Today In History
November 28 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: apl.de.ap, Berry Gordy, and Matt Cameron.

Magellan's Westward Voyage: First Global Circumnavigation
Magellan's fleet pushed through a treacherous 373-mile channel at Cape Virgenes, driving three surviving ships into the vast, calm waters he named the Pacific Ocean. This desperate navigation completed the first circumnavigation of the globe, proving the world's oceans connected and shattering European assumptions about the size of Asia. Although Magellan died in the Philippines before the journey ended, his expedition returned with concrete proof that a westward route to the Spice Islands existed.
Famous Birthdays
b. 1974
Berry Gordy
b. 1929
Matt Cameron
b. 1962
Chamillionaire
b. 1979
Claude Lévi-Strauss
1908–2009
Ernst Röhm
d. 1934
Jean-Baptiste Lully
d. 1687
Russell Alan Hulse
b. 1950
Historical Events
Magellan's fleet pushed through a treacherous 373-mile channel at Cape Virgenes, driving three surviving ships into the vast, calm waters he named the Pacific Ocean. This desperate navigation completed the first circumnavigation of the globe, proving the world's oceans connected and shattering European assumptions about the size of Asia. Although Magellan died in the Philippines before the journey ended, his expedition returned with concrete proof that a westward route to the Spice Islands existed.
Twelve men gathered at Gresham College in London on November 28, 1660, after a lecture by Christopher Wren, and decided to form a society for the promotion of 'physico-mathematical experimental learning.' The group included Robert Boyle, Robert Hooke, and John Wilkins. Charles II granted them a royal charter in 1662, creating the Royal Society of London. It was the world's first national scientific academy. The Society established Philosophical Transactions in 1665, the oldest continuously published scientific journal. Isaac Newton served as president from 1703 to 1727. The Society's motto, 'Nullius in verba' (Take nobody's word for it), captured its commitment to experimental evidence over authority. Fellows have included Darwin, Einstein, Hawking, and over 280 Nobel laureates. The Royal Society remains one of the most influential scientific bodies in the world.
The Times of London printed its November 29, 1814, edition on Friedrich Koenig's steam-powered press, the first newspaper ever produced by steam. The machine could print 1,100 sheets per hour, five times faster than the hand-operated Stanhope press it replaced. Publisher John Walter II had installed the machines in secret, fearing his pressmen would destroy them. He announced the change after the first edition was printed, telling the workers their wages would continue until they found new employment. Koenig, a German inventor, had been trying to sell his press design for years. The Times gave him his break. The steam press transformed newspaper economics: lower production costs meant lower prices, which meant larger audiences. Within decades, cheap daily papers became mass-market products. The penny press revolution of the 1830s would have been impossible without Koenig's invention.
Frank Duryea won the first American automobile race on November 28, 1895, driving his motor wagon 54 miles from Chicago's Jackson Park to Evanston and back through a snowstorm. Six vehicles started; only two finished. Duryea's average speed was 7.3 miles per hour. The entire journey took about ten hours, including stops for repairs. The race was sponsored by the Chicago Times-Herald, which offered a $5,000 prize (later reduced to $2,000). Duryea's vehicle was a modified horse buggy powered by a two-cylinder gasoline engine. His brother Charles had built the original design. The race proved automobiles could function in harsh conditions, attracting investors and public attention. The Duryea brothers established the first American automobile manufacturing company the following year. Within a decade, Henry Ford would make cars affordable to the middle class.
NASA launched the Mariner 4 probe toward Mars, where it became the first spacecraft to successfully fly by the Red Planet and transmit close-up images back to Earth. This mission shattered the prevailing belief that Mars resembled Earth, revealing a cratered, moon-like surface instead and compelling scientists to rethink the planet's potential for life.
As the World Turns and The Edge of Night aired their final live episodes, ending the last holdout of live dramatic television in American broadcasting. The transition to pre-taped production closed an era that began with television's birth, when every soap opera performance carried the thrill and risk of a live theatrical performance beamed into millions of homes.
Politician Oleksander Moroz played secret recordings in parliament that allegedly captured President Leonid Kuchma ordering the murder of journalist Georgiy Gongadze, whose decapitated body had been found weeks earlier. The Cassette Scandal triggered the "Ukraine without Kuchma" protest movement that brought tens of thousands into the streets and planted the seeds for the Orange Revolution four years later.
Enrico Fermi left Italy in 1938 the night he received the Nobel Prize in Stockholm, collecting his family and flying to New York instead of returning home. Mussolini's racial laws had targeted his Jewish wife. In Chicago in 1942, under the squash courts at the University of Chicago, he achieved the first controlled nuclear chain reaction. He used 45,000 graphite bricks, 6 tons of uranium metal, and 50 tons of uranium oxide. And then he went to lunch.
Shi Jingtang didn't win his throne — he bought it. To secure Liao's military backing against Emperor Fei of Later Tang, he handed over the strategically critical Sixteen Prefectures, a swath of northern territory China wouldn't fully recover for centuries. Emperor Taizong of Liao literally crowned him on the battlefield. And so the Later Jin was born — weak from its first breath. Shi Jingtang called himself a son to the Liao emperor, who was younger than him. A dynasty built on debt never really belongs to its founder.
A bishop and a count. That's who Pope Urban II trusted to command one of history's most audacious military campaigns. Adhemar of Le Puy wasn't a general — he was a churchman, chosen first, chosen deliberately. Raymond IV brought wealth and soldiers but answered to a cleric. The crowd at Clermont had just roared "Deus vult" — God wills it. And yet the man Urban picked to lead them carried a crozier, not a sword. Adhemar died in Antioch before Jerusalem fell. But his appointment reveals the Crusade's true purpose: this was never just a war.
William Shakespeare and Anne Hathaway paid a forty-pound bond in Stratford-upon-Avon to bypass the standard waiting period for wedding banns, securing an immediate marriage on November 28, 1582. This financial shortcut allowed the couple to wed without delay, launching a partnership that would produce eight children and anchor the Bard's personal life while he revolutionized English literature.
Anne was 26. Shakespeare was 18. And she was already three months pregnant. Two of his friends — Fulke Sandells and John Richardson — posted the £40 bond, a staggering sum meant to cover any legal objections to the rushed wedding. It worked. They married within days. But Shakespeare would spend most of his adult life in London, leaving Anne behind in Stratford. He'd famously leave her his "second-best bed" in his will. The romantic icon of English literature couldn't get out of his hometown fast enough.
Three times the numbers. That's what the Covenanters faced at Rullion Green, and they marched anyway. Tam Dalyell — a man who'd survived Russian military service and reportedly never cut his beard after Charles I's execution — crushed the rebel column in under an hour. Around 50 Covenanters died fighting, but the real toll came after: prisoners executed, others shipped to Barbados as slaves. But here's the thing — the crackdown only hardened Scottish Presbyterian resistance for decades to come.
229 people died in a single morning. The Natchez had watched French colonists seize their sacred land at Grand Village — home to their sun-king's burial mound — then demand they abandon it entirely. Enough. On November 28, warriors struck Fort Rosalie with devastating coordination, killing 138 men, 35 women, 56 children. France retaliated so brutally that the Natchez Nation essentially ceased to exist within three years. But here's the reframe: the French didn't survive this territory either. Louisiana bled them dry anyway.
The United States signs the first Treaty of Hopewell, formally acknowledging Cherokee sovereignty over lands that now comprise East Tennessee. This agreement temporarily halts encroachment and establishes a diplomatic framework for relations between the new nation and the Cherokee Nation, though it ultimately fails to prevent future land seizures.
Fun Facts
Zodiac Sign
Sagittarius
Nov 22 -- Dec 21
Fire sign. Optimistic, adventurous, and philosophical.
Birthstone
Topaz
Golden / Blue
Symbolizes friendship, generosity, and joy.
Next Birthday
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days until November 28
Quote of the Day
“It is easier to forgive an enemy than to forgive a friend.”
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