Today In History
December 28 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Woodrow Wilson, David Archuleta, and Arthur Eddington.

Becket Slain by King's Men: Church and State Clash
Followers of King Henry II slashed Archbishop Thomas Becket to death within Canterbury Cathedral, instantly transforming him from a political rival into a revered saint and martyr for both the Anglican and Roman Catholic Churches. This brutal act shattered the king's authority over the church, compelling Henry II to perform public penance and permanently altering the balance of power between English monarchy and ecclesiastical leadership.
Famous Birthdays
1856–1924
b. 1990
Arthur Eddington
1882–1944
Charles Cornwallis
1655–1698
Dhirubhai Ambani
d. 2002
James Blake
b. 1979
Liu Xiaobo
1955–2017
A. K. Antony
b. 1940
Alex Chilton
1950–2010
John Molson
d. 1836
Kary Mullis
b. 1944
Narsha
b. 1981
Historical Events
Edward the Confessor consecrates Westminster Abbey, establishing a royal church that becomes the permanent coronation site for English monarchs and the burial place of kings and queens for nearly a thousand years. This act transforms the building into the enduring stage for British monarchy rituals, securing its role as the spiritual heart of the nation's political life.
Alexander Solzhenitsyn unleashed *The Gulag Archipelago* in 1973, a searing exposé that shattered decades of silence surrounding the Soviet forced labor camps. The book's publication ignited global outrage and fundamentally eroded Western faith in the legitimacy of the Soviet regime.
Elizabeth Jordan Carr enters the world in Norfolk, Virginia as the first successful American test-tube baby, shattering biological barriers that once deemed such conception impossible. This birth immediately launches a new era of reproductive medicine, proving that in vitro fertilization could reliably result in live births and transforming infertility from a permanent sentence into a treatable condition for countless families.
The Lumiere brothers held the first public screening of projected motion pictures at the Salon Indien du Grand Cafe in Paris, charging admission to an audience of thirty-three. The ten short films, each running roughly fifty seconds, demonstrated that moving images could captivate a paying audience—launching the film industry that would become the dominant art form of the twentieth century.
Mass protests erupted across Iranian cities in the largest wave of civil unrest since the 1979 revolution, with demonstrators demanding political reform and an end to theocratic repression. Security forces responded with widespread arrests and internet shutdowns, but the scale of participation across economic classes signaled a fundamental erosion of the regime's domestic legitimacy.
A general nobody wanted becomes the last hope. Majorian took power with Leo's blessing from Constantinople — rare unity between east and west. He wasn't born to it. Rose through the ranks by winning battles others lost, then forced the Senate to accept him. Spent his first year rebuilding the army everyone said was finished, recruiting Gauls and Goths Rome used to call barbarians. Marched into Gaul in 458 and actually won territory back. For five years he held the west together through discipline and competence, no divine right needed. Then his own soldiers killed him in 461, probably paid off by the senator he'd humiliated. Rome's last functional emperor died because he demanded people do their jobs.
Alaric II inherits a Visigothic kingdom stretching from the Loire to Gibraltar — the largest Germanic realm in the West. His father Euric had forged it through relentless conquest. But Alaric chooses a river town in Gascony, not Toledo or Toulouse, as his seat. Why Aire-sur-l'Adour? Strategic poverty. It sits at the empire's northern fringe, near the Franks who'll define his reign. Twenty-three years later, Clovis will kill him in single combat at Vouillé. The Visigoths lose Gaul in a morning. Alaric's great achievement before that battle: codifying Roman law for his subjects, a legal digest that survives him by centuries. The capital he picked? Vanished from history books within a generation.
Galileo saw it. Twice. December 28, 1612, then again January 28, 1613 — Neptune right there in his telescope, moving against the background stars near Jupiter. But he marked it down as "fixed star" in his notebooks and moved on. He was tracking Jupiter's moons, the discovery that had made him famous, and this dim dot didn't fit his mission. The math wouldn't exist for another 233 years to predict where Neptune should be. When astronomers finally calculated its position in 1846, they checked old records. There was Galileo's notation: an unnamed star that shouldn't have been there. He'd held the discovery in his hands and set it back down.
Taksin crowned himself king in a makeshift throne room while half of Siam still burned. The former general had spent seven months fighting his way back from the Burmese destruction of Ayutthaya, gathering armies village by village. His new capital, Thonburi, sat across the river from the old one's ruins—close enough to see the charred temple spires. He chose it because it was defensible, not grand. Within fifteen years he'd reunite the kingdom and lose his mind doing it, executed by his own ministers for erratic behavior that may have been battle trauma. But the Thailand he stitched back together is the one that exists today.
They called it a military road, but really it was a gamble against swamp and forest. Governor Simcoe needed a route north from Lake Ontario — 34 miles through wilderness so thick his surveyors got lost for days. The crew carved through mud that swallowed wagons whole, felling trees wide enough to hide a man. Within three years, Yonge Street reached Lake Simcoe. Then it kept going. And going. By the 1950s, it stretched 1,178 miles to Rainy River, holding the world record until someone checked the fine print and realized most of that distance was actually Highway 11. But the original 34 miles? Still there. Still named for a British war minister who never saw Canada.
The U.S. government demanded Florida's Seminoles relocate west. Osceola — born Billy Powell, son of a Creek mother and Scottish father — stood in a treaty meeting and drove his knife through the paper. "This is the only treaty I will make with the whites." His warriors struck first at Fort King, killing Indian Agent Wiley Thompson while he smoked a cigar after dinner. Same day, 108 soldiers marched into an ambush at Wahoo Swamp. Three survived. The war lasted seven years, cost $40 million, and killed 1,500 U.S. troops — more than any Indian conflict before the Civil War. The Seminoles never surrendered.
A section of the Tay Rail Bridge collapsed during a violent storm as a passenger train crossed, plunging all seventy-five people aboard into the freezing Firth of Tay. The subsequent inquiry revealed catastrophic design flaws and poor-quality iron castings, transforming British engineering standards and establishing the principle that infrastructure must be designed to withstand extreme weather conditions.
The players couldn't see the sidelines through cigar smoke. Madison Square Garden's promoters needed a winter attraction, so they shrunk the field to 70 yards, stretched a rope across midfield to separate the halves, and charged spectators 25 cents. Syracuse's fullback, Phil Draper, scored three touchdowns in a game that lasted just 48 minutes — indoor rules, shorter quarters. The Philadelphians protested the field was too small for real football. They were right. But 3,000 fans showed up anyway, and pro football discovered it could sell tickets in December. The experiment failed — too expensive, too cramped — but the idea stuck. Sixty-five years later, the Houston Astrodome would prove them all wrong.
A 7.1 magnitude quake shatters Messina and Reggio Calabria on December 28, 1908, leveling buildings and triggering a massive tsunami that claims roughly 80,000 lives. This disaster forces Italy to overhaul its national building codes and establish the first modern seismic engineering standards in Europe.
She won her seat from a cell. Constance Markievicz — countess, radical, Sinn Féin candidate — beat her opponent by 4,000 votes while locked in Holloway Prison for "anti-British activities." But she never took her seat. None of the Sinn Féin MPs did. They refused to swear allegiance to the British Crown and instead formed their own parliament in Dublin: Dáil Éireann. The first woman elected to Westminster never set foot in the chamber. She chose Ireland's independence over Britain's first. A year later, she became Ireland's Minister for Labour — the first woman cabinet minister anywhere in Europe.
Fun Facts
Zodiac Sign
Sagittarius
Nov 22 -- Dec 21
Fire sign. Optimistic, adventurous, and philosophical.
Birthstone
Tanzanite
Violet blue
Symbolizes transformation, intuition, and spiritual growth.
Next Birthday
--
days until December 28
Quote of the Day
“I not only use all the brains that I have, but all I can borrow.”
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