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History Facts

1,991 facts in History. Click any fact to see its full page.

All 11,491 📜 History 1,991 🔬 Science 1,964 🐾 Animals 1,525 🚀 Space 977 🧠 Psychology 893 🌿 Nature 759 💻 Technology 735 🌍 Geography 599 🎭 Culture 581 🫀 Human Body 572 🌊 Ocean 373 💬 Language 245 🍕 Food 199 ✨ General 68 ✨ Dinosaur 10
Socrates left no written works — everything we know about him comes from the writings of his students, primarily Plato.
📜 History Fact #4691
The Iron Age began at different times in different regions — in sub-Saharan Africa, iron-working may have emerged independently.
📜 History Fact #4690
The Inca built thousands of miles of roads without wheeled vehicles — everything was carried by foot or llama.
📜 History Fact #4689
The slave trade forcibly displaced an estimated 12.5 million people from Africa between the 15th and 19th centuries.
📜 History Fact #4688
The wheel was not invented for transportation but for pottery — wheel-thrown pots predate wheeled vehicles.
📜 History Fact #4687
The largest empire by percentage of world population was the Achaemenid Persian Empire, covering about 44% of humanity.
📜 History Fact #4686
Ancient Romans had central heating — called hypocausts — that circulated hot air under raised floors.
📜 History Fact #4685
Joan of Arc was only 17–19 years old during her military campaigns that helped turn the Hundred Years' War.
📜 History Fact #4684
The Mesoamerican ball game, played for 3,000 years, sometimes involved losing teams being sacrificed.
📜 History Fact #4683
The Spanish Inquisition operated for over 350 years, from 1478 to 1834.
📜 History Fact #4681
The Mughal Empire at its peak covered most of the Indian subcontinent and had a GDP larger than all of Western Europe.
📜 History Fact #4680
The first public flush toilet was invented by Sir John Harington in 1596 and installed for Queen Elizabeth I.
📜 History Fact #4679
The Aztec 'flower wars' were ritualized conflicts specifically to capture enemies for sacrifice, not to conquer territory.
📜 History Fact #4678
The Code of Hammurabi contained 282 laws covering trade, property, family, and labor — with punishments scaling by social class.
📜 History Fact #4677
Ancient Egyptian mummies have been found with evidence of heart disease, showing it's not purely a modern problem.
📜 History Fact #4676
Catherine the Great of Russia was actually German by birth — she was born Princess Sophie of Anhalt-Zerbst.
📜 History Fact #4675
The Roman Empire's road network stretched 400,000 km, with 80,000 km of paved roads.
📜 History Fact #4674
Hannibal Barca crossed the Alps with an estimated 37 war elephants, losing most to the cold.
📜 History Fact #4673
Genghis Khan killed so many people that it may have cooled Earth's climate by reducing agricultural CO₂ emissions.
📜 History Fact #4671
The ancient city of Carthage was obliterated so thoroughly by Rome in 146 BC that its exact location was debated for centuries.
📜 History Fact #4669
The Meiji Restoration transformed Japan from a feudal society to an industrial power in just a few decades after 1868.
📜 History Fact #4668
The Roman Senate was not a democratic body — it was composed of former magistrates and aristocrats.
📜 History Fact #4666
Abraham Lincoln was the first US president to be photographed and the first to be assassinated.
📜 History Fact #4665
The first paper money in Europe was introduced in Sweden in 1661 — and caused economic chaos.
📜 History Fact #4664
The Bubonic Plague struck Europe three times: in the 6th, 14th, and 17th centuries.
📜 History Fact #4663
The ancient Greeks practiced democracy in Athens, but only free adult male citizens could participate — women and slaves were excluded.
📜 History Fact #4662
The Great Fire of London in 1666 destroyed 13,200 houses but killed fewer than 10 people.
📜 History Fact #4661
The medieval knight's full suit of plate armor weighed about 50 lbs but was designed to allow full mobility.
📜 History Fact #4660
The first woman to win the Nobel Prize was Marie Curie in 1903 — she won a second in 1911.
📜 History Fact #4659
Czar Peter the Great taxed beards in Russia in 1698 to encourage modernization along European lines.
📜 History Fact #4658
The Ming Dynasty of China built 25,000 miles of roadways, rivaling Rome's famous road network.
📜 History Fact #4657
Ancient Greek mathematician Eratosthenes calculated the Earth's circumference with remarkable accuracy around 240 BC.
📜 History Fact #4656
The Aztec calendar was more accurate than the Julian calendar used in contemporary Europe.
📜 History Fact #4655
Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein at age 18, during a stormy summer on Lake Geneva in 1816.
📜 History Fact #4654
The first known law code, the Code of Hammurabi, was written around 1754 BC in ancient Babylon.
📜 History Fact #4653
The Ottoman Empire lasted over 600 years, from 1299 to 1922, spanning three continents.
📜 History Fact #4652
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.
📜 History Fact #4651
The first telescope was invented around 1608, and Galileo turned one on the sky in 1609, discovering Jupiter's moons.
📜 History Fact #4587
The first human in space was Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin on April 12, 1961.
📜 History Fact #4558
Diana Nyad swam from Cuba to Florida in 2013 at age 64 — over 177 km in 53 hours without a shark cage.
📜 History Fact #4500
Polo is one of the oldest team sports in the world, originating in Persia around 6th century BC.
📜 History Fact #4494
Jim Thorpe won the pentathlon and decathlon at the 1912 Olympics — King Gustav V of Sweden called him 'the world's greatest athlete.'
📜 History Fact #4493
Archery was the first sport to be included in the Olympics after its original ancient form disappeared from the games.
📜 History Fact #4492
Serena Williams won the 2017 Australian Open while eight weeks pregnant.
📜 History Fact #4489
The NBA three-point line was adopted from the ABA (American Basketball Association) in 1979.
📜 History Fact #4488
Michael Phelps won 23 Olympic gold medals — more than most countries have won in total.
📜 History Fact #4487
Eddie 'The Eagle' Edwards became a cultural icon at the 1988 Calgary Olympics despite finishing last in every ski jump event.
📜 History Fact #4485
The first Winter Olympics were held in Chamonix, France, in 1924.
📜 History Fact #4484
The Boston Marathon is the world's oldest annual marathon, first held in 1897.
📜 History Fact #4481
The first sub-4-minute mile was run by Roger Bannister on May 6, 1954, in Oxford.
📜 History Fact #4479