SortStack #2921 — 2034-06-08

By year · Order from earliest to most recent.

  1. 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.

  2. The last Western Roman emperor is deposed, ending the empire in the west 476

    The final emperor, Romulus Augustulus, was a teenager. The Germanic general Odoacer didn't execute him — he pensioned him off to a villa.

  3. The Great Fire destroys most of the City of London 1666

    It consumed over 13,000 houses and St. Paul's Cathedral, yet the official death toll recorded only a handful of victims — almost certainly an undercount.

  4. Isaac Newton publishes the Principia, laying out his laws of motion 1687

    The Royal Society couldn't afford to print it — it had blown its budget on a lavish history of fish — so astronomer Edmond Halley paid out of his own pocket.

  5. 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.

  6. Steve Jobs unveils the first iPhone 2007

    The demo units were so buggy that engineers mapped a single 'golden path' of actions for Jobs to follow on stage — deviating risked a crash.

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