Laika Orbits Earth: First Animal in Space
Soviet engineers strapped Laika into Sputnik 2 and launched her into orbit, knowing the technology to bring her home did not yet exist. Her death from overheating within hours provided the first concrete data on how living organisms react to spaceflight environments, proving that survival was possible despite the lethal conditions. This sacrifice forced a reckoning in the scientific community, accelerating the development of life-support systems that would eventually carry humans into the cosmos.
November 3, 1957
69 years ago
Key Figures & Places
What Else Happened on November 3
Constantius II spent years hunting Julian — exiling family members, executing rivals, building an empire where only he could rule. Then a fever won. Dying at Mo…
A Persian captive named Piruz Nahavandi assassinated the second caliph, Umar ibn al-Khattab, while he led morning prayers in Medina. This sudden death triggered…
William Rufus marched on Rouen to seize his brother Robert's capital, only to watch his assault crumble in a chaotic riot. The failed coup forced the English ki…
Giovanni Villani watched his city drown. The Arno surged so violently in 1333 that Florence lost bridges, buildings, and hundreds of lives in a single catastrop…
Charles the Bold’s Burgundian forces razed Liège to the ground, systematically dismantling the city’s fortifications and burning its architectural treasures. Th…
Henry VII and Charles VIII signed the Peace of Etaples, ending English military intervention in Brittany. By securing a substantial annual pension from the Fren…
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