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On this day

February 10

Treaty of Paris Signed: Britain Dominates North America (1763). Baghdad Falls: Mongols End Abbasid Caliphate (1258). Notable births include Bob Iger (1951), Chloë Grace Moretz (1997), Boris Pasternak (1890).

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Treaty of Paris Signed: Britain Dominates North America
1763Event

Treaty of Paris Signed: Britain Dominates North America

Britain, France, and Spain signed the Treaty of Paris on February 10, 1763, ending the Seven Years' War and fundamentally redrawing the map of North America. France surrendered virtually all of its territory east of the Mississippi River to Britain, including Canada and the Ohio Valley, while ceding Louisiana west of the Mississippi to Spain as compensation for Spain's loss of Florida to Britain. The treaty eliminated France as a North American power and left Britain dominant from Hudson Bay to the Gulf of Mexico. The immediate consequence was catastrophic: Britain's massive war debt led directly to the taxation policies that provoked the American Revolution within twelve years. For Native Americans, the loss of France removed their primary counterweight against British colonial expansion, leaving them facing a single imperial power with little incentive to negotiate. Pontiac's War erupted within months.

Baghdad Falls: Mongols End Abbasid Caliphate
1258

Baghdad Falls: Mongols End Abbasid Caliphate

Hulagu Khan's Mongol army breached Baghdad's walls on February 10, 1258, after a siege of just twelve days. What followed was one of history's most devastating sackings. The Abbasid Caliph al-Musta'sim was executed by being rolled in a carpet and trampled by horses, a method that avoided spilling royal blood, which the Mongols considered taboo. Estimates of civilian deaths range from 200,000 to over a million. The Mongols destroyed the House of Wisdom, the greatest library in the Islamic world, throwing so many books into the Tigris that the river reportedly ran black with ink for days. Irrigation canals that had sustained Mesopotamian agriculture for millennia were systematically destroyed. Baghdad, which had been the intellectual and cultural capital of the Islamic world for five centuries, never recovered its former prominence. The sacking marked the end of the Islamic Golden Age and shifted the center of Islamic power permanently westward to Cairo.

Deep Blue Wins: AI Defeats Chess Champion
1996

Deep Blue Wins: AI Defeats Chess Champion

IBM's Deep Blue defeated world chess champion Garry Kasparov in the first game of their 1996 match in Philadelphia, the first time a computer had beaten a reigning champion under standard tournament conditions. Kasparov recovered to win the match 4-2, but the psychological damage was done. The rematch in May 1997 produced the result that shook the world: Deep Blue won the six-game series 3.5 to 2.5. Kasparov accused IBM of cheating, demanding to see the computer's logs, which IBM refused. He was particularly suspicious of a move in Game 2 that seemed too creative for a machine. IBM dismantled Deep Blue after the match and never agreed to a rematch. The victory demonstrated that brute computational force, evaluating 200 million positions per second, could overcome human intuition in the domain humans considered their ultimate intellectual benchmark. Chess has never been the same; today the weakest smartphone engine can defeat any human grandmaster.

Cold War Exchange: Powers Swapped for Abel
1962

Cold War Exchange: Powers Swapped for Abel

American U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers was exchanged for Soviet master spy Rudolf Abel on the Glienicke Bridge between West Berlin and Potsdam on February 10, 1962. Powers had been shot down over the Soviet Union on May 1, 1960, during a high-altitude reconnaissance mission the US initially denied existed. Eisenhower was forced to admit the truth when the Soviets produced both the pilot and the mostly intact aircraft. The incident torpedoed a planned Paris summit between Eisenhower and Khrushchev. Abel, born William Fisher, had run a Soviet spy network in New York for nine years before being caught through a defecting assistant. The bridge exchange established the Cold War's unwritten protocol for resolving espionage crises: captured agents were assets to be traded, not political prisoners to be punished. The Glienicke Bridge became known as the 'Bridge of Spies,' hosting several subsequent Cold War exchanges.

HMS Dreadnought Launched: Naval Warfare Transformed
1906

HMS Dreadnought Launched: Naval Warfare Transformed

HMS Dreadnought launched in February 1906 and made every other warship on Earth obsolete overnight. Ten 12-inch guns, all centerline mounted. Steam turbines instead of reciprocating engines — faster than anything afloat. Britain built her in a year and four months, half the usual time, specifically to shock the world. It worked. Germany, France, Russia, Japan — everyone scrambled to build their own. The global arms race that helped trigger World War I started with a single hull sliding into Portsmouth Harbor. Britain had the world's largest navy when Dreadnought launched. By making their own fleet obsolete, they'd reset the count to zero and dared everyone to catch up.

Quote of the Day

“Man is born to live and not to prepare to live.”

Historical events

Born on February 10

Portrait of Chloë Grace Moretz
Chloë Grace Moretz 1997

Chloë Grace Moretz was eleven when she played Hit-Girl in Kick-Ass, a role so brutal and so good that it made critics…

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argue about child actors, screen violence, and Hollywood exploitation all at once. She'd been acting since age seven. Carrie, If I Stay, The Miseducation of Cameron Post — she kept taking roles that required her to do more than look the part. She was twenty-one when The Miseducation of Cameron Post won Sundance.

Portrait of Son Na-eun
Son Na-eun 1994

Son Na-eun was born in Seoul in 1994, the year South Korea's internet infrastructure exploded and K-pop agencies…

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started scouting elementary schools. She trained for three years before debuting with Apink at 17. The group's "cute concept" seemed outdated in 2011 — girl crush dominated, sexy concepts ruled. They stuck with it anyway. Seven years later, Apink became the longest-running active girl group in K-pop history without a single member leaving. Na-eun pivoted to acting while still performing, booking lead roles that most idol-actresses don't get until after their groups disband. She left the agency in 2022 but stayed in the group. That almost never happens.

Portrait of Sooyoung
Sooyoung 1990

Sooyoung joined SM Entertainment at 13 after a single audition.

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They put her in a training program with 11 other girls. Five years later, nine of them debuted as Girls' Generation. The group sold 4.4 million albums. They became the first Korean girl group to reach 100 million YouTube views. She was the tall one — 5'7" in a country where the average woman is 5'3". That height got her cast in dramas before she could legally drive. She's acted in 15 shows since. But in 2007, when the group debuted, nobody knew if Korean pop music could travel. It did.

Portrait of Choi Si Won
Choi Si Won 1987

Choi Si-won was born in Seoul in 1987 to one of South Korea's wealthiest families.

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His father owned a pharmaceutical company. Most K-pop idols train for years in company dorms, living on instant noodles. Si-won showed up to SM Entertainment auditions in a chauffeur-driven car. He joined Super Junior anyway, one of the largest boy bands ever assembled — thirteen members at debut. The group sold millions across Asia while he quietly built a second career as an actor and UNICEF ambassador. He never hid where he came from. He just worked harder because of it.

Portrait of Andrew Johnson
Andrew Johnson 1981

Andrew Johnson was born in Bedford in 1981.

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He's 5'8" and played striker his entire career. Birmingham City paid £6 million for him in 2006. He scored 11 goals in his first 13 games. Crystal Palace fans still sing his name — he scored 87 goals for them across two spells. He never played for England's senior team despite that record. He retired at 31 after knee surgeries. Small strikers don't last long at the top level. He proved they can score plenty before they go.

Portrait of Cliff Burton
Cliff Burton 1962

Cliff Burton redefined heavy metal bass by introducing complex, melodic arrangements and classical influences to Metallica’s thrash sound.

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His virtuosic approach on albums like Master of Puppets pushed the genre toward greater musical sophistication. Though his life ended prematurely in 1986, his innovative techniques remain the blueprint for metal bassists today.

Portrait of Jim Cramer
Jim Cramer 1955

Jim Cramer was born in 1955 in Wyndmoor, Pennsylvania.

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He made millions as a hedge fund manager in the '90s — 24% average annual returns over 14 years. Then he walked away from managing money to yell about it on TV instead. His CNBC show "Mad Money" features sound effects, props, and a big red button labeled "Don't Buy! Don't Buy!" He's been called both a market genius and a contrarian indicator. His 2008 Bear Stearns call — "Don't be silly!" six days before it collapsed — became the most replayed clip of the financial crisis. He's still on air five nights a week.

Portrait of Lee Hsien Loong
Lee Hsien Loong 1952

Lee Hsien Loong steered Singapore through two decades of rapid economic evolution and the global upheaval of the…

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COVID-19 pandemic as the nation's third Prime Minister. By prioritizing digital infrastructure and high-tech manufacturing, he solidified the city-state’s position as a global financial hub, ensuring its continued relevance in an increasingly competitive international market.

Portrait of Bob Iger
Bob Iger 1951

Bob Iger was the president of ABC when Disney bought the network in 1995.

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By 2005 he was CEO of Disney, which owned a library of fairy tales and theme parks but hadn't produced a meaningful animated hit in years. He called Steve Jobs that year before the Pixar deal was announced and told him he'd watched a presentation that made him realize how wrong the companies' relationship had been. Jobs told him he was the only person at Disney who'd noticed. They did the Pixar deal in four months.

Portrait of Walter Houser Brattain
Walter Houser Brattain 1902

Walter Brattain was born in Xiamen, China, where his parents taught science at a missionary school.

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He grew up on a cattle ranch in Washington State. At Bell Labs in 1947, he and two colleagues built the first working transistor using gold foil and a paperclip. They demonstrated it on December 23rd. Nobody outside the room understood what it meant. Every computer, phone, and digital device since contains billions of them. He shared the Nobel Prize in 1956.

Portrait of John Franklin Enders
John Franklin Enders 1897

John Franklin Enders figured out how to grow viruses in test tubes.

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Before him, you needed living animals or fertilized eggs. His method used human tissue cultures instead. It worked. In 1954, Jonas Salk used Enders' technique to develop the polio vaccine. That vaccine prevented 350,000 cases a year in the U.S. alone. Enders won the Nobel Prize in 1954. He was also the first to isolate the measles virus and develop its vaccine. Two diseases, nearly eradicated, because he found a way to grow their causes in a lab dish.

Portrait of Harold Macmillan
Harold Macmillan 1894

Harold Macmillan was born into a publishing fortune in 1894.

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Shy, bookish, headed for a quiet life in the family business. Then World War I. He was wounded three times. At the Somme, he lay in a shell hole for hours pretending to be dead, reading Aeschylus in Greek to stay calm. He survived. Thirty years later he became Prime Minister and told the British they'd "never had it so good" — during the biggest economic boom in their history. The man who'd faked death in a trench presided over prosperity. He granted independence to seventeen African nations in six years. The empire didn't collapse. He dismantled it on purpose.

Portrait of Boris Pasternak
Boris Pasternak 1890

Boris Pasternak was born in Moscow in 1890.

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His parents wanted him to be a composer. He studied music for six years, then quit abruptly — said he lacked absolute pitch. Switched to philosophy. Then poetry. Published his first collection at 24. Forty years later he wrote *Doctor Zhivago*. The Soviet Union banned it. He won the Nobel Prize anyway, in 1958. The government forced him to decline. He died two years later, never having seen his novel published in his own country.

Portrait of Adelina Patti
Adelina Patti 1843

Adelina Patti was born in Madrid in 1843, backstage at a theater where her parents were performing.

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She sang her first public concert at seven. At sixteen, she made her operatic debut in New York and became the highest-paid singer in the world. She earned $5,000 per performance in the 1880s—about $150,000 today. Composers wrote roles specifically for her voice. She performed for presidents and queens. She sang her final public concert at seventy-four. Her voice was insured for more than her life.

Portrait of Charles Lamb
Charles Lamb 1775

Charles Lamb redefined the personal essay through his witty, melancholic contributions to the London Magazine under the pseudonym Elia.

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By blending intimate autobiography with sharp literary criticism, he transformed the essay from a dry academic exercise into a conversational art form that influenced generations of English prose writers.

Died on February 10

Portrait of Stuart Hall
Stuart Hall 2014

The man who theorized "cultural identity" as fluid and constructed — not fixed — had lived it.

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Born in Jamaica to a middle-class family that prized whiteness, he left at 19 on a Rhodes scholarship. Never went back. He made Britain reckon with race and immigration through the lens of culture, not biology. His 1978 essay on "mugging" showed how media creates moral panic. Reporters still don't realize they're following his playbook.

Portrait of Wilhelm Röntgen
Wilhelm Röntgen 1923

Wilhelm Röntgen discovered X-rays on November 8, 1895, by accident — he was experimenting with cathode ray tubes when…

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he noticed a fluorescent screen across the room glowing even though the tube was shielded. He spent six weeks alone in his lab, telling no one, working out what he'd found. The first X-ray image was of his wife's hand. She looked at the image of her bones and said she'd seen her own death. He won the first Nobel Prize in Physics in 1901.

Portrait of Abdul Hamid II Ottoman sultan
Abdul Hamid II Ottoman sultan 1918

Abdul Hamid II died in Istanbul on February 10, 1918.

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He'd been sultan for 33 years until his own brother deposed him in 1909. He spent his last decade under house arrest in a palace, watching the empire he'd ruled collapse in World War I. He'd built the Hejaz Railway to Mecca, established the first Ottoman secret police, and suspended the constitution twice. He was paranoid about assassination—wouldn't let anyone photograph him after 1890, kept hundreds of caged birds because their noise would mask footsteps. He outlived his reign by nine years but not his empire. It would be gone within eight months of his death.

Portrait of Joseph Lister
Joseph Lister 1912

Joseph Lister read Louis Pasteur's germ theory papers in 1865 and immediately thought of hospitals.

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At the time, post-surgical death rates ran around 45 percent — patients survived operations only to die of infection in the ward. Lister began spraying carbolic acid on surgical instruments, wounds, and the air in operating theaters. Death rates dropped to 15 percent within two years. He couldn't convince British surgeons for another decade. American surgeons adopted it faster.

Portrait of Alexander Pushkin
Alexander Pushkin 1837

Alexander Pushkin's wife was considered the most beautiful woman in St.

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Petersburg, and a French officer named d'Anthès spent two years publicly pursuing her. Pushkin challenged him to a duel on January 27, 1837. D'Anthès shot first. Pushkin lingered for two days, refusing to let his friends seek revenge, then died at thirty-seven. He'd essentially invented modern Russian literature in his spare time — Eugene Onegin, Boris Godunov, The Bronze Horseman. The duel was over a flirtation. The loss was irreplaceable.

Portrait of Montesquieu
Montesquieu 1755

Montesquieu published The Spirit of the Laws in 1748 and his publisher put it out anonymously — the ideas were too…

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dangerous to attach a name to. He argued that political liberty required separating governmental power into three branches so none could dominate the others. The framers of the U.S. Constitution read him carefully. James Madison cited him in the Federalist Papers by name. The architecture of American democracy runs through a French nobleman who lived by a vineyard in Bordeaux.

Portrait of Frederick II
Frederick II 1471

Frederick II died in 1471 after ruling Brandenburg for 45 years.

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He'd inherited a bankrupt territory torn by civil war. The nobles wouldn't pay taxes. The cities wouldn't obey orders. He spent two decades just establishing control. Then he did something unusual for a German prince: he stayed neutral. While neighbors bankrupted themselves in endless wars, he built roads. He standardized weights and measures. He actually enforced contracts. Brandenburg became boring. It also became solvent. His nickname was "Iron Tooth" because of his temperament, not his military record. Three centuries later, his successors would use that stable foundation to build Prussia. He never commanded a major battle.

Portrait of Umar II
Umar II 720

Umar II died in 720 after just two and a half years as caliph.

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He'd banned alcohol, stopped forced conversions, and returned confiscated property to non-Muslims. His own family hated him for it. He cut his salary to two dirhams a day and lived in a mud-brick house. When he died at 37, possibly poisoned, the treasury had more money than when he started. The Umayyads went back to conquest and luxury the moment he was gone.

Holidays & observances

Italy marks the day thousands of Italians vanished into foibe — natural sinkholes in the Karst plateau — between 1943…

Italy marks the day thousands of Italians vanished into foibe — natural sinkholes in the Karst plateau — between 1943 and 1945. Yugoslav Partisans threw bodies into these limestone pits, sometimes while people were still alive. Estimates range from 3,000 to 11,000 dead. Another 250,000 Italians fled Istria and Dalmatia after the war, abandoning homes their families had occupied for generations. Italy didn't talk about it for fifty years. The border had shifted. The victims were on the wrong side of Cold War politics. Parliament finally established this memorial day in 2004. The foibe are still there, some sealed, some open. Divers still find bones.

Arabian Leopard Day marks one of the rarest big cats on Earth — fewer than 200 left in the wild, scattered across Yem…

Arabian Leopard Day marks one of the rarest big cats on Earth — fewer than 200 left in the wild, scattered across Yemen, Oman, and Saudi Arabia. They're smaller than African leopards, adapted to survive on almost no water, hunting at night in mountains where temperatures swing 60 degrees between dawn and dusk. Bedouins called them *nimr*, considered them spirits of the desert. Now they're mostly camera trap ghosts. Saudi Arabia's breeding program has 50 in captivity. The goal is reintroduction, but there's almost no habitat left. You can't reintroduce an animal to a place that no longer exists for it.

The Kurdish Authors Union formed in 1970 in Baghdad, when writing in Kurdish was still dangerous.

The Kurdish Authors Union formed in 1970 in Baghdad, when writing in Kurdish was still dangerous. Iraq had banned Kurdish-language schools. Publishing Kurdish books could get you arrested. The union met anyway. They smuggled manuscripts across borders. They printed books in basements. After the 1991 uprising, they moved to Erbil and went public. Today they represent over 400 writers. Most of them started writing when it was illegal. They celebrate the day they decided the risk was worth it.

Saint Charalampe's Day honors a 113-year-old priest who refused to renounce Christianity under Roman persecution.

Saint Charalampe's Day honors a 113-year-old priest who refused to renounce Christianity under Roman persecution. When soldiers came for him in Magnesia, he was too frail to stand trial. They tortured him anyway. The governor watched him heal other prisoners between his own beatings. Eventually the executioner converted. Then the governor's daughter. The Romans killed them all, but the governor himself converted at the execution. Orthodox Christians celebrate him on February 10th as the patron saint of plague protection. During medieval outbreaks, his icon was carried through villages. The logic: a man who survived that much suffering could intercede against disease. Desperation finds its own saints.

Eritreans observe Fenkil Day to honor the 1990 liberation of the strategic port city of Massawa from Ethiopian control.

Eritreans observe Fenkil Day to honor the 1990 liberation of the strategic port city of Massawa from Ethiopian control. This victory crippled the Ethiopian military’s supply lines, forcing a shift in the war that ultimately secured Eritrean independence three years later. The holiday serves as a national reminder of the tactical ingenuity required to achieve sovereignty.

Malta celebrates the shipwreck that gave them Christianity.

Malta celebrates the shipwreck that gave them Christianity. Paul of Tarsus, prisoner of Rome, was being transported to trial when his ship went down in a storm off the coast. All 276 people aboard survived. The locals took them in for three months while they built a new ship. Paul healed the governor's father. He preached. When he left, the island was Christian. Malta's been Catholic ever since. They commemorate a disaster that became their founding myth. The storm that changed everything.

Scholastica, Benedict's twin sister, ran a monastery three miles from his.

Scholastica, Benedict's twin sister, ran a monastery three miles from his. They met once a year to talk theology. At their last meeting, she asked him to stay longer. He refused — his rules forbade it. She prayed, and a thunderstorm erupted so violent he couldn't leave. Three days later she died. He saw her soul rise as a dove. The woman who couldn't break his rules asked God to do it instead.

Malta commemorates the arrival of the Apostle Paul, who survived a violent shipwreck on the island’s shores around 60 AD.

Malta commemorates the arrival of the Apostle Paul, who survived a violent shipwreck on the island’s shores around 60 AD. This event introduced Christianity to the archipelago, establishing the faith that remains central to Maltese cultural identity and social structure today. Local processions and traditional festivities honor this foundational moment in the nation's religious history.

Saint Austreberta's feast day honors a seventh-century Frankish abbess who ran away twice to become a nun.

Saint Austreberta's feast day honors a seventh-century Frankish abbess who ran away twice to become a nun. Her noble parents arranged a marriage. She fled to a monastery. They dragged her back. She escaped again, this time successfully taking vows at Pavilly Abbey in Normandy. She became abbess and founded a second convent. The church celebrates her not for miracles or martyrdom, but for choosing religious life over family duty in an era when women had almost no choice at all.

Fenkil Day marks Eritrea's capture of the port city of Massawa on February 10, 1990.

Fenkil Day marks Eritrea's capture of the port city of Massawa on February 10, 1990. The Eritrean People's Liberation Front took the city from Ethiopian forces after three days of fighting. Ethiopia had held the port for decades. Massawa was the country's only access to the Red Sea. Without it, Ethiopia became landlocked. The battle killed over 20,000 Ethiopian soldiers. Eritrea declared full independence three years later. Ethiopia still has no coastline.

The Foibe massacres killed thousands of Italians in 1943-1945.

The Foibe massacres killed thousands of Italians in 1943-1945. Yugoslav partisans threw them into karst sinkholes — foibe — some while still alive. After the war, 350,000 Italians fled Istria and Dalmatia when the region went to Yugoslavia. Italy didn't talk about it for decades. Too complicated, too tied to fascism, too inconvenient during the Cold War. Parliament finally created this memorial day in 2004. Trieste observes it most visibly — the city absorbed the most refugees.

The Orthodox Church still uses the Julian calendar for feast days, which is why their Christmas falls on January 7th …

The Orthodox Church still uses the Julian calendar for feast days, which is why their Christmas falls on January 7th by the Gregorian calendar everyone else uses. It's not a different Christmas — it's December 25th on their calendar. The gap keeps growing. Right now it's 13 days. By 2100, it'll be 14. They know. They've debated switching for centuries. Most Orthodox churches have chosen to stay with the old calendar, even as it drifts further from the solar year.