Today In History
March 21 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Ayrton Senna, Ronaldinho, and Jair Bolsonaro.

Bloody Sunday in Selma: Civil Rights Marches On
State troopers and sheriff's deputies beat 600 marchers with billy clubs and tear gas on the Edmund Pettus Bridge, turning a peaceful protest into "Bloody Sunday" that shocked the nation. This brutality forced federal courts to intervene and galvanized public opinion, directly prompting Congress to pass the Voting Rights Act of 1965 just months later. The legislation finally authorized federal oversight to enforce voting rights in jurisdictions where discrimination had long suppressed minority participation.
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Benito Juárez
1806–1872
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Forrest Mars
1904–1999
Large Professor
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Roger Hodgson
b. 1950
Sergey Lavrov
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Historical Events
State troopers and sheriff's deputies beat 600 marchers with billy clubs and tear gas on the Edmund Pettus Bridge, turning a peaceful protest into "Bloody Sunday" that shocked the nation. This brutality forced federal courts to intervene and galvanized public opinion, directly prompting Congress to pass the Voting Rights Act of 1965 just months later. The legislation finally authorized federal oversight to enforce voting rights in jurisdictions where discrimination had long suppressed minority participation.
Emperor Heraclius marched into Jerusalem to reclaim the True Cross, a relic stolen by the Sassanid Persians during their conquest of the city. This triumphant return solidified Byzantine authority in the Holy Land and triggered a wave of Christian pilgrimage that reshaped the region's religious landscape for centuries.
Thomas Cranmer retracted his Protestant beliefs under pressure before recanting them again moments before the fire consumed him. His final stand forced England's religious identity to harden against Catholic restoration, ensuring the Church of England would eventually emerge as a distinct Protestant institution rather than reverting to Rome.
The U.S. government shut down Alcatraz after decades of mounting costs and failed escape attempts turned the island into a financial drain rather than a secure fortress. This closure immediately sparked the "Alcatraz Is Not For Sale" occupation by Native American activists, who seized the site to demand federal recognition of indigenous rights and land sovereignty.
Pius VII was crowned Pope in Venice wearing a papier-mache tiara after French radical forces had driven the papal court from Rome and imprisoned his predecessor. The makeshift coronation symbolized the papacy's lowest modern ebb, yet Pius would later travel to Paris to crown Napoleon Emperor before excommunicating him five years afterward.
Maurice Ravel premiered his fantasy opera L'enfant et les sortileges at the Opera de Monte-Carlo, with a libretto by novelist Colette that brought furniture, animals, and arithmetic to life through music. The one-act work showcased Ravel's genius for orchestral color and playful invention, blending jazz, Chinese pentatonic scales, and operatic tradition into a singular piece.
The defenders had already survived 374 days of siege when Vitiges threw everything at Rome's walls. Bessas and Peranius knew the Praenestine Gate — the Vivarium — was where the Ostrogothic king would strike. They were right. The assault failed, but here's what nobody saw coming: this wasn't Rome's salvation, it was its death sentence. The year-long siege so devastated the city that its population collapsed from over 500,000 to barely 30,000. Bessas himself would later be accused of profiteering, deliberately prolonging Roman suffering to sell grain at extravagant prices. Byzantine "rescue" accomplished what Gothic conquest couldn't — it turned the eternal city into a ghost town.
They locked the synagogue doors from the outside and set it on fire. March 21st, 1349, and Erfurt's Christian residents decided their Jewish neighbors had poisoned the wells to cause the Black Death—never mind that Jews were dying from plague at the same rates. Between 800 and 3,000 people burned alive or were murdered in the streets. The city council didn't stop it; they'd already been plotting to seize Jewish properties to pay off municipal debts. Within months, over 200 similar massacres erupted across German territories, each city conveniently canceling debts owed to Jewish lenders in the process. The plague kept spreading anyway, killing a third of Europe regardless of who they'd blamed.
He'd already signed six recantations to save his life, each one more groveling than the last. But when Thomas Cranmer climbed the Oxford platform on March 21, 1556, he threw away his prepared speech and publicly damned the pope as Antichrist instead. The guards were stunned. Queen Mary's propagandists had orchestrated this execution to showcase a repentant heretic — they'd even printed his confession in advance. Cranmer thrust his right hand into the flames first, the same hand that signed those recantations, shouting it must burn before his body. His defiance turned a Catholic victory into Protestant martyrdom that would fuel English anti-Catholicism for three centuries. Sometimes the most dangerous moment to break a promise is when everyone thinks you've already surrendered.
Jefferson didn't want the job. He'd spent five years in Paris, watching France's upheaval unfold, and preferred staying abroad as minister. Washington had to convince him through multiple letters across the Atlantic. When Jefferson finally arrived in New York—then the capital—on March 21, 1790, he walked into a government that was three departments, 350 employees, and endless arguments with Alexander Hamilton about whether America should even have a strong federal government. The State Department he inherited? A staff of five clerks, two diplomatic missions, and a budget smaller than a modern food truck operation. The man who'd draft the Louisiana Purchase started with less bureaucracy than a county courthouse.
The French general rode into battle wearing a plumed hat so enormous it made him visible from half a mile away. At Alexandria in 1801, General Menou's 10,000 troops faced British forces led by Ralph Abercromby, who'd secretly landed his army through impossible surf just weeks earlier. Abercromby took a musket ball to the thigh but kept commanding for hours, insisting younger men needed treatment first. He died seven days later. But the French lost, and with them Napoleon's entire Egyptian adventure—the Rosetta Stone, seized as spoils of war, ended up in the British Museum instead of Paris. That ridiculous hat survived the battle. The general wearing it didn't survive his reputation.
The Prime Minister of Britain showed up at Battersea Fields at 8 a.m. with loaded pistols. Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington—the man who'd defeated Napoleon—was about to fight Lord Winchilsea over Catholic emancipation. Winchilsea had accused Wellington of sneaking "Popery" into England by supporting rights for Catholics to serve in Parliament. Wellington fired first and deliberately missed. Winchilsea fired into the air, then apologized. The whole affair lasted minutes. Three weeks later, Wellington's Catholic Relief Act passed, ending centuries of discrimination. Turns out the Iron Duke was willing to risk his life not on a battlefield, but for a law.
The calendar doesn't start with a prophet's birth or death — it starts with the spring equinox, March 21, 1844, when a 25-year-old merchant in Shiraz declared himself the Báb, the gateway to divine knowledge. He'd break from Islam and attract thousands of followers within months. The Persian government executed him by firing squad just six years later, but his student Bahá'u'lláh would build an entire faith from those ashes. Today, five million Bahá'ís worldwide celebrate Náw-Rúz as their New Year, timing their holiest day not to a religious event, but to the earth's orbit itself.
Hungary's Communist revolution lasted exactly 133 days, but here's the twist: it wasn't led by workers or peasants. Béla Kun, a former POW who'd been radicalized in Russian camps, convinced Hungary's exhausted liberal government to simply hand him power without a shot fired. They did it on March 21, 1919, hoping Communists could save them from Allied demands to carve up their country. Instead, Kun's Red Terror and disastrous war with Romania destroyed what little remained. When Romanian troops marched into Budapest that August, they found a population so relieved the revolution ended that they welcomed foreign occupation. The bloodless beginning guaranteed the bloody end.
Lenin called it a "retreat" — and for the architect of the Communist Revolution, that word stung like defeat. But by 1921, War Communism had triggered famine so severe that peasants were eating tree bark, and sailors at Kronstadt — the revolution's most loyal defenders — had mutinied. So Lenin did the unthinkable: he brought back capitalism. The New Economic Policy allowed private trade, let peasants sell their grain for profit, and permitted small businesses to operate freely. Within two years, food production doubled. Stalin would later crush these reforms entirely, collectivizing farms and killing millions in the process. The man who'd seized power by promising "peace, land, and bread" saved the Soviet Union by admitting Marx couldn't feed it.
Fun Facts
Zodiac Sign
Aries
Mar 21 -- Apr 19
Fire sign. Courageous, energetic, and confident.
Birthstone
Aquamarine
Pale blue
Symbolizes courage, serenity, and clear communication.
Next Birthday
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days until March 21
Quote of the Day
“I was obliged to be industrious. Whoever is equally industrious will succeed equally well.”
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