Georgy Zhukov Born: Soviet Marshal Who Defeated Hitler
Georgy Zhukov rose from peasant origins to become the Soviet Union's most decorated military commander. His victories at Stalingrad, Kursk, and Berlin broke the Wehrmacht's back on the Eastern Front, making him the single most consequential Allied general of World War II.
December 1, 1896
130 years ago
What Else Happened on December 1
Pope Leo III staggered into St. Peter's, his face still scarred from the Roman mob that tried to gouge out his eyes and cut out his tongue six months earlier. H…
Charlemagne sat in judgment of a pope. The charges against Leo III were serious—perjury, adultery, simony—brought by nephews of his predecessor who'd ambushed h…
Henry V rode through Paris's gates with 300 knights. The French king was alive but mad, locked in his own palace while his son-in-law claimed the throne. No sie…
Henry V paraded through the streets of Paris alongside his father-in-law, Charles VI, asserting his claim to the French throne following the Treaty of Troyes. T…
Queen Elizabeth I knighted her favorites Christopher Hatton and Thomas Heneage during a private ceremony at Windsor Castle. By elevating these men to the knight…
A 46-year-old spymaster with a network stretching from Venice to Constantinople got his knighthood — not for battlefield valor but for intercepting letters. Wal…
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