Today In History logo TIH

On this day

October 25

Bolsheviks Seize Power: Russia's Revolution Erupts (1917). Henry V Triumphs at Agincourt: Longbows Win the Day (1415). Notable births include Jon Anderson (1944), Eirik Glambek Bøe (1975), William Grenville (1759).

Featured

Bolsheviks Seize Power: Russia's Revolution Erupts
1917Event

Bolsheviks Seize Power: Russia's Revolution Erupts

Bolshevik Red Guards occupied key positions throughout Petrograd on the night of October 25, 1917 (November 7 on the Gregorian calendar), seizing telegraph offices, bridges, and the State Bank before storming the Winter Palace. The Provisional Government collapsed with barely a fight: the famous 'storming' was largely unopposed. Kerensky had already fled. Lenin declared Soviet power that night at the Second Congress of Soviets. The Bolsheviks immediately issued decrees on peace and land redistribution. When the democratically elected Constituent Assembly met in January 1918 and refused to rubber-stamp Bolshevik decrees, Lenin dissolved it after a single day. Russia's brief experiment with democracy lasted 13 hours. A civil war between Reds and Whites followed, lasting until 1922 and killing millions.

Henry V Triumphs at Agincourt: Longbows Win the Day
1415

Henry V Triumphs at Agincourt: Longbows Win the Day

Henry V's exhausted, starving English army of roughly 6,000 men faced a French force of 12,000 to 36,000 at Agincourt on October 25, 1415. Rain had turned the recently plowed field into a quagmire. French knights in heavy armor charged through the mud and were cut down by English longbowmen firing 70,000 arrows per minute. The mud was so deep that fallen knights couldn't rise and drowned under the weight of subsequent charges. Henry ordered prisoners executed when a counterattack threatened his baggage train, a controversial decision even by medieval standards. French casualties exceeded 6,000 killed, including three dukes, five counts, and 90 barons. English losses were roughly 400. The victory gave Henry the leverage to negotiate the Treaty of Troyes, which named him heir to the French throne.

Leyte Gulf: Largest Naval Battle Crushes Japan
1944

Leyte Gulf: Largest Naval Battle Crushes Japan

The Battle of Leyte Gulf, fought over four days beginning October 23, 1944, was the largest naval battle in history. It involved 367 ships, 1,800 aircraft, and nearly 200,000 personnel across four separate engagements spread over 100,000 square miles of the Philippine Sea. Japan committed virtually every remaining warship in a desperate gamble to destroy the American landing force at Leyte. The plan nearly worked: Admiral Kurita's Center Force broke through San Bernardino Strait and surprised a group of escort carriers, sinking one before inexplicably turning back. Japan lost 26 warships, including the super-battleship Musashi. The battle also saw the first organized use of kamikaze attacks, as Japanese pilots deliberately crashed their planes into American ships. Japan's navy effectively ceased to exist as a fighting force.

Grenada Invaded: U.S. Restores Order After Coup
1983

Grenada Invaded: U.S. Restores Order After Coup

The United States and six Caribbean nations invaded Grenada on October 25, 1983, six days after a military coup overthrew and executed Prime Minister Maurice Bishop. The operation, codenamed Urgent Fury, deployed 7,600 American troops alongside token forces from Jamaica, Barbados, and other island states. Resistance came primarily from about 600 Cuban construction workers and military advisors. The invasion lasted three days. Nineteen American soldiers were killed, along with 25 Cubans and 45 Grenadians. Reagan cited the protection of 600 American medical students on the island as justification, though the students later gave mixed accounts of whether they felt threatened. The UN General Assembly condemned the invasion 108 to 9. The operation restored the pre-coup government and expelled all Cuban personnel.

China Takes UN Seat: Taiwan Expelled
1971

China Takes UN Seat: Taiwan Expelled

The United Nations General Assembly voted 76 to 35 on October 25, 1971, to seat the People's Republic of China and expel the Republic of China (Taiwan). The vote, on Resolution 2758, ended 22 years of U.S. efforts to keep Taiwan in the UN. The PRC immediately took China's permanent seat on the Security Council with its veto power. Taiwan's delegation walked out before the final vote. The change reflected a shifting global reality: dozens of newly independent nations in Africa and Asia recognized Beijing, and the U.S. itself was secretly negotiating Nixon's upcoming visit to China. Taiwan lost diplomatic recognition from most nations over the following decade. Today, only 13 countries and the Holy See formally recognize the Republic of China. Taiwan has never been readmitted to the UN.

Quote of the Day

“Only put off until tomorrow what you are willing to die having left undone.”

Pablo Picasso

Historical events

Born on October 25

Portrait of Robbie McIntosh
Robbie McIntosh 1957

Robbie McIntosh replaced Mick Green in The Pretenders at 25.

Read more

He later played with Paul McCartney, Norah Jones, and John Mayer. Session guitarists make the records you remember. You don't remember them.

Portrait of Nancy Cartwright
Nancy Cartwright 1957

Nancy Cartwright has voiced Bart Simpson for 35 years, recording lines in the same studio since 1989.

Read more

She's 66, still playing a 10-year-old boy. She's been paid $300,000 per episode since 2008. She's earned over $60 million saying "Eat my shorts."

Portrait of Chris Norman
Chris Norman 1950

Chris Norman rose to international fame as the raspy-voiced frontman of the rock band Smokie, defining the soft rock…

Read more

sound of the 1970s with hits like Living Next Door to Alice. His distinctive vocal style propelled the group to the top of European charts and secured his enduring status as a staple of British pop-rock radio.

Portrait of Bob Knight
Bob Knight 1940

Bob Knight threw a chair across the court during a 1985 game.

Read more

He was ejected. He won three national championships at Indiana and 902 games total. He choked a player during practice in 1997. The university fired him in 2000 after he grabbed a student who called him by his last name. He never apologized for any of it.

Portrait of Levi Eshkol
Levi Eshkol 1895

Levi Eshkol was Israel's prime minister when the Six-Day War started in 1967.

Read more

He didn't want the war. His generals pressured him. He hesitated, then authorized the preemptive strike that tripled Israel's territory in less than a week. He died two years later, before the consequences fully emerged. The territories are still occupied. The hesitant prime minister who changed the map.

Portrait of Thomas Babington Macaulay
Thomas Babington Macaulay 1800

Thomas Babington Macaulay shaped the British imperial identity through his influential Minute on Indian Education,…

Read more

which mandated English as the medium of instruction for colonial schools. His prolific historical writing and political career solidified the Whig interpretation of history, framing the British parliamentary system as the inevitable pinnacle of human progress.

Portrait of Robert Stirling
Robert Stirling 1790

Robert Stirling was a Scottish minister who invented an engine in 1816 that ran on external heat instead of internal combustion.

Read more

It was quieter, safer, and less efficient than steam. Nobody used it. 150 years later NASA put Stirling engines on spacecraft because they work in a vacuum. The pastor never knew.

Portrait of Maria Feodorovna
Maria Feodorovna 1759

Maria Feodorovna was a German princess who converted to Orthodoxy to marry the future Paul I of Russia.

Read more

Her husband was paranoid, erratic, and possibly insane. He was strangled in a coup five years into his reign. Their son Alexander became tsar. She lived another 27 years as dowager empress, influencing policy and protecting her surviving children. She outlived the husband who terrified her by decades.

Portrait of Giuliano de' Medici
Giuliano de' Medici 1453

Giuliano de' Medici was Lorenzo the Magnificent's younger brother.

Read more

He was 25, handsome, popular. The Pazzi family stabbed him 19 times during Easter Mass in Florence Cathedral. Lorenzo survived with a neck wound. Giuliano died on the church floor. Florence hanged the conspirators from palazzo windows. The Medici tightened their grip on the city.

Portrait of Louis II
Louis II 1330

Louis II inherited Flanders at age 16 and spent 38 years fighting off French kings, English claims, and rebellious cities.

Read more

Ghent revolted three times. He crushed them at the Battle of Westrozebeke in 1382, killing 26,000 Flemish rebels. He died two years later without a son. Flanders passed to his son-in-law, the Duke of Burgundy. Everything he fought for, gone with his bloodline.

Died on October 25

Portrait of Phil Lesh
Phil Lesh 2024

Phil Lesh played trumpet until he met Jerry Garcia.

Read more

He'd never touched a bass before joining the Grateful Dead. He approached it like a melodic instrument, playing counterpoint instead of roots. He played 2,300 Dead shows over 30 years. After Garcia died, he kept playing. He died at 84 having never stopped searching for the next note.

Portrait of Jack Bruce
Jack Bruce 2014

Jack Bruce sang and played bass in Cream while fighting with Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker so viciously they broke up after two years.

Read more

He'd trained as a classical cellist. He treated the bass like a lead instrument, which infuriated everyone and changed rock music. He kept playing for 50 years. The fighting never stopped.

Portrait of Richard Harris
Richard Harris 2002

Richard Harris was fired from Gladiator for being too sick, replaced by his friend.

Read more

He died filming Harry Potter, doing scenes from a wheelchair between takes. He'd signed for three films. They had to recast Dumbledore mid-franchise. He finished his scenes anyway. Never missed a day.

Portrait of Sadako Sasaki
Sadako Sasaki 1955

Sadako Sasaki was two when the bomb fell on Hiroshima, a mile from her home.

Read more

She seemed fine. At 11, she developed leukemia. She folded paper cranes in the hospital — Japanese tradition said 1,000 cranes would grant a wish. She made 644 before she died. Her classmates folded the rest.

Holidays & observances

Lithuania's constitution took effect at 7 p.m.

Lithuania's constitution took effect at 7 p.m. on this day in 1992, three years after declaring independence from the Soviet Union. Citizens voted 75% in favor despite Russian troops still occupying parts of the country. The document established Lithuanian as the only official language and banned foreign military bases on Lithuanian soil. Russia didn't withdraw its last soldiers until 1993. The constitution remains one of the few in Europe that can only be amended by referendum.

The Roman Catholic Calendar carries a feast list for each day drawn from centuries of canonization decisions, local t…

The Roman Catholic Calendar carries a feast list for each day drawn from centuries of canonization decisions, local traditions, and martyrologies. The "RC Saints feast days" entries in historical databases often represent a day's collective saints — a dozen or more figures whose individual entries were merged for practical reasons. Each saint represents a community that kept a name alive: a diocese that celebrated a local founder, a religious order that honored its patron, a region where a martyr's tomb drew pilgrims. The calendar is a compressed map of where Christianity spread and who mattered to whom.

Crispin and Crispinian were brothers who preached Christianity while working as shoemakers in Roman Gaul.

Crispin and Crispinian were brothers who preached Christianity while working as shoemakers in Roman Gaul. They gave shoes to the poor. The Roman emperor Maximian had them tortured — thrown in a river with millstones around their necks, boiled in lead, beheaded. They're the patron saints of cobblers, tanners, and leatherworkers. Their feast day is October 25th. Shakespeare put them in Henry V. "We few, we happy few, we band of brothers" is spoken on the Feast of Crispian.

The Day of the Romanian Army is October 25, the date in 1944 when Romanian forces alongside Soviet troops liberated t…

The Day of the Romanian Army is October 25, the date in 1944 when Romanian forces alongside Soviet troops liberated the city of Carei — the last Romanian territory under Hungarian-German control. Romania had entered the war on the Axis side in 1941, then switched sides in August 1944 after a coup toppled Ion Antonescu. Romanian soldiers then fought both their former German allies and retreating Hungarian forces for the rest of the war. An army holiday that marks a reversal of alliances is a particular kind of commemoration.

Kazakhstan declared sovereignty in October 1990, a year before the Soviet Union officially dissolved.

Kazakhstan declared sovereignty in October 1990, a year before the Soviet Union officially dissolved. Republic Day marks that declaration. The country that emerged was the ninth largest in the world by area — larger than Western Europe — with enormous hydrocarbon reserves, 130 ethnic groups, and a political system that concentrated power in Nursultan Nazarbayev, who had been Communist Party First Secretary. Nazarbayev governed until 2019 and named the capital city after himself. Republic Day celebrates independence; what independence has meant in practice is more complicated.

Taiwan marks the day it stopped being Japanese.

Taiwan marks the day it stopped being Japanese. October 25, 1945: after 50 years of colonial rule, Japan formally handed Taiwan to the Republic of China. Retrocession Day was a celebration—at first. Then came martial law, massacres, and authoritarian rule from the same government they'd welcomed. Now the holiday is controversial. Many Taiwanese see it as trading one colonial master for another. The government downplays it. Schools are open. It's independence from the wrong country.

Thanksgiving in the US Virgin Islands is celebrated on the third Monday of October, not the fourth Thursday of November.

Thanksgiving in the US Virgin Islands is celebrated on the third Monday of October, not the fourth Thursday of November. The islands have been a US territory since 1917, when the United States purchased them from Denmark for million to keep Germany from acquiring them during World War I. The islanders adopted American Thanksgiving but set their own date during a cooler month. The tourism industry built its own frame around the holiday. USVI Thanksgiving has become distinct enough from mainland Thanksgiving to be essentially its own thing.

Romania celebrates Armed Forces Day on October 25th, marking the day in 1944 when Romanian troops completed the liber…

Romania celebrates Armed Forces Day on October 25th, marking the day in 1944 when Romanian troops completed the liberation of Romanian territory from Axis occupation. Romania had switched sides two months earlier, joining the Allies after King Michael I arrested dictator Ion Antonescu. Romanian forces then fought alongside the Soviets, losing 170,000 men pushing into Hungary and Czechoslovakia. The Soviets occupied Romania anyway.

Slovenia marks Sovereignty Day on the anniversary of the 1991 withdrawal of the last Yugoslav People's Army soldiers …

Slovenia marks Sovereignty Day on the anniversary of the 1991 withdrawal of the last Yugoslav People's Army soldiers from Slovenian territory. Slovenia had declared independence in June. A ten-day war followed. The Yugoslav army retreated by October 25th. Slovenia was free. It joined the EU in 2004. The entire country has a population smaller than Houston. It won independence in less time than most wars take to start.

Grenada's Thanksgiving falls on October 25th, the anniversary of the 1983 U.S.

Grenada's Thanksgiving falls on October 25th, the anniversary of the 1983 U.S. invasion that ended a Marxist coup. Seven thousand American troops landed after the coup's leaders executed Prime Minister Maurice Bishop and 11 others. Grenadians celebrate with church services and a feast, but they're thanking God for deliverance, not harvest. The holiday replaced Independence Day celebrations for several years. Nineteen American soldiers died in the invasion. It lasted four days.

Taiwan observes Retrocession Day to commemorate the 1945 end of Japanese colonial rule and the island’s return to Chi…

Taiwan observes Retrocession Day to commemorate the 1945 end of Japanese colonial rule and the island’s return to Chinese administration. Simultaneously, the nation honors the defenders of the Battle of Guningtou, whose 1949 victory against invading Communist forces prevented a total takeover and secured the survival of the Republic of China government on the island.

Taiwan marks the day it was returned to Republic of China control in 1945 after 50 years of Japanese rule.

Taiwan marks the day it was returned to Republic of China control in 1945 after 50 years of Japanese rule. The governor arrived to find Japanese infrastructure, Japanese currency still in circulation, and a population that spoke Japanese better than Mandarin. Within two years, tensions between mainland arrivals and local Taiwanese erupted in the 228 Incident, killing thousands. Retrocession Day was a national holiday until 2000. Now it's observed quietly.

Chrysanthus and Daria were Roman martyrs, killed under Emperor Numerian around 283 AD.

Chrysanthus and Daria were Roman martyrs, killed under Emperor Numerian around 283 AD. Chrysanthus was a young Roman convert; Daria was his wife, a Vestal Virgin he converted and married. According to tradition, they were buried alive in a sand pit on the Via Salaria after converting many of the soldiers sent to execute them. A cult grew around the burial site. Gregory of Tours mentioned it in the 6th century. Their feast day has been observed since at least the 9th century, which means the story has been told for 1,700 years.

French citizens celebrated the beetroot on this day under the Republican Calendar, honoring the humble root vegetable…

French citizens celebrated the beetroot on this day under the Republican Calendar, honoring the humble root vegetable as a vital agricultural staple. By elevating the beet to a place of seasonal reverence, the radical government promoted domestic food security and reduced reliance on colonial sugar imports during the Napoleonic Wars.

Grenada celebrates Thanksgiving in October because of an invasion.

Grenada celebrates Thanksgiving in October because of an invasion. On October 25, 1983, U.S. troops landed to overthrow a Marxist military government that had executed the prime minister. The operation lasted four days. Nineteen Americans died. Grenada made the date a national holiday and called it Thanksgiving Day. They're the only country that celebrates Thanksgiving specifically to commemorate being invaded. Americans barely remember it. Grenadians get a day off work every year.

Nevadans celebrate their statehood every year on the last Friday of October, honoring the 1864 admission of the Silve…

Nevadans celebrate their statehood every year on the last Friday of October, honoring the 1864 admission of the Silver State into the Union. By shifting the observance from the actual October 31 anniversary to a Friday, the state ensures a long weekend that boosts local tourism and encourages community participation in parades and historical festivities.

Basque Country Day commemorates a 1978 referendum when 90% voted for autonomy from Spain.

Basque Country Day commemorates a 1978 referendum when 90% voted for autonomy from Spain. Franco had banned the Basque language for 36 years — speaking it in public meant arrest. Within a year of the referendum, Basque became co-official with Spanish in schools and government. The region gained its own parliament, police force, and tax system. Today Basque is taught to 300,000 students. Half the population under 35 speaks it fluently.