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On this day

October 3

Germany Reunifies: Cold War Division Ends (1990). O.J. Acquitted: Race and Justice Divide America (1995). Notable births include Gwen Stefani (1969), Lindsey Buckingham (1949), Tommy Lee (1962).

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Germany Reunifies: Cold War Division Ends
1990Event

Germany Reunifies: Cold War Division Ends

Reunification happened faster than anyone planned. When Hungary cut its border fence in May 1989, East Germans poured through, and the GDR regime collapsed within months. The Two Plus Four Treaty, signed in September 1990, gave the new Germany full sovereignty while letting it keep NATO membership and European Community ties. Midnight on October 3 brought fireworks at the Brandenburg Gate and tears from people who had lived divided for 41 years. The economic reality was harsher: West Germany poured over 2 trillion euros into rebuilding the East over the next three decades, yet wages and productivity in eastern states still lag behind. The wall came down in a night, but the economic wall took a generation to even begin dismantling.

O.J. Acquitted: Race and Justice Divide America
1995

O.J. Acquitted: Race and Justice Divide America

The jury deliberated for less than four hours after a nine-month trial that consumed American attention like no legal proceeding before it. An estimated 150 million people watched the verdict live on October 3, 1995. In offices, bars, and classrooms across the country, the reaction split along racial lines: polls showed 77% of Black Americans agreed with the acquittal while 75% of white Americans believed Simpson was guilty. The prosecution's case included DNA evidence, a bloody glove, and a history of domestic violence, but defense attorneys Johnny Cochran and Robert Shapiro attacked the LAPD's credibility, especially detective Mark Fuhrman's use of racial slurs. Simpson was later found liable in a civil trial and ordered to pay $33.5 million in damages.

Poe Found in Gutter: The Mysterious Final Days
1849

Poe Found in Gutter: The Mysterious Final Days

A printer named Joseph Walker found Edgar Allan Poe semiconscious outside Gunner's Hall tavern in Baltimore on October 3, 1849, wearing clothes that weren't his own. Poe was taken to Washington Medical College, where he drifted in and out of consciousness for four days, calling repeatedly for someone named 'Reynolds' before dying on October 7. He was 40 years old. No autopsy was performed. His medical records were lost. Theories about his death include rabies, alcoholism, carbon monoxide poisoning, heavy metal poisoning, and cooping, a form of voter fraud where victims were drugged, disguised, and forced to vote at multiple polling stations. The clothes he wore weren't his, and it was Election Day in Baltimore. The real answer died with him.

Lincoln Proclaims Thanksgiving: Unifying a Nation
1863

Lincoln Proclaims Thanksgiving: Unifying a Nation

Lincoln proclaimed the last Thursday in November as a national day of Thanksgiving on October 3, 1863, in the middle of a war that had already killed hundreds of thousands. The timing was deliberate: Gettysburg and Vicksburg had turned the tide that summer, and Lincoln needed a unifying gesture. Sarah Josepha Hale, editor of Godey's Lady's Book, had lobbied five presidents over 17 years for a fixed national holiday. Lincoln finally said yes. The date stuck until 1939, when FDR moved it up a week to extend the Christmas shopping season. Congress overruled him in 1941 and fixed it permanently as the fourth Thursday in November. The turkey, cranberry sauce, and football came later. Lincoln just wanted Americans to stop killing each other long enough to give thanks.

V-2 Rocket Reaches Space: First Man-Made Object
1942

V-2 Rocket Reaches Space: First Man-Made Object

The A-4 rocket, later designated V-2, reached an altitude of 84.5 kilometers on its third test flight from Peenemunde on October 3, 1942, crossing the boundary of space. Two previous attempts had exploded. Wernher von Braun's team celebrated, though one engineer reportedly reminded them they had just perfected a weapon of mass destruction. Germany fired over 3,000 V-2s at London, Antwerp, and other cities, killing roughly 9,000 people. The rockets also killed an estimated 12,000 concentration camp prisoners forced to build them at the Mittelbau-Dora underground factory. After the war, von Braun surrendered to the Americans, who brought him and 1,600 German scientists to the United States under Operation Paperclip. He built the Saturn V that took astronauts to the Moon.

Quote of the Day

“It is the spirit of the age to believe that any fact, no matter how suspect, is superior to any imaginative exercise, no matter how true.”

Gore Vidal

Historical events

Black Hawk Down: 18 Americans Killed in Mogadishu
1993

Black Hawk Down: 18 Americans Killed in Mogadishu

Task Force Ranger's mission to capture two of Mohamed Farrah Aidid's lieutenants was supposed to last one hour. It lasted 17. Two Black Hawk helicopters were shot down over Mogadishu on October 3, 1993, and Somali militias surrounded both crash sites. Delta Force operators Gary Gordon and Randy Shughart volunteered to defend the second crash site, knowing they would be overwhelmed. Both were killed. Eighteen Americans died in total, 73 were wounded, and pilot Michael Durant was captured and held for 11 days. Somali casualties ranged from 300 to over 1,000. The televised image of an American soldier's body being dragged through the streets caused immediate public revulsion. Clinton withdrew U.S. forces within six months, and the debacle directly influenced America's refusal to intervene in Rwanda.

Hunger Strike Ends: 10 Dead at Maze Prison
1981

Hunger Strike Ends: 10 Dead at Maze Prison

Bobby Sands began refusing food on March 1, 1981, demanding that IRA prisoners be treated as political prisoners rather than criminals. Margaret Thatcher refused to negotiate. Sands died on May 5 after 66 days without food. Nine more men followed him over the next four months. The strikes ended on October 3 after families began authorizing medical intervention for unconscious strikers. The ten deaths achieved none of their stated demands. But the political impact was seismic: Sands had been elected to Parliament while starving. His funeral drew 100,000 mourners. Sinn Fein's vote share doubled. IRA recruitment surged. The hunger strikes transformed the Republican movement from a purely military campaign into a political force that eventually negotiated the Good Friday Agreement.

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Born on October 3

Portrait of ASAP Rocky
ASAP Rocky 1988

ASAP Rocky was named Rakim after the rapper.

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He was homeless at 13, sleeping in shelters across Manhattan. He started rapping to escape. His first mixtape went viral in 2011. Within a year, he'd signed a $3 million record deal. He was 23. He named his collective ASAP: Always Strive And Prosper.

Portrait of Jake Shears
Jake Shears 1978

Jake Shears was born Jason Sellards on Bainbridge Island, Washington.

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He moved to New York and started Scissor Sisters in a gay nightclub. Their cover of Pink Floyd's 'Comfortably Numb' became the UK's bestselling single of 2004. Pink Floyd hated it. Roger Waters called it 'a good laugh.' Shears didn't care.

Portrait of Talib Kweli
Talib Kweli 1975

Talib Kweli's name means 'student' and 'seeker of truth' in Arabic.

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His mother was a professor, his father an administrator at Adelphi University. He was studying experimental theater at NYU when he dropped out to make conscious hip-hop. He's spent 25 years proving that smart rap could sell without compromising.

Portrait of India Arie
India Arie 1975

India Arie redefined neo-soul in the early 2000s by prioritizing acoustic vulnerability and self-love over the polished…

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artifice of mainstream R&B. Her debut album, Acoustic Soul, earned seven Grammy nominations and proved that listeners craved authentic, message-driven songwriting. She continues to use her platform to advocate for artistic integrity and emotional healing in the music industry.

Portrait of Black Thought
Black Thought 1972

Black Thought has been The Roots' lead MC since 1987.

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He was 15 when he met Questlove at the Philadelphia High School for Creative and Performing Arts. They've been the house band for The Tonight Show since 2014. He's recorded over 300 episodes of television a year for a decade. He's never missed a show.

Portrait of Kevin Richardson
Kevin Richardson 1971

Kevin Richardson quit the Backstreet Boys in 2006 to focus on family, then rejoined in 2012 because his son asked him to.

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The band's still touring. He's 53, doing the same choreography he learned at 19. His son comes to the shows now.

Portrait of Gwen Stefani

Gwen Stefani exploded onto the pop-ska scene as frontwoman of No Doubt, whose album Tragic Kingdom sold 16 million copies worldwide.

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She parlayed that success into a solo career, a fashion empire with L.A.M.B., and a judging seat on The Voice, becoming one of the most commercially versatile entertainers of her generation.

Portrait of Tommy Lee
Tommy Lee 1962

Tommy Lee's real name is Thomas Lee Bass — his mother was a former Miss Greece contestant.

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He married Pamela Anderson four days after meeting her. The drum kit that rotated upside-down during Mötley Crüe concerts was his idea. He designed it himself, then rode it 40 feet in the air every night.

Portrait of Tim Westwood
Tim Westwood 1957

Tim Westwood transformed British hip-hop from a niche underground interest into a mainstream cultural force through his…

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decades-long tenure at BBC Radio 1Xtra. By championing both domestic grime artists and American rap icons, he bridged the gap between global industry trends and the local London scene, fundamentally altering the UK’s musical landscape.

Portrait of Stevie Ray Vaughan
Stevie Ray Vaughan 1954

Stevie Ray Vaughan was terrified of flying.

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He died in a helicopter crash at 35, leaving a concert where he'd played with Eric Clapton. He'd been sober for four years. His last album was called In Step. He'd finally figured it out.

Portrait of Lindsey Buckingham
Lindsey Buckingham 1949

Lindsey Buckingham was kicked out of Fleetwood Mac in 1987 despite producing their biggest albums.

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He'd joined with Stevie Nicks as a couple, then spent years making hits while their relationship disintegrated on stage. His guitar work and production turned 'Rumours' into one of the best-selling albums ever. The band fired him anyway. He rejoined twice.

Portrait of Fred DeLuca
Fred DeLuca 1947

Fred DeLuca borrowed $1,000 from a family friend at 17 to open a sandwich shop in Connecticut.

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He called it Pete's Super Submarines. It failed. He opened another. Then another. He renamed it Subway and franchised the concept. When he died in 2015, there were 44,000 locations in 110 countries. The family friend became a multimillionaire. The $1,000 loan was never formally repaid.

Portrait of Glenn Hall
Glenn Hall 1931

Glenn Hall played 502 consecutive games as an NHL goalie.

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He vomited before almost every one. The streak lasted seven years without a mask. He revolutionized goaltending by dropping to his knees, which coaches said was wrong. He won the Vezina Trophy three times. They called him Mr. Goalie.

Portrait of James M. Buchanan
James M. Buchanan 1919

James M.

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Buchanan argued that politicians act in self-interest, not public interest. He won the Nobel Prize for applying economic analysis to political decision-making. His work inspired the Tea Party and libertarian movements. He died insisting he'd been misunderstood. Ideas escape their authors.

Portrait of Charles J. Pedersen
Charles J. Pedersen 1904

Charles Pedersen worked at DuPont for 42 years, mostly on petroleum additives, then discovered crown ethers at age 62…

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while experimenting in his spare time. He won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry at 83. He'd retired before anyone realized what he'd found.

Portrait of Carl von Ossietzky
Carl von Ossietzky 1889

Carl von Ossietzky published evidence that Germany was secretly rearming in violation of the Versailles Treaty.

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He was convicted of treason and sent to a concentration camp. He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1935 while imprisoned. Hitler forbade him from accepting it. He died of tuberculosis in 1938, still in custody. Norway still awards the prize in his name.

Portrait of Leopold II
Leopold II 1797

Leopold II ruled Tuscany for 17 years, abolished the death penalty, and reformed the legal code.

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Then the revolutions of 1848 forced him to flee to Gaeta. He returned with Austrian troops, ruled as a puppet for another decade, and was finally deposed when Italy unified in 1859. He spent his last 11 years in exile in Rome, watching Tuscany thrive without him.

Portrait of Francisco Morazán
Francisco Morazán 1792

Francisco Morazán unified Central America into one republic in 1823 and spent 17 years fighting to keep it together.

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El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Guatemala — one nation. It lasted until 1838. Regional leaders wanted their own power. He was executed by firing squad in Costa Rica in 1842. The countries never reunited.

Died on October 3

Portrait of Denis Healey
Denis Healey 2015

Denis Healey was nearly killed at Anzio in 1944 when a shell landed five yards from him.

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He became Britain's Defence Secretary, then Chancellor of the Exchequer during the 1976 IMF crisis. He lost the Labour Party leadership by one vote in 1980. He served 40 years in Parliament. He died at 98, the oldest former Chancellor ever.

Portrait of Benjamin Orr
Benjamin Orr 2000

Benjamin Orr provided the cool, steady vocal anchor for The Cars, defining the sound of New Wave hits like Drive and Just What I Needed.

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His death from pancreatic cancer at age 53 silenced one of rock’s most distinct voices, ending any hope for a full reunion of the band’s original lineup.

Portrait of Akio Morita
Akio Morita 1999

Akio Morita co-founded Sony in a bombed-out department store in 1946 with $500 and seven employees.

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Their first product was a rice cooker that burned the rice. He convinced Americans to buy transistor radios from Japan when "Made in Japan" meant junk. He created the Walkman after watching his daughter lug a stereo to the beach. Sony's board hated the idea. He built it anyway. 400 million sold.

Portrait of Gary Gordon
Gary Gordon 1993

Gary Gordon asked to be inserted into Mogadishu to defend a downed helicopter crew.

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He asked twice. Command said no twice. He asked a third time. They let him go. He and another sniper held off a mob for 30 minutes until their ammunition ran out. Both died. They saved the pilot. Gordon's body was recovered 11 days later.

Portrait of Stefano Casiraghi
Stefano Casiraghi 1990

Stefano Casiraghi was a speedboat racer married to Princess Caroline of Monaco.

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He won two world championships. He was racing off Monaco in 1990 when his boat hit a wave at 100 mph. The boat flipped. He died instantly. He was 30. His three children were all under six. Caroline never remarried for 13 years.

Portrait of Franz Josef Strauss
Franz Josef Strauss 1988

Franz Josef Strauss dominated West German politics for decades, transforming Bavaria from an agrarian backwater into a…

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high-tech industrial powerhouse. His sudden death in 1988 removed the most formidable conservative challenger to Chancellor Helmut Kohl, consolidating Kohl’s grip on the Christian Social Union and ensuring a unified path toward German reunification.

Portrait of Woody Guthrie
Woody Guthrie 1967

Woody Guthrie wrote "This Land Is Your Land" as an angry response to "God Bless America.

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" He scrawled "This machine kills fascists" on his guitar and wrote 3,000 songs. Huntington's disease destroyed his brain for 13 years. He couldn't play at the end. Bob Dylan visited him in the hospital.

Portrait of Gustav Stresemann
Gustav Stresemann 1929

Gustav Stresemann stabilized the Weimar Republic’s hyperinflation and secured Germany’s return to the international…

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community through the Locarno Treaties. His sudden death from a stroke removed the primary architect of German-French reconciliation, leaving a fragile political vacuum that extremist factions exploited to dismantle the nation’s democratic institutions within a few years.

Portrait of Elias Howe
Elias Howe 1867

Elias Howe patented the lockstitch sewing machine in 1846.

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Nobody bought it. He went to England, sold the rights, came home broke. Isaac Singer copied his design and got rich. Howe sued and won — Singer paid him royalties. Howe made $2 million before he died at 48. He invented it. Singer sold it. Patent law decided who ate.

Portrait of Gaius Cassius Longinus
Gaius Cassius Longinus 42 BC

Gaius Cassius Longinus convinced Brutus to join the conspiracy with one argument: Caesar would make himself king.

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Cassius led 60 senators in the assassination—23 stab wounds, Caesar dead on the Senate floor. Then Mark Antony turned Rome against them with one speech. Cassius fled east, raised an army, lost the battle at Philippi. He ordered his slave to kill him with the same dagger he'd used on Caesar. The slave obeyed.

Holidays & observances

Episcopalians honor George Bell and John Raleigh Mott today for their relentless pursuit of Christian unity.

Episcopalians honor George Bell and John Raleigh Mott today for their relentless pursuit of Christian unity. By spearheading the ecumenical movement and the World Council of Churches, they dismantled long-standing sectarian barriers and transformed how global denominations collaborate on humanitarian aid and social justice initiatives.

October 3 in the Eastern Orthodox calendar corresponds to late October in the Gregorian, carrying commemorations of m…

October 3 in the Eastern Orthodox calendar corresponds to late October in the Gregorian, carrying commemorations of martyrs and confessors from the early church. The Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar diverges from the Catholic calendar at almost every date because the Orthodox church still uses the Julian system for its fixed feasts. This means the same saints appear on different Gregorian dates depending on whether you're looking at Eastern or Western observance — a byproduct of the calendar reform that Catholic countries adopted in 1582 and Orthodox countries resisted for centuries.

Iraq's independence came with an asterisk in 1932.

Iraq's independence came with an asterisk in 1932. Britain granted sovereignty but kept military bases, oil contracts, and veto power over foreign policy. King Faisal signed the treaty knowing it wasn't really freedom. Full British withdrawal didn't happen until 1955, 23 years after the independence they celebrate today.

South Korea celebrates Gaecheonjeol on October 3, marking the mythical founding of the first Korean kingdom in 2333 B…

South Korea celebrates Gaecheonjeol on October 3, marking the mythical founding of the first Korean kingdom in 2333 BCE by Dangun, who was supposedly born from a union between a god and a bear who'd transformed into a woman. The bear had lived in a cave eating garlic for 100 days to become human. It's the only national holiday based on a foundation myth rather than a historical event. North Korea claims Dangun's tomb is near Pyongyang. They rebuilt it in 1993. South Korea disputes this. Both countries celebrate the same impossible birthday.

Leiden celebrates the day Spanish troops lifted their siege in 1574.

Leiden celebrates the day Spanish troops lifted their siege in 1574. The city had been starving for months. William of Orange broke the dikes, flooding the land around the city so relief ships could sail across farmland. The Spanish fled. Leiden's mayor distributed herring and white bread. They've eaten it every October 3rd since.

Mean Girls Day is October 3rd because that's when Aaron Samuels asks Cady what day it is in the 2004 movie.

Mean Girls Day is October 3rd because that's when Aaron Samuels asks Cady what day it is in the 2004 movie. She says "It's October 3rd." The line has no plot importance. Fans turned two seconds of dialogue into an annual celebration. Paramount Pictures now releases merchandise. Cast members post reunions. A throwaway question about the date became the date itself.

Honduras celebrates Francisco Morazán, who tried to keep Central America united as one country.

Honduras celebrates Francisco Morazán, who tried to keep Central America united as one country. He served as president of the Federal Republic of Central America from 1830 to 1839. When it collapsed into five separate nations, he kept fighting to reunite them. He was executed by firing squad in Costa Rica in 1842, still trying.

Leiden celebrates October 3 as the day in 1574 when the Spanish siege was broken after four months of starvation.

Leiden celebrates October 3 as the day in 1574 when the Spanish siege was broken after four months of starvation. The Dutch breached their own dikes, flooding the land around the city so relief ships could sail across the fields. The Spanish abandoned their camps as water rose around them. Leiden's citizens were eating rats and leather. Three thousand had died of hunger and plague. William of Orange offered the starving city a choice of rewards: tax relief or a university. They chose the university. It opened five months later.

The saint known as Abd-al-Masih — "Servant of Christ" in Arabic — represents a category of early Christian martyrs in…

The saint known as Abd-al-Masih — "Servant of Christ" in Arabic — represents a category of early Christian martyrs in the Eastern church whose records survived only partially through martyrologies and later hagiographies. The name itself is a marker of Arabic-speaking Christianity, a tradition that predates Islam and persisted through the early caliphates. Arab Christianity's deep history is often invisible in Western accounts. Saints like Abd-al-Masih are anchors for communities that have been Christian since the first century.

French citizens celebrated the Immortelle, or strawflower, on this day under the short-lived Republican Calendar.

French citizens celebrated the Immortelle, or strawflower, on this day under the short-lived Republican Calendar. By dedicating the twelfth day of Vendémiaire to this resilient bloom, the radical government replaced traditional saints' days with symbols of nature, attempting to secularize daily life and anchor the new republic in the rhythms of the harvest.

Ewald the Black and Ewald the White were two Anglo-Saxon priests who traveled to Old Saxony in 695 to convert the pag…

Ewald the Black and Ewald the White were two Anglo-Saxon priests who traveled to Old Saxony in 695 to convert the pagan population. A local chieftain had them killed before they could reach the regional lord whose conversion might have protected them. Their bodies were thrown in the Rhine. The story was recorded by Bede and later embellished with miracles. They are patrons of Westphalia. Their double feast — two brothers, two names, two deaths on the same day — makes them unusual entries in the martyrology.

Germany celebrates reunification on October 3, the day in 1990 when East Germany legally ceased to exist.

Germany celebrates reunification on October 3, the day in 1990 when East Germany legally ceased to exist. The Berlin Wall had fallen 11 months earlier. Helmut Kohl wanted reunification before Christmas. The Soviets wanted cash — Germany paid 55 billion Deutschmarks for permission. East Germany didn't merge with West Germany. It was absorbed, dissolved, erased. Five new states joined the Federal Republic. Seventeen million people went to bed in one country and woke up in another. The party in Berlin lasted three days.

Anne-Thérèse Guérin came from Brittany to the Indiana frontier in 1840 with five other nuns.

Anne-Thérèse Guérin came from Brittany to the Indiana frontier in 1840 with five other nuns. The mission was to establish schools. The conditions were extreme: dense forest, no roads, no buildings, an American bishop who refused to let her govern her own institution. She managed to found Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College, the oldest Catholic women's college in the United States. The bishop eventually excommunicated her in a dispute over authority — a decision reversed within months. She was canonized in 2006. The college she founded is still operating.

Ewald the Black and Ewald the White traveled together from England to Saxony in 695 AD with the purpose of converting…

Ewald the Black and Ewald the White traveled together from England to Saxony in 695 AD with the purpose of converting the pagan tribes. The story says a steward let them stay the night, but before they could meet the local chieftain, other men killed them — fearing they would convert their lord. Their bodies were thrown in the Rhine. A light over the river reportedly revealed where they had drowned. King Pepin of the Franks recovered the bodies. Bede recorded the story within a generation. Two brothers who failed in their mission are remembered for 1,300 years.