SortStack #646 — 2028-03-16
By year · Order from earliest to most recent.
- The first ancient Olympic Games are held at Olympia 776 BCE
The only event was a single sprint of about 190 meters, and the first recorded champion was Coroebus of Elis — a cook.
- Rome is founded, according to legend, by Romulus 753 BCE
Romans dated their entire calendar 'ab urbe condita' — from the founding of the city — and the legend says Romulus killed his twin brother Remus over the city walls.
- Qin Shi Huang unifies China and declares himself its first emperor 221 BCE
He standardized writing, currency, and axle widths — and was buried with an estimated 8,000 life-sized terracotta soldiers, no two faces alike.
- William the Conqueror defeats King Harold at the Battle of Hastings 1066
The Bayeux Tapestry — actually an embroidery nearly 70 meters long — tells the story, including Harold's famous (and disputed) arrow in the eye.
- The Penny Black, the world's first postage stamp, goes on sale 1840
It bore Queen Victoria's profile and no country name — and because Britain invented the stamp, British stamps still omit the country's name today.
- The Eiffel Tower opens to the public in Paris 1889
It was meant to stand for only twenty years. Its usefulness as a giant radio antenna saved it from demolition.