google.com, pub-6663105814926378, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 Around the World List JM: 2022-07-10


Croatia: A devastating fire has reduced 33,000 hectares to ashes

Investigations to determine the cause of the fire, which burned about 33,000 hectares in central Croatia.


About 33,000 hectares have been reduced to ashes by a large forest fire in central Croatia, according to government sources.


The fire front has been brought under control in Sibenik-Knin County, but 330 firefighters remain on alert for the risk of flare-ups, said the head of the Civil Protection Directorate, Damir Trout, adding that an investigation is underway to determine the cause of the fire.


Meanwhile, local authorities are calling for the region to be declared a state of emergency in order to secure additional financial resources for the relief of fire victims who lost homes and property.


According to APE-MPE, Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic pledged today that the government will assess the damage and immediately support the affected areas.


Outstanding Facts in Saudi Arabia


1973: October 17OPEC (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) reaches an agreement to reduce oil extraction by 5% until Israel withdraws from the occupied territories during the Yom Kippur War. Failing to achieve a result, Saudi Arabia and other nations will cut oil production drastically and impose a full oil embargo against the United States and the Netherlands in response to their military support for Israel. The embargo will cause the biggest energy crisis in the United States and Europe and will initiate an unprecedented speculative escalation in the price of a barrel of oil. (48 years ago)

1963: June 2With a decree of the Regent Prince Faisal, slavery is abolished in Saudi Arabia, the last country that until yesterday officially recognized it. (58 years ago)

1945: March 22
They meet in Cairo (Egypt), to found the Arab League (organization of Arab states of the Middle East), representatives of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Lebanon, Transjordan, Iraq and Yemen. The League was created with the purpose of promoting economic development in the area, resolving possible disputes between member states by peaceful means, and coordinating political objectives. In 1950, two years after the creation of the State of Israel, the members of the Arab League signed a Treaty of Mutual Defense. Over time, 15 more countries will join the organization, which will also establish the creation of a common market in 1965. (76 years ago)

634: August 23
In Medina (Arabia) the new caliph Omar I was elected, a former enemy of Muhammad but who, upon converting to Islam, became a close collaborator and even married his daughter to the prophet. Omar I will extend the domination of Islam with his conquests of Syria, Palestine, Mesopotamia, Egypt and Persia. (1387 years ago)

627: March 31
In the surroundings of Medina (Saudi Arabia), the so-called "Battle of the Ditch or Trench" begins between the prophet of Islam, Muhammad, who had been exiled to Medina, and a coalition that had forced his exile in 622 from La Mecca. The battle is named after the Muslims dug a deep trench around their camp to avoid the charges of the enemy cavalry. Two weeks later and after the coalition was disbanded, Muhammad will achieve victory and about 900 losers will be beheaded and thrown into a pit. (1394 years ago)

622: September 24
Muhammad completes the "Hegira" to Medina from Mecca (Arabia). Mecca is the birthplace of Muhammad, the prophet and founder of Islam, and the holy center of Islam. In 610, north of Mecca, in a cave on Mount Hira, Muhammad, a rich and respected merchant, had a vision in which God commanded him to become the prophet of "true religion." From there, he will manage to gather a large group of supporters in Mecca, arousing the suspicion of the quraysi clan, lords of the city who will want his death. Muhammad will be forced to escape in what will be the beginning of the "Hijra", but in 630 he will return to Mecca as a conqueror. Upon his death in 632, Muhammad will leave an organized community, governed by the principles of the Qur'an. In 639, Caliph Umar I will mark the year of the Hegira as the first of the Muslim era, thus, 622 AD. C. will become 1 ah (anno hegirae) in the Muslim calendar. (1399 years ago)

622: September 20
Muhammad arrives in Medina (Saudi Arabia) fleeing from Mecca. Medina will become the capital of the flourishing Muslim state, until the year 661, when it will be replaced by Damascus, the capital of the Umayyad caliphs. In 683, the caliphs will attack Medina in the battle of al-Harra. After its subsequent sacking, the city will go into decline. (1399 years ago)

622: July 16
Faced with the danger of living in Mecca, Muhammad decides to move to Medina, a great agricultural oasis where he has his followers. Thus begins the "Age of Hegira". The Islamic calendar will count the dates from this moment on. In September he will arrive in Medina where he will take care of organizing the worship. (1399 years ago)

Outstanding births in Saudi Arabia
570: April 26
Tradition sets on this date the birth of the prophet Muhammad in Mecca, present-day Saudi Arabia, considered according to the Muslim religion, the "seal of the prophets" as he is the last of a long chain of messengers, sent by God to update his message. , which according to Islam, is essentially the same as that transmitted by its predecessors, including Ibrahim (Abraham), Isa (Jesus) and Musa (Moses). At the age of forty, Muhammad will retire to the desert where he will spend whole days in a cave on Mount Hira, and will receive the revelation of God (Allah), speaking to him through the archangel Gabriel who will communicate the secret of true faith. He will begin to preach in his hometown, where he will present himself as a continuation of the previous great monotheistic prophets. (1451 years ago)

Reported deaths in Saudi Arabia
2003: August 16
Refugee since 1979 in Jedda, Saudi Arabia, the tyrannical Ugandan dictator Idi Amin Dada dies, plunging Uganda into confusion in 8 years. Its repressive apparatus caused the death of nearly 300,000 countrymen and left their country bankrupt. (18 years ago)

1975: March 25
In Riyah, Saudi Arabia, Prince Faisal shoots and kills his uncle, King Faisal, for reasons that are still unknown today. During his reign King Faisal, son of King Ibn Saud, tried to modernize his country. His son, Crown Prince Khalid, succeeds him on the throne. (46 years ago)

644: November 3
In pursuit of revenge, a Persian Christian assassinates Caliph Oman I in Medina (Arabia), who at first was an enemy and later a faithful collaborator of Muhammad. (1377 years ago)

632: June 8
During a pilgrimage, Muhammad, founder of Islam, died in Medina (Arabia) at the age of 62. Thanks to his religious and political activity, he achieved the unity of the Arab peoples, allowing the founding of a kingdom that, based on Islam, achieved a position of strength against other great powers of the time. (1389 years ago)

Outstanding Events in Algeria


1989: February 17
In Marrakesh, the Arab Maghreb Union was created with the union of Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Mauritania and Libya, generating great hopes before being gripped by the conflict in Western Sahara. (32 years ago)

1965: June 20
In Algiers, the capital of Algeria, the police repress demonstrations by hundreds of people who have taken to the streets launching slogans in support of the deposed President Ben Bella. The protests, which began as an orderly march of students, began to walk through the streets in small groups that, when trying to disperse them, caused riots. Former President Ahmed Ben Bella is being held in a military enclave in the Sahara. He was overthrown yesterday by the head of the armed forces Colonel Houari Boumedienne and his National Revolutionary Council. Ben Bella will remain under house arrest for 15 years. Once freed, he will go into exile in neutral Switzerland. (56 years ago)

1965: June 19
In Algeria, a military coup took place that overthrew Ahmed Ben Bella, the first president of the People's Democratic Republic of Algeria after its independence from France in 1962 and leader of the Algerian liberation war, and gave power to Houari Boumedian. The causes lie in the continuous internal disputes of the FLN and the external pressures due to the problematic definition of the country's borders and its war with Morocco. Boumedian will establish a dictatorship and will base his economic policy on agrarian reform and nationalizations. (56 years ago)

1962: July 3
Algeria ends its war of liberation and gains its independence from France. (59 years ago)

1962: March 18
Finally, after years of struggle by the Algerian National Liberation Front (FLN) founded and led by Ahmed ben Bella in November 1954, in Evian, France, and with the supervision of Charles de Gaulle, the countries of France and Algeria sign a truce to end the liberation war and the 130 years of French rule. Algerian official independence will be declared on July 5. This process of independence has been one of the cruelest of African decolonization since, as there is a strong presence of Europeans residing in the country, they pressured France to prevent emancipation, since they would be the worst affected, which caused many deaths. on both sides and a harsh repression by the French army. (59 years ago)

1960: February 13
France, after its military disaster in French Indochina (present-day Vietnam), and the humiliation of the expropriation of the Suez Canal, which occurred in October 1956 when the United States left its allies without support, accelerates its nuclear program of defense and Today, it detonates its first test atomic bomb in the Algerian Sahara. (61 years ago)

1954: November 1
The Algerian National Liberation Front begins its long war of liberation against France, culminating in victory in 1962. (67 years ago) 1943: June 3During World War II, the French Committee for National Liberation was created in the city of Algiers (Algeria), with General Charles De Gaulle and General Giraud being named co-presidents. On the same date the following year, this Liberation Committee will be called the Provisional Government of the French Republic. (78 years ago)

1830: July 5
To put an end to Berber piracy, the French invade Algiers and the surrounding territories, thus beginning a long period of colonial rule in Algeria, which will last until 1962. (191 years ago)

1580: September 19
In the city of Algiers (now Algeria) Miguel de Cervantes is released, after five years of captivity in the hands of the corsairs, thanks to the payment of a ransom and the mediation of the Trinitarian Fathers. In 1605 he published the first part of "Don Quixote" . (441 years ago)

Outstanding births in Algeria
1913: November 7
In Mondovi, in the bosom of a family of French settlers dedicated to the cultivation of cashew nuts in the Algerian department of Constantine, Albert Camus was born, novelist, essayist, playwright and French philosopher who will be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1957 to the 44 years. "The Stranger" , his first novel, is perhaps his best known work, where the protagonist seems to accept life as something automatic. that is undermining their humanity and dignity. (108 years ago)

354: November 13
In Tagaste, a small city of Numidia (now Algeria), Saint Augustine was born, the author of "The Confessions" and "The City of God" , he will be bishop of Hippo from 396 to 430, and one of the most important Christian thinkers together with Saint Paul. (1667 years ago)

Reported deaths in Algeria
1978: December 27
In Algiers, the capital of Algeria, Houari Boumedienne, an Algerian politician, president of his country from the 1965 coup until his death, dies. (42 years ago)

430: August 28
In the city of Hipona (present-day Algeria), which is under siege by Vandal troops, Saint Augustine, author of "The Confessions" and "The City of God" , bishop of Hippo from 396 until his death, dies , one of the most important Christian thinkers together with Saint Paul and great doctor of the Church. (1591 years ago)

Outstanding Events in Agentina


1998: November 2
In the city of Buenos Aires, capital of Argentina, the fourth session of the Conference of the Parties on Climate Change takes place until the 13th, under the auspices of the UN, a very serious problem facing humanity. The meeting will end with the adoption of an Action Plan, which will set deadlines for the finalization of agreements on the mechanisms proposed in Kyoto and the policies to be adopted. (23 years ago)

1994: October 21
An international arbitral tribunal rules in favor of Argentina in its conflict with Chile over a narrow valley between rectangular mountains 12 km wide and some 44 km long known as the "Lago del Desierto", a border area between the two countries of 530 square kilometers. (27 years ago)

1983: October 30
In Argentina, after the fall of the military regime, Raúl Alfonsín, candidate of the Radical Civic Union, wins the elections. During his mandate, until July 1989, he will have to face two major problems: consolidating the democracy that has just emerged from the dictatorship, permeating all areas of society with it, while monitoring the Armed Forces suspicious of any change and fight inflation and the debt crisis. (38 years ago)

1982: June 14
Surrender of the Argentine troops in Port Stanley (capital of the Falkland Islands) two months after the start of hostilities between Argentina and the United Kingdom. In the Falklands War, almost 700 Argentines and just over 200 British have died. (39 years ago)

1982: May 4
In the framework of the Falklands War, the British ship HMS Sheffield (type 42 destroyer) is hit in its control room by a French-made Exocet missile, fired from an Argentine fighter bomber. The impact is followed by a terrifying fire that causes highly toxic smoke. The ship sinks shortly after, resulting in 20 crew killed and 30 more injured. This sinking moves the British nation which will frustrate any possible diplomatic solution to the current controversy over the Falkland Islands. As if that weren't enough, a British vertical take-off Harrier was also shot down today. (39 years ago)

1982: May 1
In the context of the Falklands War, British planes carried out bombardments on two runways near Port Stanley, the capital of the Falkland Islands, which are currently occupied by Argentine forces. The objective of the attack is to prevent the Argentines from landing their supply planes or from attacking the British fleet in the 200-mile exclusion zone, decreed by the British Government. (39 years ago)

1982: April 2
The Argentine military regime, beset by serious problems, and to reestablish control of the internal situation, decides to invade the Malvinas archipelago, inhabited by just over 2,000 people, all of them British subjects, and claim their sovereignty. (39 years ago)

1982: March 19
During the Argentine military dictatorship of the government of Leopoldo Galtieri, whose prestige is clearly deteriorated with street demonstrations demanding freedom that are harshly repressed, and somehow needing popular support and diverting social attention from the internal problems that affect him. drown, today, a group of 50 Argentines lands in Leith Harbor, in South Georgia, a British colony very close to the Falkland Islands, in the South Atlantic, and plants the flag of their nation, one more step in the provocation Argentina from the so-called "Operation Rosario" until the total invasion of the islands on April 2. (39 years ago)

1977: April 30
In Buenos Aires, Argentina, Azucena Villafor de Vicenti and 13 other mothers demonstrate for the first time, and with great courage, in the Plaza de Mayo, in front of the government headquarters (Casa Rosada), to request information on their kidnapped children, tortured and murdered by the military dictatorship, considered the bloodiest in the history of the country, characterized by a constant violation of Human Rights. Faced with the police order not to stop or group together, but to circulate, the Mothers decide to walk around the aforementioned Plaza. (44 years ago)

1976: March 24
The Argentine army, with General Videla in command, gives a coup d'etat deposition of President Isabel Martínez de Perón, implanting an iron and bloody military dictatorship that will last until 1983 during which students, trade unionists, intellectuals and other professionals will be kidnapped. , tortured, assassinated or simply "disappear". (45 years ago)

1974: June 29
In Buenos Aires, the capital of Argentina, María Estela Martínez de Perón, "Isabelita", assumes the leadership of the State, due to the health problems suffered by her husband, President Juan Domingo Perón, who will die two days later. In this way, she becomes the first woman to hold the Presidency of her country. With it, one of the darkest periods in Argentine history will begin. On March 24, 1976, she will be overthrown by a military coup led by General Jorge Rafael Videla. (47 years ago)

1973: March 11
In the elections held today in Argentina, the Peronist doctor Héctor Cámpora wins the victory. He will assume the Presidency on May 25 and 49 days later he will resign from his position to allow the holding of new elections in which Juan Domingo Perón, who has returned from exile, can participate. (48 years ago)

1966: June 28
In Argentina, constitutional president Arturo Umberto Illía is overthrown by the Armed Forces led by General Juan Carlos Onganía, origin of the dictatorship called the "Argentine Revolution", in which the coup plotters claim to establish themselves in power permanently. (55 years ago)

1962: March 29
In Argentina, the Armed Forces confine President Arturo Frondizi to Martín García Island. They annul the elections and designate José María Guido, president of the Senate, to occupy the presidency in order to maintain an image of civil government. (59 years ago)

1960: May 27
In Argentina, the Israeli secret services kidnap the Nazi and war criminal Adolf Eichmann, transferring him incognito to Israel for a summary trial. (61 years ago)

1955: September 16
In Córdoba, Argentina, retired artillery general Eduardo Lonardi leads a military uprising against the constitutional government of Juan Domingo Perón. The coup extends to Buenos Aires and other cities. On September 19, Perón will resign requesting asylum at the Paraguayan embassy. Lonardi assumes power as provisional president of what he calls the "Liberating Revolution." (66 years ago)

1955: June 16
In Buenos Aires, Argentina, members of the armed forces and Civil Commands, made up of conservatives, radicals, and sectors of the Catholic Church, unsuccessfully try to take the Casa Rosada and take President Juan Domingo Perón prisoner. The president seeks refuge in the building of the Ministry of War and prepares to quell the rebellion. At noon, 20 Gloster Meteor planes of the Navy bombard and machine-gun the government headquarters and the Plaza de Mayo. The rebel pilots drop nine and a half tons of explosives. The balance of barbarism is more than 360 dead and about 2,000 wounded. The failed coup plotters flee to Uruguay, where they request political asylum. (66 years ago)

1951: November 11
In Argentina, after having won the presidential elections for the period 1946-1952, Juan Domingo Perón was reelected president. During this second term, he will face serious problems and will be dismissed by a military coup in September 1955. He will temporarily take refuge in the neighboring country of Paraguay. Later he will go to Panama from where, after a brief stay, he will travel to Madrid (Spain) and marry María Estela Martínez de Perón. (70 years ago)

1946: February 24
In Argentina Juan Domingo Perón is elected president, for the period 1946-1952, with 56% of the votes. Perón had been imprisoned in 1945, after a civil and military uprising, but the mobilizations of the workers demanding his freedom and the insistence of his wife, Eva Duarte de Perón, forced his release. In 1947, with favorable economic conditions and with the support of the General Labor Confederation, he created the Peronist Party. After this presidency, he will win the elections two more times, in 1951 and 1973. (75 years ago)

1944: February 25
In Argentina, Vice President Edelmiro Julián Farrell assumes power after the resignation yesterday of the dictator Pedro Pablo Ramírez due to the pressure received from the chiefs and officers of the garrisons of the Federal Capital, Campo de Mayo, Palomar and La Plata. (77 years ago)

1944: January 15
An earthquake in the city of San Juan (Argentina) reaches 7.4 degrees on the Ritcher scale, with the focus at a depth of about 30 kilometers, causing the death of between 8,000 and 10,000 people. According to investigations carried out years later, this death toll was due, more than to the violence of the earthquake, to the type of construction that existed at that time. Reconstruction will last until 1960. (77 years ago)

1926: February 10
The Spanish aviators Franco, Ruiz de Alda, Durán and Rada arrive in Río de la Plata (Argentina), where they are received as heroes, after having traveled 10,270 km aboard the Dornier Wal hydroplane, baptized as "Plus Ultra", and fulfilled the dream of uniting Europe with Latin America by air. The trip, which had started in La Rábida (Spain) on January 22, was made with stopovers in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Praia (Cape Verde), Fernando de Noronha (Pernambuco, Brazil), Recife (Pernambuco, Brazil ), Rio de Janeiro and Montevideo (Uruguay). They have been on the air for a total of 59 hours and 39 minutes. (95 years ago)

1908: January 27
In Buenos Aires (Argentina), shortly after the current National Congress building was inaugurated, President José Figueroa Alcorta ordered the police to occupy it for not approving the budget signed in the agreement of ministers on January 25. A federal judge will later decree that no public authority can by law occupy the Congress building by force or prevent congressmen from entering it. (113 years ago)

1904: March 13
In the morning, in Las Cuevas, an Argentine town in the Department of Las Heras, Mendoza, located in the Andes Mountains on the border between Argentina and Chile, the foreign ministers of both countries together with other civil, ecclesiastical and military authorities, They inaugurate the monument of Christ the Redeemer which will be a symbol of friendship between the two peoples. On the monument there is an inscription with a message from Pope Pius XII, which is read in this act by the Bishop of San Carlos, and which says: "These mountains will collapse first before Chileans and Argentines break the peace sworn at the foot of Christ. Redeemer". This symbolic ceremony puts an end to the tense disagreements that have arisen between both parties, which due to border issues have been on the verge of unleashing a terrible warlike conflict. (117 years ago)

1882: November 19
In Argentina, the governor of Buenos Aires, Dardo Rocha, lays the first stone of the city of La Plata, with the idea that it will become the maritime capital of the nation. (139 years ago)

1865: May 1
Although the war began in December of last year, the Triple Alliance treaty between Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay is signed today in secret in the city of Buenos Aires (Argentina), to face Paraguay, ruled by Marshal Francisco Solano Lopez. The contest, which will conclude in March 1870 with the Paraguayan defeat, will be the bloodiest in South America. (156 years ago)

1864: November 12
As a consequence of the capture of the Brazilian ship "Marqués de Olinda" by Paraguay, in retaliation for the Brazilian invasion of Uruguay, a war begins between Paraguay and the Triple Alliance (Brazil, Uruguay and Argentina) that will last until 1870. (Makes 157 years)

1860: October 21
In Argentina, a national convention proclaims and swears in the Constitution, based on that of 1853, of which 22 amendments have been proposed and finally accepted. By article 3, of the new Constitution, the city declared by Congress by a special law is declared the capital of the Argentine Confederation, prior assignment of the territory by the corresponding law. (161 years ago)

1857: August 30The locomotive called "La Porteña", which pulls a small passenger convoy, inaugurates in Buenos Aires the first railway line to be built in the Argentine Republic: the West Railroad, which runs from El Parque, which is the current location of the Theater Colon, to La Floresta. (164 years ago)

1853: May 1
In Argentina, the Constituent Assembly approves the Constitution putting an end to civil wars and laying the foundations of the National Organization. (168 years ago)

1852: May 31
In Argentina, the National Agreement of San Nicolás de los Arroyos is signed, to lay the foundations of the national organization and a Constituent Congress is convened from where the National Constitution will come out, sanctioned on May 11, 1853 and promulgated on May 25, 1853. month to be sworn in on July 9 of the same year. (169 years ago)

1850: August 31
The Arana-Le Prédour treaty is signed in Buenos Aires, Argentina, by which France, which has resisted to the end, undertakes to withdraw its forces from the Río de la Plata, concluding the economic blockade on the port of Buenos Aires, at the same time that it recognizes the independence of the Argentine nation. (171 years ago)

1838: March 28
A French squadron blocks the port of Buenos Aires to obtain freedom of navigation on the Argentine rivers, after the government of Manuel Rosas has decided to put a 25% surcharge on the rights of the goods that arrive from abroad bound for Buenos Aires. Aires and that have been transshipped in the port of Montevideo, and to achieve exemption from military service to French citizens. The French intervention will last for two years and will have important economic consequences on the Buenos Aires coffers. In October 1840, with the signing of the Mackau-Arana treaty (names of the negotiators), the blockade will end. The Argentine government will undertake to compensate French citizens and will also exempt them from performing military service. (183 years ago)

1837: May 19
In Argentina, which aims at the province of Tarija (now Bolivia) and the part of the Chaco territory that ranges from the Bermejo River to the Pilcomayo, Juan Manuel de Rosas, in charge of managing the foreign relations of the Argentine Confederation and governor of Buenos Aires Aires, issues a decree declaring war on the Peruvian-Bolivian Confederation. In addition, Rosas accuses Bolivian dictator Andrés de Santa Cruz of favoring the enemies of the government of Buenos Aires and even making deals with revolutionaries from the Unitary Party asylum seekers in Uruguay. The war will be concluded on April 26, 1839 with the military victory of the Peruvian-Bolivian Confederation. Shortly after the overthrow of Santa Cruz, (184 years ago)

1827: February 20
In the framework of the Argentine-Brazilian War (1825-1828) the decisive Battle of Ituzaingó takes place, near the ford of Rosario, which is located in the state of Rio Grande do Sul (present-day Brazil). In this battle, the joint Army of Argentina and Uruguay defeats the troops of the Empire of Brazil, being the embryo of the Preliminary Peace Convention to be signed in 1828, by which Uruguay will be recognized as an independent, free and sovereign State. On the battlefield, the Brazilians leave some 1,200 casualties, 400 dead and wounded, and 800 prisoners; on the contrary, the Argentines and Uruguayans about 150 dead and 260 wounded. (194 years ago)

1827: February 16
In present-day Uruguay, Argentine and Brazilian troops face each other in the battle of Ombú for control of the Banda Oriental, which has belonged to Brazil since 1824. The Argentines, under the command of General Lucio Norberto Mansilla, attack the Brazilian troops of Bento Manuel Ribeiro , which are scattered. For this fact, Mansilla will be decorated by the federal government, and the commander of the Argentine forces Carlos María de Alvear, will be appointed chief of the General Staff. (194 years ago)

1822: January 25
In present-day Argentina, with the representatives of the four provinces, Buenos Aires, Santa Fe, Entre Ríos and Corrientes, the signing of the Quadrilateral Treaty is concluded, an alliance against a possible foreign aggression, by Spanish or Portuguese. (199 years ago)

1821: April 5
In the Brazilian municipality of Bagé, the Battle of Camacuá takes place, a confrontation between Argentina and Brazil for control of the Banda Oriental. It will be Argentina's last victory in the Brazilian campaign. (200 years ago)

1820: November 24
After the battle of Cepeda, fought on February 1 of this year, the representatives of the provinces of Buenos Aires and Santa Fe, Generals Martín Rodríguez and Estanislao López respectively, meet today at the Tiburcio Benegas ranch, located on the banks of the Arroyo del Medio (Argentina), and put an end to the war between Buenos Aires and Santa Fe, by signing the Treaty of Benegas, which also establishes the meeting of a future congress in Córdoba. (200 years ago)

1820: March 22
In current Argentina, as a regional response to the problem of the anarchized country, the governor of the Province of Tucumán, Bernabé Aráoz proclaims the Federal Republic of Tucumán as independent from a central government, to become part of a Federal State with the other provinces . This adventure will last until August of next year. (201 years ago)

1820: February 1
In Argentina, in the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata, the federals defeat the Unitarians in the Battle of Cepeda, supporters of a strong central government, as a result of which the General Congress will be dissolved and the Buenos Aires Cabildo will resume the control of this city and its provincial territory, at the same time that an interim governor will be appointed, which will imply the extinction of the national government. From then on, the provinces, still strongly autonomous, will continue a structure strengthened by a series of interprovincial pacts (Treaty of Benegas and the Quadrilateral). (201 years ago)

1817: January 17
Although they are leaving from the 12th, and will still do so until the 18th, today a column of soldiers under the command of General San Martín leaves from El Plumerillo (Argentina) to cross the Andes mountain range, one of the highest mountain ranges in the world, and liberate the peoples of Chile and Peru. In April 1818, by winning the battle of Maipú, they will ensure the independence of Chile. (204 years ago)

1816: September 13
In Buenos Aires (Argentina), in a public act in the current Plaza de Mayo, independence is sworn, declared on July 9 of this year by the Congress of Tucumán. (205 years ago)

1816: July 9
In present-day Argentina, in the Congress of Tucumán, Juan Francisco Narciso de Laprida, who chairs the session, asks those present: "Do you want the provinces of the Union to be a free and independent nation from the kings of Spain and their metropolis? ? ", to which the deputies answered affirmatively. Next, the Emancipation Act is drawn up proclaiming its independence from Spain, which is signed by the deputies who have come on horseback, in stagecoaches or carts, on roads in poor condition and for long days, and that the people will celebrate with joy. Even in the evening of the following day a gala ball will be held to celebrate it. (205 years ago)

1814: September 10
By decree of this date, in Buenos Aires (Argentina), the supreme director of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata Gervasio Posadas, separates the province of Entre Ríos from that of Corrientes, separating them from the Government of Buenos Aires and setting their respective jurisdictions with their own holders. (207 years ago)

1813: May 11
In Argentina, the General Constituent Assembly approves the lyrics of the "Patriotic March" , the National Anthem, composed by Vicente López y Planes. (208 years ago)

1813: April 13
José Gervasio Artigas, from his camp located near the Ayuí Grande stream, a few kilometers north of the current city of Concordia (in the current Argentine Republic), dictates and sends to Buenos Aires his famous "Instructions", a program that represents a fair interpretation of the revolutionary movement that will give independence to America in which it claims the Declaration of Independence from Spanish power, civil and religious freedom, federative political organization, autonomous states, equality of the provinces through a reciprocal pact and, finally That Buenos Aires is not the seat of the central government. The diplomas of the Eastern deputies will be rejected by the Assembly, using the nullity of their election as a legal argument. (208 years ago)

1813: February 20
General Belgrano's forces defeat General Tristán's royalists in the battle of Salta, decisive for the independence of Argentina. (208 years ago)

1813: February 3
In the Argentine province of Santa Fe, the Victory of San Lorenzo takes place, in the homonymous town, by 120 grenadiers on horseback under the command of General San José de San Martín, who thus achieves his first triumph in American lands, a prologue to his brilliant military history in Latin America. The objective of the combat is to defend the coastline from Zárate to Santa Fé from the royalists under the command of the Spanish royalist Commander Antonio Zabala, who has just invaded the territory. (208 years ago)

1813: January 31
In the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata (present-day Argentina), the General Constituent Assembly is inaugurated, initiating its sessions and electing Carlos de Alvear as president. It declares itself sovereign, abolishes the noble titles, eliminates the mayorazgo, declares the freedom of wombs (the children born to the slaves are free), prohibits the tributes and personal services of the Indians and makes the coat of arms and the national anthem official. , but it does not declare independence since de Alvear considers such a declaration early and not timely. (208 years ago)

1812: September 24
In the vicinity of the Argentine city of San Miguel de Tucumán, the Battle of Tucumán takes place in which the Argentine forces under the command of General Manuel Belgrano, defeat the royalist troops of General Pío Tristán, who double in number. (209 years ago)

1812: April 4
For the first time, a General Assembly, called the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata, meets in Buenos Aires, present-day Argentina, which declares itself sovereign and has representatives from the capital and the provinces. (209 years ago)

1812: February 27
During the war for the Independence of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata, Manuel Belgrano flies the Argentine flag for the first time in the city of Rosario, looking for a visible symbol for the national revolution. To do this, it adopts the colors blue and white. (209 years ago)

1812: February 13
In the city of Rosario (Argentina), General Manuel Belgrano proposes to the Government the creation of a national banner in order to motivate the troops in the fight for independence, given that the Army corps use different banners. On February 18, the Triumvirate will approve the use of the white and blue flag. (209 years ago)

1810: May 29
The First Argentine Board, headed by Cornelio Saavedra, decrees the creation of the national military bodies, to ensure the "defense and self-determination of the Argentine people, and for their territorial integrity." (211 years ago)

1810: May 25
The so-called "May Revolution" culminates in Buenos Aires, which began on the 18th, due to the instability of the government of Spain, when a group of revolutionaries deposed the viceroy and organized a new government Junta, known as the first National Government that is considered heir and not enemy of Spain. This fact will change the course of the country and the mentality of its inhabitants, accelerating the independence process. (211 years ago)

1807: July 5
In Buenos Aires, present-day Argentina, the English troops are reduced by the Regiment of Patricios commanded by Cornelio Judas Tadeo de Saavedra y Rodríguez. The English take refuge in the Church of Santo Domingo where many are annihilated by the Creoles. Two days later, on the 7th, John Whitelocke will capitulate with Liniers and the immediate abandonment of all the invaders of the Río de la Plata will be agreed. Thus ends the second British invasion after last year. (214 years ago)

1807: June 28
In present-day Argentina, the English general Whitelocke disembarks with some 8,000 men in the Barragan cove and sets out to conquer the city of Buenos Aires, besieging it on July 4. Finally, on July 5, after a fierce fighting through the streets of the city, Whitelocke will lose more than half of his soldiers among casualties and prisoners. On July 7, the English general will agree to capitulate and will retire with his men from Buenos Aires. It will definitely leave the territory of the eastern band on September 9. (214 years ago)

1806: June 27
As a result of the alliance between Napoleon and Spain, a force of 1,500 British soldiers under the command of William Carr Beresford occupies the city of Buenos Aires, in what will be the first English invasion of the city. Six weeks later the English will surrender to the local militias led by the French nobleman Santiago de Liniers, in the service of Spain. In May 1807 there will be another second invasion, this time much better planned. (215 years ago)

1806: June 25
After the English invasions of 1763 and 1765, today, the British forces under the command of Brigadier Beresford began the landing on the beaches of Quilmes very close to Buenos Aires, Argentina, initiating the third invasion. Viceroy Sobremonte, who is in command of the Buenos Aires city, will try to defend himself but will be defeated. On June 27 in the afternoon, Beresford will arrive at the city fort where he will receive the capitulation of Buenos Aires. In Montevideo, the captain of the frigate Liniers will organize the reconquest and thus, on August 12 of this year, the army commanded by Liniers will begin the reconquest of Buenos Aires. Finally Beresford will surrender along with all his men. (215 years ago)

1600: January 24
The Falkland Islands receive the first truly verified visit from a Dutchman named Sebald de Weert. (421 years ago)

1593: April 19
In present-day Argentina, Francisco de Argañaraz y Murguía founded San Salvador de Velazco in the Jujuy Valley, after the founding of a city in the aforementioned valley has been delayed by the militant indigenous opposition to the entry of the Spanish, although What really had more weight was the fratricidal struggle that was sustained among themselves by the Spaniards of Chile and Peru, who wanted to achieve control of the territory of Tucumán. Later, during the wars for independence, Jujuy became the scene of battles between the Army of the North and the royalist forces. (428 years ago)

1588: April 3
In present-day Argentina, and following orders from Juan Torres de Vera y Aragón, the conquerors Alonso de Vera and Hernandarias de Saavedra founded San Juan de la Vera de las Siete Corrientes, now Corrientes. They have arrived at this place after 4 months of painful march and continuous siege by the Guarani. (433 years ago)

1582: April 16
In present-day Argentina, Hernando de Lerma, governor of Tucumán, following orders from the viceroy of Peru, Francisco de Toledo, founds the city of San Felipe de Lerma in the Salta valley, in order to create a stopover in communications between Lima. and Buenos Aires. The town will later be called only Salta. (439 years ago)

1580: June 11
The Spanish Juan de Garay, under the command of some officers and sixty volunteers, founded the new city of the Holy Trinity, the current Buenos Aires (Argentina), after the failure of the first by the advanced Pedro de Mendoza who did so in February of 1536, but after the siege to which it was subjected by the Querandi Indians, they decided to abandon it in 1541. Juan de Garay, as promised, distributes land and livestock to those who accompany him on this expedition and for himself. (441 years ago)

1573: July 6
In the current province of Córdoba (Argentina), the Spanish forward Jerónimo Luis de Cabrera founded on the left bank of the Suquía River, in a place called Quisquisacate, the village of Córdoba La Llana de la Nueva Andalucía. In 1599, the Jesuit religious arrived, settling there to make these lands their central point for evangelization. (448 years ago)

1561: March 2
In the Valley of Güentota in present-day Argentina, the Spanish Pedro del Castillo founded the city of Mendoza, and named it Mendoza del Nuevo Valle de La Rioja, in honor of the governor and captain general of Chile, García Hurtado de Mendoza. On March 28, 1562, the city was transferred very close to there by Captain Juan Jufré. (460 years ago)

1542: January 31
The Spanish navigator and explorer Alvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca, while making a land expedition from the Atlantic Ocean to Asunción del Paraguay, discovers the Iguazú Falls, on the current borders of Brazil and Argentina, one of the most impressive natural beauties on the planet. , which will be declared a Natural World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1984. (479 years ago)

1536: February 3
The expedition of the advanced Pedro de Mendoza entered the Río de la Plata and founded a fort that he called Puerto de Nuestra Señora del Buen Ayre, this being the first settlement in the current location of the city of Buenos Aires (Argentina). The second foundation will be made by Juan de Garay in 1580, who will call it Ciudad de Trinidad. (485 years ago)

1535: August 24
The expedition of the Spanish admiral and conqueror Pedro de Mendoza, composed of more than a dozen ships and about 2,200 men, sets sail from the Cadiz port of Sanlúcar de Barrameda (Spain), with the mission of transporting to the Río de la Plata (present-day Argentina) a group of settlers, a hundred horses, build three forts and build a royal road from the Río de la Plata to the Pacific Ocean, all with the aim of winning the Portuguese in the race to obtain the riches that the legends of Indigenous. He will arrive at his destination in mid-January 1536, and on February 3 he will found in that place a port defended by a fort which he will baptize with the name Santa María del Buen Ayre, future Buenos Aires. (486 years ago)

1526: January 15
A maritime expedition sets sail from the port of La Coruña (Spain), led by the Spanish explorer Diego García de Moguer, to discover the route of spices. During his trip, in February 1528, he will explore the Río de la Plata (estuary in the Atlantic Ocean formed by the union of the Paraná and Uruguay rivers) to investigate the myth of the Sierra de la Plata and will enter the Paraná river, describing the towns that inhabit its shores and its wealth, for which the exploration of the estuary of the Río de la Plata will be attributed. (495 years ago)

1520: October 21
Magellan's fleet reaches a cape south of Patagonia that marks the strait that separates the South American continent from Tierra del Fuego. They have just discovered the passage to the west they are looking for. Later, and in his honor, this strait will bear his name. (501 years ago)

Outstanding births in Argentina
1928: June 14
Born in Rosario, Argentina, Ernesto "Che" Guevara, Argentinean-Cuban revolutionary, politician, writer, journalist and doctor, commander and ideologist of the Cuban Revolution. (93 years ago)

1919: May 7
In Junín, Buenos Aires province (Argentina), María Eva Duarte was born, an Argentine actress and politician who in 1945 married Juan Domingo Perón and a year later became first lady. It will win the sympathy of the people, and promote the recognition of workers' rights. He will fight for the female vote. (102 years ago)

1911: June 24 In the town of Rojas, Argentina, the writer Ernesto Sabato was born, author of novels such as "The tunnel" and different essays on the human condition. His novel "On heroes and tombs" , from 1961, where he exposes his vision of loneliness, will be considered the best Argentine novel of the 20th century and one of the top works of all Ibero-American literature. (110 years ago)

1899: August 24
Born in Buenos Aires (Argentina) Jorge Luis Borges, Argentine writer, one of the glories of Latin American letters as well as one of the most prominent authors of 20th century Spanish literature, with works of short stories, essays and poetry, creator of masterpieces such as "The Library of Babel". (122 years ago)

1895: October 8
In the Argentine city of Lobos, Juan Domingo Perón was born, an Argentine politician and military man, three times president of the nation, and founder in 1945 of the Peronist movement, with great support among the working class. (126 years ago)

1852: July 12
In the city of Buenos Aires (Argentina), Hipólito Yrigoyen was born, who will be an Argentine politician and a leading figure of the Radical Civic Union and President of the Argentine Nation in two terms (1916 - 1922 and 1928 - 1930), being the first president of the Argentine history in being elected by universal male, secret and compulsory suffrage. In 1930 he was deposed by the first coup in contemporary Argentina. (169 years ago)

1846: October 11
In the City of Buenos Aires, Argentina, the lawyer and politician Carlos Pellegrini was born. In 1890, being vice president, he assumed the presidency of the nation after the resignation of its owner Miguel Ángel Juárez Celman after an insurrection called the Revolution of 91. (175 years ago)

1837: October 3
In the Argentine town of San Miguel de Tucumám, Nicolás Avellaneda was born, a lawyer, journalist, politician and statesman who will be president of Argentina between 1874 and 1880. (184 years ago)

1834: November 10
The poet José Hernández, author, among others, of the unique narrative poem "Martín Fierro" was born in San Martín (Argentina). (187 years ago)

1778: February 25
José de San Martín was born in Yapeyú, present-day Argentina, who will become an Argentine military man and together with Simón Bolívar will be considered the most important liberator in South America. His military campaigns will be decisive for the independence of Argentina, Chile and Peru. He will die suddenly in his retirement from Boulogne-sur-Mer, France, on August 17, 1850. (243 years ago)

1757: June 18
Gervasio Antonio de Posadas y Dávila, Argentine politician and patriot, was born in the city of Buenos Aires (Argentina). In 1811 he joined the liberal patriotic society of Mariano Moreno, in favor of freedom of trade with Great Britain and for that reason he was expatriated to the city of Mendoza. In 1813, he will be part of the Constituent Assembly and will enter the second triumvirate. In January 1814 he assumed the position of supreme director of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata, a position he would hold until January 1815. (264 years ago)

Deaths reported in Argentina
2011: April 30
In the town of Santos Places, Argentina, the writer and essayist Ernesto Sabato, author of novels such as "On heroes and tombs" or "The tunnel" and different essays , dies . He was a great fighter against the Argentine dictatorship and was considered one of the greats of Latin American literature, not only for his novels, but also for his extensive essay work on the human condition. He was awarded the Cervantes Prize in 1984. (10 years ago)

2010: October 27
Néstor Kirchner, a lawyer and politician who ruled Argentina from 2003 to 2007, dies in El Calafate, Santa Cruz (Argentina) and at the time of his death he was president of the Justicialist Party. The former Argentine president had strong support among popular sectors of the population thanks to his economic policy that led to Argentina's recovery after the terrible crisis that sowed chaos in the country in 2000. (11 years ago)

1952: July 26
In the city of Buenos Aires, a cancer victim, María Eva Duarte de Perón dies at the age of 33, a controversial figure who won the sympathy of the people, and as first lady promoted the recognition of workers' rights and fought for the female vote. (69 years ago)

1933: July 3
In Buenos Aires, Argentina, Hipólito Yrigoyen, Argentine politician of the Radical Civic Union, president of his country on two occasions (1916-1922 and 1928-1930), dies. (88 years ago)

1868: January 2
Marcos Paz, victim of the cholera epidemic that devastates the capital, dies in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He was a great figure in Argentine politics, governor of Tucumán and Córdoba, and vice president of the Nation. (153 years ago)

1820: June 20
In the city of Buenos Aires (present-day Argentina) ravaged by civil war, Manuel Belgrano, creator of the Argentine national flag and one of the most notable economists, dies of dropsy and extreme poverty, as well as a forerunner of national journalism and promoter of popular education, national industry and social justice. (201 years ago)

Outstanding Facts in Australia


2000: September 15
With the presence of 200 countries, the XXIV Olympics of the Modern Era are inaugurated in Sydney (Australia). They will close on October 1. (21 years ago)

1979: July 11
Five years after completing the mission of its last crew, the first American space station, weighing 75 tons, called "Skylab", fell on Australia. The station was launched into space and put into orbit in 1973. (42 years ago)

1956: November 22
With the presence of 72 countries and 2,938 athletes, the XIII Olympics of the Modern Era are inaugurated in Melbourne (Australia), and for the equestrian events in Stockholm. They will close on December 8. Boycotts of countries began to take place due to the tensions derived from the cold war. (65 years ago)

1927: May 9
The Australian federal government is transferred to the city of Canberra proclaiming itself as the new capital of Australia to the detriment of Melbourne. (94 years ago)

1913: March 12
Construction begins on Canberra, the capital of Australia, named after the wife of Governor General Lord Thomas Denman. In 1908 its capital was chosen as a compromise between Sydney and Melbourne, the two great cities that competed for that title. (108 years ago)

1859: November 24
Charles Darwin publishes his great work "The Origin of Species" , the result of more than 20 years of research work, meticulous and detailed observation and trips aboard the beautiful brig "Beagle" as a naturalist, on a journey that lasted five years for both coasts of South America, Galapagos, Tahiti, New Zealand, Australia, Tasmania, Keeling Island, Mauritius, Brazil and the Azores. He was able to perceive the subtle differences between the birds of the Galapagos archipelago that live in different natural environments. In his book he scientifically manifests his theory of natural selection as the cause of the evolutionary impulse of species. The inspiration for this theory was found in the great English economist Thomas Malthus. (162 years ago)

1788: January 26
Arthur Phillip, British captain, landed 1,030 immigrants in Australia, including 736 inmates. The objective is the rapid colonization of Australia and the decongestion of English prisons. With them they founded the city of Sydney, the first European colony on this continent. (233 years ago)

1642: November 24
The Dutch explorer and navigator Abel Janszoon Tasman, in the service of the Netherlands East India Company, who set sail from Batavia (Jakarta) on August 14 to investigate the viability of a sea passage to Chile from the east and to explore New Guinea, he discovers the current island of Tasmania, which he named "Van Diemen's Land" in honor of the Governor General of his Company. Later, British colonizers will change the name. Also, when you are making your return trip to Jakarta on January 21, 1643, you will discover the archipelago of the Tonga Islands. (379 years ago)

Outstanding Events in Austria


1975: December 21
Venezuelan Ilich Ramírez Sánchez, better known by the nickname "Carlos the Jackal", leads a terrorist action against the Oil Ministers, who are attending a meeting of OPEC (Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries) in Vienna. In it, they kill three people and take 63 hostages, including 11 OPEC ministers. "Carlos" demands that an anti-Israel political statement be broadcast on the radio and a bus and a jet plane be made available to him. The Austrian authorities agree to his request. The hostages will be released unharmed in Algeria in exchange for a significant amount of money. For years his trail will be lost until in 1994 the Sudanese authorities hand him over to France, (45 years ago)

1961: June 3
In Vienna, Austria, and with the aim of evaluating Khrushchev, discovering his views on the nuclear race and other issues, as well as getting an impression of his personality, US President John Fitzgerald Kennedy meets for the first time. the first Soviet leader, Nikita Khrushchev. At the end of day 4, the meeting will not mean a victory or a defeat but something "useful" and "necessary", in the words of both leaders. (60 years ago)

1957: July 29
In Vienna (Austria) the International Atomic Energy Agency begins to function, which in November will be defined as an autonomous body of the UN, whose main function will be to serve as an intergovernmental forum for scientific and technical cooperation in the field of energy use. for peaceful purposes, for which it will have advisers, equipment and training to provide assistance to developing governments promoting the transmission of knowledge and skills, so that recipient countries can effectively and safely execute their development programs of atomic Energy. (64 years ago)

1945: April 14
Austria regains independence from Germany after the occupation of the country by Soviet troops. (76 years ago)

1938: November 9
On the night of 9-10, what will be known as "the night of broken glass" takes place in Austria and Germany, in which a murder serves as an excuse to launch a revolt against Jewish citizens throughout the country. The attack, engineered to look like a spontaneous act, is orchestrated by the German government. Some 1,600 synagogues, cemeteries, more than 7,000 shops and 29 Jewish warehouses are damaged or destroyed. More than 30,000 Jews are arrested and interned in concentration camps, many are lynched, some even to death and many of them are subjected to all kinds of humiliations suffering the ridicule of their compatriots who, until recently, had been their friends and neighbors . (83 years ago)

1938: April 10
In Austria a controlled plebiscite takes place, after the invasion of Adolf Hitler on March 12, where 99.7 percent of Austrians over 20 years approve the Anschluss (German: "Union") for the political unification of Austria and Germany. It should be noted that the vote is not secret and voters have had to fill out the ballot in front of the members of the SS without being able to insert it directly into the ballot box. (83 years ago)

1919: September 10The Peace Treaty of Saint Germain en Laye (France) is signed. As a result, Austria will be obliged to comply with important territorial cessions to Italy, Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia. It is also obliged to recognize, according to section V of the third Chapter, ethnic minorities. (102 years ago)

1918: November 12The Austrian National Assembly decides to proclaim the Republic and adhere with the signature of the First Chancellor of the Republic Karl Renner to the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye, making their union in the community of German states, as well as the monarchy, become obsolete. . Starting today, with its new name of Republic of Austria, the country will establish itself as an independent state in international law. His early years will be marked by serious economic difficulties and a continuous escalation of conflicts between different political groups. (103 years ago)

1914: August 1
Austria-Hungary declares war on Russia, which transforms the conflict between Austro-Hungarians and Serbs into a military confrontation on a European scale, starting the devastating World War I. (107 years ago)

1914: July 28
When Austria declared war on Serbia, World War I began. (107 years ago)

1865: August 20
In the Gastein Valley (Austria), Prussia and Austria sign an agreement known as the Gastein Convention by which the territories of the Duchies of Schleswig and Holstein are divided, which both countries have seized from Denmark the previous year in the so-called War of the Duchies. Austria wants these two duchies to become independent members of the German Confederation, but nevertheless the Prussian Chancellor Otto von Bismarck has every intention of incorporating them into Prussia. As agreed in the Gastein Convention, Austria will have to administer and temporarily occupy Holstein, and Prussia will have to do the same in Schleswig. Neither party will be satisfied with this agreement, which will not even be able to hold for a year. (156 years ago)

1854: April 24
In Vienna (Austria) the lavish wedding of the 23-year-old Austrian Emperor Franz Joseph I and the Bavarian princess Elizabeth, better known as Sissí, of the same age, is celebrated. (167 years ago)

1849: April 4
Austria incorporates Hungary into its Empire, which will give rise in 1867 to the Austro-Hungarian Empire. (172 years ago)

1848: March 13
In Vienna (Austria) a large concentration takes place that demands a Constitution to end the hated absolutist regime. The army dissolves the concentration and it ends in fighting throughout the city. Thus begins a liberal revolt throughout the country, which will end on October 31 when Field Marshal Alfred, conquers Vienna and establishes martial law and punishes the rebels. (173 years ago)

1815: June 9
The final Act of the Congress of Vienna, which has been meeting since September 18 of the previous year, is approved, in which the new territorial reorganization of Europe is agreed after the defeat of Napoleon, trying to return to the situation before the Revolution French of 1789. The procedures used will serve as a guideline in future international conferences, even today, to establish agreements between nations. (206 years ago)

1815: February 8
The Congress of Vienna (Austria) approves an order of international rank by which the slave trade is outlawed in any form. (206 years ago)

1811: March 15
The Austrian Empire goes bankrupt due to speculation, due to the continental blockade and inflation caused by the military expenditures of a long series of wars that has brought all of Europe to the brink. Other countries, such as England, France, Germany, Spain ... also suffer from this crisis. (210 years ago)

1809: October 14
In Austria the Peace of Schönbrunn is signed, which ends Austria's resistance against the Napoleonic imperial troops. (212 years ago)

1809: May 13
The French army under Napoleon Bonaparte occupies Vienna (Austria). (212 years ago)

1808: December 22
Symphony No. 5 in C minor, op. 67, by Ludwig van Beethoven, directed by the composer, the work will acquire a patent prestige. (212 years ago)

1805: December 26
France and Austria put an end to the third coalition war, by signing a peace treaty in Presburg (Slovakia), as a result of the defeat suffered by the Austrians against Napoleon Bonaparte in the battle of Austerlitz. The treaty is clearly favorable to French interests. It will mark the end of the Holy Roman Empire. (215 years ago)

1805: December 2
In the battle of Austerlitz (present-day Czech Republic), also called the Battle of the Three Emperors, Napoleon defeats the armies of the third anti-French coalition (Great Britain, Austria and Russia), destroying the remains of the Holy Roman Empire. This victory will put France at the head of a great empire. (215 years ago)

1804: November 6
Alexander I, Tsar of Russia, and Francis II, Emperor of Austria, agree to go to war against France. Between the two countries they will enlist a force of 350,000 soldiers against Napoleon. (217 years ago)

1795: October 24
When Prussia, Russia and Austria conclude the third division of Poland, it ceases to exist. Poland will regain its independence in 1918 in the form of a republic, at the end of the First World War. (226 years ago)

1792: April 20
France declares war on Austria, diverting attention from internal problems in passing, and launches three armies into combat. On the 29th of this month, the Armée du Nord, composed of 34,000 men, will suffer a great defeat when trying to invade Belgium. The setbacks of the French army will increase the revolutionary agitation in Paris. (229 years ago)

1776: January 2
The Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II of Austria abolishes torture. (245 years ago)

1772: August 5
In the Saint Petersburg agreements, Russia, Prussia and Austria share one third of the Polish territory, thus avoiding a European war. (249 years ago)

1763: February 15Austria, Prussia and Saxony, seal the Peace of Hübertusburg which marks the end of the so-called Seven Years War, by means of which Prussia annexes the Silesian region. With this Prussia becomes a great European power under the mandate of Frederick II the Great, who will emerge with a clearly strengthened position. (258 years ago)

1742: June 11
The Empress Maria Teresa of Austria decides to make peace with King Frederick II of Prussia, by giving him almost all of Silesia through the Treaty of Breslau, thus marking the end of the First Silesian War. (279 years ago)

1725: April 30
In Austria, the Treaty of Vienna is signed between Felipe V, King of Spain, and Carlos VI, Emperor of the Holy Empire, ending a period of negotiations with the aim of solving the conflicts of both Crowns in Italy, establishing a link between them through the double marriage of the infants Carlos and Don Felipe with two daughters of the emperor, and to render mutual aid, especially in the conflicts in Gibraltar. (296 years ago)

1683: September 12
A relief army, under the command of the Polish King John III, expels the Turkish hosts at the battle of Kahlenberg that have been besieging Vienna (Austria) since July 14. The bakers, who played an important role in the resistance, will commemorate the siege of Vienna and the defeat of the Ottomans with a tasty crescent-shaped puff pastry that they will call a croissant. (338 years ago)

1683: July 14
Captained by the grand vizier Kara Mustafa, the Ottomans besieged the city of Vienna (Austria). The siege will conclude on September 12 with the Battle of Kalhenberg in which the Christian army will put the Ottomans to flight. (338 years ago)

1529: September 27
The siege of Vienna (Austria) begins, when the forces of the Ottoman Empire, under the command of Suleiman I, attack the city. The lack of adequate logistics will make a dent and finally, without having achieved his goal, Suleiman will withdraw in mid-October to Constantinople. A new attempt in 1532 will be another failure. (492 years ago)

1528: September 24
Sultan Suleiman II the Magnificent fails in his attempt to seize the city of Vienna by force of arms, although he manages to impose his terms of peace. Up to here the limit of expansion of the Turkish empire will arrive. (493 years ago)

1526: August 29
In the battle of Mohács, on the banks of the Danube, Suleiman II the Magnificent, commanding Ottoman troops, crushes the army of the King of Hungary and Bohemia, Louis II, who dies in the battle without leaving heirs, leaving the path to the beautiful Vienna city. The consequences for Hungary will be disastrous. (495 years ago)

1278: August 26
In Austria, in the battle of Durnkrut along the Morava River, the German Emperor Rudolf I defeats the Bohemian King Ottokar II who refuses to lose his Austrian territories. After the victory, Rodolfo orders the death of Ottokar leaving Bohemia under his dominion. (743 years ago)

996: November 1
The Holy German Emperor Otto III gifts a territory of about 8 km 2 called Ostattichi to the Bishop of Freising. The act of this donation is the first to speak of Austria and its foundation as such. (1025 years ago)

Outstanding births in Austria
1914: November 9
In Vienna (Austria), Hedwig Eva Maria Kiesler was born. She will be an actress under the stage name of Hedy Lamarr, "the most beautiful woman in the history of cinema", Austrian telecommunications engineer and inventor, creator of the spread spectrum, a modulation technique used in telecommunications for the transmission of digital data and by radio frequency. . In his honor, the International Inventor's Day will be celebrated every 9 November. (107 years ago)

1902: July 28
Born in Vienna, Austria, the philosopher of the theory of science and sociologist, later a British national, Karl Popper. His vision of science appears in his work "The logic of scientific research" of 1934. (119 years ago)

1899: April 20
In Braunau am Inn, present-day Austria, was born Adolf Hitler, a German megalomaniac politician, who will establish a totalitarian regime as head of the German National Socialist Workers Party and will rule Germany cruelly as a dictator from 1933 to 1945. He will promote the military industry, which that will bring Germany out of the post-World War I economic crisis. He will order the invasion of Poland in 1939, being one of the triggers of the Second World War, which will end with the destruction of much of Europe. During his rule, Hitler will carry out the racial policy of the Nazi Party, the Holocaust, the death and displacement of millions of people. Finally, he committed suicide in 1945 with the fall of Berlin. (122 years ago)

1869: September 3
In Laibach (present-day Slovenia), the Austrian chemist and physiologist Fritz Pregl was born, who in 1923 received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his invention of the method of microanalysis of organic substances. (152 years ago)

1868: June 14
The doctor Karl Landsteiner was born in Vienna (Austria), Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1930 for discovering and typifying blood groups and their compatibility to carry out blood transfusions, which will save many lives. You will classify the blood groups into four groups: A, B, O, and AB. It will also show that polio is infectious. Much later, together with Alexander Solomon Wiener, they will discover the existence of the Rhesus or Rh factor in the blood. (153 years ago)

1856: May 6
In Pribor, the Austrian Empire and present-day Czech Republic, Sigmund Freud, Austrian neurologist and freethinker, creator of psychoanalysis, was born. (165 years ago)

1832: July 6
Archduke Maximilian of Habsburg, Emperor of Mexico from 1864 to 1867, was born in Schönbrunn (Vienna, Austria). (189 years ago)

1830: August 18
In Vienna, Austria, Francisco José I was born, the eldest son of Archduke Francisco Carlos, brother and heir of the Austrian Emperor Ferdinand I. On December 2, 1848, he will be crowned Emperor of Austria, Apostolic King of Hungary and King of Bohemia, among other titles. He will reign until his death in November 1916, making his reign of 68 years the third longest in European history. (191 years ago)

1825: October 25
In the city of Vienna (Austria), the musician and composer Johann Strauss Jr. was born. His father, Johann Strauss, also a composer and director, will not want his children to enter the world of music. He will stand out as a conductor and for his compositions of waltzes and polkas, and will be known worldwide for his famous waltz "On the beautiful Blue Danube" . (196 years ago)

1822: July 20
In Heinzendorf, Austria (now the Czech Republic), Gregor Mendel, an Augustinian monk and naturalist, was born. You will lay the mathematical foundations of genetic science by researching different varieties of pea and listing the so-called "Mendel's Laws" that govern genetic inheritance. (199 years ago)

1804: March 14
Born in Vienna (Austria) Johann Strauss Sr., Austrian composer of waltzes, polkas and military marches. (217 years ago)

1756: January 27
Born in Salzburg (Austria), Wolfang Amadeus Mozart, Austrian composer of the classical period. At four years old he will be a child prodigy who will interpret simple melodies in the harpsichord and compose small pieces. In time he will be one of the most influential musicians in the history of Western music and will compose more than 600 beautiful works that will cover almost all genres of the time. (265 years ago)

1755: November 2
In the rooms of the Hofbur Imperial Palace in Vienna (Austria), María Antonia Josefa Joana de Habsburgo-Lorena was born, who will be known as Marie Antoinette, daughter of Francisco I of the Holy Roman Empire and of the Empress Maria Teresa I of Austria. In 1770, at the age of fourteen, she married the then dauphin and future Louis XVI of France, in an attempt to strengthen ties between two historical enemies. In 1774 Louis XVI ascended to the throne of France and Marie Antoinette exerted great influence on her husband. His libertine and wasteful attitude, ignoring the misery of the people, will contribute greatly to the discredit of the monarchy in the years before the French Revolution of 1789. He will die by the guillotine in 1793. (266 years ago)

1732: March 31
Near Vienna, Austria, the Austrian composer Josef Haydn was born, who will be one of the most influential figures in the development of classical music. For his works in the genre of symphony and string quartets, he will be known as "Father" of both genres. You will get to achieve great notoriety which will bring you great income. (289 years ago)

1683: September 7
In the Austrian city of Linz, the daughter of Leopold I of Austria, Holy Roman Emperor of the Germanic Empire, and of Eleanor Magdalena, María Ana Josefa, Archduchess of Austria, is born, who, to reaffirm the Austro-Portuguese alliance, will marry Juan V of Portugal in 1708, being queen consort until the death of her husband in 1750. She will give birth to seven children, three of whom will come to the throne: José I king of Portugal, Bárbara de Braganza queen consort of Fernando VI of Spain and Pedro III king of Portugal. (338 years ago)

1459: March 22
Born in Vienna, Austria, Maximilian I of Habsburg, Germanic Roman Emperor from 1493 until his death in 1519. He will carry out the reform of the Reichstag in Worms that will conclude the Reichsreform (Imperial Reform), modifying a very large part of the constitution of the Empire to try to end the prevailing feudalism, gathering Diets with representation from the different estates, establishing a Regency Council and an Imperial Court to administer justice. It will carry out fragmentations in the districts, of an administrative and military nature. (562 years ago)

Reported deaths in Austria
1916: November 21
In his Palace in Vienna (Austria), Francisco José I of Habsburg-Lorraine, the last Emperor of Austria and King of Hungary, died. (105 years ago)

1911: May 18
Gustav Mahler, Austrian composer and conductor, dies in Vienna (Austria), whose work is the highest peak of the romantic symphony. (110 years ago)

1897: April 3
In Vienna, Austria, the German composer Johannes Brahms dies, famous for his works for piano, chamber music and symphonies of deep lyricism. (124 years ago)

1849: September 25
Johann Strauss Sr., Austrian composer of waltzes, polkas and military marches, dies in Vienna (Austria). The "Radetzky March" will be his most popular work. (172 years ago)

1828: November 19
The romantic Austrian composer Franz Schubert dies in Vienna (Austria). He composed the so-called "Lieder" (short works for voice and piano, predecessors of modern song). (193 years ago)

1827: March 26
The German composer and universal genius of classical music, Ludwing van Beethoven, who is considered the main precursor of the transition from classicism to romanticism, dies in Vienna (Austria). He leaves a prolific work for generations to come, including his 9 symphonies, 7 concertos, 32 piano sonatas and his opera "Fidelio". (194 years ago)

1791: December 5
In the city of Vienna (Austria), Wolfang Amadeus Mozart, Austrian composer of the classical period and one of the most influential in the history of Western music, dies at the age of 34, probably from chronic kidney disease. (229 years ago)

1750: July 28
In Leipzig (Austria), Johann Sebastian Bach, prolific and famous German composer, whose work is considered the pinnacle of the Baroque, passes away. (271 years ago)

1741: July 28
Antonio Vivaldi, a Baroque composer and Italian violinist, died in Vienna (Austria), known, among others, for "The Four Seasons" , a concerto for violin and orchestra. (280 years ago)

1740: October 20
Carlos VI, Holy Roman Emperor, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, dies in Vienna (Austria) from 1711 until his death, putting an end to the male line of the House of Austria that, for more than 300 years has given German emperors. His eldest daughter María Teresa will inherit the title, in this way the War of the Austrian Succession will begin. (281 years ago)

1564: July 27
Emperor Ferdinand I of Habsburg, son of Philip the Fair and Juana I of Castile, dies in Vienna, Austria. (457 years ago)

1564: July 25
The Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand I of Austria dies in Vienna, Austria. (457 years ago)

180: March 17
The Roman emperor and Stoic philosopher Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, whose great work, "Meditations" , is a kind of interior testament valid for any age, passes away sick of the plague in Vindobona (present-day Vienna, Austria) , accepting fate with the self-confidence that it gives. serenity. (1841 years ago)

US: Second "yes" from the House on the amendment to "block" the sale of F-16 to Turkey

 


The amendment banning the sale of new F-16s to Turkey has "passed" after the appropriate committee and the full session of the US House of Representatives, raising the possibility that it will become law by the end of the year. What does it say?


An amendment banning the sale of new F-16s, modernization kits or upgraded technology to Turkey was also passed by the plenary session of the House of Representatives.


The amendment was upvoted a few days ago by the competent committee of the US House.


However, it leaves open a window that allows the president to override the restrictions if he certifies to Congress that doing so is in the vital national security interest of the U.S. and details the steps being taken to ensure that the F-16s do not are used for overflights over Greece.


Specifically, the amendment, which will be included in the budget of the US Department of Defense, states the following:


The (U.S.) President may not sell or authorize the export of new F-16 aircraft or F-16 upgrade technology or modernization kits under any authority under the Arms Export Control Act (22 U.S.C. 2751 et seq. e.) to the government of Turkey or any agency or agency of Turkey, unless the (US) President provides to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, the House Foreign Affairs Committee, and the Congressional Defense Committees that:


This transfer is in the national interest of the United States and details the specific measures taken to ensure that such F-16s are not used by Turkey for repeated unauthorized overflights over Greece.


The two amendments were filed by Reps. Chris Pappas and Frank Pallon. In a joint letter, the Hellenic American Leadership Council and the American Jewish Committee asked American lawmakers to support the said amendment.


"Turkish violations of Greek airspace and armed overflights over Aegean islands have reached dangerous levels, creating a real threat to peace and stability in the region," the letter said.


It was preceded by the hard-hitting announcement by Republican congressmen Gus Bilirakis and Nicole Maliotakis: It is shocking that President Biden supported the sale of US F-16 fighter jets and modernization kits to Turkey, while he had recently heard first-hand the concerns about Turkish aggression by Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis during his visit to Washington.

Top 10 Shocking Facts About North Korea


On the northern side of the Korean peninsula, there sits the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, best known as the East Asian country of North Korea. To the world outside of its proverbial wall, the country appears to be a radical land regulated by strange rules and a constant fear of death or internment. To portray just how extreme North Korea can be, we dug up these 10 shocking facts.

10. Mandated Hair Styles
Don't adjust your volume, you definitely heard that right! According to sources in Pyongyang, men in North Korea are being prompted to rid themselves of their long hair and take on a cut similar to the mushroom cloud sported by current leader, Kim Jong-un. Men with hair over .8 inches or 2 centimeters in length are allegedly being targeted by North Korean authorities. Not to leave women out of the insanity, they, too, have been directed to take on a certain style - that of Jong-un's wife, Ri Sol-ju. Prior to this directive, the country imposed approved haircuts for men and women, with men being able to choose between 28 different cuts and women stuck with only 14 options.

9. Teachers and Accordions
During the 1990's, if you wanted to be a teacher in North Korea, you had to possess a rather specific skill. As told in the book Nothing to Envy, which depicts the lives of multiple North Korean citizens over a period of 15 years, teachers were required to be able to play the accordion. Dubbed the "people's instrument" for its more compact size and portability, teachers would utilize the instrument in the middle of class, often engaging their students in a little musical session. It's said that before being awarded a teacher's license, the intended educator was required to pass an accordion exam.

8. The Propaganda City
If you situate yourself in a demilitarized zone near the border of North and South Korea, you'll be able to glimpse a rather serene looking North Korean city. Believed to be a decoy put in place to attract defectors from South Korea, Kijong-dong is one of North Korea's more elaborate ploys. What appears to be a peaceful village complete with an attractive array of essentials like a school and hospital, Kijong-dong has been given the nickname of "Propaganda Village." North Korea claims the city, which was built in 1953, sports 200 residents and economic success. Until 2004, Kijong-dong was outfitted with speakers that broadcast praise of North Korea and invited unhappy South Koreans across the border.

7. Media Censorship
No matter what part of the world you live in or the restrictions placed upon what you can and cannot see on TV or hear on the radio, chances are the censorship you're dealing with is nothing compared to that in North Korea. Televisions and radios purchased within North Korea are required to be registered with the police and are pre-tuned to local stations, of which there are 4 television channels and 2 main radio stations. Though there is "freedom of speech and press" on the surface, the government closely watches media outlets to ensure negativity about the country and its leader never reach the public. Only with government approval can a home be granted access to the internet, otherwise citizens must use internet cafes or hotels.


6. Assigned Employment
As most of us made our way through the later years of our schooling, there was always an emphasis on that one nagging question: "What do you want to do with your life?" If you want to rid yourself of the need to choose your career path, head on over to North Korea! Once upon a time, if you weren’t a person of substantial wealth or came from a prestigious family, job assignment was a government task. Citizens were placed in different industries based on current needs unless, of course, they had bribery money to get out of doing any work. Children weren't encouraged to follow their dreams and were instead indoctrinated with the belief that their own purpose was to serve the greater good of North Korea.

5. Making Students Pay
In many countries across the globe, education comes at a cost. For some, like the United States, it's a yearly tax. In others, like North Korea, that cost comes in the form of keeping the school supplied with the essentials, and by essentials, we don't just mean pencils and workbooks. It's said that parents with children in school are responsible for providing everything from building materials to desks. Even more shocking is the building's cost of heating fuel, which, too, is passed on down to parents. To keep the education system - which North Korea alleges produces a 100% literacy rate - students may also be used to gather useful, discarded materials. As they say, money talks and parents are able to bribe teachers into getting their child out of these more menial tasks.

4. A Ban on Sarcasm
Sarcasm is such an incredibly useful aspect of modern speech that to think of a world without it would be depressing. North Korea, however, doesn't have the same viewpoint on sarcastic phrases and, in an effort to continue the oppression of its people, purportedly warned against the use of "hostile" speech. The examples given by a state security official that disseminated this insane proposal were not just general sarcastic statements, but rather sarcasm that appears to paint the country's leader or the country in a negative light. Essentially, the North Korean government is a little paranoid that any praise its people are giving it is less than honest.

3. What Year Is It?
We all relatively know how old mankind is, but many cultures across the globe can't seem to agree on what year we're currently in. Probably the most compelling of these differing calendars is that of North Korea. Known as the Juche calendar, named for the ideology developed by former leader Kim Il-sung, this method of numbering states that North Korea is, as of 2016, only in year 105. The Juche system, which was implemented 3 years after the leader's death in 1997, uses Kim Il-sung's year of birth, 1912, as the starting point. Anything prior to 1912 is counted using the Christian method of calendaring.

2. Three Generations of Punishment
North Korea may have taken the concept of the Sins of the Father a bit too far by making it so that not only the sin passes down to the next generation, but so too does the punishment. When an individual commits a crime, likely something more political in nature, they not only risk spending a good portion of their life imprisoned but also put their family at risk of receiving the same sentence thanks to North Korea's three generations of punishment. In 1972, Kim Il-sung implemented the cruel act, claiming that three generations must suffer the same punishment in order to weed out the corrupted bloodline.

1. Active Concentration Camps
Where there are prisoners, there must be a place to keep them housed. North Korean criminals, even those held on the "three generations of punishment" decree, can be subjected to life in a concentration camp, where they'll be met with deplorable conditions not too dissimilar to the German camps during World War II. According to former inmates, prisoners are subjected to conditions that leave them famished and forced to survive on dirt, but that's not even the worst of it. Survivors have reported bearing witness to random executions, various forms of torture, dismemberment, and experimentation. Hoeryong concentration camp, otherwise known as No. 22, was one of the country's more notable political prison camps before its closure in 2012 that was known for performing water torture, hanging, a pigeon torture as well as using prisoners for novice surgeons to practice on.

Top 10 Amazing Facts About Bolivia


We’re back on the road again, crossing the exotic lands of South America for a stop off in Bolivia to see exactly why over one million people visit these exotic lands every year! So, fry up your salchipapa and grab a glass of mocochinchi as we explore this multi-ethnic and diversified country with these ten amazing facts about Bolivia.

10. Cuisine of Bolivia
Vegetarians and pet owners look away now – Bolivia’s specialty dish is... guinea pig! Guinea pig, or cuy, has been a traditional part of the Bolivian diet for many years as it is a major source of protein and is also considerably easy to raise. If you don’t have the stomach for guinea pig, other dishes on the menu include salteña, an empanada-style pastry filled with beef, pork or chicken, or Silpancho, a super filling dish consisting of rice, potato, meat, egg, vegetables and herbs. Feeling a little parched? Try a traditional licuado, a water or milk-based beverage blended with your choice of fruit.

9. World records
When it comes to setting world records, Bolivians are all about size. The largest charango - which is a South American guitar - was created in 2004 measuring 20-feet or 6.1-meters long, and the largest morenada dance, or Bolivian folk dance, was achieved in 2014 involving an incredible 3014 people. Bolivia also boasts three of the largest musical ensembles – 2,317 panpipes in 2004, 1,166 trumpets in 2006, and 1,157 charangos in 2009.

8. Famous Bolivians
Bolivia boasts many well-known faces, and you may recognize actresses Carla Ortiz, Tanya Callau and Ximena Herrera from such movies as Forgotten and The Princess Diaries 2. Bolivian football stars include Gilbert Álvarez and Carlos Saucedo, who have both played for their national team. Maria Fernanda Álvarez is also a recognizable Bolivian known for her tennis prowess and you may even recognize Claudia Balderrama, who competed at the 2012 summer Olympics as a race-walker. Bolivia is also the birthplace of several internet stars, including amazing YouTubers Elias Ayaviri, Favio Apaza-MansOn, and VicenticoTD, and Blogger Andrea Roman. Inventions include the Tiki-Taka - or click-clackers - a toy to both entertain and test your balance and skill; Coca Lorini, a syrup-type elixir that predates and paved the way for Coca-Cola, and Nit Occlud, a medical device for treating infant heart problems.

7. Stunning Sights
Bolivia’s most stunning sight is the Salar de Uyuni, a salt flat that surpasses any other. At over 4,000 sq-miles (10,000 square km), it is the largest salt flat in the world and measures roughly the size of Jamaica. Travelers have been known to spend days exploring this giant mirror-like wonder. Visitors also tend to flock to Lake Titicaca, South America’s largest lake by volume. Straddling the border with Peru, Titicaca measures up at 3,232 sq-miles (8,372 square-km) and is considered by many locals to be sa cred.

6. Sacred Lake Titicaca
Sacred Lake Titicaca has incredible origins and is said to be the birthplace of the region’s ancient civilization. The Inca myth states that the god Con Tiqui Viracocha, emerged from Titicaca, bringing with him a small group of humans. Under his orders, the sun, moon, and the stars rose into the sky, creating the universe which he populated with people created from stone. As the human populace was brought to life, Viracocha commanded them to populate the world, creating the ancient civilizations that predate the modern world. According to the Incas, after death, their spirit will return to Lake Titicaca for eternity.

5. Sports of Bolivia
As is the case with most South American nations, Bolivians are huge football fans, and the sport has an almost religious following. Club Bolívar is the most successful team in Bolivia and is currently at the top of the league. It’s also the only Bolivian team to reach the semi-finals of the Copa Libertadores tournament, the major South American club tournament. Bolivia’s love of football is so strong that they bring that love indoors with a version of the sport called Futsal, or futsala, which can be played on a basketball court and uses smaller goals and balls and teams of only 5.

4. Bolivians and Nature
As of 2001, though 78% of Bolivia's population identifies as Roman Catholic, the nation's traditions are more deeply rooted in their respect for nature rather than the religion they follow. Pacha Mama, or Mother Earth, is still worshiped by many who offer sacrifices of llama to bring good luck and fortune. Bolivian’s have so much respect for nature in fact, that in 2010 the government passed the Law of the Rights of Mother Earth, which grants nature the right to pure water, clean air, and to live free of contamination.

3. Bolivia’s festivals
Bolivians enjoy many fun-filled fiestas throughout the year, starting with the Alasitas Fair in January. The month-long festival is dedicated to giving gifts to Ekeko, the god of abundance. One quirky festival that sounds less enjoyable than most is Tinku. Loosely translating to “violent encounter,” brutal ritualistic combat erupts in the hill-towns of Bolivia once a year. Using fists and stones, participants supposedly fight to honor Pacha Mama, but nowadays it’s more to prove bravery. Warfare is so vicious that deaths are reported each year, meaning you’ll want to avoid the Bolivian highlands during early May if you plan to vacation there.

2. Bolivia’s Battle for Independence
Bolivia’s independence was hard fought for against the Spanish and 16 years of bloody wars were endured so that Bolivia could have the right to govern itself. Before becoming its own nation, Bolivia was part of the Spanish Río de la Plata viceroyalty. After failed revolutions in Sucre and La Paz in 1809, Spanish authorities continued to reign. But, as the Spanish American wars of Independence raged across the continent, Bolivians continued to fight for their freedom under the campaign of Simón Bolívar. Support came from the north via Bolívar’s friend and fellow Venezuelan Antonio José de Sucre, for whom the capital is now named. Independence was finally declared on August 6th, 1825, and Bolivians celebrate each year with parades and fireworks.

1. The Naming of “Bolivia”
Born in 1783 to a wealthy Creole family in Venezuela, Simón Bolívar was a military and political leader who played an integral part in the independence of Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador, Peru and Colombia. Upon its independence, the country was granted the right to a name of its own. Initially, the Republic of Bolívar stuck until congressman Manuel Martín Cruz declared that “if from Romulus comes Rome, then from Bolívar comes Bolivia”. The new name was made official in 1825, but was changed to “Plurinational State of Bolivia” in 2009, to recognize the diversity and multiple ethnicities spread throughout.

Top 10 Amazing Facts About China


Are you ready for another journey across the globe, fellow Archivists? For our next stop, we're going to a place that covers 3.7 million square-miles (9.6 million square-km) of the Earth and boasts the largest registered population at 1.4 billion people. China is a fascinating land filled with so many intriguing tidbits that it was quite the renwu (yen-woo) to narrow down a list of only the top ten amazing facts about the China Red Dragon.

10. A Longstanding Feud
During the Tang Dynasty, Chinese and Japanese relations were amicable, but it was a pleasant time that wouldn't last forever. Though the nations feuded over control of Korea, there was a relative peace between the two. Unfortunately, that wouldn't last forever, and when Commodore Perry butted into Japanese affairs in 1850, the empire was forced out of isolation and quickly became a military power, surpassing China. Though China started to admire Japan, radicals in the budding nation felt its Asian counterpart was inferior. This was most evident in the early 20th century, when Japan pushed into Chinese territories, sparking the Second Sino-Japanese War. Even today, anti-Japanese sentiment is rampant in China - and vice versa for Japan.

9. The Cuisine of China
It's time to clear something up. That take-out you get from the Flaming Panda every Friday night isn't exactly Chinese food. Sure, it's generally inspired by it, but it's very Americanized. In 2014, Business Insider did a piece on the dishes you should order from a Chinese restaurant, comparing them to the American versions. For instance, the crab rangoon you get isn't a Chinese delicacy, but Xiao Long Bao from Shanghai, which is filled with real crab or pork, is. As much as you may love Fortune Cookies, their country of origin is - you guessed it - the United States of America. Chinese take-out is considerably heavier than authentic Chinese food, as seen with the American-style egg roll and lo mein noodles. Instead, go for cong you bing, or scallion pancakes, and zha jiang mian (Ja jee-ang mee-en), a lighter noodle dish with stir-fried pork and fermented soybean paste.

8. Famous People of China
When you think of famous people from China, you may immediately think of General Tso, the man that created the popular chicken dish. Except he didn't, and Zuo Zongtang (Zow Zong-Tang) wasn't what we'd call "famous." Instead, you should think of people like the Dalai Lama who, despite being born in Tibet, was exiled to India and the ancient Chinese teacher and philosopher, Confucius. More modern recognizable names include Bruce Lee, Yao Ming, Jackie Chan, John Woo, Jet Li, Ming-Na, Zhang Ziyi, and Chow Yun-fat.

7. The Cave People of China
Not only are there an abundance of caves scattered across China's landscape, many of them are inhabited by people. According to a 2012 report by the Los Angeles Times, an estimated 30 million people in China live in caves. That's approximately 2% of the population. A bulk of that populous can be found in the Shaanxi province, which is known for porous and soft soil. Even well before modern man, the Zhoukoudian (Jo-Ko-Dee-On) cave system was inhabited by the Peking Man. One downfall of living in a cave, says Ren Shouhua (Show-Wa), who grew up in a cave, is that you aren't guaranteed modern conveniences, though some ritzier dwellings are equipped with electricity and running water.

6. Panda Diplomacy
Wouldn't the world be a better place if pandas could be gifted to other countries as a symbol of good faith and appreciation? Hate to break it to you, but panda gifting isn't the fix-all for the world's issues as China has implemented "Panda Diplomacy" dating as far back as the Tang Dynasty. The first use of the practice was when Empress Wu Zetian gifted pandas to the Japanese emperor...and we see how that ultimately turned out. As recently as 2014, Panda Diplomacy has been in practice with the last exchange being two pandas that were sent to Malaysia in celebration of 40 years of diplomatic ties.

5. Chinese Inventions
As much as people from the U.S. may joke about items "Made in China," many of the inventions today came from brilliant Chinese minds. Americans should, at the very least, praise China for its hand in creating gunpowder, which was a strange side effect created during the search for human immortality. We also have China to thank for silk, umbrellas, the compass, deepwater drilling, and even paper. The process of fermentation, which is used in alcohol production, is also said to have roots in ancient China.

4. China and Sports
We've covered much of the world but we're most excited to get to China so that we can talk about one of the nation's most popular sports - Pingpang. You may know it better as table tennis or ping pong. There was a time when ping pong was the only sport in China, and was the equivalent to football in the United States in popularity. If you thought Panda Diplomacy was nuts, China and the United States underwent "Ping-pong diplomacy," where the two nations exchanged table tennis players in the 1970s. Other sports that have a big pull in China include badminton, basketball, and soccer.

3. China's World Records
With a population of more than 1.4 billion people and growing, there are bound to be quite a few world record holders; and according to the Guinness World Records, in China, there are more than we have time for. In June of 2012, Liu Yang became the first female astronaut from China. In 2011, Kaifeng City in the Henan Province broke the record for longest carpet of flowers, measuring 6,597 feet and 8 inches (2,011 m). May of 2012 saw the record of the largest trouser mosaic, made from 23,171 trousers, and, in 2006, China was crowned for having the most hospitals. The list goes on and on, like earning a record for the largest producer of energy, highest consumption of cigarettes and honey, and the longest distance on a tightrope with a motorcycle with no front wheel.

2. The One-Child Policy
From 1979 to 2015, China implemented a policy that forced Han Chinese families to restrict their family size to one child per household. The fear was that China's population would grow to a point where an overpopulation catastrophe was inevitable. Limiting families to one child was believed to eventually have a positive effect on social, economic, and environmental strains. Families that didn't adhere to the policy faced income-based fines. On January 1st, 2016, the law was changed to a two-child policy, allowing families to have two children. The policy led to the creation of the term "black child," which is a baby that's born outside of the policy and not registered with the national household registration system.

1. The War on Pollution
If nations are going to lead the charge against pollution, China should definitely be one of the principal factions. When China hit a period of growth around the early 2000s, its increase in industry also created an exponential increase in carbon dioxide emissions, nearly doubling its production within a matter of years. Realizing something would have to be done, the nation started to combat pollution in an aggressive manner. Since 2015, China led the world in electronic vehicle sales and saw a drastic increase in use of solar panels. To further limit its production of pollution, which is estimated to cause 1.6 million deaths per year in the nation, China has also been pursuing wind energy and changing from coal to hydrogen.

10 Big Facts About The USA


10. President McKinley almost always wore a red carnation as a good luck charm. In 1901, moments after giving the flower to a little girl, he was assassinated.

09. There are tiny hidden images of an owl and spider hidden on the $1 bill. Many claim they are symbols of a Masonic club with several presidential members.

08. The US government are still paying 2 civil war pensions to the children of soldiers. They receive $867 a year. The last widow of the Civil War died in 2003.

07. In 1950 Tootsie Rolls were accidentally sent to fighting US Marines instead of ammunition. The Battle of Chosin Reservoir was lost when a request for the snack - codeword for ammunition-was taken literally.

06. 14,000 firework displays take place during 4th July celebrations. In 2013, 7400 were hospitalized with firework related injuries, with sparklers the number 1 cause.

05. John Adams & Thomas Jefferson both died on 4th July 1826 - exactly 50 years after signing the Declaration of Independence. Adams’ last words were “Jefferson Survives”, unaware his political rival had died hours earlier.

04. The 50-star USA flag was designed for a school project by Robert Heft, aged 17. His B- grade was raised to an A after chosen by President Eisenhower.

03. In New Jersey it is illegal to commit murder while wearing a bulletproof vest. In Ohio it is illegal to get a fish drunk & hunt whales on a Sunday.

02. In 1980 Saddam Hussein was given the key to the city & made an honorary citizen of Detroit. The honor came after he paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to clear the debt of a Detroit Church.

01. The American National Anthem, The Star-Spangled Banner, was composed by a British man. Francis Scott Key set his lyrics to the tune of a drinking song played in a London social club.

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