The Hague Court Established: Nations Seek Peaceful Resolution
The Netherlands Senate ratified an 1899 peace conference decree, formally creating the Permanent Court of Arbitration at The Hague. This institution gave nations a structured alternative to war for resolving disputes and became the ancestor of the International Court of Justice, embedding the principle of peaceful arbitration into the fabric of international law.
February 6, 1900
126 years ago
What Else Happened on February 6
Julius I became pope in 337 by waiting. The previous pope died. The Roman clergy wanted Julius. But Emperor Constantius II wanted someone else — someone who'd s…
Hormizd IV lost his throne because he tried to tax the nobility and protect Christians. His brothers-in-law led the coup — Vistahm and Vinduyih, both military c…
The Vatican needed eight years to figure out who controlled the Philippines' souls. Spain claimed it. Portugal said the islands fell on their side of the Pope's…
Charles II became king of exactly one-third of his supposed realm. Six days after his father's execution, Scotland's Parliament declared him monarch. England re…
James II ascended the throne following his brother Charles II’s death, immediately sparking intense political friction by openly practicing Catholicism in a sta…
Dandara of Palmares chose death over re-enslavement after her capture, cementing her status as a defiant symbol of resistance within Brazil’s Quilombo communiti…
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