Today In History
February 27 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Constantine the Great, John Steinbeck, and Jony Ive.

Women Vote Secured: Supreme Court Upholds 19th Amendment
The Supreme Court unanimously upheld the Nineteenth Amendment in Leser v. Garnett on February 27, 1922, rejecting challenges from Maryland opponents who argued that the amendment was invalid because it expanded the electorate beyond what the original Constitution intended. The plaintiffs claimed the amendment violated state sovereignty and had been improperly ratified because some state legislatures lacked authority to approve it. Justice Louis Brandeis wrote the opinion dismissing all three arguments in a terse ruling that took the Court less than two pages. The decision was critical because it foreclosed any future legal challenge to women's suffrage, which had been ratified only eighteen months earlier after a 72-year campaign. The Nineteenth Amendment had passed the Tennessee legislature by a single vote when 24-year-old representative Harry Burn changed his position at his mother's urging. Without Leser v. Garnett, opponents could have continued challenging ratification state by state for years.
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Historical Events
The Supreme Court unanimously upheld the Nineteenth Amendment in Leser v. Garnett on February 27, 1922, rejecting challenges from Maryland opponents who argued that the amendment was invalid because it expanded the electorate beyond what the original Constitution intended. The plaintiffs claimed the amendment violated state sovereignty and had been improperly ratified because some state legislatures lacked authority to approve it. Justice Louis Brandeis wrote the opinion dismissing all three arguments in a terse ruling that took the Court less than two pages. The decision was critical because it foreclosed any future legal challenge to women's suffrage, which had been ratified only eighteen months earlier after a 72-year campaign. The Nineteenth Amendment had passed the Tennessee legislature by a single vote when 24-year-old representative Harry Burn changed his position at his mother's urging. Without Leser v. Garnett, opponents could have continued challenging ratification state by state for years.
President George H.W. Bush declared Kuwait liberated on February 27, 1991, ending Iraq's seven-month occupation after a coalition ground offensive that lasted exactly 100 hours. The speed of the victory stunned military analysts: Iraqi forces, the world's fourth-largest army, collapsed in days under the combined weight of American armor, precision air strikes, and a flanking maneuver through the Iraqi desert that cut off retreat routes. Over 80,000 Iraqi soldiers surrendered. Kuwait's liberation was followed by Saddam Hussein's brutal suppression of Shia and Kurdish uprisings that the US had encouraged but refused to support with military force. Bush chose not to pursue regime change, citing the coalition's limited UN mandate. The decision haunted his presidency and was reversed by his son twelve years later. The US established permanent military bases in Saudi Arabia, a presence that became Osama bin Laden's primary grievance against the American government.
Theodosius II built the University of Constantinople in 425 because his wife told him to. Aelia Eudocia, a poet and intellectual herself, wanted a state-funded institution that could rival Alexandria. The emperor gave her 31 chairs—professors paid by the empire to teach law, philosophy, medicine, arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, music, rhetoric, and Greek and Latin grammar. It was the first university with an official curriculum and salaried faculty. For over a thousand years, it trained the Byzantine bureaucracy. Every lawyer, diplomat, and administrator in the Eastern Roman Empire learned to think there. When Constantinople fell in 1453, its scholars fled west with their manuscripts. The Renaissance was waiting.
The House of Commons voted to end the war on February 27, 1782. Not because they'd lost — Cornwallis had surrendered four months earlier, but Britain still held New York, Charleston, and Savannah. They voted to stop because it cost too much. The war was draining £20 million annually. France and Spain had joined against them. And King George III threatened to abdicate rather than accept it. Parliament chose bankruptcy over the king's pride.
Juan Pablo Duarte, Francisco del Rosario Sanchez, and Ramon Matias Mella led a bloodless revolt on February 27, 1844, firing a shot from the Puerta del Conde fortress in Santo Domingo to signal the start of Dominican independence from Haiti. Haiti had controlled the entire island of Hispaniola since 1822, imposing French as the official language and alienating the Spanish-speaking eastern population through heavy taxation and forced labor. The Trinitarios, a secret society Duarte had founded in 1838, organized the independence movement along nationalist and cultural lines rather than racial ones, a significant distinction on an island where racial identity and political power were deeply intertwined. Haiti invaded repeatedly after independence, and the young republic nearly collapsed under internal power struggles. Pedro Santana, a military strongman, exiled Duarte and eventually invited Spain to reannex the country in 1861, an arrangement that lasted only four years before another revolt restored independence.
Boer General Piet Cronje surrendered unconditionally with 4,000 men at the Battle of Paardeberg, the first major British victory after a string of demoralizing defeats in the Second Boer War. The capture shattered Boer morale and opened the road to Bloemfontein, giving the British the momentum that would eventually lead to the occupation of both Boer capitals.
The Twenty-second Amendment passed because Democrats were furious at FDR. He'd won four times — nobody else had tried for three. Republicans pushed the amendment through Congress in 1947, two years after he died. It sailed through state legislatures. Then Eisenhower, a Republican, immediately hit the limit they'd just created. Reagan wanted it repealed. So did Clinton, Obama, and Trump. Every two-term president discovers the same thing: the 22nd Amendment only bothers the people who can't change it.
Louis Vuitton built a trunk-making business that became the world's most recognizable luxury brand, pioneering flat-topped luggage that could be stacked during the steam-travel era. His innovation of lightweight, airtight canvas trunks with signature monogram patterns turned functional travel goods into status symbols, founding a fashion empire that now anchors the largest luxury conglomerate on Earth.
Ivan Pavlov started the experiments that produced classical conditioning research entirely by accident — he was studying canine digestion when he noticed the dogs salivated at the sight of food before it arrived. He spent twenty years investigating that reflex. He won the Nobel Prize in Physiology in 1904 for digestive research, not for conditioning. The conditioning work came after the Prize, which turned out to be more famous than the reason he'd won it.
Emperor Theodosius I made Christianity the only legal religion of the Roman Empire on February 27, 380. Not just legal — mandatory. The Edict of Thessalonica declared that all citizens must follow "the religion which the divine Peter the Apostle transmitted to the Romans." Anyone who refused would be considered "demented and insane" and subject to punishment. No more temples. No more sacrifices. A thousand years of Roman gods, gone by imperial decree. Within a decade, pagan worship became a capital crime. The empire that fed Christians to lions now fed pagans to the law.
A nomadic warlord who couldn't read Chinese became emperor of a dynasty that would last two centuries. Abaoji unified the Khitan tribes through a mix of marriage alliances and strategic assassinations — including his own brothers. He borrowed the imperial bureaucracy from Tang China but kept Khitan military structure. His wife, Empress Yingtian, ran the government while he fought wars. When he died, she cut off her own hand and placed it in his tomb. The Liao controlled the Silk Road and forced Song China to pay annual tribute of 100,000 taels of silver. A nomad made China pay him to stay away.
England signed the Treaty of Berwick with Scottish Protestant lords in 1560, agreeing to send troops north to kick out the French garrison. The French were there backing Mary of Guise, the Catholic regent, against her own Protestant nobility. Elizabeth I hesitated for months — backing rebels against a legitimate ruler set a dangerous precedent. But her advisors convinced her: better a Protestant Scotland than a French one. English forces arrived, besieged Leith, and the French withdrew. Scotland's Reformation Parliament met four months later and broke with Rome. The alliance held for 43 years, until Elizabeth died without an heir and Scotland's king inherited both thrones.
England sent troops into Scotland in 1560 because Scottish nobles asked them to. The Lords of the Congregation wanted French soldiers out. They'd been there since Mary of Guise ruled as regent, and they weren't leaving. The Treaty of Berwick made it legal: English forces could cross the border, help drive out the French, then go home. It worked. Within months, French troops withdrew. Scotland's Protestant reformation could proceed. And England, for once, intervened in Scotland by invitation — not invasion. The alliance held. When Mary Queen of Scots returned from France a year later, she found a Scotland fundamentally changed, with England as guarantor instead of enemy.
Sweden took Russia's only window to the Baltic. The Treaty of Stolbovo gave Sweden Ingria — the coastal strip that included a small trading post called Nyen. Russia kept inland territory but lost access to European shipping routes. The Swedes celebrated. They'd locked their rival into a landlocked corner. Ninety years later, Peter the Great would reconquer this exact strip of land and build St. Petersburg on it. He called it his "window to Europe." He meant it literally.
Yuan Chonghuan took command of China's northern frontier in 1626 after doing what nobody else had managed: he'd stopped Nurhaci. The Manchu warlord had conquered everything in his path for decades. Yuan held a single fortified city with Portuguese cannons and 10,000 men. Nurhaci died of his wounds six months later. Yuan's reward was the worst job in China — defending 600 miles of border against Nurhaci's sons. They'd capture Beijing anyway. Then they'd execute Yuan for treason.
Fun Facts
Zodiac Sign
Pisces
Feb 19 -- Mar 20
Water sign. Compassionate, intuitive, and artistic.
Birthstone
Amethyst
Purple
Symbolizes wisdom, clarity, and peace of mind.
Next Birthday
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days until February 27
Quote of the Day
“How pleasing to the wise and intelligent portion of mankind is the concord which exists among you!”
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