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October 13 in History
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Knights Templar Arrested: Friday the 13th Origins
King Philip IV of France ordered sealed arrest warrants opened simultaneously across the country at dawn on Friday, October 13, 1307. Hundreds of Knights Templar were seized from their commanderies and thrown into prison. Under torture, many confessed to heresy, spitting on the cross, idol worship, and homosexual practices. Philip owed the Templars enormous sums, and their international banking network controlled vast wealth. Pope Clement V, under heavy French pressure, dissolved the order in 1312. Grand Master Jacques de Molay was burned at the stake in Paris on March 18, 1314. The popular association between Friday the 13th and bad luck has been traced to this event, though the direct connection was popularized only in the twentieth century. The Templars' actual banking records suggest they were creditors, not heretics.
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Ashok Kumar
d. 2001
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b. 1947
Jozef Tiso
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Historical Events
Henry Jones and eleven companions founded B'nai B'rith in New York City to create a unified voice for American Jews facing rising antisemitism. This organization immediately established a network of mutual aid societies that evolved into the world's oldest Jewish service group, shaping community support structures for generations.
Italy's switch from Axis to Allied cobelligerent in 1943 was neither clean nor bloodless. King Victor Emmanuel III dismissed Mussolini on July 25, and Marshal Badoglio secretly negotiated an armistice that was announced on September 8. The Germans responded immediately: they seized Rome, disarmed 600,000 Italian soldiers (most were sent to forced labor), and established the puppet Italian Social Republic under Mussolini in the north. On October 13, Italy formally declared war on Germany. The country was now fighting itself. Fascist loyalists battled partisans across northern Italy for the next 18 months. Allied forces ground their way up the peninsula through Monte Cassino and the Gothic Line. Mussolini was captured and executed by partisans on April 28, 1945, two days before Hitler killed himself in Berlin.
The Boston Americans, later renamed the Red Sox, defeated the Pittsburgh Pirates five games to three in the first modern World Series, which concluded on October 13, 1903. Pitcher Bill Dinneen won three games for Boston, including a shutout in the decisive Game 8. The series had no official sanctioning from either league; Pittsburgh owner Barney Dreyfuss challenged Boston after both teams won their respective pennants. Players negotiated their own shares of the gate receipts. The Pirates' losing share was actually larger than Boston's winning share because Dreyfuss added his personal cut to the players' pool. Total attendance for the eight games was 100,429. The following year, the New York Giants' John McGraw refused to play the American League champion, calling them a 'minor league team,' and there was no World Series in 1904.
Ameritech Mobile Communications flipped the switch on Chicago's streets, connecting the first US cellular network to the world. This launch transformed mobile phones from luxury toys into essential tools, sparking a global shift where instant communication became woven into daily life rather than confined to landlines.
The Continental Congress authorized the purchase of two sailing vessels on October 13, 1775, to intercept British supply ships heading for Quebec. It was the birth of what would become the United States Navy. The first ships were converted merchantmen armed with a handful of cannons. Within months, Congress expanded the fleet and appointed Esek Hopkins as the first commodore. The early navy was tiny compared to the Royal Navy's 270 ships of the line, but it served a crucial strategic purpose: disrupting British logistics and capturing supplies that Washington's army desperately needed. Captain John Paul Jones became America's first naval hero by raiding the British coast. After the Revolution, Congress disbanded the navy entirely. It was reconstituted in 1794 when Barbary pirates threatened American commerce.
Nero ascends the throne after Claudius dies from poison, sidelining the emperor's biological son Britannicus. This succession shift unleashes a decade of brutal purges against the Julio-Claudian family and signals the end of the principate's relative stability. The empire immediately faces a new era defined by Nero's erratic rule rather than the cautious administration Claudius maintained.
Claudius died at dinner after eating mushrooms. He was 63. His wife Agrippina probably poisoned him — she'd married him five years earlier to position her son Nero for the throne. Nero was 17 when he became emperor. He had Agrippina murdered five years later. Claudius had been a stammering, limping scholar whom nobody took seriously until he became emperor by accident. He conquered Britain and built the port of Ostia. Nero burned Rome.
King Philip the Fair ordered the arrest of hundreds of Knights Templar across France at dawn, crushing a powerful military order that had long held vast wealth and influence. Under torture, many knights confessed to fabricated heresies, allowing the crown to seize their assets and permanently dismantle the organization while consolidating royal power in France.
King Philip IV of France ordered sealed arrest warrants opened simultaneously across the country at dawn on Friday, October 13, 1307. Hundreds of Knights Templar were seized from their commanderies and thrown into prison. Under torture, many confessed to heresy, spitting on the cross, idol worship, and homosexual practices. Philip owed the Templars enormous sums, and their international banking network controlled vast wealth. Pope Clement V, under heavy French pressure, dissolved the order in 1312. Grand Master Jacques de Molay was burned at the stake in Paris on March 18, 1314. The popular association between Friday the 13th and bad luck has been traced to this event, though the direct connection was popularized only in the twentieth century. The Templars' actual banking records suggest they were creditors, not heretics.
Rinchinbal Khan ruled the Yuan Dynasty for 53 days. He was 29 when he became emperor, dead at 30. Cause unknown — possibly poisoned. He was the tenth Yuan emperor in 25 years. The Mongol Empire was collapsing from within. Rival factions fought over the throne while Chinese rebels gathered strength in the south. The Yuan Dynasty fell 36 years later. The Mongols never ruled China again.
October 5th was Thursday. October 15th was Friday. The ten days between didn't happen. Pope Gregory XIII's calendar reform deleted them to realign Easter with the spring equinox. People went to bed Thursday night and woke up Friday morning. Rents and wages were prorated. Nothing was lost but numbers. Protestant countries refused the change for 170 years, preferring astronomical error to papal authority.
George Washington laid the cornerstone of the Executive Mansion using a trowel and Masonic ceremony. The building was designed by Irish architect James Hoban, who'd never been paid for his previous work. Construction took eight years. Washington never lived there. John Adams moved in before the plaster dried. The house wouldn't be called the White House for another 26 years, after British troops burned it and it was rebuilt.
British regulars and Mohawk warriors under Sir Isaac Brock repelled an American invasion force at Queenston Heights, though Brock himself died leading a countercharge. The victory preserved Upper Canada from conquest and turned Brock into a national hero, while the American defeat exposed the disorganization that plagued early U.S. war planning.
Texas voters approved a constitution that would make them a U.S. state by a margin of more than 7 to 1. They'd been an independent republic for nine years. The vote wasn't about sovereignty—it was about debt. Texas owed $10 million and had no way to pay. Statehood meant the U.S. assumed the debt. Congress accepted. Texas traded independence for solvency.
The Prime Meridian could've been anywhere. Paris lobbied for it. So did Berlin. The International Meridian Conference in Washington voted 22 to 1 for Greenwich — the Royal Observatory had the best star charts and most ships already used them. France abstained from the vote and refused to adopt Greenwich Mean Time until 1911. They called it "Paris Mean Time, retarded by nine minutes twenty-one seconds."
Fun Facts
Zodiac Sign
Libra
Sep 23 -- Oct 22
Air sign. Diplomatic, gracious, and fair-minded.
Birthstone
Opal
Iridescent
Symbolizes creativity, inspiration, and hope.
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