SortStack #1465 — 2030-06-13

By year · Order from earliest to most recent.

  1. The boy pharaoh Tutankhamun dies in Egypt 1323 BCE

    He died around age nineteen after a minor reign — yet his is the most famous tomb ever found, because grave robbers largely missed it for over 3,000 years.

  2. Julius Caesar is stabbed to death in the Roman Senate 44 BCE

    He was stabbed 23 times on the Ides of March. A comet appeared months later, which Romans took as proof his soul had ascended to the gods.

  3. Mount Vesuvius erupts and buries the Roman city of Pompeii 79

    The famous 'bodies' of Pompeii are plaster casts: excavators poured plaster into hollows left in the ash where victims' bodies had decayed.

  4. Britain passes the act abolishing slavery across most of its empire 1833

    The government borrowed a colossal sum to compensate slave owners — not the enslaved. The loan was so large it was only fully paid off in 2015.

  5. Larry Page and Sergey Brin found Google 1998

    The company started in Susan Wojcicki's garage, and its name is a misspelling of 'googol' — the number one followed by a hundred zeros.

  6. The Philae probe makes the first-ever landing on a comet 2014

    Philae's harpoons failed and it bounced twice — the first bounce lasted nearly two hours in the comet's feeble gravity before it settled in a shadowy crevice.

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