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On this day

August 22

Richard III Falls at Bosworth: Wars of the Roses End (1485). Michael Collins Killed: Ireland's Tragic Turning Point (1922). Notable births include Donna Jean Godchaux (1947), Paul Doucette (1972), Jerry Iger (1903).

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Richard III Falls at Bosworth: Wars of the Roses End
1485Event

Richard III Falls at Bosworth: Wars of the Roses End

Richard III charged directly into Henry Tudor's bodyguard at the Battle of Bosworth Field on August 22, 1485, in a desperate attempt to kill his rival in personal combat. He came close enough to cut down Henry's standard-bearer before being overwhelmed and killed. Legend holds that his crown was found in a hawthorn bush and placed on Henry's head on the battlefield. Richard's naked body was displayed in Leicester for two days before burial. His skeleton was discovered under a parking lot in 2012 and confirmed through DNA analysis, revealing severe scoliosis and eleven wounds, including two fatal blows to the skull. The battle ended the Wars of the Roses and established the Tudor dynasty that would rule England for 118 years.

Michael Collins Killed: Ireland's Tragic Turning Point
1922

Michael Collins Killed: Ireland's Tragic Turning Point

Michael Collins was 31 years old and the most effective military leader the Irish independence movement had ever produced when he was shot dead in an ambush at Beal na Blath, County Cork, on August 22, 1922. Collins had negotiated the Anglo-Irish Treaty that created the Irish Free State but split the independence movement between those who accepted the compromise and those who demanded a full republic. The civil war that followed pitted former comrades against each other. Collins was traveling in a lightly armored convoy when anti-Treaty forces opened fire. His companions wanted to speed through the ambush, but Collins ordered them to stop and fight. A single bullet struck him behind the right ear.

Japan Annexes Korea: A Nation Under Colonial Rule
1910

Japan Annexes Korea: A Nation Under Colonial Rule

Japan formally annexed Korea on August 22, 1910, through a treaty signed under duress by Korean Emperor Sunjong. The annexation followed a decade of escalating Japanese control: a protectorate in 1905, dissolution of the Korean army in 1907, and forced abdication of Emperor Gojong. Colonial rule lasted 35 years and included forced labor, suppression of the Korean language in schools, compulsory Shinto worship, the comfort women system, and the requirement that Koreans adopt Japanese names. Korean cultural identity survived underground through secret schools, independence movements, and exile governments. Liberation came only with Japan's surrender in August 1945, but the Korean peninsula was immediately divided between Soviet and American zones.

King George Declares Rebellion: War on the Colonies
1775

King George Declares Rebellion: War on the Colonies

King George III issued a Proclamation of Rebellion on August 23, 1775 (not August 22), declaring the American colonies in a state of "open and avowed rebellion" and ordering all subjects to assist in suppressing the uprising. The proclamation closed the door on reconciliation that moderates in Congress had been pursuing through the Olive Branch Petition, which the king refused to read. George III authorized the hiring of foreign mercenaries, which led to the deployment of roughly 30,000 Hessian soldiers to America. The proclamation radicalized fence-sitters throughout the colonies, pushing moderates who had hoped for compromise toward the independence camp. By the following summer, Congress had declared independence.

Japan Swaps Islands: Sakhalin for Kurils Treaty
1875

Japan Swaps Islands: Sakhalin for Kurils Treaty

Japan and Russia signed the Treaty of Saint Petersburg on May 7, 1875, trading territorial claims in an exchange designed to prevent conflict in the northern Pacific. Japan ceded all claims to Sakhalin Island, which Russia had been colonizing from the north, in exchange for all eighteen islands in the Kuril chain, which Russia had been occupying from the north as well. The treaty appeared to settle the boundary neatly, but it created the foundation for a territorial dispute that persists to this day. The Soviet Union seized the southern Kurils during the closing days of World War II in 1945, and Japan has demanded their return ever since. The unresolved dispute has prevented Russia and Japan from signing a formal peace treaty.

Quote of the Day

“Keep a cool head and maintain a low profile. Never take the lead - but aim to do something big.”

Historical events

Born on August 22

Portrait of Howie Dorough
Howie Dorough 1973

Howie Dorough is the oldest member of the Backstreet Boys, born in Orlando in 1973, and has been part of the group since 1993.

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The Backstreet Boys sold over 100 million records — more than almost any act of the 1990s. AJ, Brian, Nick, Kevin, and Howie. Dorough's vocal range handled parts of the harmonies that gave the group its distinctive sound. He was there for the full run, the split, the reunion, and the Las Vegas residency that started in 2017.

Portrait of Layne Staley
Layne Staley 1967

He hadn't left his Seattle condo in years.

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Layne Staley, born August 22, 1967, co-wrote some of grunge's darkest material while battling an addiction so consuming that by his final years, neighbors reported he'd become a ghost — ordering pizza, occasionally, as proof of life. Alice in Chains sold over 30 million records worldwide. But Staley's real instrument was his voice, a thing of unsettling beauty he once described as "just screaming inside." He died alone, April 5, 2002. The same date as Kurt Cobain, eight years later.

Portrait of Gza
Gza 1966

He went by three names before he found the one that stuck.

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Gary Grice, born in Brooklyn's Brownsville neighborhood in 1966, became The Genius, then GZA — the Wu-Tang Clan's self-described "head" and its quietest member. While others shouted, he counted syllables. His 1995 album *Liquid Swords* sold 250,000 copies in its first week on chess metaphors alone. He later taught hip-hop lyricism at Harvard. The most dangerous weapon in a nine-man crew wasn't the loudest voice.

Portrait of Tori Amos
Tori Amos 1963

Tori Amos sat down at a piano at age two and played by ear.

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She was enrolled at the Peabody Institute in Baltimore at five — their youngest student ever. She was asked to leave at eleven for pursuing rock and roll instead of classical. Y Kant Tori Read, her 1988 debut, flopped. Little Earthquakes came out in 1992 and sold over a million copies in Britain alone. She built a catalog that addressed trauma, religion, and sexuality with a directness that the music industry spent years struggling to categorize.

Portrait of Mark Williams
Mark Williams 1959

Mark Williams is the English actor best known to global audiences as Arthur Weasley in the Harry Potter film series,…

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though British viewers knew him first from the sketch comedy show "The Fast Show." He later starred as the title character in the BBC's "Father Brown" detective series.

Portrait of Chiranjeevi
Chiranjeevi 1955

He started with nothing — literally.

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Born Konidela Siva Sankara Vara Prasad in a small Andhra Pradesh village, he couldn't afford bus fare to his first film audition. He borrowed it. That gamble eventually made him the highest-paid actor in Indian cinema through the 1990s, commanding fees that rewrote Tollywood salary structures entirely. His 1985 film *Giraftaar* ran 365 days straight in some theaters. He later served as India's Minister of Tourism. But the borrowed bus fare started everything.

Portrait of Scooter Libby
Scooter Libby 1950

Lewis Libby, known as Scooter, rose to prominence as the Chief of Staff to Vice President Dick Cheney, where he wielded…

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immense influence over national security policy. His career ended following his 2007 conviction for obstruction of justice and perjury during the investigation into the leak of CIA operative Valerie Plame’s identity.

Portrait of Ron Dante
Ron Dante 1945

Ron Dante defined the sound of late-sixties bubblegum pop by providing the lead vocals for The Archies’ chart-topping hit Sugar, Sugar.

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Beyond his work as a frontman, he produced Barry Manilow’s first nine albums, helping shape the polished, radio-friendly aesthetic that dominated American pop charts throughout the 1970s.

Portrait of Annie Proulx
Annie Proulx 1935

She didn't publish her first novel until she was 57.

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Annie Proulx spent decades writing magazine pieces about cider-making and rural New England before fiction took over. Born in Norwich, Connecticut in 1935, she'd move eleven times before settling into the Wyoming ranchlands that would define her most famous work. "Brokeback Mountain" started as a short story she wrote in a single sitting at a Wyoming bar. She left behind prose so geographically specific that readers can feel the altitude in their lungs.

Portrait of Deng Xiaoping
Deng Xiaoping 1904

Deng Xiaoping was purged three times — by Mao, then by the Gang of Four, then survived both.

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Each time he came back. By 1978 he was running China, and he made a decision that Mao never would have: let it get rich first, sort out ideology later. The special economic zones, the foreign investment, the factories making everything for the West — that was Deng's architecture. 800 million people lifted out of poverty over the following decades. He also ordered the tanks into Tiananmen Square in 1989.

Portrait of Frederick II
Frederick II 1412

Frederick II ruled Saxony as Elector during a period of rising territorial power in the Holy Roman Empire.

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His steady governance helped consolidate Saxon influence in German politics, laying groundwork for Saxony's emergence as one of the Empire's most consequential states.

Died on August 22

Portrait of S. R. Nathan
S. R. Nathan 2016

S.

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R. Nathan served as Singapore's sixth president for 12 years (1999-2011), the longest presidential tenure in the nation's history. A former intelligence chief and diplomat who survived the Japanese occupation as a child, he was known for his accessibility and his commitment to social welfare, particularly for the elderly and disabled.

Portrait of Toots Thielemans
Toots Thielemans 2016

Toots Thielemans made the chromatic harmonica a legitimate jazz instrument, playing on hundreds of recording sessions…

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and collaborating with everyone from Charlie Parker to Quincy Jones. His composition "Bluesette" — which he performed while simultaneously whistling and playing guitar — became a jazz standard, and his harmonica work was featured in the soundtracks of *Midnight Cowboy*, *Jean de Florette*, and *Sesame Street*.

Portrait of Nick Ashford
Nick Ashford 2011

Nick Ashford, half of the Motown songwriting duo Ashford & Simpson, co-wrote some of the greatest soul songs ever…

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recorded — "Ain't No Mountain High Enough," "Reach Out and Touch (Somebody's Hand)," and "I'm Every Woman." He and wife Valerie Simpson also performed as a duo, charting hits through the 1980s.

Portrait of Boris Pugo
Boris Pugo 1991

He shot himself before they could arrest him.

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Boris Pugo, one of eight hardliners who'd just tried to overthrow Mikhail Gorbachev in the August 1991 coup, put a bullet in his head the morning KGB agents came to his Moscow apartment. He survived long enough to be taken to a hospital — then died. His wife was wounded in what appeared to be a second shot. The coup had collapsed in 72 hours. Pugo's suicide was the only one among the plotters. The rest faced trial, then amnesty.

Portrait of Huey P. Newton
Huey P. Newton 1989

He co-founded the Black Panther Party at 24 with a $4.

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98 mimeograph machine and a borrowed typewriter. Huey P. Newton was shot in West Oakland on August 22, 1989, by a drug dealer named Tyrone Robinson — three blocks from where Newton had grown up. He'd earned a PhD from UC Santa Cruz in 1980. But addiction had unraveled him by the end. The free breakfast programs he launched fed 20,000 children weekly at their peak. Schools still run versions of that program today.

Portrait of James Smith McDonnell
James Smith McDonnell 1980

James Smith McDonnell founded McDonnell Aircraft in St.

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Louis in 1939 with ,000 and six employees. The company built the first carrier-based jet fighter for the Navy, developed the Phantom series that defined American air superiority in Vietnam, and produced the Mercury and Gemini spacecraft capsules that put Americans in orbit. McDonnell Aircraft merged with Douglas in 1967 to form McDonnell Douglas, which was eventually absorbed by Boeing in 1997. Mr. Mac, as employees called him, died in 1980. The planes he built flew for decades after.

Portrait of Jomo Kenyatta
Jomo Kenyatta 1978

Jomo Kenyatta led Kenya to independence in 1963 and governed it until his death in 1978 — fifteen years as president.

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He'd been imprisoned by the British for eight years, convicted of organizing the Mau Mau uprising, which historians later concluded was largely fabricated. His presidency oversaw economic growth but also one-party consolidation and suppression of opposition. He died in office at roughly 86. His son Uhuru Kenyatta became president in 2013. The family hasn't left Kenyan politics since.

Portrait of Juscelino Kubitschek
Juscelino Kubitschek 1976

Juscelino Kubitschek died in a car accident, ending the life of the architect behind Brazil’s rapid modernization.

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As president, he famously moved the national capital to the inland city of Brasília, a project that physically shifted the country’s political center of gravity away from the coast and toward the interior.

Portrait of Gregory Goodwin Pincus
Gregory Goodwin Pincus 1967

Gregory Goodwin Pincus co-developed the birth control pill with John Rock and Min Chueh Chang, testing the hormonal…

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formulation that became Enovid, approved by the FDA in 1960. He'd been working on mammalian reproduction since the 1930s and had been forced out of Harvard in 1937 for his work on in vitro fertilization, which the university found controversial. He founded his own research institute in Shrewsbury, Massachusetts, and kept working. The pill he helped create is one of the most consequential pharmaceuticals in history.

Portrait of Döme Sztójay
Döme Sztójay 1946

Döme Sztójay served as Hungary's 35th Prime Minister for just five months in 1944, installed by Nazi Germany after the…

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occupation of Hungary. He oversaw the deportation of over 430,000 Hungarian Jews to Auschwitz and was executed as a war criminal in 1946.

Portrait of Warren Hastings
Warren Hastings 1818

He ran the entire British operation in India for over a decade, then came home to face 148 charges of corruption and cruelty.

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The impeachment trial dragged on for seven years — the longest in British history — and ultimately acquitted him of everything. But the legal costs bankrupted him completely. Parliament eventually granted him a pension and temporary relief funds just to keep him alive. Hastings died at 85 having reshaped colonial administration across a subcontinent, yet spent his final decades proving his own innocence.

Portrait of John Howard
John Howard 1485

John Howard, 1st Duke of Norfolk, was killed at the Battle of Bosworth Field fighting for Richard III, becoming the…

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highest-ranking nobleman to die in the battle. He had been one of Richard's strongest supporters and his death opened the way for the Tudor dynasty's consolidation of power.

Portrait of James Harrington
James Harrington 1485

Yorkshire knight James Harrington fought for Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth Field in 1485, dying in the last…

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charge of the last Plantagenet king. His death in the battle that ended the Wars of the Roses cost his family their estates and influence.

Portrait of Ferdinand II
Ferdinand II 1188

He conquered more Iberian territory than any Leonese king before him, yet Ferdinand II spent his final years watching…

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his son Alfonso IX undo his alliances one by one. He'd taken Cáceres, Alcántara, and Mérida from the Moors — cities that would define León's southwestern frontier for generations. He died in Benavente, reportedly mid-journey. But the kingdom he handed off wasn't just land. His reign accidentally midwifed the first Spanish parliamentary assembly, the Cortes of León, called just weeks after his death.

Holidays & observances

Catholics celebrate the Queenship of Mary today, honoring her role as a spiritual sovereign within the church hierarchy.

Catholics celebrate the Queenship of Mary today, honoring her role as a spiritual sovereign within the church hierarchy. This feast day, established by Pope Pius XII in 1954, solidified the theological doctrine that Mary’s influence extends beyond her earthly life, directly shaping centuries of devotional art and liturgical practice across the globe.

The Immaculate Heart of Mary is celebrated on the Saturday following the Solemnity of the Sacred Heart.

The Immaculate Heart of Mary is celebrated on the Saturday following the Solemnity of the Sacred Heart. This devotion, which honors Mary's interior life of joy, sorrow, and compassion, gained momentum after the Fatima apparitions of 1917 and was added to the universal Catholic calendar by Pope Pius XII in 1944.

The Queenship of Mary was established as a liturgical feast by Pope Pius XII in 1954, affirming the Catholic belief i…

The Queenship of Mary was established as a liturgical feast by Pope Pius XII in 1954, affirming the Catholic belief in Mary's role as Queen of Heaven. It is celebrated on August 22, exactly one week after the Feast of the Assumption.

Symphorian and Timotheus are early Christian martyrs venerated together on August 22.

Symphorian and Timotheus are early Christian martyrs venerated together on August 22. Symphorian was executed in Autun, Gaul, around 180 AD for refusing to worship the pagan goddess Cybele.

The Eastern Orthodox Church observes several liturgical commemorations on August 23 in the Julian calendar.

The Eastern Orthodox Church observes several liturgical commemorations on August 23 in the Julian calendar. The day includes remembrances of various saints, martyrs, and holy figures from the Orthodox Christian tradition.

Filipinos honor the nation’s patriots every fourth Monday in August, a floating holiday that commemorates the Cry of …

Filipinos honor the nation’s patriots every fourth Monday in August, a floating holiday that commemorates the Cry of Pugad Lawin. This observance shifts the focus from specific birth dates to the collective sacrifice of those who sparked the 1896 Philippine Revolution against Spanish colonial rule, grounding national identity in the struggle for independence.

Madras Day celebrates the founding of the city now known as Chennai on August 22, 1639, when the East India Company e…

Madras Day celebrates the founding of the city now known as Chennai on August 22, 1639, when the East India Company established Fort St. George on the Coromandel Coast. The annual celebration honors Chennai's nearly four centuries of continuous history as one of India's oldest modern cities.

Residents of Chennai celebrate Madras Day to commemorate the 1639 founding of the city, when the East India Company p…

Residents of Chennai celebrate Madras Day to commemorate the 1639 founding of the city, when the East India Company purchased a strip of land from local rulers. This annual tradition fosters civic pride by highlighting the region’s evolution from a colonial trading post into a major hub for South Indian culture, industry, and education.

Flag Day in Russia commemorates the adoption of the Russian tricolor — white, blue, and red — as the national flag on…

Flag Day in Russia commemorates the adoption of the Russian tricolor — white, blue, and red — as the national flag on August 22, 1991, during the collapse of the Soviet Union. The tricolor, originally used by Tsar Peter the Great's merchant fleet in the 1690s, replaced the Soviet hammer-and-sickle flag as Russia reclaimed its pre-revolutionary national identity.

The International Day Commemorating the Victims of Acts of Violence Based on Religion or Belief was established by th…

The International Day Commemorating the Victims of Acts of Violence Based on Religion or Belief was established by the UN in 2019, responding to rising attacks on religious communities — from the Christchurch mosque shootings to the Sri Lanka Easter bombings.