November 20
Events
67 events recorded on November 20 throughout history
An 80-ton sperm whale rammed the whaling ship Essex twice on November 20, 1820, 2,000 miles west of South America. First mate Owen Chase watched in disbelief as the whale turned and accelerated directly into the bow. The ship sank within minutes. Twenty crew members escaped in three small whaleboats with minimal provisions. Over the next 90 days, they drifted across the Pacific, rationing their dwindling supplies until starvation forced the survivors to consume the bodies of their dead companions. Seven men eventually drew lots to determine who would be killed so others could eat. Only eight of the original twenty survived. Chase published his firsthand account in 1821. A young Herman Melville met Chase's son on a whaling voyage, obtained a copy, and annotated it obsessively. The Essex became the foundation of Moby-Dick.
Francisco Madero issued the Plan de San Luis Potosi on November 20, 1910, calling for an armed uprising against President Porfirio Diaz, who had ruled Mexico for over 30 years through rigged elections and police repression. Madero, a wealthy landowner, had run against Diaz in the 1910 election and been arrested and imprisoned before the vote. The initial uprising was poorly organized, but guerrilla leaders Pancho Villa in the north and Emiliano Zapata in the south rallied massive popular support. Diaz resigned and fled to Paris in May 1911. Madero was elected president but couldn't control the revolutionary forces he had unleashed. He was overthrown and assassinated in 1913. The revolution continued for another seven years, killing roughly one million people and remaking Mexican society, land ownership, and governance.
The International Military Tribunal opened in Nuremberg on November 20, 1945, charging 24 senior Nazi leaders with conspiracy, crimes against peace, war crimes, and crimes against humanity. The concept of crimes against humanity was new to international law. The defendants included Hermann Goering, Rudolf Hess, Albert Speer, and Joachim von Ribbentrop. The trial lasted 11 months. The prosecution presented 4,000 documents and showed footage from liberated concentration camps that shocked the courtroom and the world. Twelve defendants were sentenced to death, seven received prison terms, and three were acquitted. Goering swallowed cyanide hours before his scheduled execution. The Nuremberg principles established that 'following orders' is not a defense for atrocities and that heads of state can be held personally accountable, foundations of modern international criminal law.
Quote of the Day
“Some men see things as they are and say why. I dream things that never were and say, why not?”
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The deal Emperor Suzong struck was brutal: let the Huihe soldiers loot Luoyang for three days after victory.
The deal Emperor Suzong struck was brutal: let the Huihe soldiers loot Luoyang for three days after victory. Three days. A city of hundreds of thousands, handed over to allies as payment. The Huihe didn't just help recapture Luoyang — they burned it. Tang forces stood by and watched. The An Shi Rebellion, already eight years running, had nearly shattered China's golden age. But winning Luoyang this way meant the rescue and the destruction arrived together.
Emperor Henry VI stormed Palermo on Christmas Day, seizing the Sicilian crown through his wife Constance's claim.
Emperor Henry VI stormed Palermo on Christmas Day, seizing the Sicilian crown through his wife Constance's claim. The conquest united the Holy Roman Empire with the wealthy Norman Kingdom of Sicily, briefly creating the most powerful state in Europe.
Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor, conquered Palermo and claimed the Kingdom of Sicily through his wife Constance, uniting…
Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor, conquered Palermo and claimed the Kingdom of Sicily through his wife Constance, uniting it with the Holy Roman Empire. The conquest gave the Hohenstaufen dynasty control of both northern and southern Italy, surrounding the Papal States and setting off a century of conflict between emperors and popes.
John the Fearless and Louis of Valois signed a truce on November 20, 1407, only for Burgundy's men to murder the Duke…
John the Fearless and Louis of Valois signed a truce on November 20, 1407, only for Burgundy's men to murder the Duke of Orléans three days later. This betrayal ignited a decade-long civil war between Burgundian and Armagnac factions that devastated France during the Hundred Years' War.
False Peace in France: Orleans Murdered Days After Truce
John the Fearless, Duke of Burgundy, and Louis of Valois, Duke of Orleans, agreed to a truce brokered by the Duke of Berry to end their violent rivalry for control of the French crown. Three days later, Burgundy's agents assassinated Orleans on a Paris street, igniting the Armagnac-Burgundian civil war that would devastate France for a generation.
Venice's daring mountain siege engines forced the Duke of Milan to sue for peace, ending years of costly conflict.
Venice's daring mountain siege engines forced the Duke of Milan to sue for peace, ending years of costly conflict. The Treaty of Cremona secured Venetian dominance in northern Italy and proved that innovative military engineering could dictate diplomatic outcomes on a continental scale.
Charles XII Crushes Peter: Sweden's Victory at Narva
An 8,500-strong Swedish army under eighteen-year-old King Charles XII crushed a Russian siege force nearly four times its size at Narva in a blinding snowstorm. The stunning victory established Charles as Europe's most formidable young commander, though Tsar Peter the Great used the humiliation to rebuild the Russian military into the force that would eventually destroy Swedish dominance.
Admiral Edward Vernon captured the Spanish port of Porto Bello with only six ships, proving that a small, aggressive …
Admiral Edward Vernon captured the Spanish port of Porto Bello with only six ships, proving that a small, aggressive naval force could dismantle colonial defenses. This victory humiliated Spain and ignited a wave of jingoistic fervor in Britain, directly escalating the War of Jenkins' Ear into a broader conflict for control of Caribbean trade routes.
Fort Lee fell in under an hour.
Fort Lee fell in under an hour. Lord Cornwallis landed 5,000 troops at the Palisades on November 20th, scrambling up the cliffs before Washington's men even knew they'd arrived. The garrison fled so fast they left 300 cannons, 1,000 barrels of flour, and their tents still standing. Washington didn't fight — he ran. Across New Jersey, mile by desperate mile. But that retreat? It gave Thomas Paine just enough time to write *The American Crisis* — the pages that kept the whole thing alive.
New Jersey became the first state to ratify the Bill of Rights, officially endorsing the initial ten amendments to th…
New Jersey became the first state to ratify the Bill of Rights, officially endorsing the initial ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution. This swift action pressured other states to follow suit, ensuring the federal government formally adopted the protections for individual liberties that define American legal life today.
Ludwig van Beethoven debuted his only opera, Fidelio, at Vienna’s Theater an der Wien while French troops occupied th…
Ludwig van Beethoven debuted his only opera, Fidelio, at Vienna’s Theater an der Wien while French troops occupied the city. The premiere flopped as the audience consisted largely of uninterested French officers, forcing Beethoven to revise the score twice before it finally achieved success years later as a evidence of his persistence in the face of political upheaval.
The Second Treaty of Paris was signed after Napoleon's final defeat at Waterloo, imposing harsher terms on France tha…
The Second Treaty of Paris was signed after Napoleon's final defeat at Waterloo, imposing harsher terms on France than the treaty signed after his first abdication. France lost border territories, agreed to pay 700 million francs in reparations, and submitted to a five-year military occupation by the allied powers.

Whale Attacks Essex: Moby Dick's Real Inspiration
An 80-ton sperm whale rammed the whaling ship Essex twice on November 20, 1820, 2,000 miles west of South America. First mate Owen Chase watched in disbelief as the whale turned and accelerated directly into the bow. The ship sank within minutes. Twenty crew members escaped in three small whaleboats with minimal provisions. Over the next 90 days, they drifted across the Pacific, rationing their dwindling supplies until starvation forced the survivors to consume the bodies of their dead companions. Seven men eventually drew lots to determine who would be killed so others could eat. Only eight of the original twenty survived. Chase published his firsthand account in 1821. A young Herman Melville met Chase's son on a whaling voyage, obtained a copy, and annotated it obsessively. The Essex became the foundation of Moby-Dick.
Argentine forces fought a British and French naval squadron to a standstill at the Battle of Vuelta de Obligado on th…
Argentine forces fought a British and French naval squadron to a standstill at the Battle of Vuelta de Obligado on the Paraná River. Though Argentina lost the battle, the fierce resistance became a symbol of national sovereignty and is celebrated as a national holiday.
Kentucky's self-proclaimed Confederate government filed a secession ordinance, though the state's elected government …
Kentucky's self-proclaimed Confederate government filed a secession ordinance, though the state's elected government remained loyal to the Union. The rival government operated in exile for most of the war, a symbol of how deeply the conflict split border states.
French forces under Lieutenant Francis Garnier stormed and seized Hanoi from Vietnamese defenders, shattering local r…
French forces under Lieutenant Francis Garnier stormed and seized Hanoi from Vietnamese defenders, shattering local resistance and pushing the Nguyen dynasty into a defensive posture. This aggressive expansion directly triggered the Sino-French War a decade later as China moved to protect its tributary relationship with Vietnam.
Eight men didn't come home.
Eight men didn't come home. The Blanch mine explosion tore through Brooke County's coal seams in a single violent instant, killing 8 and wounding 10 more — men who'd descended into the earth that morning like any other shift. Brooke County sat in West Virginia's northern panhandle, a tight strip of Appalachian industry pressed between Ohio and Pennsylvania. But here's what stings: no investigation made national news. No legislation followed. These 18 miners were simply absorbed into an era when explosions happened so often, they barely registered.
Sarah Bernhardt electrified the New York press at the Savoy Hotel, announcing a massive tour featuring fifty performe…
Sarah Bernhardt electrified the New York press at the Savoy Hotel, announcing a massive tour featuring fifty performers and her audacious plan to play the title role in Hamlet. By tackling a traditionally male Shakespearean lead, she challenged rigid gender norms in theater and cemented her reputation as the most daring performer of the era.

Madero Calls for Change: Mexican Revolution Starts
Francisco Madero issued the Plan de San Luis Potosi on November 20, 1910, calling for an armed uprising against President Porfirio Diaz, who had ruled Mexico for over 30 years through rigged elections and police repression. Madero, a wealthy landowner, had run against Diaz in the 1910 election and been arrested and imprisoned before the vote. The initial uprising was poorly organized, but guerrilla leaders Pancho Villa in the north and Emiliano Zapata in the south rallied massive popular support. Diaz resigned and fled to Paris in May 1911. Madero was elected president but couldn't control the revolutionary forces he had unleashed. He was overthrown and assassinated in 1913. The revolution continued for another seven years, killing roughly one million people and remaking Mexican society, land ownership, and governance.
Ukraine's Central Rada declared the country a people's republic amid the collapse of the Russian Empire.
Ukraine's Central Rada declared the country a people's republic amid the collapse of the Russian Empire. The declaration launched a turbulent four-year struggle for independence that ended with Soviet absorption in 1922.
Tanks Mass at Cambrai: Armored Warfare's First Test
British forces launched the Battle of Cambrai with nearly 400 tanks leading the assault, the first mass armored attack in military history that punched through the Hindenburg Line without a preliminary artillery barrage. The initial breakthrough captured five miles in hours, though a German counterattack reclaimed most of the ground and proved that tank warfare still needed combined-arms doctrine to succeed.
One trillion to one.
One trillion to one. That was the trade — one crisp Rentenmark for a literal trillion crumbling Papiermarks. Hjalmar Schacht, the man who engineered the swap, had watched Germans haul wheelbarrows of cash just to buy bread. The Rentenmark wasn't backed by gold. It was backed by land — mortgaged German soil, an idea so strange it shouldn't have worked. But it did. Hyperinflation stopped almost overnight. And here's the uncomfortable truth: the same economic desperation this rescued also planted seeds for what came next.
Republican forces executed Jose Antonio Primo de Rivera, the charismatic founder of Spain's Falange party, in an Alic…
Republican forces executed Jose Antonio Primo de Rivera, the charismatic founder of Spain's Falange party, in an Alicante prison. His death transformed him into a martyr for Franco's Nationalists and intensified the ideological fury of the Spanish Civil War.
Hungary didn't want a war.
Hungary didn't want a war. Prime Minister Pál Teleki signed the Tripartite Pact on November 20th, believing alignment with Hitler bought his landlocked country survival, not destruction. He was wrong. Five months later, when Hungary allowed German troops to cross its soil to attack Yugoslavia — a nation with whom they'd just signed a friendship treaty — Teleki shot himself in his office. His suicide note called it "murder." And Hungary's pact, meant to protect the nation, ultimately delivered it straight into Soviet occupation by 1945.
Seventy-six hours.
Seventy-six hours. That's all it took to produce nearly 3,300 American casualties on a strip of coral barely two miles long. Marines wading ashore at Betio Island walked into a wall of interlocking Japanese fire — commanders like Major Henry Crowe screaming orders over bodies stacking in the surf. Japanese Admiral Keiji Shibazaki had boasted a million men couldn't take Tarawa in a hundred years. He was wrong. But so were American planners who dramatically underestimated the tide depth, stranding hundreds in open water. The "victory" shocked the public — and forced the military to completely rethink amphibious warfare.

Nuremberg Trials: Justice Against Nazi War Crimes
The International Military Tribunal opened in Nuremberg on November 20, 1945, charging 24 senior Nazi leaders with conspiracy, crimes against peace, war crimes, and crimes against humanity. The concept of crimes against humanity was new to international law. The defendants included Hermann Goering, Rudolf Hess, Albert Speer, and Joachim von Ribbentrop. The trial lasted 11 months. The prosecution presented 4,000 documents and showed footage from liberated concentration camps that shocked the courtroom and the world. Twelve defendants were sentenced to death, seven received prison terms, and three were acquitted. Goering swallowed cyanide hours before his scheduled execution. The Nuremberg principles established that 'following orders' is not a defense for atrocities and that heads of state can be held personally accountable, foundations of modern international criminal law.
The Nuremberg trials opened at the Palace of Justice, forcing Nazi leaders to answer for crimes against humanity in a…
The Nuremberg trials opened at the Palace of Justice, forcing Nazi leaders to answer for crimes against humanity in a court of law rather than facing summary execution. This unprecedented proceeding established the legal precedent that individuals, not just states, bear personal responsibility for atrocities, fundamentally reshaping international criminal law for the decades that followed.
Dutch troops slaughtered ninety-six Indonesian defenders, including General I Gusti Ngurah Rai, at the Battle of Marg…
Dutch troops slaughtered ninety-six Indonesian defenders, including General I Gusti Ngurah Rai, at the Battle of Margarana. This massacre transformed a tactical defeat into a defining symbol of national unity, galvanizing the archipelago's resolve to fight for independence against colonial rule.
Princess Elizabeth married Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten at Westminster Abbey, offering a war-weary Britain a rare mo…
Princess Elizabeth married Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten at Westminster Abbey, offering a war-weary Britain a rare moment of public celebration. The union stabilized the monarchy during the difficult post-war transition and established a partnership that defined the British royal family for the next seven decades.
Czechoslovakia's Communist regime staged the Slánsky show trials, forcing 14 senior party officials to confess to fab…
Czechoslovakia's Communist regime staged the Slánsky show trials, forcing 14 senior party officials to confess to fabricated charges of treason and espionage. Eleven were executed, including party leader Rudolf Slánsky, in proceedings marked by virulent anti-Semitism and Stalinist paranoia.
The United Nations General Assembly adopted the Declaration of the Rights of the Child, establishing ten principles i…
The United Nations General Assembly adopted the Declaration of the Rights of the Child, establishing ten principles including the right to education, play, and protection from exploitation. The non-binding declaration laid the groundwork for the legally binding Convention on the Rights of the Child adopted 30 years later, now the most widely ratified human rights treaty in history.

Missile Crisis Ends: Kennedy Lifts Cuba Quarantine
President Kennedy announced the lifting of the naval quarantine on Cuba on November 20, 1962, after the Soviet Union confirmed it was dismantling and removing its medium-range and intermediate-range ballistic missile installations from the island. Soviet ships carrying the missiles departed under American aerial surveillance. The crisis had lasted from October 16 to November 20, though the most dangerous phase ended on October 28 when Khrushchev agreed to withdraw. As part of the deal, the U.S. publicly pledged never to invade Cuba and secretly agreed to remove its Jupiter missiles from Turkey within six months. The crisis led directly to the Moscow-Washington hotline, installed in 1963, and the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty signed the same year. Both superpowers emerged chastened by how close they had come to nuclear war.
Eleven men slipped into the jungle.
Eleven men slipped into the jungle. Only four walked out unwounded. The Long Range Patrol from F Company, 58th Infantry knew their job — move quietly, gather intelligence, disappear. But the 4th and 5th NVA Regiments had other plans, surrounding the team and nearly erasing it completely. What saved the seven survivors wasn't a formal rescue op. It was their own guys, improvising under fire, pulling something together from nothing. And that improvised force is the whole story — nobody waited for orders.
An explosion ripped through Consolidated Coal's No.
An explosion ripped through Consolidated Coal's No. 9 mine in Farmington, West Virginia, trapping 78 miners underground. Rescue attempts were abandoned after 10 days and the mine was sealed with the bodies still inside. The disaster spurred passage of the Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969, the most sweeping mine safety legislation in decades.
An explosion ripped through Consolidation Coal's No.
An explosion ripped through Consolidation Coal's No. 9 mine near Farmington, West Virginia, killing 78 miners. The disaster shocked the nation and became the catalyst for the Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969, which dramatically strengthened federal oversight of the mining industry.
Thirty color photographs.
Thirty color photographs. That's what Ronald Haeberle handed over — images he'd taken himself as an Army photographer *at* My Lai, then quietly kept for 20 months. When the Plain Dealer ran them on November 20, 1969, Americans didn't just read about 504 civilians killed. They *saw* it. Children. Ditches. No combatants. Public outrage exploded, accelerating the broader collapse of trust in government war reporting. But Haeberle had attended the massacre as official documentation. He was supposed to show the Army's story. He showed the truth instead.
Eighty-nine Native Americans landed on a former federal prison and claimed it by "right of discovery" — mocking the v…
Eighty-nine Native Americans landed on a former federal prison and claimed it by "right of discovery" — mocking the very legal doctrine used to take Indigenous land for centuries. Richard Oakes, a Mohawk ironworker, led the charge. They offered the government $24 in glass beads and red cloth — the supposed price paid for Manhattan. The occupation lasted 19 months. But the government cut off water and power, and attrition did the rest. That abandoned prison became something Washington never intended: a rallying point for the entire American Indian Movement.
Lufthansa Flight 540 slams into the runway at Nairobi's Jomo Kenyatta International Airport during a failed takeoff a…
Lufthansa Flight 540 slams into the runway at Nairobi's Jomo Kenyatta International Airport during a failed takeoff attempt, killing 59 of the 157 souls aboard. This tragedy marked the first fatal crash involving a Boeing 747, compelling airlines to immediately reevaluate high-altitude performance limits and emergency procedures for their jumbo jets.
One company controlled nearly every phone call in America.
One company controlled nearly every phone call in America. The Justice Department's 1974 antitrust filing against AT&T wasn't just paperwork — it was a direct challenge to a monopoly serving 80% of U.S. telephone customers. Eight years of legal battles followed. Then, in 1984, AT&T surrendered, spinning off seven independent "Baby Bells." MCI, Sprint, and eventually cellular competitors rushed in. But here's the twist: those Baby Bells slowly re-merged, and today's AT&T is basically the monopoly the government spent a decade dismantling.

Franco Dies: Spain's 36-Year Dictatorship Ends
Thirty-six years. Franco had outlasted Hitler, Mussolini, and four U.S. presidents — a dictator who somehow survived his own era. When he finally died on November 20th, his physicians had kept him artificially alive for weeks, his body failing through eighteen operations. King Juan Carlos I, Franco's handpicked successor, then did something Franco never expected: he dismantled the whole system. Within three years, Spain held free elections. The man who thought he'd secured his legacy forever had accidentally chosen the person who'd bury it.
Sadat Walks to Israel: A New Middle East Begins
Anwar Sadat steps onto Israeli soil as the first Arab leader to officially visit Israel, meeting Prime Minister Menachem Begin and addressing the Knesset to demand a permanent peace settlement. This bold move directly shattered decades of diplomatic isolation between Egypt and Israel, setting the stage for the Camp David Accords and the 1979 peace treaty that ended their state of war.
Six thousand hostages.
Six thousand hostages. Inside the holiest site in Islam. Juhayman al-Otaybi led his 200 followers into the Grand Mosque believing one of them was the Mahdi — Islam's promised redeemer. Saudi forces couldn't breach the sanctuary without religious permission, so clerics deliberated while hostages waited. Pakistani Special Services Group commandos ultimately helped retake the tunnels beneath Mecca. Two weeks. Hundreds dead. But here's what most people miss: the siege spooked the Saudi royals into tightening religious restrictions across the kingdom — restrictions whose echoes are still being unwound today.
A misplaced Texaco oil drill punctured the roof of the Diamond Crystal Salt Mine, turning Lake Peigneur into a massiv…
A misplaced Texaco oil drill punctured the roof of the Diamond Crystal Salt Mine, turning Lake Peigneur into a massive, swirling whirlpool. The entire lake, along with eleven barges and a tugboat, drained into the mine shafts below, permanently transforming a freshwater ecosystem into a deep, saltwater basin connected to the Gulf of Mexico.
The General Union of Ecuadorian Workers was founded to consolidate labor organizing across the country.
The General Union of Ecuadorian Workers was founded to consolidate labor organizing across the country. The UGTE provided a unified voice for workers' rights during a period of economic instability and political repression in Ecuador.
The SETI Institute was established in Mountain View, California, to conduct scientific research on the origin and pre…
The SETI Institute was established in Mountain View, California, to conduct scientific research on the origin and prevalence of life in the universe. The nonprofit has since led systematic searches for extraterrestrial intelligence using radio telescopes and other detection methods.
Microsoft released Windows 1.0 after two years of delays, offering PC users their first graphical interface with tile…
Microsoft released Windows 1.0 after two years of delays, offering PC users their first graphical interface with tiled windows, a mouse-driven desktop, and bundled apps like Paint and Notepad. Critics dismissed it as slow and limited, but it planted the seed for the platform that would dominate personal computing.
Microsoft released Windows 1.0, replacing cryptic command-line prompts with a graphical interface driven by a mouse.
Microsoft released Windows 1.0, replacing cryptic command-line prompts with a graphical interface driven by a mouse. This shift transformed personal computing from a niche skill for programmers into an accessible tool for the general public, establishing the visual desktop standard that still dominates the industry today.
Half a million people.
Half a million people. In one city. In one day. What started as student marches just days earlier had exploded into something the Communist government couldn't mathematically ignore. Václav Havel, a playwright who'd spent years in prison, was coordinating from a theater basement. No army. No weapons. Just bodies filling Wenceslas Square until the numbers themselves became the argument. Czechoslovakia's Communist leadership resigned within days. But here's the thing — the revolution's name came after. Someone chose "Velvet" because nothing tore.
Soviet authorities finally cornered Andrei Chikatilo after a decade of terror, leading him to confess to fifty-six br…
Soviet authorities finally cornered Andrei Chikatilo after a decade of terror, leading him to confess to fifty-six brutal murders. This arrest ended one of history's most notorious killing sprees and exposed the terrifying scale of violence that had plagued the region for years.
Nineteen people were dead before anyone fully understood what had happened.
Nineteen people were dead before anyone fully understood what had happened. An MI-8 helicopter, carrying officials and journalists from three former Soviet republics on a peacekeeping mission, was shot down over Khojavend district — not by enemy combatants, but by forces supposedly involved in resolving the very conflict they were flying into. Reporters died alongside diplomats. And the Nagorno-Karabakh war ground on for three more brutal years. A peacekeeping mission became the massacre. That detail never quite faded.
A faulty spotlight ignited a curtain in Queen Victoria’s Private Chapel, triggering a blaze that tore through Windsor…
A faulty spotlight ignited a curtain in Queen Victoria’s Private Chapel, triggering a blaze that tore through Windsor Castle for fifteen hours. The inferno destroyed over a hundred rooms and prompted a massive public debate over funding the £36.5 million restoration, which ultimately forced the Queen to pay income tax for the first time.
Alan Cranston didn't go to jail.
Alan Cranston didn't go to jail. That's the part people forget. Charles Keating's Lincoln Savings collapse wiped out 23,000 investors — many of them elderly — costing taxpayers $3.4 billion. Cranston had accepted $1 million in contributions. But the Senate Ethics Committee landed on "censure," the softest punch available. Cranston, 79 and battling prostate cancer, stood on the Senate floor and refused to apologize. And somehow, that defiance reframed everything — the real scandal wasn't one senator. It was how ordinary the whole arrangement had been.
Avioimpex Flight 110 plummets into the mountainside near Ohrid Airport, claiming every single one of the 116 souls ab…
Avioimpex Flight 110 plummets into the mountainside near Ohrid Airport, claiming every single one of the 116 souls aboard. This tragedy stands as North Macedonia's deadliest aviation disaster and forces a complete overhaul of regional safety protocols for Yakovlev aircraft operations in the Balkans.
Nineteen years of brutal civil war, and it ended with signatures in Lusaka — not Luanda, not anywhere Angolan.
Nineteen years of brutal civil war, and it ended with signatures in Lusaka — not Luanda, not anywhere Angolan. Jonas Savimbi's UNITA rebels and the government of President José Eduardo dos Santos finally agreed to stop. The protocol established ceasefires, power-sharing, and disarmament timelines that both sides swore they'd honor. But Savimbi didn't trust it. Within months, localized fighting crept back. Full-scale war resumed by 1998. Angola wouldn't see real peace until Savimbi himself was killed in 2002. The Lusaka Protocol didn't end the war — it just paused it.
A fire engulfed a 16-story commercial building in Hong Kong's Kowloon district, killing 41 people and injuring 81 in …
A fire engulfed a 16-story commercial building in Hong Kong's Kowloon district, killing 41 people and injuring 81 in the territory's deadliest building fire in decades. Many victims were trapped on upper floors where exits were blocked, and the disaster led to comprehensive fire safety reforms for Hong Kong's dense high-rise landscape.
A Taliban court looked at the man the FBI wanted dead or alive and declared him innocent.
A Taliban court looked at the man the FBI wanted dead or alive and declared him innocent. Clean hands. No sin. This wasn't ignorance — it was a deliberate shield, issued just months after the August bombings killed 224 people across Nairobi and Dar es Salaam. The ruling made extradition legally impossible under Taliban logic. America pushed. The Taliban held firm. Bin Laden stayed. And that decision, dressed up in the language of Islamic jurisprudence, helped set the clock ticking toward September 11, 2001.
Russia launches the Zarya module from Baikonur, kicking off the assembly of the International Space Station.
Russia launches the Zarya module from Baikonur, kicking off the assembly of the International Space Station. This specific hardware provided the initial power and propulsion needed to anchor the orbiting laboratory, enabling decades of continuous human presence above Earth.
Russia launched the Zarya control module into orbit, the first piece of the International Space Station.
Russia launched the Zarya control module into orbit, the first piece of the International Space Station. The 20-ton module provided power and propulsion for the station's early assembly, beginning a project that would grow into the largest structure ever built in space.
The building had carried no name for decades.
The building had carried no name for decades. Then George W. Bush — a Republican — walked in and named it after a Kennedy. The Robert F. Kennedy Justice Building dedication happened on what would've been RFK's 76th birthday, May 20, 2001, inside the very department Kennedy once ran as Attorney General. Bush honored a man from America's most famous Democratic dynasty, no hesitation. And that's the part worth sitting with: the Justice Department itself carries his name now, not any president's.
Four bombs.
Four bombs. Two days. A city already reeling. The November 20 attacks hit the HSBC headquarters and British Consulate General Roger Short's building within minutes of each other, killing Short along with 27 others. Istanbul's streets had barely cleared from November 15. Al-Qaeda-linked group IBDA-C claimed responsibility, but the timing wasn't random — it landed the same day Tony Blair visited George W. Bush in London. The deadliest attack on British diplomats in decades, and it happened while two leaders celebrated their alliance.
Forty-six percent.
Forty-six percent. Gone. In barely thirteen months, the Dow shed nearly half its value, bottoming at 7,552.29 — levels unseen since 1997. But the real gut-punch lives in the inflation-adjusted numbers: the S&P 500 effectively erased thirteen years of gains, dragging investors back to May 1995. Ordinary retirement accounts vanished overnight. Families who'd planned to retire in 2009 didn't. And the March 2000 peak that started this freefall? That was the dot-com bubble's last gasp — meaning two separate manias destroyed one generation's wealth twice.
Jihadist gunmen stormed the Radisson Blu hotel in Bamako, Mali, taking 170 hostages and killing at least 19 people.
Jihadist gunmen stormed the Radisson Blu hotel in Bamako, Mali, taking 170 hostages and killing at least 19 people. The attack, claimed by al-Mourabitoun and al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, underscored the spread of militant Islamist violence across West Africa.
Jimmie Johnson clinched his seventh NASCAR Cup Series title on November 20, 2016, tying Richard Petty and Dale Earnha…
Jimmie Johnson clinched his seventh NASCAR Cup Series title on November 20, 2016, tying Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt for the most championships in series history. This achievement cemented his legacy as one of the sport's greatest drivers, proving that sustained excellence over a decade could match the dominance of racing legends from previous eras.
A 1.6 million-square-foot building — gone in seconds.
A 1.6 million-square-foot building — gone in seconds. The Georgia Dome, which had hosted two Super Bowls and the 1996 Olympic basketball finals, was brought down by strategically placed explosives on November 20, 2017. Workers had spent weeks threading charges through its steel bones. But the real twist? The $1.5 billion Mercedes-Benz Stadium that replaced it was already standing next door, watching. The old dome didn't disappear into history — it collapsed in the shadow of its own successor.
The 2022 FIFA World Cup kicks off in Qatar, shattering tradition as the first tournament ever staged in the Middle East.
The 2022 FIFA World Cup kicks off in Qatar, shattering tradition as the first tournament ever staged in the Middle East. This historic shift forces global organizers to confront extreme heat challenges and sparks intense debates about labor rights across the host nation's construction sites. The event redefines the sport's geographic boundaries while igniting a worldwide conversation on human rights within international sporting governance.