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1,991 facts in History. Click any fact to see its full page.
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📜 History 1,991
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Socrates left no written works — everything we know about him comes from the writings of his students, primarily Plato.
The Iron Age began at different times in different regions — in sub-Saharan Africa, iron-working may have emerged independently.
The Inca built thousands of miles of roads without wheeled vehicles — everything was carried by foot or llama.
The slave trade forcibly displaced an estimated 12.5 million people from Africa between the 15th and 19th centuries.
The wheel was not invented for transportation but for pottery — wheel-thrown pots predate wheeled vehicles.
The largest empire by percentage of world population was the Achaemenid Persian Empire, covering about 44% of humanity.
Ancient Romans had central heating — called hypocausts — that circulated hot air under raised floors.
Joan of Arc was only 17–19 years old during her military campaigns that helped turn the Hundred Years' War.
The Mesoamerican ball game, played for 3,000 years, sometimes involved losing teams being sacrificed.
The Spanish Inquisition operated for over 350 years, from 1478 to 1834.
The Mughal Empire at its peak covered most of the Indian subcontinent and had a GDP larger than all of Western Europe.
The first public flush toilet was invented by Sir John Harington in 1596 and installed for Queen Elizabeth I.
The Aztec 'flower wars' were ritualized conflicts specifically to capture enemies for sacrifice, not to conquer territory.
The Code of Hammurabi contained 282 laws covering trade, property, family, and labor — with punishments scaling by social class.
Ancient Egyptian mummies have been found with evidence of heart disease, showing it's not purely a modern problem.
Catherine the Great of Russia was actually German by birth — she was born Princess Sophie of Anhalt-Zerbst.
The Roman Empire's road network stretched 400,000 km, with 80,000 km of paved roads.
Hannibal Barca crossed the Alps with an estimated 37 war elephants, losing most to the cold.
Genghis Khan killed so many people that it may have cooled Earth's climate by reducing agricultural CO₂ emissions.
The ancient city of Carthage was obliterated so thoroughly by Rome in 146 BC that its exact location was debated for centuries.
The Meiji Restoration transformed Japan from a feudal society to an industrial power in just a few decades after 1868.
The Roman Senate was not a democratic body — it was composed of former magistrates and aristocrats.
Abraham Lincoln was the first US president to be photographed and the first to be assassinated.
The first paper money in Europe was introduced in Sweden in 1661 — and caused economic chaos.
The Bubonic Plague struck Europe three times: in the 6th, 14th, and 17th centuries.
The ancient Greeks practiced democracy in Athens, but only free adult male citizens could participate — women and slaves were excluded.
The Great Fire of London in 1666 destroyed 13,200 houses but killed fewer than 10 people.
The medieval knight's full suit of plate armor weighed about 50 lbs but was designed to allow full mobility.
The first woman to win the Nobel Prize was Marie Curie in 1903 — she won a second in 1911.
Czar Peter the Great taxed beards in Russia in 1698 to encourage modernization along European lines.
The Ming Dynasty of China built 25,000 miles of roadways, rivaling Rome's famous road network.
Ancient Greek mathematician Eratosthenes calculated the Earth's circumference with remarkable accuracy around 240 BC.
The Aztec calendar was more accurate than the Julian calendar used in contemporary Europe.
Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein at age 18, during a stormy summer on Lake Geneva in 1816.
The first known law code, the Code of Hammurabi, was written around 1754 BC in ancient Babylon.
The Ottoman Empire lasted over 600 years, from 1299 to 1922, spanning three continents.
The Trojan War, made famous by Homer's Iliad, may have had a historical basis — archaeologists have found evidence of a city fitting Troy's description.
The first telescope was invented around 1608, and Galileo turned one on the sky in 1609, discovering Jupiter's moons.
The first human in space was Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin on April 12, 1961.
Diana Nyad swam from Cuba to Florida in 2013 at age 64 — over 177 km in 53 hours without a shark cage.
Polo is one of the oldest team sports in the world, originating in Persia around 6th century BC.
Jim Thorpe won the pentathlon and decathlon at the 1912 Olympics — King Gustav V of Sweden called him 'the world's greatest athlete.'
Archery was the first sport to be included in the Olympics after its original ancient form disappeared from the games.
Serena Williams won the 2017 Australian Open while eight weeks pregnant.
The NBA three-point line was adopted from the ABA (American Basketball Association) in 1979.
Michael Phelps won 23 Olympic gold medals — more than most countries have won in total.
Eddie 'The Eagle' Edwards became a cultural icon at the 1988 Calgary Olympics despite finishing last in every ski jump event.
The first Winter Olympics were held in Chamonix, France, in 1924.
The Boston Marathon is the world's oldest annual marathon, first held in 1897.
The first sub-4-minute mile was run by Roger Bannister on May 6, 1954, in Oxford.