to a daughter empress. Two women, two reigns, one unbroken line.

Holidays & observances

The fourth candle honors *ujamaa* — cooperative economics.

The fourth candle honors *ujamaa* — cooperative economics. Built on African market traditions where vendors shared space, pooled resources, and customers negotiated face-to-face, the principle pushes back against isolation in commerce. Maulana Karenga chose it in 1966 because he'd watched businesses abandon Black neighborhoods after Watts burned. The idea: your neighbor's shop isn't competition, it's survival infrastructure. Families discuss starting joint ventures, supporting local businesses, creating capital within their community. It's the most practical of the seven principles, the one that translates to Monday morning. Critics call it impossible in a market economy. Practitioners built credit unions and worker cooperatives in response.

Ireland's 1937 Constitution passed with 56.5% of the vote — barely.

Ireland's 1937 Constitution passed with 56.5% of the vote — barely. De Valera's blueprint removed references to the British Crown and redefined sovereignty, but also embedded Catholic social teaching so deeply that contraception stayed banned for decades. Article 41 declared a woman's "life within the home" her proper place. The document created an elected presidency and renamed the Free State "Éire," signaling full independence without formally declaring a republic. That final step wouldn't come until 1949. The constitution still governs today, though amended 32 times — including to legalize divorce in 1995 and same-sex marriage in 2015.

Western churches commemorate King David today, honoring the biblical monarch who unified Israel and authored the Psalms.

Western churches commemorate King David today, honoring the biblical monarch who unified Israel and authored the Psalms. His legacy persists through the liturgy of the Divine Office, where his poetic prayers provide the structural foundation for daily Christian worship across centuries of tradition.

The Soviet Union backed Mongolia's independence from China in 1911.

The Soviet Union backed Mongolia's independence from China in 1911. Then kept 90,000 troops there for the next 81 years. Mongolia's "liberation" came with a price: Russian became mandatory in schools, Buddhist monasteries were destroyed, and 30,000 people were executed during Stalin's purges. The Soviets didn't fully withdraw until 1992—one year after their own empire collapsed. Mongolia finally got independence from its liberator. Now the country celebrates twice: once in July for breaking from China, once in November for the Soviets actually leaving. Freedom came in installments.

The Eastern Orthodox Church marks this day by remembering several saints and martyrs according to the Julian calendar…

The Eastern Orthodox Church marks this day by remembering several saints and martyrs according to the Julian calendar, which runs 13 days behind the Gregorian. While most of the world celebrated Christmas on December 25, Orthodox churches using the old calendar won't reach that feast until January 7. This calendar difference stems from 1582, when Pope Gregory XIII reformed the Western calendar but Orthodox patriarchs refused to follow Rome's lead. Today's observances include the Holy Innocents – Herod's massacre of Bethlehem's children – commemorated by Eastern churches two days after Western Christianity. The split calendar means Orthodox faithful experience Christian holidays in a different seasonal context, Christmas arriving deeper into winter's grip.

A shepherd turned bishop who never asked for the job.

A shepherd turned bishop who never asked for the job. Trophimus arrived in Gaul around 250 AD, planted Christianity in what's now southern France, and became Arles' first bishop—though he spent more time hiding from Roman authorities than preaching from pulpits. He died broke, probably in his sixties, in a city that would later claim him as its patron saint. The cathedral built over his burial site took 400 years to complete. His feast day honors a man who lived underground and founded a church that reached for the sky.

Thomas Becket spent Christmas 1170 preaching about martyrs.

Thomas Becket spent Christmas 1170 preaching about martyrs. Four days later, four knights burst into Canterbury Cathedral at sunset. They'd ridden from King Henry II's court — the king had raged "Will no one rid me of this turbulent priest?" Becket was Henry's former friend, his chancellor, the man who'd helped him consolidate power. Then Henry made him Archbishop. Bad move. Becket switched sides, defended church rights, and drove Henry mad. The knights found him at vespers. Becket refused to flee. "I am ready to die for my Lord," he said, "that in my blood the Church may obtain liberty and peace." They hacked him down at the altar. Three years later, Henry walked barefoot through Canterbury in penance while monks whipped him. Becket's shrine became medieval Europe's most-visited pilgrimage site — until Henry VIII destroyed it and burned the bones.

The partridge gets the fame, but by day five the song's getting expensive.

The partridge gets the fame, but by day five the song's getting expensive. Five golden rings weren't jewelry — they were ring-necked pheasants, game birds for the table. The whole "Twelve Days" wasn't just a carol. It mapped the Christian calendar from December 25 to Epiphany, when the Magi arrived. Western churches kept gift-giving alive through all twelve days, not just one morning. The tradition survives in exactly three places: church liturgy, one relentless song, and British pantomimes that still pack theaters every Boxing Day.