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On this day

January 3

Washington Wins Princeton: Morale Boosts Revolution (1777). Tutankhamun's Tomb Found: Egypt's Golden Age Revealed (1924). Notable births include John Paul Jones (1946), Michael Schumacher (1969), Clement Attlee (1883).

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Washington Wins Princeton: Morale Boosts Revolution
1777Event

Washington Wins Princeton: Morale Boosts Revolution

Washington crossed the Delaware at night in a blizzard. Two soldiers froze to death. Their boots left bloody prints in the snow. But ten days later, he did it again. This time at Princeton. The British thought he was retreating to Philadelphia. Instead, he marched his army in a wide circle through frozen farmland. Dawn attack. Complete surprise. General Hugh Mercer died leading the charge, bayoneted by British soldiers who mistook him for Washington. The victory convinced France that Americans could actually win this war. Without French ships and gold, there would be no United States. Washington's second river crossing changed everything.

Tutankhamun's Tomb Found: Egypt's Golden Age Revealed
1924

Tutankhamun's Tomb Found: Egypt's Golden Age Revealed

Carter had been digging for three years. His wealthy patron, Lord Carnarvon, was losing patience. One more season, then quit. Carter found a step. Then another. Sixteen steps down to a sealed doorway. Behind it: four rooms crammed with 3,500 artifacts. Golden chariots, jewelry, weapons, furniture. Even underwear. But the real treasure was in the stone sarcophagus. Not gold. The mummy itself. Tutankhamun died at 19, probably from malaria. His tomb was the only pharaoh's burial found intact. It proved Egyptian wealth was beyond anything historians had imagined. Carter spent the next ten years cataloging everything. The discovery made him famous worldwide.

Luther Excommunicated: The Great Church Schism Deepens
1521

Luther Excommunicated: The Great Church Schism Deepens

Luther's 95 Theses had been posted for three years. Leo X tried everything else first. Debates. Negotiations. Threats. Nothing worked. The German monk kept writing. Kept preaching. Kept saying the Pope couldn't sell salvation. The bull's Latin title meant 'It befits the Roman Pontiff.' Formal language for a declaration of war. Luther burned his copy in public. Students cheered. Half of Germany followed him out of the Catholic Church. The split cost Rome millions in revenue from indulgences. It triggered 130 years of religious wars. Leo X died the same year, probably unaware he'd just created Protestantism. The Church would never recover its monopoly on European Christianity.

Meiji Restoration: Japan Abolishes the Shogunate
1868

Meiji Restoration: Japan Abolishes the Shogunate

Commodore Perry's black ships had shattered Japan's 265-year slumber under Tokugawa rule, and young samurai from the Satsuma and Choshu domains decided the old order had to die. They seized the imperial palace in Kyoto and declared they were restoring Emperor Meiji's direct rule, though the fifteen-year-old emperor likely understood little of what was happening around him. The term 'restoration' was misleading because nothing was being restored to any previous state. Instead, these reformers dismantled the feudal system entirely, abolished the samurai class, conscripted a modern army, and launched an industrialization program that transformed Japan from an isolated agrarian society into a global military power within forty years. The speed of the transformation remains unmatched in modern history.

U.S. Invades Panama: Noriega Falls From Power
1990

U.S. Invades Panama: Noriega Falls From Power

Noriega walked into the Vatican embassy in Panama City wearing his general's uniform. American forces had been hunting him for three days. They surrounded the building. Then they started playing music. Van Halen. The Clash. AC/DC. Volume cranked to maximum. For ten days straight. The papal nuncio complained about the noise. Noriega's face was scarred from teenage acne. He'd been a CIA asset for 20 years. He knew too much about American operations in Central America. The music wasn't torture—it was negotiation. He surrendered when the U.S. promised him a trial instead of a bullet. The psychological warfare worked perfectly.

Quote of the Day

“All that is gold does not glitter, not all those who wander are lost; the old that is strong does not wither, deep roots are not reached by the frost.”

J. R. R. Tolkien

Historical events

Born on January 3

Portrait of Thomas Bangalter
Thomas Bangalter 1975

He built the most influential electronic music act of the 1990s from a Paris suburb with no industry connections and no record deal.

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Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo were Daft Punk. Their faces were never shown — helmets, always. Homework in 1997 and Discovery in 2001 defined what dance music could be. "Get Lucky" in 2013 was the most streamed song in history at that point. They dissolved the project in 2021 with a video that had no explanation, only a sunrise and one of them walking away.

Portrait of Michael Schumacher

He was 19 when he won his first Formula 1 championship.

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By 24, he'd won four in a row. Michael Schumacher spent a decade making the rest of the grid look like they were racing a different sport. Seven world titles. 91 race wins — a record that stood for 16 years. He drove with a precision that bordered on mechanical, studying telemetry the way other drivers studied weather reports. Then in December 2013, a ski accident in the French Alps. He hit a rock. The helmet saved his life. Barely. He's been out of public life ever since, cared for privately by his family.

Portrait of Palmolive
Palmolive 1955

Palmolive got her stage name from dish soap.

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Born January 3, 1955, she drummed for three of punk's most influential bands: The Slits, The Raincoats, and The Flowers of Romance. She played with chopsticks instead of drumsticks. Her real name was Paloma Romero. She helped define the sound of British post-punk.

Portrait of Masha and Dasha Krivoshlyapova
Masha and Dasha Krivoshlyapova 1950

Masha and Dasha Krivoshlyapova shared three legs and one pelvis.

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Born January 3, 1950, the conjoined twins lived 53 years in Soviet Russia. Doctors kept them secret for decades, using them for medical experiments. They had different personalities and often disagreed. Masha was outgoing, Dasha was shy. They died within hours of each other in 2003.

Portrait of Vesna Vulović
Vesna Vulović 1950

Vesna Vulović fell 33,000 feet and lived.

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Born January 3, 1950, she was a flight attendant on JAT Flight 367 when it exploded over Czechoslovakia in 1972. She was the sole survivor. The Guinness Book of Records called it the highest fall without a parachute ever survived. She had no memory of the crash. She kept flying for the same airline until retirement.

Portrait of John Paul Jones

John Paul Jones was born John Baldwin in Sidcup.

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He changed his name to avoid confusion with another musician. Started as a session player at 17. Played on Donovan's 'Sunshine Superman.' When Led Zeppelin formed, he was the only one who could read music. He arranged their orchestral sections and played everything from mandolin to keyboards.

Portrait of Stephen Stills
Stephen Stills 1945

Stephen Stills was kicked out of the Monkees for having bad teeth.

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He formed Buffalo Springfield instead. When that band broke up, he started Crosby, Stills & Nash. He's the only person to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice on the same night—once solo, once with Buffalo Springfield.

Portrait of Glen A. Larson
Glen A. Larson 1937

Glen A.

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Larson created TV's most expensive show. Born January 3, 1937, he produced Battlestar Galactica in 1978. Each episode cost $1 million – more than most movies. ABC cancelled it after one season due to budget concerns. Larson also created Knight Rider, The Fall Guy, and Magnum P.I. Science fiction was just one of his many genres.

Portrait of Gordon Moore
Gordon Moore 1929

Gordon Moore predicted that computer processing power would double every year.

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He was working at Fairchild Semiconductor when he made the observation in 1965. He co-founded Intel three years later. His prediction became known as Moore's Law and drove the entire computer industry for 60 years.

Portrait of George Martin
George Martin 1926

He discovered the Beatles.

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George Martin had been producing novelty records and classical music for Parlophone when Brian Epstein brought him a tape in 1962. The other labels had already passed. Martin signed them. He arranged strings on Eleanor Rigby, French horn on For No One, the orchestral crescendo of A Day in the Life. He was the fifth Beatle in the sense that he shaped what they recorded into what people actually heard. He also had the restraint to know when to leave things alone.

Portrait of André Franquin
André Franquin 1924

André Franquin created a character who slept through nuclear war and woke up unchanged.

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Gaston Lagaffe was the world's most incompetent office worker, a man who could destroy entire buildings while trying to fix a paperclip. Franquin drew him during Belgium's post-war boom, when efficiency and progress dominated everything. Gaston was beautiful rebellion—proof that sometimes the most radical act is refusing to be productive.

Portrait of Ngô Đình Diệm
Ngô Đình Diệm 1901

Ngô Đình Diệm spoke six languages and never married.

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Born January 3, 1901, he became South Vietnam's first president in 1955. He was a devout Catholic in a Buddhist country. His brother ran the secret police. His sister-in-law controlled social policy. The Kennedy administration backed his assassination in 1963. Three weeks later, Kennedy himself was dead.

Portrait of Clement Attlee
Clement Attlee 1883

He won the 1945 British general election in a landslide while Churchill was still a global hero.

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Clement Attlee had led the Labour Party through the coalition government and went to the Potsdam Conference as prime minister while Churchill was there as opposition leader. His government created the National Health Service, nationalized coal, steel, and the railways, and gave independence to India. He was famously quiet. Churchill called him "a modest man with much to be modest about." He was anything but modest. He just didn't talk about it.

Portrait of Grace Coolidge
Grace Coolidge 1879

Grace Coolidge taught at a school for the deaf before marriage.

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Born January 3, 1879, she used sign language fluently her entire life. She met Calvin at a window – he was shaving in long underwear, she was watering flowers. They married in 1905. As First Lady, she hosted the first radio broadcast from the White House. She refused to give interviews, calling herself 'a good listener.'

Portrait of Wilhelm Pieck
Wilhelm Pieck 1876

Wilhelm Pieck spent 15 years in Soviet exile.

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Born January 3, 1876, he became East Germany's first president in 1949. He'd been a carpenter before turning communist. Stalin personally chose him to lead the new state. He died in office in 1960. East Germany never had another president – they switched to a collective leadership instead.

Portrait of Savitribai Phule
Savitribai Phule 1831

Savitribai Phule opened India's first school for girls.

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Born January 3, 1831, she faced stones and dung thrown by angry mobs. She carried an extra sari to change into after attacks. Her husband supported her mission despite social pressure. She wrote poetry in Marathi, becoming the language's first female poet. She died fighting the plague epidemic of 1897.

Portrait of James Harrington
James Harrington 1611

James Harrington wrote that power follows property.

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Born 1611, he watched kings lose their heads when they forgot this rule. His political theory would shape American democracy centuries later.

Died on January 3

Portrait of Qasem Soleimani
Qasem Soleimani 2020

Qasem Soleimani commanded Iran's elite Quds Force.

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Born in 1957, he died January 3, 2020, killed by a U.S. drone strike at Baghdad Airport. He'd been Iran's most powerful military figure for two decades. His death nearly triggered war between Iran and America. Iran retaliated by bombing U.S. bases in Iraq. No Americans died, preventing escalation.

Portrait of Herb Kelleher
Herb Kelleher 2019

Herb Kelleher wrote Southwest's business plan on a napkin.

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Born in 1931, he died January 3, 2019, having created the low-cost airline model. No assigned seats. No meals. No hub airports. Just cheap flights between secondary cities. The napkin is displayed at Southwest headquarters. Every budget airline since copied his formula.

Portrait of Phil Everly
Phil Everly 2014

Phil Everly sang harmony with his brother for 60 years.

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Born in 1939, he died January 3, 2014, having helped create the sound of rock and roll. The Everly Brothers influenced the Beatles, Simon and Garfunkel, and the Beach Boys. Their tight harmonies came from singing together since childhood. They had a bitter feud in 1973 but reunited a decade later.

Portrait of Conrad Hilton
Conrad Hilton 1979

Conrad Hilton bought his first hotel with $40,000 borrowed money.

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Born in 1887, he built a global empire from a single property in Texas. He died January 3, 1979, worth $200 million. His will left most of it to Catholic charities. His son Barron contested the will and won. The Hilton Foundation still operates with the reduced inheritance.

Portrait of Jack Ruby
Jack Ruby 1967

Jack Ruby died of cancer, not execution.

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Born in 1911, he shot Lee Harvey Oswald on live television. He died January 3, 1967, while awaiting a new trial. His conviction had been overturned on appeal. He claimed he killed Oswald to spare Jackie Kennedy the trauma of a trial. Cancer killed him before the truth could be retested in court.

Portrait of Alois Hitler
Alois Hitler 1903

Alois Hitler was drinking at his local tavern when he collapsed.

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The 65-year-old customs official died of a lung hemorrhage. His 13-year-old son Adolf was at school. Alois had been a strict father who beat his children regularly. His death freed Adolf from plans to follow him into government service.

Portrait of Josiah Wedgwood
Josiah Wedgwood 1795

Josiah Wedgwood made pottery an art form.

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Born in 1730, he died January 3, 1795, having revolutionized ceramics. He invented pyrometric beads to measure kiln temperature precisely. His jasperware became the choice of European royalty. He was Charles Darwin's grandfather. The Wedgwood company still bears his name 250 years later.

Holidays & observances

The tenth day of Christmas falls on January 3rd.

The tenth day of Christmas falls on January 3rd. Ten lords a-leaping. The song's gifts total 364 items by this point. But the twelve days weren't about presents originally. They marked the time between Jesus's birth and the arrival of the Magi. Epiphany comes on day twelve. The gifts were symbolic, not literal.

Eastern Orthodox churches observe January 3 differently across the world.

Eastern Orthodox churches observe January 3 differently across the world. Some follow the Julian calendar, making this December 21 in the Gregorian system. Others commemorate various saints and martyrs. The day holds special significance for fasting periods and feast preparations. Different Orthodox traditions create a complex calendar of observances that varies by region.

St.

St. Genevieve saved Paris from Attila the Hun by praying. Or so the story goes. In 451, when the Huns approached the city, she convinced Parisians to stay and pray instead of flee. Attila changed course. Coincidence or miracle? Paris celebrates her feast day every January 3.

Ancient Romans celebrated Pax on January 3rd.

Ancient Romans celebrated Pax on January 3rd. Goddess of peace. Her temple stood in the Forum. But here's the irony: Romans built the temple after conquering their enemies. Peace through victory. The festival honored not the absence of war, but its successful conclusion. Roman peace meant everyone else surrendered.

Two teams of half-naked men fight for wooden balls.

Two teams of half-naked men fight for wooden balls. The Tamaseseri Festival happens every January 3 at Hakozaki Shrine in Fukuoka. Participants wear only loincloths despite freezing temperatures. The wooden balls represent the coming year's fortune. Spectators throw cold water on the competitors. The festival dates back 500 years. Winners get a year of good luck.