Scott Dies in Antarctica: Eleven Miles From Safety
Robert Falcon Scott froze to death in an Antarctic blizzard just eleven miles from a supply depot, ending the Terra Nova Expedition's failed race to the South Pole. His recovered journals revealed the harrowing final days of his team, transforming a military defeat into an enduring British narrative of courage and sacrifice against impossible odds.
March 29, 1912
114 years ago
Key Figures & Places
What Else Happened on March 29
A barbarian king did what Rome couldn't: made conquerors and conquered equal under law. Gundobad's Lex Burgundionum at Lyon didn't just allow Gallo-Romans to ke…
Ottoman forces under Murad II seize Thessalonica, stripping the Byzantine Empire of its second-largest city and severing a vital economic lifeline that had sust…
Edward of York destroyed Queen Margaret's Lancastrian army at Towton in a snowstorm, with an estimated 28,000 killed on both sides in the bloodiest battle ever …
His father was the Pope, and that wasn't even the scandalous part. Rodrigo Borgia—Pope Alexander VI—handed his illegitimate son Cesare the highest military comm…
The Portuguese built Brazil's first capital on a cliff 279 feet above the harbor specifically so enslaved Africans would have to haul sugar up the escarpment. T…
The Treaty of Saint-Germain restored Quebec to French control after three years of English occupation, reaffirming France's colonial foothold in North America. …
Talk to History
Have a conversation with historical figures who witnessed this era. Ask questions, explore perspectives, and bring history to life.