International Women's Day: A Century of Activism
International Women's Day traces its origins to early twentieth-century labor movements demanding suffrage and workers' rights. In Eastern Europe and the former Soviet bloc, the day doubles as Mother's Day, blending political activism with personal celebration. Globally, it remains a focal point for advocacy around gender equality, workplace rights, and violence prevention.
March 8
Key Figures & Places
What Else Happened on March 8
Ferdowsi finished his monumental epic, the Shāhnāmeh, after thirty years of meticulous labor. By recording the myths and history of ancient Persia in pure Persi…
His mother ruled for seventeen years while nobles tried to replace her with every available man — her husband, her ex-husband, even her teenage son. But Urraca …
They entered through the latrine chute. That's how Philip II's soldiers finally breached Richard the Lionheart's supposedly impregnable fortress after six month…
The butchers and bakers won. On the frozen fields of Hausbergen, Strasbourg's shopkeepers and guild members—armed with pikes they'd forged themselves—faced down…
Duke John of Finland established the city of Pori on the banks of the Kokemäenjoki River to consolidate trade along the Gulf of Bothnia. By relocating merchants…
The Spanish explorer stumbled onto a ghost city swallowed by jungle and didn't realize he'd found one of history's greatest astronomical observatories. Diego Ga…
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