history

161 posts tagged with this keyword.

Portrait of Jean-Pierre Boyer, President of Haiti, who led the 1822 annexation of Santo Domingo

One and Indivisible

Feb 9, 2026 By Andy Barca

On 9 February 1822, Jean-Pierre Boyer rode into Santo Domingo with 12,000 soldiers and unified the entire island of Hispaniola under a single Black republic. The occupation lasted 22 years, abolished slavery, closed the oldest university in the Americas, and planted the resentments that would define Dominican identity ever after.

Mary, Queen of Scots portrait by Francois Clouet

A Queen on the Block

Feb 8, 2026 By Andy Barca

On 8 February 1587, Mary, Queen of Scots was beheaded at Fotheringhay after the Babington Plot. Her death was lawful theatre, political necessity, and a dynastic tragedy all at once.

Russo-Japanese War montage

The Warning Shot

Feb 8, 2026 By Andy Barca

On 8 February 1904, Japan struck first at Port Arthur and shattered more than a fleet. Russia's defeat exposed the rot of Tsarism years before 1917 finished the job.

Puyi, the last Emperor of China

The Last Emperor

Feb 7, 2026 By Andy Barca

On 7 February 1906, Aisin-Gioro Puyi was born in Beijing. He became Emperor of China at two, lost the throne at six, spent his life as the plaything of forces vastly larger than himself, and died a gardener.

Queen Elizabeth II

The Longest Reign

Feb 6, 2026 By Andy Barca

On 6 February 1952, a twenty-five-year-old princess in Kenya learned her father was dead. She reigned for seventy years — longer than any British monarch in history — and watched the empire she inherited dissolve beneath her.

The Augustus of Prima Porta, a Roman marble statue created c. AD 15, found at the Villa of Livia, now in the Vatican Museums

Father of the Fatherland

Feb 5, 2026 By Andy Barca

On 4 February 2 BC, the Roman Senate hailed Augustus as Pater Patriae — Father of the Fatherland. He had been ruling Rome for thirty years. He wept.

The Battle of Diu, 1509

Portugal's Ocean

Feb 3, 2026 By Andy Barca

On 3 February 1488, Bartolomeu Dias landed at Mossel Bay after rounding the Cape of Good Hope. Twenty-one years later to the day, Portuguese cannon settled who would rule the Indian Ocean.

Charles I on horseback

The King Ascends

Feb 2, 2026 By Andy Barca

On 2 February 1626, Charles I was crowned at Westminster Abbey. His reign ended on a scaffold — and began the slow, violent invention of parliamentary democracy.

Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini disembarks from the airplane in Mehrabad Airport

The Homecoming

Feb 1, 2026 By Andy Barca

On 1 February 1979, Ayatollah Khomeini flew home from Paris and Iran changed for ever. Forty-seven years later, the regime he built is under more pressure than at any point since. It may not matter.