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  • Chang'an, China
    Friday Oct 6, 23
    Imperial China (Qin and Han dynasties)

    Lülin rebels stormed the Weiyang Palace and killed Wang

    Chang'an, China
    Friday Oct 6, 23

    Lülin rebels stormed the Weiyang Palace and killed Wang. The Gengshi Emperor ascended the throne, restoring the Han dynasty.




  • Rome, Italy, Roman Empire
    Tuesday Oct 13, 54
    Roman Empire

    Claudius died

    Rome, Italy, Roman Empire
    Tuesday Oct 13, 54

    Claudius was deified later that year. The death of Claudius paved the way for Agrippina's own son, the 17-year-old Lucius Domitius Nero.




  • Rome
    Tuesday Oct 13, 54
    Roman Empire

    Mad Nero

    Rome
    Tuesday Oct 13, 54

    Nero ruled from 54 to 68. During his rule, Nero focused much of his attention on diplomacy, trade, and increasing the cultural capital of the empire.




  • Rome
    Saturday Oct 22, 253
    Roman Empire

    Valerian's first act as emperor

    Rome
    Saturday Oct 22, 253

    Valerian's first act as emperor on October 22, 253, was to appoint his son Gallienus caesar. Early in his reign, affairs in Europe went from bad to worse, and the whole West fell into disorder. In the East, Antioch had fallen into the hands of a Sassanid vassal and Armenia was occupied by Shapur I (Sapor).




  • Campania, Italy
    Oct, 552
    Byzantine Empire

    Battle of Mons Lactarius

    Campania, Italy
    Oct, 552

    Totila's successor, Teia, was defeated at the Battle of Mons Lactarius (October 552).




  • Constantinople, Byzantine Empire
    Friday Oct 5, 610
    Byzantine Empire

    Phocas was deposed

    Constantinople, Byzantine Empire
    Friday Oct 5, 610

    After Maurice's murder by Phocas, Khosrau used the pretext to reconquer the Roman province of Mesopotamia. Phocas, an unpopular ruler invariably described in Byzantine sources as a "tyrant", was the target of a number of Senate-led plots. He was eventually deposed in 610 by Heraclius, who sailed to Constantinople from Carthage with an icon affixed to the prow of his ship.




  • Egypt
    Friday Oct 14, 996
    Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah

    His inauguration

    Egypt
    Friday Oct 14, 996

    Al-Ḥākim's father had intended the eunuch Barjawan to act as regent until Al-Ḥākim was old enough to rule by himself. Ibn 'Ammar and the Qadi Muhammad ibn Nu'man were to assist in the guardianship of the new caliph. Instead, al-Hasan ibn 'Ammar (the leader of the Kutama) immediately seized the office of wasīta "chief minister" from 'Īsa ibn Nestorius. At the time the office of sifāra "secretary of state" was also combined within that office. Ibn 'Ammar then took the title of Amīn ad-Dawla "the one trusted in the empire". This was the first time that the term "empire" was associated with the Fatimid state.


  • Jerusalem
    Thursday Oct 19, 1009
    Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah

    Destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre

    Jerusalem
    Thursday Oct 19, 1009

    Al-Ḥākim's destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in 1009.


  • Nicaea (present-day İznik, Turkey)
    Wednesday Oct 21, 1096
    Crusades

    Battle of Civetot

    Nicaea (present-day İznik, Turkey)
    Wednesday Oct 21, 1096

    They were destroyed in 1096 when the main body of Crusaders was annihilated at the battle of Civetot.


  • Antioch (Present-Day Antakya, Turkey)
    Wednesday Oct 20, 1097
    Crusades

    Siege of Antioch

    Antioch (Present-Day Antakya, Turkey)
    Wednesday Oct 20, 1097

    The Crusader army marched to the former Byzantine city of Antioch that had been in Muslim control since 1084. The Crusaders began the siege of Antioch in October 1097 tell Antioch was captured.


  • Zengid dynasty (now Syria)
    Tuesday Oct 11, 1138
    Disasters with highest death tolls

    1138 Aleppo Earthquake

    Zengid dynasty (now Syria)
    Tuesday Oct 11, 1138

    The 1138 Aleppo earthquake was among the deadliest earthquakes in history. Its name was taken from the city of Aleppo, in northern Syria, where the most casualties were sustained. The quake occurred on 11 October 1138 and was preceded by a smaller quake on the 10th. However, the figure of 230,000 dead is based on a historical conflation of this earthquake with earthquakes in November 1137 on the Jazira plain and the large seismic event of 30 September 1139 in the Transcaucasian city of Ganja. The first mention of a 230,000 death toll was by Ibn Taghribirdi in the fifteenth century.


  • Jerusalem
    Friday Oct 2, 1187
    Crusades

    Siege of Jerusalem

    Jerusalem
    Friday Oct 2, 1187

    The siege of Jerusalem lasted from September 20 to October 2, 1187, when Balian of Ibelin surrendered the city to Saladin.


  • Vatican City
    Thursday Oct 29, 1187
    Crusades

    Gregory VIII issued the bull Audita tremendi calling for "Third Crusade"

    Vatican City
    Thursday Oct 29, 1187

    Urban III died shortly after hearing the news, and his successor Gregory VIII issued the bull Audita tremendi on 29 October 1187 describing the events in the East and urging all Christians to take up arms and go to the aid of those in the Kingdom of Jerusalem, calling for a new crusade to the Holy Land––the Third Crusade––to be led by Frederick Barbarossa and Richard I of England.


  • Cairo, Egypt
    Sunday Oct 24, 1260
    Mamluks

    Baibars was the fourth Mamluk Sultan of Mamluk

    Cairo, Egypt
    Sunday Oct 24, 1260

    Al-Malik al-Zahir Rukn al-Din Baibars al-Bunduqdari was the fourth Mamluk sultan of Egypt in the Bahri dynasty, succeeding Qutuz. He was one of the commanders of the Egyptian forces that inflicted a defeat on the Seventh Crusade of King Louis IX of France.


  • Kosovo
    Tuesday Oct 17, 1448
    Ottoman Empire

    Second Battle of Kosovo

    Kosovo
    Tuesday Oct 17, 1448

    Four years later, John Hunyadi prepared another army of Hungarian and Wallachian forces to attack the Turks but was again defeated at the Second Battle of Kosovo in 1448.


  • Egypt
    Wednesday Oct 9, 1467
    Mamluks

    Sayf ad-Din Bilbay was a Mamluk sultan of Egypt in 1467

    Egypt
    Wednesday Oct 9, 1467

    Sayf ad-Din Bilbay or Yalbay was a Mamluk sultan of Egypt from 9 October to 4 December 1467.


  • Cairo, Egypt
    Monday Oct 31, 1498
    Mamluks

    Abu Sa'id Qansuh was the twenty third Mamluk Sultan of Egypt

    Cairo, Egypt
    Monday Oct 31, 1498

    Abu Sa'id Qansuh, also Qansuh Al-Ashrafi, Qansuh I or Al-Zahir Qansuh, was the twenty third Mamluk Sultan of Egypt from the Burji dynasty.


  • Florence, Italy
    Sunday Oct 18, 1503
    Leonardo da Vinci

    Guild of Saint Luke

    Florence, Italy
    Sunday Oct 18, 1503

    Leonardo had left Borgia's service and returned to Florence by early 1503, where he rejoined the Guild of Saint Luke on 18 October of that year.


  • Milan, Italy
    Oct, 1515
    Leonardo da Vinci

    King Francis I of France recaptured Milan

    Milan, Italy
    Oct, 1515

    In October 1515, King Francis I of France recaptured Milan.


  • Cairo, Egypt
    Tuesday Oct 17, 1516
    Mamluks

    Tuman bay II was the last Sultan of Egypt

    Cairo, Egypt
    Tuesday Oct 17, 1516

    Al-Ashraf Abu Al-Nasr Tuman bay, better known as Tuman bay II, was the last Sultan of Egypt before the country's conquest by the Ottoman Turks in 1517.


  • Gulf of Patras, Ionian Sea
    Thursday Oct 7, 1571
    Ottoman Empire

    Battle of Lepanto

    Gulf of Patras, Ionian Sea
    Thursday Oct 7, 1571

    Meanwhile, the Holy league consisting of mostly Spanish and Venetian fleets won a victory over the Ottoman fleet at the Battle of Lepanto (1571), off southwestern Greece; Catholic forces killed over 30,000 Turks and destroyed 200 of their ships.


  • Leiden (now Netherlands)
    Oct, 1573
    Thanksgiving

    Siege of Leiden in 1574

    Leiden (now Netherlands)
    Oct, 1573

    According to historian Jeremy Bangs, director of the Leiden American Pilgrim Museum, the Pilgrims may have been influenced by watching the annual services of Thanksgiving for the relief of the siege of Leiden in 1574, while they were staying in Leiden. Now called Oktober Feest, Leiden's autumn thanksgiving celebration in 1617 was the occasion for sectarian disturbance that appears to have accelerated the pilgrims' plans to emigrate to America. Later in Massachusetts, religious thanksgiving services were declared by civil leaders such as Governor Bradford, who planned the colony's thanksgiving celebration and fast in 1623. The practice of holding an annual harvest festival did not become a regular affair in New England until the late 1660s.


  • London, England, United Kingdom
    Monday Oct 29, 1618
    The palace of Westminster England

    Sir Walter Raleigh was executed

    London, England, United Kingdom
    Monday Oct 29, 1618

    Sir Walter Raleigh was executed at the Palace of Westminster on 29 October 1618.


  • Dornheim, Germany
    Monday Oct 17, 1707
    Johann Sebastian Bach

    Marriage

    Dornheim, Germany
    Monday Oct 17, 1707

    Bach married Maria Barbara Bach, his second cousin.


  • (Chūbu region, Kansai region, Shikoku, Kyūshū), Japan
    Friday Oct 28, 1707
    02:00:00 PM
    Disasters with highest death tolls

    1707 HōEi Earthquake

    (Chūbu region, Kansai region, Shikoku, Kyūshū), Japan
    Friday Oct 28, 1707
    02:00:00 PM

    The 1707 Hōei earthquake (Hōei jishin 宝永地震) struck south-central Japan at 14:00 local time on 28 October 1707. It caused moderate to severe damage throughout southwestern Honshu, Shikoku and southeastern Kyūshū. The earthquake, and the resulting destructive tsunami, caused more than 5,000 casualties.


  • India
    Monday Oct 7, 1737
    Disasters with highest death tolls

    1737 Calcutta Cyclone

    India
    Monday Oct 7, 1737

    On 7 October 1737, a natural disaster struck the city of Calcutta (modern-day Kolkata) in India. For a long time this was believed in Europe to have been the result of an earthquake, but it is now believed to have been a tropical cyclone. Thomas Joshua Moore, the duties collector for the British East India Company in Calcutta, wrote in his official report that a storm and flood had destroyed nearly all the thatched buildings and killed 3,000 of the city's inhabitants. Other reports from merchant ships indicated an earthquake and tidal surge were to blame, destroying 20,000 ships in the harbor and killing 300,000 people. The population of Calcutta at the time was around 3,000–20,000.


  • Virginia, U.S. (then Colony of Virginia)
    Oct, 1753
    George Washington

    A Special envoy

    Virginia, U.S. (then Colony of Virginia)
    Oct, 1753

    In October 1753, Dinwiddie (Virginia's Lieutenant Governor) appointed Washington as a special envoy to demand that the French vacate territory which the British had claimed.


  • Vienna, Austria
    Oct, 1762
    Mozart

    Going to Vienna for the first time

    Vienna, Austria
    Oct, 1762

    The same year in October Leopold brought both kids off to Vienna. This great city, just as it is today, was the beating heart of music in Austrian lands. The youngsters were once again heard by the powers that were and invited to play at the Viennese court, which they did on 13 October.


  • Olmütz (Present Day Olomouc), Czech Republic
    Monday Oct 26, 1767
    Mozart

    Mozart and smallpox

    Olmütz (Present Day Olomouc), Czech Republic
    Monday Oct 26, 1767

    Wolfgang had shown the first smallpox symptoms. Because of the incubation time of the disease (about 12 days), it can be known that he had already contracted it in Vienna, Leopold called Doctor Wolff and Mozart was told to rest for at least a few months, he was so sick that he could see nothing for nine days and had to spare his eyes for several weeks after his recovery, Mozart was much better in December and the family mooted.


  • Milan, Italy
    Oct, 1770
    Mozart

    Operatic success in Milan

    Milan, Italy
    Oct, 1770

    Mozart began working on his recitations in October 1770, The opening night at the Teatro Regio Ducal on 26 December, with Mozart conducting himself, was an even better experience, The opera was called Mitridate, rè di Ponto. It is now overshadowed by the later operatic work of Mozart, and is rarely performed today as a result.


  • London, England, United Kingdom
    Oct, 1775
    George Washington

    King George III declared that the colonies were in open rebellion

    London, England, United Kingdom
    Oct, 1775

    In October 1775, King George III declared that the colonies were in open rebellion and relieved General Gage of command for incompetence, replacing him with General William Howe.


  • Augsburg, Germany
    Oct, 1777
    Mozart

    Mozart's meets Maria Anna

    Augsburg, Germany
    Oct, 1777

    Mozart met his distant cousin, Maria Anna Thekia, whom he affectionately nicknamed "Bäsle," while in Augsburg. She seems to have shared the sense of humour with Mozart and they soon became good friends, maybe even lovers. His letters to her indicate an transformation in him that shows he was more like every other 21-year-old in that respect. He finally ripped himself away from Basle and moved on to Mannheim with his mother.


  • Stillwater, Saratoga County, New York, U.S.
    Wednesday Oct 8, 1777
    George Washington

    Burgoyne tried to take Bemis Heights but was isolated from support by Howe

    Stillwater, Saratoga County, New York, U.S.
    Wednesday Oct 8, 1777

    On October 7, 1777, Burgoyne tried to take Bemis Heights but was isolated from support by Howe. He was forced to retreat to Saratoga and ultimately surrendered after the Battles of Saratoga. As Washington suspected, Gates' victory emboldened his critics.


  • Mannheim, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
    Thursday Oct 30, 1777
    Mozart

    Going to Mannheim and meeting the Webers

    Mannheim, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
    Thursday Oct 30, 1777

    He and his mother moved on to Mannheim, became pleasant with the Mannheim musicians, did some teaching and playing, accepted and partially fulfilled a flute music commission from a German surgeon, and fell in love with Aloysia Weber, a soprano, the second of four daughters of a music copyist. He has also written numerous sonatas for piano, some with violin. He put a scheme to his father for traveling with the naive and reckless Webers to Italy, and met with an angry response from Leopald.


  • (Present Day Southern Italy)
    Saturday Oct 3, 1778
    Flag of the United States

    Letter to Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies

    (Present Day Southern Italy)
    Saturday Oct 3, 1778

    Benjamin Franklin and John Adams, in a letter dated October 3, 1778, to Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies, described the American flag as consisting of "13 stripes, alternately red, white, and blue, a small square in the upper angle, next the flag staff, is a blue field, with 13 white stars, denoting a new Constellation."


  • Yorktown, Virginia, U.S.
    Saturday Oct 20, 1781
    George Washington

    Siege of Yorktown ended

    Yorktown, Virginia, U.S.
    Saturday Oct 20, 1781

    The siege ended with a British surrender on October 19, 1781; over 7,000 British soldiers were captured, in the last major land battle of the American Revolutionary War.


  • Vienna, Austria
    Oct, 1785
    Mozart

    Collaboration with Da Ponte

    Vienna, Austria
    Oct, 1785

    Mozart stepped away from keyboard writing around the end of 1785, and started his famous operatic partnership with the librettist Lorenzo Da Ponte. In 1786 the popular premiere of The Marriage of Figaro was celebrated in Vienna. Later in the year its reception in Prague was even warmer.


  • Vienna, Austria
    Oct, 1787
    Mozart

    Working as the Kammermusicus to the Emperor’s court

    Vienna, Austria
    Oct, 1787

    He had been given a new job: Kammermusicus to the Emperor’s court. The job did not require much from one so great as Mozart but it did guarantee him 800 gulden as a regular income.


  • Paris, France
    Saturday Oct 3, 1795
    Napoleon

    Royalists declared a rebellion against the National Convention

    Paris, France
    Saturday Oct 3, 1795

    On 3 October, royalists in Paris declared a rebellion against the National Convention.


  • Paris, France
    Monday Oct 5, 1795
    Napoleon

    1,400 royalists died and the rest fled

    Paris, France
    Monday Oct 5, 1795

    Napoleon ordered a young cavalry officer named Joachim Murat to seize large cannons and used them to repel the attackers on 5 October 1795 (13 Vendémiaire An IV in the French Republican Calendar); 1,400 royalists died and the rest fled.


  • Campoformido, Republic of Venice (Present Day Campoformido, Italy)
    Tuesday Oct 17, 1797
    Napoleon

    Treaty of Campo Formio

    Campoformido, Republic of Venice (Present Day Campoformido, Italy)
    Tuesday Oct 17, 1797

    These negotiations resulted in the Treaty of Campo Formio.


  • Paris, France
    Friday Oct 10, 1800
    Napoleon

    Conspiration des poignards

    Paris, France
    Friday Oct 10, 1800

    The Conspiration des poignards (Daggers Conspiracy) or Complot de l'Opéra (Opera Plot) was an alleged assassination attempt against Napoleon Bonaparte. The members of the plot were not clearly established. Authorities at the time presented it as an assassination attempt on Napoleon at the exit of the Paris operahouse on 18 vendémiaire year IX (10 October 1800), which was prevented by the police force of Joseph Fouché. However, this version was questioned very early on.


  • Heiligenstadt, Austria
    Wednesday Oct 6, 1802
    Beethoven

    Heiligenstadt Testament

    Heiligenstadt, Austria
    Wednesday Oct 6, 1802

    On the advice of his doctor, he moved to the small Austrian town of Heiligenstadt, just outside Vienna, from April to October 1802 in an attempt to come to terms with his condition. There he wrote the document now known as the “Heiligenstadt Testament”, a letter to his brothers which records his thoughts of suicide due to his growing deafness and records his resolution to continue living for and through his art. The letter was never actually sent and was discovered in the composer’s papers after his death. The letters to Wegeler and Amenda were not so despairing; in them, Beethoven commented also on his ongoing professional and financial success at this period, and his determination, as he expressed it to Wegeler, to “seize Fate by the throat; it shall certainly not crush me completely.” In 1806, Beethoven noted on his musical sketches "Let your deafness no longer be a secret – even in art."


  • Ulm, Electorate of Bavaria (Present Day Ulm, Germany)
    Wednesday Oct 16, 1805
    Napoleon

    Battle of Ulm

    Ulm, Electorate of Bavaria (Present Day Ulm, Germany)
    Wednesday Oct 16, 1805

    Austrian commander Karl Mack had gathered the greater part of the Austrian army at the fortress of Ulm in Swabia. Napoleon swung his forces to the southeast and the Grande Armée performed an elaborate wheeling movement that outflanked the Austrian positions. The Ulm Maneuver completely surprised General Mack, who belatedly understood that his army had been cut off. After some minor engagements that culminated in the Battle of Ulm, Mack finally surrendered after realizing that there was no way to break out of the French encirclement. For just 2,000 French casualties, Napoleon had managed to capture a total of 60,000 Austrian soldiers through his army's rapid marching.


  • Central Europe
    Sunday Oct 20, 1805
    Napoleon

    Ulm Campaign ended

    Central Europe
    Sunday Oct 20, 1805

    The Ulm Campaign is generally regarded as a strategic masterpiece and was influential in the development of the Schlieffen Plan in the late 19th century.


  • Jena and Auerstedt, Germany
    Tuesday Oct 14, 1806
    Napoleon

    Battle of Jena–Auerstedt

    Jena and Auerstedt, Germany
    Tuesday Oct 14, 1806

    Napoleon invaded Prussia with 180,000 troops, rapidly marching on the right bank of the River Saale. As in previous campaigns, his fundamental objective was to destroy one opponent before reinforcements from another could tip the balance of the war. Upon learning the whereabouts of the Prussian army, the French swung westwards and crossed the Saale with overwhelming force. At the twin battles of Jena and Auerstedt, fought on 14 October, the French convincingly defeated the Prussians and inflicted heavy casualties. With several major commanders dead or incapacitated, the Prussian king proved incapable of effectively commanding the army, which began to quickly disintegrate.


  • Oella, Baltimore County, Maryland, U.S.
    Sunday Oct 19, 1806
    Benjamin Banneker

    Death

    Oella, Baltimore County, Maryland, U.S.
    Sunday Oct 19, 1806

    Banneker never married. Because of declining sales, his 1797 almanacs were the last that printers published. After selling much of his homesite to the Ellicotts and others, he probably died in his log cabin nine years later on October 19, 1806, aged 74.


  • Pyrenees mountains ( Spain, France and Andorra)
    Saturday Oct 17, 1807
    Napoleon

    French troops crossed the Pyrenees

    Pyrenees mountains ( Spain, France and Andorra)
    Saturday Oct 17, 1807

    On 17 October 1807, 24,000 French troops under General Junot crossed the Pyrenees with Spanish cooperation and headed towards Portugal to enforce Napoleon's orders.


  • Fontainebleau, France
    Tuesday Oct 27, 1807
    Napoleon

    Treaty of Fontainebleau (October 1807)

    Fontainebleau, France
    Tuesday Oct 27, 1807

    Unhappy with this change of policy by the Portuguese government, Napoleon negotiated a secret treaty with Charles IV of Spain and sent an army to invade Portugal.


  • Schönbrunn Palace near Vienna, Austria
    Saturday Oct 14, 1809
    Napoleon

    Treaty of Schönbrunn

    Schönbrunn Palace near Vienna, Austria
    Saturday Oct 14, 1809

    The resulting Treaty of Schönbrunn in October 1809 was the harshest that France had imposed on Austria in recent memory.


  • Vienna, Austria
    Oct, 1816
    Beethoven

    Inflammatory Fever

    Vienna, Austria
    Oct, 1816

    Between 1815 and 1819 Beethoven's output dropped again to a level unique in his mature life. He attributed part of this to a lengthy illness (he called it an "inflammatory fever") that he had for more than a year, starting in October 1816.


  • Indiana, U.S.
    Monday Oct 5, 1818
    Abraham Lincoln

    Mother's death

    Indiana, U.S.
    Monday Oct 5, 1818

    On October 5, 1818, Nancy Lincoln succumbed to milk sickness, leaving 11-year-old Sarah in charge of a household including her father, 9-year-old Abraham, and Nancy's 19-year-old orphan cousin, Dennis Hanks.


  • Italy
    Oct, 1820
    Unification of Italy

    Silvio Pellico and Pietro Maroncelli organized several attempts to weaken the hold of Austrian despotism by indirect educational means

    Italy
    Oct, 1820

    In Milan, Silvio Pellico and Pietro Maroncelli organized several attempts to weaken the hold of the Austrian despotism by indirect educational means. In October 1820, Pellico and Maroncelli were arrested on the charge of carbonarism and imprisoned.


  • Miramichi, Canada
    Oct, 1825
    Disasters with highest death tolls

    Miramichi Fire

    Miramichi, Canada
    Oct, 1825

    The 1825 Miramichi fire, or Great Miramichi Fire, or Great Fire of Miramichi, as it came to be known, was a massive forest fire complex that devastated forests and communities throughout much of northern New Brunswick in October 1825. It ranks among the three largest forest fires ever recorded in North America. About 160 people died in and around Newcastle, including prisoners in the Newcastle Jail. Elsewhere, the totals were likely higher, given the number of lumbermen in the forests at the time (about 3000). To escape the blaze many residents took refuge with livestock and wildlife in the Miramichi River.


  • Navarino, Ionian Sea
    Saturday Oct 20, 1827
    Muhammad Ali of Egypt

    Battle of Navarino

    Navarino, Ionian Sea
    Saturday Oct 20, 1827

    Muhammad Ali sent 16,000 soldiers, and 63 escort vessels under command of his son, Ibrahim Pasha. Britain, France, and Russia intervened to protect the Greek revolutionaries. On 20 October 1827 at the Battle of Navarino, while under the command of Muharram Bey, the Ottoman representative, the entire Egyptian navy was sunk by the European Allied fleet, under the command of Admiral Edward Codrington.


  • Acre, Israel
    Oct, 1831
    Ibrahim Pasha of Egypt

    Ibrahim Pasha were sent north to besiege Acre

    Acre, Israel
    Oct, 1831

    Ibrahim Pasha was sent north to besiege Acre in October 1831. After Abdullah Pasha ibn Ali governor of Acre refused request to contribute towards Muhammad Ali's war effort.


  • Ottoman Syrian provinces
    Monday Oct 31, 1831
    Muhammad Ali of Egypt

    Egyptian invasion of Syria

    Ottoman Syrian provinces
    Monday Oct 31, 1831

    A new fleet was built, a new army was raised and on 31 October 1831, under Ibrahim Pasha, the Egyptian invasion of Syria initiated the First Turko-Egyptian War. For the sake of appearance on the world stage, a pretext for the invasion was vital.


  • Stockholm, Sweden
    Monday Oct 21, 1833
    Alfred Nobel

    Birth

    Stockholm, Sweden
    Monday Oct 21, 1833

    Born in Stockholm, Alfred Nobel was the third son of Immanuel Nobel (1801–1872), an inventor and engineer, and Carolina Andriette (Ahlsell) Nobel (1805–1889).


  • London, England, United Kingdom
    Thursday Oct 16, 1834
    The palace of Westminster England

    A Fire

    London, England, United Kingdom
    Thursday Oct 16, 1834

    On 16 October 1834, a fire broke out in the Palace after an overheated stove used to destroy the Exchequer's stockpile of tally sticks set fire to the House of Lords Chamber. In the resulting conflagration both Houses of Parliament were destroyed, along with most of the other buildings in the palace complex. Westminster Hall was saved thanks to fire-fighting efforts and a change in the direction of the wind. The Jewel Tower, the Undercroft Chapel and the Cloisters and Chapter House of St Stephen's were the only other parts of the Palace to survive.


  • London, England, United Kingdom
    Thursday Oct 16, 1834
    The palace of Westminster England

    Victoria Tower

    London, England, United Kingdom
    Thursday Oct 16, 1834

    The largest and tallest tower is 98.5-metre (323 ft) Victoria Tower, which occupies the south-western corner of the Palace. Originally named "The King's Tower" because the fire of 1834 which destroyed the old Palace of Westminster occurred during the reign of King William IV, the tower was an integral part of Barry's original design, of which he intended it to be the most memorable element. The architect conceived the great square tower as the keep of a legislative "castle" (echoing his selection of the portcullis as his identifying mark in the planning competition), and used it as the royal entrance to the Palace and as a fireproof repository for the archives of Parliament. Victoria Tower was re-designed several times, and its height increased progressively; upon its completion in 1858, it was the tallest secular building in the world.


  • London, England, United Kingdom
    Thursday Oct 16, 1834
    Buckingham Palace

    Destruction of the Palace of Westminster by fire

    London, England, United Kingdom
    Thursday Oct 16, 1834

    After the destruction of the Palace of Westminster by fire in 1834, William considered converting the palace into the new Houses of Parliament.


  • Verkhnie Aremzyani (now a village near Tobolsk in Siberia)
    Oct, 1847
    Dmitri Mendeleev

    The death of Mendeleev's Father

    Verkhnie Aremzyani (now a village near Tobolsk in Siberia)
    Oct, 1847

    At the age of 13, Mendeleev's father passed away in October 1847.


  • Geneva, New York, U.S.
    Oct, 1847
    Elizabeth Blackwell

    Blackwell was accepted as a medical student by Hobart College

    Geneva, New York, U.S.
    Oct, 1847

    In October 1847, Blackwell was accepted as a medical student by Hobart College, then called Geneva Medical College, located in upstate New York.


  • Central Europe (Present-Day Vienna, Austria)
    Oct, 1848
    German revolutions of 1848–1849

    The citizens of Vienna had demonstrated against the emperor's actions

    Central Europe (Present-Day Vienna, Austria)
    Oct, 1848

    On October 6 through 7, 1848, the citizens of Vienna had demonstrated against the emperor's actions against forces in Hungary.


  • Central Europe (Present-Day Germany)
    Monday Oct 30, 1848
    German revolutions of 1848–1849

    D'Ester had been elected to the Central committee of the German Democrats

    Central Europe (Present-Day Germany)
    Monday Oct 30, 1848

    D'Ester had been elected to the Central Committee of the German Democrats, together with Reichenbach and Hexamer, at the Second Democratic Congress held in Berlin from October 26 through October 30, 1848.


  • England, United Kingdom
    Monday Oct 21, 1850
    David Copperfield

    Torn and Happy

    England, United Kingdom
    Monday Oct 21, 1850

    Dickens marked the end of his manuscript on 21 October 1850 and felt both torn and happy like every time he finished a novel: "Oh, my dear Forster, if I were to say half of what Copperfield makes me feel to-night, how strangely, even to you, I should be turned inside out! I seem to be sending some part of myself into the Shadowy World".


  • Crimean Peninsula, Caucasus, Balkans, Black Sea, Baltic Sea, White Sea, Far East
    Sunday Oct 16, 1853
    Unification of Germany

    Crimean War

    Crimean Peninsula, Caucasus, Balkans, Black Sea, Baltic Sea, White Sea, Far East
    Sunday Oct 16, 1853

    The Crimean War was a military conflict fought from October 1853 to February 1856 in which Russia lost to an alliance of France, the Ottoman Empire, the United Kingdom and Piedmont-Sardinia.


  • Ottoman Empire
    Oct, 1853
    Ottoman Empire

    Foreign Loans

    Ottoman Empire
    Oct, 1853

    The Crimean War (1853–1856) was part of a long-running contest between the major European powers for influence over territories of the declining Ottoman Empire. The financial burden of the war led the Ottoman state to issue foreign loans amounting to 5 million pounds sterling on 4 August 1854.


  • Peoria, Illinois, U.S.
    Oct, 1854
    Abraham Lincoln

    Peoria Speech

    Peoria, Illinois, U.S.
    Oct, 1854

    Lincoln did not comment on the act until months later in his "Peoria Speech" in October 1854. Lincoln then declared his opposition to slavery which he repeated en route to the presidency. He said the Kansas Act had a "declared indifference, but as I must think, a covert real zeal for the spread of slavery. I cannot but hate it. I hate it because of the monstrous injustice of slavery itself. I hate it because it deprives our republican example of its just influence in the world ..." Lincoln's attacks on the Kansas–Nebraska Act marked his return to political life.


  • New York, U.S.
    Wednesday Oct 27, 1858
    Theodore Roosevelt

    Birth

    New York, U.S.
    Wednesday Oct 27, 1858

    Theodore Roosevelt Jr. was born on October 27, 1858, at East 20th Street in New York City.


  • Italy
    Tuesday Oct 9, 1860
    Unification of Italy

    Victor Emmanuel arrived and took command

    Italy
    Tuesday Oct 9, 1860

    On 9 October, Victor Emmanuel arrived and took command. There was no longer a papal army to oppose him, and the march southward proceeded unopposed.


  • Italy
    Oct, 1860
    Unification of Italy

    Garibaldi had easily taken the capital

    Italy
    Oct, 1860

    Though Garibaldi had easily taken the capital, the Neapolitan army had not joined the rebellion en masse, holding firm along the Volturno River. Garibaldi's irregular bands of about 25,000 men could not drive away the king or take the fortresses of Capua and Gaeta without the help of the Sardinian army.


  • China
    Wednesday Oct 24, 1860
    Xinhai Revolution

    The Second Opium War

    China
    Wednesday Oct 24, 1860

    Following defeat in the Second Opium War in 1860, the Qing tried to modernize by adopting certain Western technologies through the Self-Strengthening Movement from 1861.


  • Nevada, U.S.
    Monday Oct 31, 1864
    Abraham Lincoln

    Nevada was admitted as a free state

    Nevada, U.S.
    Monday Oct 31, 1864

    Nevada, which became the third State in the far-west of the continent, was admitted as a free state on October 31, 1864.


  • Gujarat, India
    Saturday Oct 2, 1869
    Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi

    Born

    Gujarat, India
    Saturday Oct 2, 1869

    Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was born on 2 October 1869 into a Gujarati Hindu Modh Baniya family in Porbandar (also known as Sudamapuri), a coastal town on the Kathiawar Peninsula and then part of the small princely state of Porbandar in the Kathiawar Agency of the Indian Empire.


  • Wisconsin, United States
    Sunday Oct 8, 1871
    Disasters with highest death tolls

    Peshtigo Fire

    Wisconsin, United States
    Sunday Oct 8, 1871

    The Peshtigo fire was a very large forest fire that took place on October 8, 1871, in northeastern Wisconsin, including much of the Door Peninsula, and adjacent parts of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. The largest community in the affected area was Peshtigo, Wisconsin. With the estimated deaths of around 1,500 people, and possibly as many as 2,500.


  • British Raj (now Bangladesh)
    Oct, 1876
    Disasters with highest death tolls

    Great Backerganj Cyclone of 1876

    British Raj (now Bangladesh)
    Oct, 1876

    The Great Backerganj Cyclone of 1876 (29 October – 1 November 1876) was one of the deadliest cyclones in history. It hit the coast of Backerganj (near Meghna estuary) in present-day Barisal, Bangladesh, killing about 200,000 people, half of whom were drowned by the storm surge, while the rest died from the subsequent famine.


  • Friedrich Wilhelms University, Berlin, Germany
    Oct, 1878
    Max Planck

    Graduation

    Friedrich Wilhelms University, Berlin, Germany
    Oct, 1878

    After studying at the University of Munich, he went to the Friedrich Wilhelms University in Berlin for a year of study with physicists Hermann von Helmholtz and Gustav Kirchhoff and mathematician Karl Weierstrass, and in October 1878 Planck passed his qualifying exams .


  • New Jersey, U.S.
    Monday Oct 14, 1878
    Incandescent light bulb

    Edison filed his first patent Application for "Improvement In Electric Lights"

    New Jersey, U.S.
    Monday Oct 14, 1878

    Thomas Edison began serious research into developing a practical incandescent lamp in 1878. Edison filed his first patent application for "Improvement In Electric Lights" on 14 October 1878.


  • New Jersey, U.S.
    Wednesday Oct 22, 1879
    Incandescent light bulb

    Edison's first Successful Test

    New Jersey, U.S.
    Wednesday Oct 22, 1879

    After many experiments, first with carbon in the early 1880s and then with platinum and other metals, in the end Edison returned to a carbon filament. The first successful test was on 22 October 1879, and lasted 13.5 hours.


  • Haiphong, Vietnam
    Saturday Oct 8, 1881
    Disasters with highest death tolls

    1881 Haiphong Typhoon

    Haiphong, Vietnam
    Saturday Oct 8, 1881

    The 1881 Haiphong typhoon was a typhoon that struck Haiphong, in Dai Nam (now Vietnam), and the northern part of the Captaincy General of the Philippines (now the Philippines) on October 8, 1881. About 300000 people were killed in and around Haiphong by the typhoon alone (casualties likely went up even in the storm's passing due to disease and starvation).


  • Málaga, Spain
    Tuesday Oct 25, 1881
    Pablo Picasso

    Born

    Málaga, Spain
    Tuesday Oct 25, 1881

    Born in the city of Málaga in the Andalusian region of Spain.


  • Germany
    Saturday Oct 6, 1883
    Thanksgiving

    German-American Day

    Germany
    Saturday Oct 6, 1883

    The United States has observed German-American Day annually on October 6, within the vicinity of Erntedankfest, from 1883 until the early 1910s, then again from 1983 to the present day.


  • Alexandria, Virginia, U.S.
    Monday Oct 8, 1883
    Incandescent light bulb

    The United States Patent Office gave a ruling about Edison's Patents

    Alexandria, Virginia, U.S.
    Monday Oct 8, 1883

    The United States Patent Office gave a ruling 8 October 1883, that Edison's patents were based on the prior art of William Sawyer and were invalid.


  • Płońsk, Congress Poland, Russian Empire (Poland now)
    Saturday Oct 16, 1886
    David Ben-Gurion

    Birth

    Płońsk, Congress Poland, Russian Empire (Poland now)
    Saturday Oct 16, 1886

    David Ben-Gurion was born in Płońsk in Congress Poland – then part of the Russian Empire.


  • New York, U.S.
    Thursday Oct 28, 1886
    Statue of Liberty

    Ticker-Tape parade Beginning

    New York, U.S.
    Thursday Oct 28, 1886

    A ceremony of dedication was held on the afternoon of October 28, 1886. President Grover Cleveland, the former New York governor, presided over the event. On the morning of the dedication, a parade was held in New York City; estimates of the number of people who watched it ranged from several hundred thousand to a million. President Cleveland headed the procession, then stood in the reviewing stand to see bands and marchers from across America. General Stone was the grand marshal of the parade. The route began at Madison Square, once the venue for the arm, and proceeded to the Battery at the southern tip of Manhattan by way of Fifth Avenue and Broadway, with a slight detour so the parade could pass in front of the Worldbuilding on Park Row. As the parade passed the New York Stock Exchange, traders threw ticker tape from the windows, beginning the New York tradition of the ticker-tape parade.


  • Alexandria, Virginia, U.S.
    Sunday Oct 6, 1889
    Incandescent light bulb

    Edison's Litigation

    Alexandria, Virginia, U.S.
    Sunday Oct 6, 1889

    Edison's Litigation continued for a number of years. Eventually on 6 October 1889, a judge ruled that Edison's electric light improvement claim for "a filament of carbon of high resistance" was valid.


  • U.S.
    Thursday Oct 10, 1889
    Bicycle

    First diamond frame

    U.S.
    Thursday Oct 10, 1889

    On 10 October 1889, Isaac R Johnson, an African-American inventor, lodged his patent for a folding bicycle – the first with a recognizably modern diamond frame, the pattern still used in the 21st-century bicycles.


  • Denison, Texas, U.S.
    Tuesday Oct 14, 1890
    Dwight D. Eisenhower

    Birth

    Denison, Texas, U.S.
    Tuesday Oct 14, 1890

    Dwight David Eisenhower was born on October 14, 1890, in Denison, Texas, the third of seven sons born to David J. Eisenhower and Ida Stover.


  • Benin
    Saturday Oct 6, 1894
    Dahomey Amazons

    A lot of Dahomey death after the Second Franco-Dahomean War

    Benin
    Saturday Oct 6, 1894

    During a battle with French soldiers at Adegon on 6 October during the second war, the bulk of the Amazon corps were wiped out in a matter of hours in hand-to-hand combat after the French engaged them with a bayonet charge.The Dahomey lost 86 regulars and 417 Dahomey Amazons, with nearly all of those deaths being inflicted by bayonets; the French lost 6 soldiers.


  • Manchuria
    Wednesday Oct 10, 1894
    First Sino-Japanese War

    The Japanese pushed toward Manchuria

    Manchuria
    Wednesday Oct 10, 1894

    With the defeat at Pyongyang, the Chinese abandoned northern Korea and took up defensive positions in fortifications along their side of the Yalu River near Jiuliancheng. After receiving reinforcements by 10 October, the Japanese quickly pushed north toward Manchuria.


  • The Yalu River
    Wednesday Oct 24, 1894
    First Sino-Japanese War

    The Japanese Crossed The Yalu River

    The Yalu River
    Wednesday Oct 24, 1894

    On the night of 24 October 1894, the Japanese successfully crossed the Yalu River, undetected, by erecting a pontoon bridge.


  • Liaodong Peninsula, Liaoning, China
    Wednesday Oct 24, 1894
    First Sino-Japanese War

    The Japanese Landed on The Coast Liaodong Peninsula

    Liaodong Peninsula, Liaoning, China
    Wednesday Oct 24, 1894

    The Japanese 2nd Army Corps under Ōyama Iwao landed on the south coast of Liaodong Peninsula on 24 October.


  • Hushan, China
    Thursday Oct 25, 1894
    07:00:00 PM
    First Sino-Japanese War

    Assaulting The outpost of Hushan

    Hushan, China
    Thursday Oct 25, 1894
    07:00:00 PM

    The following afternoon of 25 October at 17:00, they assaulted the outpost of Hushan, east of Jiuliancheng. At 20:30 the defenders deserted their positions and by the next day they were in full retreat from Jiuliancheng.With the capture of Jiuliancheng, General Yamagata's 1st Army Corps occupied the nearby city of Dandong, while to the north, elements of the retreating Beiyang Army set fire to the city of Fengcheng. The Japanese had established a firm foothold on Chinese territory with the loss of only four killed and 140 wounded.


  • Turkey (then Ottoman Empire)
    Tuesday Oct 1, 1895
    Armenian Genocide

    2,000 Armenians assembled in Constantinople

    Turkey (then Ottoman Empire)
    Tuesday Oct 1, 1895

    On 1 October 1895, 2,000 Armenians assembled in Constantinople to petition for the implementation of the reforms, but Ottoman police units violently broke the rally up. Soon, massacres of Armenians broke out in Constantinople and then engulfed the rest of the Armenian-populated provinces of Bitlis, Diyarbekir, Erzurum, Harput, Sivas, Trabzon, and Van. Estimates differ on how many Armenians were killed, but European documentation of the pogroms, which became known as the Hamidian massacres, placed the figures at between 100,000 and 300,000.


  • Tainan, Taiwan
    Monday Oct 21, 1895
    First Sino-Japanese War

    The Surrender of The Republican Capital Tainan

    Tainan, Taiwan
    Monday Oct 21, 1895

    The campaign effectively ended on 21 October 1895, with the flight of Liu Yongfu, the second Republican president, and the surrender of the Republican capital Tainan.


  • Guangzhou, China
    Saturday Oct 26, 1895
    Xinhai Revolution

    The First Guangzhou Uprising

    Guangzhou, China
    Saturday Oct 26, 1895

    On 26 October 1895, Yeung Ku-wan and Sun Yat-sen led Zheng Shiliang and Lu Haodong to Guangzhou, preparing to capture Guangzhou in one strike. However, the details of their plans were leaked to the Qing government. The government began to arrest revolutionaries, including Lu Haodong, who was later executed. The first Guangzhou uprising was a failure.


  • Mumbai, India
    Oct, 1896
    Winston Churchill

    Churchill went to Bombay

    Mumbai, India
    Oct, 1896

    Churchill proceeded to New York City and, in admiration of the United States, wrote to his mother about "what an extraordinary people the Americans are!" With the Hussars, he went to Bombay in October 1896. Based in Bangalore, he was in India for 19 months, visiting Calcutta three times and joining expeditions to Hyderabad and the Northwest Frontier.


  • Present-day Bangalore, India
    Oct, 1897
    Winston Churchill

    First Book "The Story of the Malakand Field Force"

    Present-day Bangalore, India
    Oct, 1897

    Churchill returned to Bangalore in October 1897 and there wrote his first book, The Story of the Malakand Field Force, which received positive reviews. He also wrote his only work of fiction, Savrola, a Ruritanian romance. To keep himself fully occupied, Churchill embraced writing as what Roy Jenkins calls his "whole habit", especially through his political career when he was out of office. It was his main safeguard against recurring depression, which he termed his "black dog".


  • Rheydt, Mönchengladbach, Germany
    Friday Oct 29, 1897
    Joseph Goebbels

    Joseph Goebbels's Birth

    Rheydt, Mönchengladbach, Germany
    Friday Oct 29, 1897

    Paul Joseph Goebbels was born on 29 October 1897 in Rheydt, an industrial town south of Mönchengladbach near Düsseldorf, Germany. Both of his parents were Roman Catholics with modest family backgrounds.


  • Chang'an, China
    Friday Oct 6, 23
    Imperial China (Qin and Han dynasties)

    Lülin rebels stormed the Weiyang Palace and killed Wang

    Chang'an, China
    Friday Oct 6, 23

    Lülin rebels stormed the Weiyang Palace and killed Wang. The Gengshi Emperor ascended the throne, restoring the Han dynasty.


  • Rome, Italy, Roman Empire
    Tuesday Oct 13, 54
    Roman Empire

    Claudius died

    Rome, Italy, Roman Empire
    Tuesday Oct 13, 54

    Claudius was deified later that year. The death of Claudius paved the way for Agrippina's own son, the 17-year-old Lucius Domitius Nero.


  • Rome
    Tuesday Oct 13, 54
    Roman Empire

    Mad Nero

    Rome
    Tuesday Oct 13, 54

    Nero ruled from 54 to 68. During his rule, Nero focused much of his attention on diplomacy, trade, and increasing the cultural capital of the empire.


  • Rome
    Saturday Oct 22, 253
    Roman Empire

    Valerian's first act as emperor

    Rome
    Saturday Oct 22, 253

    Valerian's first act as emperor on October 22, 253, was to appoint his son Gallienus caesar. Early in his reign, affairs in Europe went from bad to worse, and the whole West fell into disorder. In the East, Antioch had fallen into the hands of a Sassanid vassal and Armenia was occupied by Shapur I (Sapor).


  • Campania, Italy
    Oct, 552
    Byzantine Empire

    Battle of Mons Lactarius

    Campania, Italy
    Oct, 552

    Totila's successor, Teia, was defeated at the Battle of Mons Lactarius (October 552).


  • Constantinople, Byzantine Empire
    Friday Oct 5, 610
    Byzantine Empire

    Phocas was deposed

    Constantinople, Byzantine Empire
    Friday Oct 5, 610

    After Maurice's murder by Phocas, Khosrau used the pretext to reconquer the Roman province of Mesopotamia. Phocas, an unpopular ruler invariably described in Byzantine sources as a "tyrant", was the target of a number of Senate-led plots. He was eventually deposed in 610 by Heraclius, who sailed to Constantinople from Carthage with an icon affixed to the prow of his ship.


  • Egypt
    Friday Oct 14, 996
    Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah

    His inauguration

    Egypt
    Friday Oct 14, 996

    Al-Ḥākim's father had intended the eunuch Barjawan to act as regent until Al-Ḥākim was old enough to rule by himself. Ibn 'Ammar and the Qadi Muhammad ibn Nu'man were to assist in the guardianship of the new caliph. Instead, al-Hasan ibn 'Ammar (the leader of the Kutama) immediately seized the office of wasīta "chief minister" from 'Īsa ibn Nestorius. At the time the office of sifāra "secretary of state" was also combined within that office. Ibn 'Ammar then took the title of Amīn ad-Dawla "the one trusted in the empire". This was the first time that the term "empire" was associated with the Fatimid state.


  • Jerusalem
    Thursday Oct 19, 1009
    Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah

    Destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre

    Jerusalem
    Thursday Oct 19, 1009

    Al-Ḥākim's destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in 1009.


  • Nicaea (present-day İznik, Turkey)
    Wednesday Oct 21, 1096
    Crusades

    Battle of Civetot

    Nicaea (present-day İznik, Turkey)
    Wednesday Oct 21, 1096

    They were destroyed in 1096 when the main body of Crusaders was annihilated at the battle of Civetot.


  • Antioch (Present-Day Antakya, Turkey)
    Wednesday Oct 20, 1097
    Crusades

    Siege of Antioch

    Antioch (Present-Day Antakya, Turkey)
    Wednesday Oct 20, 1097

    The Crusader army marched to the former Byzantine city of Antioch that had been in Muslim control since 1084. The Crusaders began the siege of Antioch in October 1097 tell Antioch was captured.


  • Zengid dynasty (now Syria)
    Tuesday Oct 11, 1138
    Disasters with highest death tolls

    1138 Aleppo Earthquake

    Zengid dynasty (now Syria)
    Tuesday Oct 11, 1138

    The 1138 Aleppo earthquake was among the deadliest earthquakes in history. Its name was taken from the city of Aleppo, in northern Syria, where the most casualties were sustained. The quake occurred on 11 October 1138 and was preceded by a smaller quake on the 10th. However, the figure of 230,000 dead is based on a historical conflation of this earthquake with earthquakes in November 1137 on the Jazira plain and the large seismic event of 30 September 1139 in the Transcaucasian city of Ganja. The first mention of a 230,000 death toll was by Ibn Taghribirdi in the fifteenth century.


  • Jerusalem
    Friday Oct 2, 1187
    Crusades

    Siege of Jerusalem

    Jerusalem
    Friday Oct 2, 1187

    The siege of Jerusalem lasted from September 20 to October 2, 1187, when Balian of Ibelin surrendered the city to Saladin.


  • Vatican City
    Thursday Oct 29, 1187
    Crusades

    Gregory VIII issued the bull Audita tremendi calling for "Third Crusade"

    Vatican City
    Thursday Oct 29, 1187

    Urban III died shortly after hearing the news, and his successor Gregory VIII issued the bull Audita tremendi on 29 October 1187 describing the events in the East and urging all Christians to take up arms and go to the aid of those in the Kingdom of Jerusalem, calling for a new crusade to the Holy Land––the Third Crusade––to be led by Frederick Barbarossa and Richard I of England.


  • Cairo, Egypt
    Sunday Oct 24, 1260
    Mamluks

    Baibars was the fourth Mamluk Sultan of Mamluk

    Cairo, Egypt
    Sunday Oct 24, 1260

    Al-Malik al-Zahir Rukn al-Din Baibars al-Bunduqdari was the fourth Mamluk sultan of Egypt in the Bahri dynasty, succeeding Qutuz. He was one of the commanders of the Egyptian forces that inflicted a defeat on the Seventh Crusade of King Louis IX of France.


  • Kosovo
    Tuesday Oct 17, 1448
    Ottoman Empire

    Second Battle of Kosovo

    Kosovo
    Tuesday Oct 17, 1448

    Four years later, John Hunyadi prepared another army of Hungarian and Wallachian forces to attack the Turks but was again defeated at the Second Battle of Kosovo in 1448.


  • Egypt
    Wednesday Oct 9, 1467
    Mamluks

    Sayf ad-Din Bilbay was a Mamluk sultan of Egypt in 1467

    Egypt
    Wednesday Oct 9, 1467

    Sayf ad-Din Bilbay or Yalbay was a Mamluk sultan of Egypt from 9 October to 4 December 1467.


  • Cairo, Egypt
    Monday Oct 31, 1498
    Mamluks

    Abu Sa'id Qansuh was the twenty third Mamluk Sultan of Egypt

    Cairo, Egypt
    Monday Oct 31, 1498

    Abu Sa'id Qansuh, also Qansuh Al-Ashrafi, Qansuh I or Al-Zahir Qansuh, was the twenty third Mamluk Sultan of Egypt from the Burji dynasty.


  • Florence, Italy
    Sunday Oct 18, 1503
    Leonardo da Vinci

    Guild of Saint Luke

    Florence, Italy
    Sunday Oct 18, 1503

    Leonardo had left Borgia's service and returned to Florence by early 1503, where he rejoined the Guild of Saint Luke on 18 October of that year.


  • Milan, Italy
    Oct, 1515
    Leonardo da Vinci

    King Francis I of France recaptured Milan

    Milan, Italy
    Oct, 1515

    In October 1515, King Francis I of France recaptured Milan.


  • Cairo, Egypt
    Tuesday Oct 17, 1516
    Mamluks

    Tuman bay II was the last Sultan of Egypt

    Cairo, Egypt
    Tuesday Oct 17, 1516

    Al-Ashraf Abu Al-Nasr Tuman bay, better known as Tuman bay II, was the last Sultan of Egypt before the country's conquest by the Ottoman Turks in 1517.


  • Gulf of Patras, Ionian Sea
    Thursday Oct 7, 1571
    Ottoman Empire

    Battle of Lepanto

    Gulf of Patras, Ionian Sea
    Thursday Oct 7, 1571

    Meanwhile, the Holy league consisting of mostly Spanish and Venetian fleets won a victory over the Ottoman fleet at the Battle of Lepanto (1571), off southwestern Greece; Catholic forces killed over 30,000 Turks and destroyed 200 of their ships.


  • Leiden (now Netherlands)
    Oct, 1573
    Thanksgiving

    Siege of Leiden in 1574

    Leiden (now Netherlands)
    Oct, 1573

    According to historian Jeremy Bangs, director of the Leiden American Pilgrim Museum, the Pilgrims may have been influenced by watching the annual services of Thanksgiving for the relief of the siege of Leiden in 1574, while they were staying in Leiden. Now called Oktober Feest, Leiden's autumn thanksgiving celebration in 1617 was the occasion for sectarian disturbance that appears to have accelerated the pilgrims' plans to emigrate to America. Later in Massachusetts, religious thanksgiving services were declared by civil leaders such as Governor Bradford, who planned the colony's thanksgiving celebration and fast in 1623. The practice of holding an annual harvest festival did not become a regular affair in New England until the late 1660s.


  • London, England, United Kingdom
    Monday Oct 29, 1618
    The palace of Westminster England

    Sir Walter Raleigh was executed

    London, England, United Kingdom
    Monday Oct 29, 1618

    Sir Walter Raleigh was executed at the Palace of Westminster on 29 October 1618.


  • Dornheim, Germany
    Monday Oct 17, 1707
    Johann Sebastian Bach

    Marriage

    Dornheim, Germany
    Monday Oct 17, 1707

    Bach married Maria Barbara Bach, his second cousin.


  • (Chūbu region, Kansai region, Shikoku, Kyūshū), Japan
    Friday Oct 28, 1707
    02:00:00 PM
    Disasters with highest death tolls

    1707 HōEi Earthquake

    (Chūbu region, Kansai region, Shikoku, Kyūshū), Japan
    Friday Oct 28, 1707
    02:00:00 PM

    The 1707 Hōei earthquake (Hōei jishin 宝永地震) struck south-central Japan at 14:00 local time on 28 October 1707. It caused moderate to severe damage throughout southwestern Honshu, Shikoku and southeastern Kyūshū. The earthquake, and the resulting destructive tsunami, caused more than 5,000 casualties.


  • India
    Monday Oct 7, 1737
    Disasters with highest death tolls

    1737 Calcutta Cyclone

    India
    Monday Oct 7, 1737

    On 7 October 1737, a natural disaster struck the city of Calcutta (modern-day Kolkata) in India. For a long time this was believed in Europe to have been the result of an earthquake, but it is now believed to have been a tropical cyclone. Thomas Joshua Moore, the duties collector for the British East India Company in Calcutta, wrote in his official report that a storm and flood had destroyed nearly all the thatched buildings and killed 3,000 of the city's inhabitants. Other reports from merchant ships indicated an earthquake and tidal surge were to blame, destroying 20,000 ships in the harbor and killing 300,000 people. The population of Calcutta at the time was around 3,000–20,000.


  • Virginia, U.S. (then Colony of Virginia)
    Oct, 1753
    George Washington

    A Special envoy

    Virginia, U.S. (then Colony of Virginia)
    Oct, 1753

    In October 1753, Dinwiddie (Virginia's Lieutenant Governor) appointed Washington as a special envoy to demand that the French vacate territory which the British had claimed.


  • Vienna, Austria
    Oct, 1762
    Mozart

    Going to Vienna for the first time

    Vienna, Austria
    Oct, 1762

    The same year in October Leopold brought both kids off to Vienna. This great city, just as it is today, was the beating heart of music in Austrian lands. The youngsters were once again heard by the powers that were and invited to play at the Viennese court, which they did on 13 October.


  • Olmütz (Present Day Olomouc), Czech Republic
    Monday Oct 26, 1767
    Mozart

    Mozart and smallpox

    Olmütz (Present Day Olomouc), Czech Republic
    Monday Oct 26, 1767

    Wolfgang had shown the first smallpox symptoms. Because of the incubation time of the disease (about 12 days), it can be known that he had already contracted it in Vienna, Leopold called Doctor Wolff and Mozart was told to rest for at least a few months, he was so sick that he could see nothing for nine days and had to spare his eyes for several weeks after his recovery, Mozart was much better in December and the family mooted.


  • Milan, Italy
    Oct, 1770
    Mozart

    Operatic success in Milan

    Milan, Italy
    Oct, 1770

    Mozart began working on his recitations in October 1770, The opening night at the Teatro Regio Ducal on 26 December, with Mozart conducting himself, was an even better experience, The opera was called Mitridate, rè di Ponto. It is now overshadowed by the later operatic work of Mozart, and is rarely performed today as a result.


  • London, England, United Kingdom
    Oct, 1775
    George Washington

    King George III declared that the colonies were in open rebellion

    London, England, United Kingdom
    Oct, 1775

    In October 1775, King George III declared that the colonies were in open rebellion and relieved General Gage of command for incompetence, replacing him with General William Howe.


  • Augsburg, Germany
    Oct, 1777
    Mozart

    Mozart's meets Maria Anna

    Augsburg, Germany
    Oct, 1777

    Mozart met his distant cousin, Maria Anna Thekia, whom he affectionately nicknamed "Bäsle," while in Augsburg. She seems to have shared the sense of humour with Mozart and they soon became good friends, maybe even lovers. His letters to her indicate an transformation in him that shows he was more like every other 21-year-old in that respect. He finally ripped himself away from Basle and moved on to Mannheim with his mother.


  • Stillwater, Saratoga County, New York, U.S.
    Wednesday Oct 8, 1777
    George Washington

    Burgoyne tried to take Bemis Heights but was isolated from support by Howe

    Stillwater, Saratoga County, New York, U.S.
    Wednesday Oct 8, 1777

    On October 7, 1777, Burgoyne tried to take Bemis Heights but was isolated from support by Howe. He was forced to retreat to Saratoga and ultimately surrendered after the Battles of Saratoga. As Washington suspected, Gates' victory emboldened his critics.


  • Mannheim, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
    Thursday Oct 30, 1777
    Mozart

    Going to Mannheim and meeting the Webers

    Mannheim, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
    Thursday Oct 30, 1777

    He and his mother moved on to Mannheim, became pleasant with the Mannheim musicians, did some teaching and playing, accepted and partially fulfilled a flute music commission from a German surgeon, and fell in love with Aloysia Weber, a soprano, the second of four daughters of a music copyist. He has also written numerous sonatas for piano, some with violin. He put a scheme to his father for traveling with the naive and reckless Webers to Italy, and met with an angry response from Leopald.


  • (Present Day Southern Italy)
    Saturday Oct 3, 1778
    Flag of the United States

    Letter to Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies

    (Present Day Southern Italy)
    Saturday Oct 3, 1778

    Benjamin Franklin and John Adams, in a letter dated October 3, 1778, to Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies, described the American flag as consisting of "13 stripes, alternately red, white, and blue, a small square in the upper angle, next the flag staff, is a blue field, with 13 white stars, denoting a new Constellation."


  • Yorktown, Virginia, U.S.
    Saturday Oct 20, 1781
    George Washington

    Siege of Yorktown ended

    Yorktown, Virginia, U.S.
    Saturday Oct 20, 1781

    The siege ended with a British surrender on October 19, 1781; over 7,000 British soldiers were captured, in the last major land battle of the American Revolutionary War.


  • Vienna, Austria
    Oct, 1785
    Mozart

    Collaboration with Da Ponte

    Vienna, Austria
    Oct, 1785

    Mozart stepped away from keyboard writing around the end of 1785, and started his famous operatic partnership with the librettist Lorenzo Da Ponte. In 1786 the popular premiere of The Marriage of Figaro was celebrated in Vienna. Later in the year its reception in Prague was even warmer.


  • Vienna, Austria
    Oct, 1787
    Mozart

    Working as the Kammermusicus to the Emperor’s court

    Vienna, Austria
    Oct, 1787

    He had been given a new job: Kammermusicus to the Emperor’s court. The job did not require much from one so great as Mozart but it did guarantee him 800 gulden as a regular income.


  • Paris, France
    Saturday Oct 3, 1795
    Napoleon

    Royalists declared a rebellion against the National Convention

    Paris, France
    Saturday Oct 3, 1795

    On 3 October, royalists in Paris declared a rebellion against the National Convention.


  • Paris, France
    Monday Oct 5, 1795
    Napoleon

    1,400 royalists died and the rest fled

    Paris, France
    Monday Oct 5, 1795

    Napoleon ordered a young cavalry officer named Joachim Murat to seize large cannons and used them to repel the attackers on 5 October 1795 (13 Vendémiaire An IV in the French Republican Calendar); 1,400 royalists died and the rest fled.


  • Campoformido, Republic of Venice (Present Day Campoformido, Italy)
    Tuesday Oct 17, 1797
    Napoleon

    Treaty of Campo Formio

    Campoformido, Republic of Venice (Present Day Campoformido, Italy)
    Tuesday Oct 17, 1797

    These negotiations resulted in the Treaty of Campo Formio.


  • Paris, France
    Friday Oct 10, 1800
    Napoleon

    Conspiration des poignards

    Paris, France
    Friday Oct 10, 1800

    The Conspiration des poignards (Daggers Conspiracy) or Complot de l'Opéra (Opera Plot) was an alleged assassination attempt against Napoleon Bonaparte. The members of the plot were not clearly established. Authorities at the time presented it as an assassination attempt on Napoleon at the exit of the Paris operahouse on 18 vendémiaire year IX (10 October 1800), which was prevented by the police force of Joseph Fouché. However, this version was questioned very early on.


  • Heiligenstadt, Austria
    Wednesday Oct 6, 1802
    Beethoven

    Heiligenstadt Testament

    Heiligenstadt, Austria
    Wednesday Oct 6, 1802

    On the advice of his doctor, he moved to the small Austrian town of Heiligenstadt, just outside Vienna, from April to October 1802 in an attempt to come to terms with his condition. There he wrote the document now known as the “Heiligenstadt Testament”, a letter to his brothers which records his thoughts of suicide due to his growing deafness and records his resolution to continue living for and through his art. The letter was never actually sent and was discovered in the composer’s papers after his death. The letters to Wegeler and Amenda were not so despairing; in them, Beethoven commented also on his ongoing professional and financial success at this period, and his determination, as he expressed it to Wegeler, to “seize Fate by the throat; it shall certainly not crush me completely.” In 1806, Beethoven noted on his musical sketches "Let your deafness no longer be a secret – even in art."


  • Ulm, Electorate of Bavaria (Present Day Ulm, Germany)
    Wednesday Oct 16, 1805
    Napoleon

    Battle of Ulm

    Ulm, Electorate of Bavaria (Present Day Ulm, Germany)
    Wednesday Oct 16, 1805

    Austrian commander Karl Mack had gathered the greater part of the Austrian army at the fortress of Ulm in Swabia. Napoleon swung his forces to the southeast and the Grande Armée performed an elaborate wheeling movement that outflanked the Austrian positions. The Ulm Maneuver completely surprised General Mack, who belatedly understood that his army had been cut off. After some minor engagements that culminated in the Battle of Ulm, Mack finally surrendered after realizing that there was no way to break out of the French encirclement. For just 2,000 French casualties, Napoleon had managed to capture a total of 60,000 Austrian soldiers through his army's rapid marching.


  • Central Europe
    Sunday Oct 20, 1805
    Napoleon

    Ulm Campaign ended

    Central Europe
    Sunday Oct 20, 1805

    The Ulm Campaign is generally regarded as a strategic masterpiece and was influential in the development of the Schlieffen Plan in the late 19th century.


  • Jena and Auerstedt, Germany
    Tuesday Oct 14, 1806
    Napoleon

    Battle of Jena–Auerstedt

    Jena and Auerstedt, Germany
    Tuesday Oct 14, 1806

    Napoleon invaded Prussia with 180,000 troops, rapidly marching on the right bank of the River Saale. As in previous campaigns, his fundamental objective was to destroy one opponent before reinforcements from another could tip the balance of the war. Upon learning the whereabouts of the Prussian army, the French swung westwards and crossed the Saale with overwhelming force. At the twin battles of Jena and Auerstedt, fought on 14 October, the French convincingly defeated the Prussians and inflicted heavy casualties. With several major commanders dead or incapacitated, the Prussian king proved incapable of effectively commanding the army, which began to quickly disintegrate.


  • Oella, Baltimore County, Maryland, U.S.
    Sunday Oct 19, 1806
    Benjamin Banneker

    Death

    Oella, Baltimore County, Maryland, U.S.
    Sunday Oct 19, 1806

    Banneker never married. Because of declining sales, his 1797 almanacs were the last that printers published. After selling much of his homesite to the Ellicotts and others, he probably died in his log cabin nine years later on October 19, 1806, aged 74.


  • Pyrenees mountains ( Spain, France and Andorra)
    Saturday Oct 17, 1807
    Napoleon

    French troops crossed the Pyrenees

    Pyrenees mountains ( Spain, France and Andorra)
    Saturday Oct 17, 1807

    On 17 October 1807, 24,000 French troops under General Junot crossed the Pyrenees with Spanish cooperation and headed towards Portugal to enforce Napoleon's orders.


  • Fontainebleau, France
    Tuesday Oct 27, 1807
    Napoleon

    Treaty of Fontainebleau (October 1807)

    Fontainebleau, France
    Tuesday Oct 27, 1807

    Unhappy with this change of policy by the Portuguese government, Napoleon negotiated a secret treaty with Charles IV of Spain and sent an army to invade Portugal.


  • Schönbrunn Palace near Vienna, Austria
    Saturday Oct 14, 1809
    Napoleon

    Treaty of Schönbrunn

    Schönbrunn Palace near Vienna, Austria
    Saturday Oct 14, 1809

    The resulting Treaty of Schönbrunn in October 1809 was the harshest that France had imposed on Austria in recent memory.


  • Vienna, Austria
    Oct, 1816
    Beethoven

    Inflammatory Fever

    Vienna, Austria
    Oct, 1816

    Between 1815 and 1819 Beethoven's output dropped again to a level unique in his mature life. He attributed part of this to a lengthy illness (he called it an "inflammatory fever") that he had for more than a year, starting in October 1816.


  • Indiana, U.S.
    Monday Oct 5, 1818
    Abraham Lincoln

    Mother's death

    Indiana, U.S.
    Monday Oct 5, 1818

    On October 5, 1818, Nancy Lincoln succumbed to milk sickness, leaving 11-year-old Sarah in charge of a household including her father, 9-year-old Abraham, and Nancy's 19-year-old orphan cousin, Dennis Hanks.


  • Italy
    Oct, 1820
    Unification of Italy

    Silvio Pellico and Pietro Maroncelli organized several attempts to weaken the hold of Austrian despotism by indirect educational means

    Italy
    Oct, 1820

    In Milan, Silvio Pellico and Pietro Maroncelli organized several attempts to weaken the hold of the Austrian despotism by indirect educational means. In October 1820, Pellico and Maroncelli were arrested on the charge of carbonarism and imprisoned.


  • Miramichi, Canada
    Oct, 1825
    Disasters with highest death tolls

    Miramichi Fire

    Miramichi, Canada
    Oct, 1825

    The 1825 Miramichi fire, or Great Miramichi Fire, or Great Fire of Miramichi, as it came to be known, was a massive forest fire complex that devastated forests and communities throughout much of northern New Brunswick in October 1825. It ranks among the three largest forest fires ever recorded in North America. About 160 people died in and around Newcastle, including prisoners in the Newcastle Jail. Elsewhere, the totals were likely higher, given the number of lumbermen in the forests at the time (about 3000). To escape the blaze many residents took refuge with livestock and wildlife in the Miramichi River.


  • Navarino, Ionian Sea
    Saturday Oct 20, 1827
    Muhammad Ali of Egypt

    Battle of Navarino

    Navarino, Ionian Sea
    Saturday Oct 20, 1827

    Muhammad Ali sent 16,000 soldiers, and 63 escort vessels under command of his son, Ibrahim Pasha. Britain, France, and Russia intervened to protect the Greek revolutionaries. On 20 October 1827 at the Battle of Navarino, while under the command of Muharram Bey, the Ottoman representative, the entire Egyptian navy was sunk by the European Allied fleet, under the command of Admiral Edward Codrington.


  • Acre, Israel
    Oct, 1831
    Ibrahim Pasha of Egypt

    Ibrahim Pasha were sent north to besiege Acre

    Acre, Israel
    Oct, 1831

    Ibrahim Pasha was sent north to besiege Acre in October 1831. After Abdullah Pasha ibn Ali governor of Acre refused request to contribute towards Muhammad Ali's war effort.


  • Ottoman Syrian provinces
    Monday Oct 31, 1831
    Muhammad Ali of Egypt

    Egyptian invasion of Syria

    Ottoman Syrian provinces
    Monday Oct 31, 1831

    A new fleet was built, a new army was raised and on 31 October 1831, under Ibrahim Pasha, the Egyptian invasion of Syria initiated the First Turko-Egyptian War. For the sake of appearance on the world stage, a pretext for the invasion was vital.


  • Stockholm, Sweden
    Monday Oct 21, 1833
    Alfred Nobel

    Birth

    Stockholm, Sweden
    Monday Oct 21, 1833

    Born in Stockholm, Alfred Nobel was the third son of Immanuel Nobel (1801–1872), an inventor and engineer, and Carolina Andriette (Ahlsell) Nobel (1805–1889).


  • London, England, United Kingdom
    Thursday Oct 16, 1834
    The palace of Westminster England

    A Fire

    London, England, United Kingdom
    Thursday Oct 16, 1834

    On 16 October 1834, a fire broke out in the Palace after an overheated stove used to destroy the Exchequer's stockpile of tally sticks set fire to the House of Lords Chamber. In the resulting conflagration both Houses of Parliament were destroyed, along with most of the other buildings in the palace complex. Westminster Hall was saved thanks to fire-fighting efforts and a change in the direction of the wind. The Jewel Tower, the Undercroft Chapel and the Cloisters and Chapter House of St Stephen's were the only other parts of the Palace to survive.


  • London, England, United Kingdom
    Thursday Oct 16, 1834
    The palace of Westminster England

    Victoria Tower

    London, England, United Kingdom
    Thursday Oct 16, 1834

    The largest and tallest tower is 98.5-metre (323 ft) Victoria Tower, which occupies the south-western corner of the Palace. Originally named "The King's Tower" because the fire of 1834 which destroyed the old Palace of Westminster occurred during the reign of King William IV, the tower was an integral part of Barry's original design, of which he intended it to be the most memorable element. The architect conceived the great square tower as the keep of a legislative "castle" (echoing his selection of the portcullis as his identifying mark in the planning competition), and used it as the royal entrance to the Palace and as a fireproof repository for the archives of Parliament. Victoria Tower was re-designed several times, and its height increased progressively; upon its completion in 1858, it was the tallest secular building in the world.


  • London, England, United Kingdom
    Thursday Oct 16, 1834
    Buckingham Palace

    Destruction of the Palace of Westminster by fire

    London, England, United Kingdom
    Thursday Oct 16, 1834

    After the destruction of the Palace of Westminster by fire in 1834, William considered converting the palace into the new Houses of Parliament.


  • Verkhnie Aremzyani (now a village near Tobolsk in Siberia)
    Oct, 1847
    Dmitri Mendeleev

    The death of Mendeleev's Father

    Verkhnie Aremzyani (now a village near Tobolsk in Siberia)
    Oct, 1847

    At the age of 13, Mendeleev's father passed away in October 1847.


  • Geneva, New York, U.S.
    Oct, 1847
    Elizabeth Blackwell

    Blackwell was accepted as a medical student by Hobart College

    Geneva, New York, U.S.
    Oct, 1847

    In October 1847, Blackwell was accepted as a medical student by Hobart College, then called Geneva Medical College, located in upstate New York.


  • Central Europe (Present-Day Vienna, Austria)
    Oct, 1848
    German revolutions of 1848–1849

    The citizens of Vienna had demonstrated against the emperor's actions

    Central Europe (Present-Day Vienna, Austria)
    Oct, 1848

    On October 6 through 7, 1848, the citizens of Vienna had demonstrated against the emperor's actions against forces in Hungary.


  • Central Europe (Present-Day Germany)
    Monday Oct 30, 1848
    German revolutions of 1848–1849

    D'Ester had been elected to the Central committee of the German Democrats

    Central Europe (Present-Day Germany)
    Monday Oct 30, 1848

    D'Ester had been elected to the Central Committee of the German Democrats, together with Reichenbach and Hexamer, at the Second Democratic Congress held in Berlin from October 26 through October 30, 1848.


  • England, United Kingdom
    Monday Oct 21, 1850
    David Copperfield

    Torn and Happy

    England, United Kingdom
    Monday Oct 21, 1850

    Dickens marked the end of his manuscript on 21 October 1850 and felt both torn and happy like every time he finished a novel: "Oh, my dear Forster, if I were to say half of what Copperfield makes me feel to-night, how strangely, even to you, I should be turned inside out! I seem to be sending some part of myself into the Shadowy World".


  • Crimean Peninsula, Caucasus, Balkans, Black Sea, Baltic Sea, White Sea, Far East
    Sunday Oct 16, 1853
    Unification of Germany

    Crimean War

    Crimean Peninsula, Caucasus, Balkans, Black Sea, Baltic Sea, White Sea, Far East
    Sunday Oct 16, 1853

    The Crimean War was a military conflict fought from October 1853 to February 1856 in which Russia lost to an alliance of France, the Ottoman Empire, the United Kingdom and Piedmont-Sardinia.


  • Ottoman Empire
    Oct, 1853
    Ottoman Empire

    Foreign Loans

    Ottoman Empire
    Oct, 1853

    The Crimean War (1853–1856) was part of a long-running contest between the major European powers for influence over territories of the declining Ottoman Empire. The financial burden of the war led the Ottoman state to issue foreign loans amounting to 5 million pounds sterling on 4 August 1854.


  • Peoria, Illinois, U.S.
    Oct, 1854
    Abraham Lincoln

    Peoria Speech

    Peoria, Illinois, U.S.
    Oct, 1854

    Lincoln did not comment on the act until months later in his "Peoria Speech" in October 1854. Lincoln then declared his opposition to slavery which he repeated en route to the presidency. He said the Kansas Act had a "declared indifference, but as I must think, a covert real zeal for the spread of slavery. I cannot but hate it. I hate it because of the monstrous injustice of slavery itself. I hate it because it deprives our republican example of its just influence in the world ..." Lincoln's attacks on the Kansas–Nebraska Act marked his return to political life.


  • New York, U.S.
    Wednesday Oct 27, 1858
    Theodore Roosevelt

    Birth

    New York, U.S.
    Wednesday Oct 27, 1858

    Theodore Roosevelt Jr. was born on October 27, 1858, at East 20th Street in New York City.


  • Italy
    Tuesday Oct 9, 1860
    Unification of Italy

    Victor Emmanuel arrived and took command

    Italy
    Tuesday Oct 9, 1860

    On 9 October, Victor Emmanuel arrived and took command. There was no longer a papal army to oppose him, and the march southward proceeded unopposed.


  • Italy
    Oct, 1860
    Unification of Italy

    Garibaldi had easily taken the capital

    Italy
    Oct, 1860

    Though Garibaldi had easily taken the capital, the Neapolitan army had not joined the rebellion en masse, holding firm along the Volturno River. Garibaldi's irregular bands of about 25,000 men could not drive away the king or take the fortresses of Capua and Gaeta without the help of the Sardinian army.


  • China
    Wednesday Oct 24, 1860
    Xinhai Revolution

    The Second Opium War

    China
    Wednesday Oct 24, 1860

    Following defeat in the Second Opium War in 1860, the Qing tried to modernize by adopting certain Western technologies through the Self-Strengthening Movement from 1861.


  • Nevada, U.S.
    Monday Oct 31, 1864
    Abraham Lincoln

    Nevada was admitted as a free state

    Nevada, U.S.
    Monday Oct 31, 1864

    Nevada, which became the third State in the far-west of the continent, was admitted as a free state on October 31, 1864.


  • Gujarat, India
    Saturday Oct 2, 1869
    Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi

    Born

    Gujarat, India
    Saturday Oct 2, 1869

    Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was born on 2 October 1869 into a Gujarati Hindu Modh Baniya family in Porbandar (also known as Sudamapuri), a coastal town on the Kathiawar Peninsula and then part of the small princely state of Porbandar in the Kathiawar Agency of the Indian Empire.


  • Wisconsin, United States
    Sunday Oct 8, 1871
    Disasters with highest death tolls

    Peshtigo Fire

    Wisconsin, United States
    Sunday Oct 8, 1871

    The Peshtigo fire was a very large forest fire that took place on October 8, 1871, in northeastern Wisconsin, including much of the Door Peninsula, and adjacent parts of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. The largest community in the affected area was Peshtigo, Wisconsin. With the estimated deaths of around 1,500 people, and possibly as many as 2,500.


  • British Raj (now Bangladesh)
    Oct, 1876
    Disasters with highest death tolls

    Great Backerganj Cyclone of 1876

    British Raj (now Bangladesh)
    Oct, 1876

    The Great Backerganj Cyclone of 1876 (29 October – 1 November 1876) was one of the deadliest cyclones in history. It hit the coast of Backerganj (near Meghna estuary) in present-day Barisal, Bangladesh, killing about 200,000 people, half of whom were drowned by the storm surge, while the rest died from the subsequent famine.


  • Friedrich Wilhelms University, Berlin, Germany
    Oct, 1878
    Max Planck

    Graduation

    Friedrich Wilhelms University, Berlin, Germany
    Oct, 1878

    After studying at the University of Munich, he went to the Friedrich Wilhelms University in Berlin for a year of study with physicists Hermann von Helmholtz and Gustav Kirchhoff and mathematician Karl Weierstrass, and in October 1878 Planck passed his qualifying exams .


  • New Jersey, U.S.
    Monday Oct 14, 1878
    Incandescent light bulb

    Edison filed his first patent Application for "Improvement In Electric Lights"

    New Jersey, U.S.
    Monday Oct 14, 1878

    Thomas Edison began serious research into developing a practical incandescent lamp in 1878. Edison filed his first patent application for "Improvement In Electric Lights" on 14 October 1878.


  • New Jersey, U.S.
    Wednesday Oct 22, 1879
    Incandescent light bulb

    Edison's first Successful Test

    New Jersey, U.S.
    Wednesday Oct 22, 1879

    After many experiments, first with carbon in the early 1880s and then with platinum and other metals, in the end Edison returned to a carbon filament. The first successful test was on 22 October 1879, and lasted 13.5 hours.


  • Haiphong, Vietnam
    Saturday Oct 8, 1881
    Disasters with highest death tolls

    1881 Haiphong Typhoon

    Haiphong, Vietnam
    Saturday Oct 8, 1881

    The 1881 Haiphong typhoon was a typhoon that struck Haiphong, in Dai Nam (now Vietnam), and the northern part of the Captaincy General of the Philippines (now the Philippines) on October 8, 1881. About 300000 people were killed in and around Haiphong by the typhoon alone (casualties likely went up even in the storm's passing due to disease and starvation).


  • Málaga, Spain
    Tuesday Oct 25, 1881
    Pablo Picasso

    Born

    Málaga, Spain
    Tuesday Oct 25, 1881

    Born in the city of Málaga in the Andalusian region of Spain.


  • Germany
    Saturday Oct 6, 1883
    Thanksgiving

    German-American Day

    Germany
    Saturday Oct 6, 1883

    The United States has observed German-American Day annually on October 6, within the vicinity of Erntedankfest, from 1883 until the early 1910s, then again from 1983 to the present day.


  • Alexandria, Virginia, U.S.
    Monday Oct 8, 1883
    Incandescent light bulb

    The United States Patent Office gave a ruling about Edison's Patents

    Alexandria, Virginia, U.S.
    Monday Oct 8, 1883

    The United States Patent Office gave a ruling 8 October 1883, that Edison's patents were based on the prior art of William Sawyer and were invalid.


  • Płońsk, Congress Poland, Russian Empire (Poland now)
    Saturday Oct 16, 1886
    David Ben-Gurion

    Birth

    Płońsk, Congress Poland, Russian Empire (Poland now)
    Saturday Oct 16, 1886

    David Ben-Gurion was born in Płońsk in Congress Poland – then part of the Russian Empire.


  • New York, U.S.
    Thursday Oct 28, 1886
    Statue of Liberty

    Ticker-Tape parade Beginning

    New York, U.S.
    Thursday Oct 28, 1886

    A ceremony of dedication was held on the afternoon of October 28, 1886. President Grover Cleveland, the former New York governor, presided over the event. On the morning of the dedication, a parade was held in New York City; estimates of the number of people who watched it ranged from several hundred thousand to a million. President Cleveland headed the procession, then stood in the reviewing stand to see bands and marchers from across America. General Stone was the grand marshal of the parade. The route began at Madison Square, once the venue for the arm, and proceeded to the Battery at the southern tip of Manhattan by way of Fifth Avenue and Broadway, with a slight detour so the parade could pass in front of the Worldbuilding on Park Row. As the parade passed the New York Stock Exchange, traders threw ticker tape from the windows, beginning the New York tradition of the ticker-tape parade.


  • Alexandria, Virginia, U.S.
    Sunday Oct 6, 1889
    Incandescent light bulb

    Edison's Litigation

    Alexandria, Virginia, U.S.
    Sunday Oct 6, 1889

    Edison's Litigation continued for a number of years. Eventually on 6 October 1889, a judge ruled that Edison's electric light improvement claim for "a filament of carbon of high resistance" was valid.


  • U.S.
    Thursday Oct 10, 1889
    Bicycle

    First diamond frame

    U.S.
    Thursday Oct 10, 1889

    On 10 October 1889, Isaac R Johnson, an African-American inventor, lodged his patent for a folding bicycle – the first with a recognizably modern diamond frame, the pattern still used in the 21st-century bicycles.


  • Denison, Texas, U.S.
    Tuesday Oct 14, 1890
    Dwight D. Eisenhower

    Birth

    Denison, Texas, U.S.
    Tuesday Oct 14, 1890

    Dwight David Eisenhower was born on October 14, 1890, in Denison, Texas, the third of seven sons born to David J. Eisenhower and Ida Stover.


  • Benin
    Saturday Oct 6, 1894
    Dahomey Amazons

    A lot of Dahomey death after the Second Franco-Dahomean War

    Benin
    Saturday Oct 6, 1894

    During a battle with French soldiers at Adegon on 6 October during the second war, the bulk of the Amazon corps were wiped out in a matter of hours in hand-to-hand combat after the French engaged them with a bayonet charge.The Dahomey lost 86 regulars and 417 Dahomey Amazons, with nearly all of those deaths being inflicted by bayonets; the French lost 6 soldiers.


  • Manchuria
    Wednesday Oct 10, 1894
    First Sino-Japanese War

    The Japanese pushed toward Manchuria

    Manchuria
    Wednesday Oct 10, 1894

    With the defeat at Pyongyang, the Chinese abandoned northern Korea and took up defensive positions in fortifications along their side of the Yalu River near Jiuliancheng. After receiving reinforcements by 10 October, the Japanese quickly pushed north toward Manchuria.


  • The Yalu River
    Wednesday Oct 24, 1894
    First Sino-Japanese War

    The Japanese Crossed The Yalu River

    The Yalu River
    Wednesday Oct 24, 1894

    On the night of 24 October 1894, the Japanese successfully crossed the Yalu River, undetected, by erecting a pontoon bridge.


  • Liaodong Peninsula, Liaoning, China
    Wednesday Oct 24, 1894
    First Sino-Japanese War

    The Japanese Landed on The Coast Liaodong Peninsula

    Liaodong Peninsula, Liaoning, China
    Wednesday Oct 24, 1894

    The Japanese 2nd Army Corps under Ōyama Iwao landed on the south coast of Liaodong Peninsula on 24 October.


  • Hushan, China
    Thursday Oct 25, 1894
    07:00:00 PM
    First Sino-Japanese War

    Assaulting The outpost of Hushan

    Hushan, China
    Thursday Oct 25, 1894
    07:00:00 PM

    The following afternoon of 25 October at 17:00, they assaulted the outpost of Hushan, east of Jiuliancheng. At 20:30 the defenders deserted their positions and by the next day they were in full retreat from Jiuliancheng.With the capture of Jiuliancheng, General Yamagata's 1st Army Corps occupied the nearby city of Dandong, while to the north, elements of the retreating Beiyang Army set fire to the city of Fengcheng. The Japanese had established a firm foothold on Chinese territory with the loss of only four killed and 140 wounded.


  • Turkey (then Ottoman Empire)
    Tuesday Oct 1, 1895
    Armenian Genocide

    2,000 Armenians assembled in Constantinople

    Turkey (then Ottoman Empire)
    Tuesday Oct 1, 1895

    On 1 October 1895, 2,000 Armenians assembled in Constantinople to petition for the implementation of the reforms, but Ottoman police units violently broke the rally up. Soon, massacres of Armenians broke out in Constantinople and then engulfed the rest of the Armenian-populated provinces of Bitlis, Diyarbekir, Erzurum, Harput, Sivas, Trabzon, and Van. Estimates differ on how many Armenians were killed, but European documentation of the pogroms, which became known as the Hamidian massacres, placed the figures at between 100,000 and 300,000.


  • Tainan, Taiwan
    Monday Oct 21, 1895
    First Sino-Japanese War

    The Surrender of The Republican Capital Tainan

    Tainan, Taiwan
    Monday Oct 21, 1895

    The campaign effectively ended on 21 October 1895, with the flight of Liu Yongfu, the second Republican president, and the surrender of the Republican capital Tainan.


  • Guangzhou, China
    Saturday Oct 26, 1895
    Xinhai Revolution

    The First Guangzhou Uprising

    Guangzhou, China
    Saturday Oct 26, 1895

    On 26 October 1895, Yeung Ku-wan and Sun Yat-sen led Zheng Shiliang and Lu Haodong to Guangzhou, preparing to capture Guangzhou in one strike. However, the details of their plans were leaked to the Qing government. The government began to arrest revolutionaries, including Lu Haodong, who was later executed. The first Guangzhou uprising was a failure.


  • Mumbai, India
    Oct, 1896
    Winston Churchill

    Churchill went to Bombay

    Mumbai, India
    Oct, 1896

    Churchill proceeded to New York City and, in admiration of the United States, wrote to his mother about "what an extraordinary people the Americans are!" With the Hussars, he went to Bombay in October 1896. Based in Bangalore, he was in India for 19 months, visiting Calcutta three times and joining expeditions to Hyderabad and the Northwest Frontier.


  • Present-day Bangalore, India
    Oct, 1897
    Winston Churchill

    First Book "The Story of the Malakand Field Force"

    Present-day Bangalore, India
    Oct, 1897

    Churchill returned to Bangalore in October 1897 and there wrote his first book, The Story of the Malakand Field Force, which received positive reviews. He also wrote his only work of fiction, Savrola, a Ruritanian romance. To keep himself fully occupied, Churchill embraced writing as what Roy Jenkins calls his "whole habit", especially through his political career when he was out of office. It was his main safeguard against recurring depression, which he termed his "black dog".


  • Rheydt, Mönchengladbach, Germany
    Friday Oct 29, 1897
    Joseph Goebbels

    Joseph Goebbels's Birth

    Rheydt, Mönchengladbach, Germany
    Friday Oct 29, 1897

    Paul Joseph Goebbels was born on 29 October 1897 in Rheydt, an industrial town south of Mönchengladbach near Düsseldorf, Germany. Both of his parents were Roman Catholics with modest family backgrounds.


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