Soldiers Fire on Tiananmen: Protests Crushed in Blood
Chinese military forces opened fire on pro-democracy protesters in and around Tiananmen Square in Beijing on the night of June 3-4, 1989, after seven weeks of peaceful demonstrations that had drawn over a million participants at their peak. The People's Liberation Army deployed tanks and infantry armed with assault rifles against unarmed civilians. Casualty estimates range from several hundred to several thousand dead; the Chinese Red Cross initially reported 2,600 dead before retracting the figure under government pressure. The protests had begun in April as mourning for reformist leader Hu Yaobang and evolved into demands for democracy, press freedom, and accountability. The government imposed martial law on May 20. The iconic "Tank Man" photograph of a lone citizen blocking a column of tanks became one of the most recognizable images of the 20th century.
June 4, 1989
37 years ago
Key Figures & Places
What Else Happened on June 4
Chinese astronomers already knew it was coming. They'd tracked the sun for generations, mapped its moods, built careers on predicting its behavior. But when the…
Henry III was 22 years old when he inherited an empire stretching from Denmark to southern Italy — and he actually made it work. His father Conrad II left him a…
The world's first food monopoly wasn't wine. Wasn't bread. It was mold. King Charles VI handed the village of Roquefort-sur-Soulzon exclusive rights to ripen th…
Villagers from Kent and Sussex stormed Bayham Abbey and occupied it for a week, protesting Cardinal Wolsey's order to dissolve the monastery and redirect its we…
Lightning hit St Paul's steeple on a June afternoon and within hours, 500 years of medieval stonework were gone. The blaze burned so hot that molten lead from t…
The colony was gone before anyone could explain it. Raleigh never actually set foot on Roanoke Island — he funded the 1584 expedition but stayed in England, sen…
Talk to History
Have a conversation with historical figures who witnessed this era. Ask questions, explore perspectives, and bring history to life.