Wikipedia:Recent additions
Appearance
This is a record of material that was recently featured on the Main Page as part of Did you know (DYK). Recently created new articles, greatly expanded former stub articles and recently promoted good articles are eligible; you can submit them for consideration.
Archives are generally grouped by month of Main Page appearance. (Currently, DYK hooks are archived according to the date and time that they were taken off the Main Page.) To find which archive contains the fact that appeared on Did you know, go to article's talk page and follow the archive link in the DYK talk page message box.
Did you know...
16 October 2024
- 00:00, 16 October 2024 (UTC)
- ... that as the 1979 computer chess game Chesmac (pictured) could not display a chessboard on screen, players had to replicate the game on a physical chessboard?
- ... that Samuel Barber said that he could not adequately play his own Piano Sonata?
- ... that geographer Michael Chisholm and contemporaries became known as "Caesar's Praetorian Guard", in reference to their teacher Gus Caesar?
- ... that Anne Morrow Lindbergh tried to warn her husband Charles Lindbergh of the backlash that his antisemitic Des Moines speech would receive?
- ... that Rose Betts wrote the song "Driving Myself Home" as a joke after a blind date, only for it to go viral on TikTok?
- ... that an art critic felt that Rooms by the Sea was one of Edward Hopper's "strangest" works?
- ... that when Swedish soccer player Beata Olsson transferred from Florida to Florida State, she said that she did not really know about the schools' rivalry?
- ... that John Passmore Edwards erected a library in memory of his mother?
- ... that researchers want Hymenophyllum axsmithii rhizomes so that they can tell whether the filmy fern was up a tree?
15 October 2024
- 00:00, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
- ... that the Niederdollendorf stone (pictured), the Grésin plaque, and the Landelinus buckle are each controversially conjectured to depict a pagan-inspired Jesus Christ?
- ... that composer Gonzalo Brenes was a politician in the National Assembly of Panama and served for seven years as Panama's secretary of culture?
- ... that the undefeated 1961 Pittsburg State Gorillas football team shut out seven opponents, featured four All-Americans, and won three national championships?
- ... that Cathy Merrick was the first woman to be elected grand chief of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs?
- ... that Maystorm, a character from Ultimate X-Men, was initially created for a variant cover for the comic X-Men?
- ... that Mike Veeck's baseball promotions include Disco Demolition Night, a game with no fans, and the world's largest pillow fight?
- ... that a clergyman from London established 87 schools in Wales in the 17th century?
- ... that Harold C. Hinton was one of the only American academics under McCarthyism to study communist China?
- ... that South African president Jacob Zuma requested a tour of a Sainsbury's supermarket during his state visit to the United Kingdom in 2010?
14 October 2024
- 00:00, 14 October 2024 (UTC)
- ... that Santa opened the 2024 Summer Paralympics closing ceremony (pictured)?
- ... that researchers speculate that cocoa butter forms crystals on sugar while chocolate is tempered?
- ... that the noken system used for voting in parts of Indonesia can produce turnouts of 100%?
- ... that for 19 years Tonya Burns had the only retired jersey number in Iowa State women's basketball history?
- ... that Northamptonshire has had ninety-two railway stations, but now has only six?
- ... that Joe Wirkkunen coached the Finland men's national ice hockey team after receiving a recommendation from Canada?
- ... that the music video for "...Well, Better Than the Alternative" uses software to render handmade paintings over live-action footage of musician Will Wood?
- ... that British conscientious objector Henry Firth died in 1918 while being held at a work camp in Dartmoor?
- ... that the ongoing premiere of Gregory Markopoulos's Eniaios started 20 years ago?
13 October 2024
- 00:00, 13 October 2024 (UTC)
- ... that Actinote zikani (specimen pictured) is one of only two butterflies on the IUCN's list of the 100 most threatened species?
- ... that cyclist Daniela Larreal competed in five Olympic Games for a country that later exiled her?
- ... that after Hitler came to power in 1933, the newspaper Hakenkreuzbanner acquired an office building and printing presses by seizing them from a Social Democratic publication?
- ... that despite having no university training, Agnes Crane described a new species of brachiopod in 1886?
- ... that chronic pain syndromes affect approximately 20 percent of people and account for 15 to 20 percent of doctor visits?
- ... that the first art exhibition in the Trade Fair Palace after it was rebuilt from a fire was named Like a Phoenix?
- ... that Arekia Bennett was inspired to organize a voter registration drive in 2017 by the 1964 Freedom Summer drive?
- ... that the Counterintelligence Group was disbanded because the unit was deemed successful in the "neutralization and prosecution of scalawags" in the Armed Forces of the Philippines?
- ... that the character Psycho Mantis in the video game Metal Gear Solid breaks the fourth wall by identifying the player's other games?
12 October 2024
- 00:00, 12 October 2024 (UTC)
- ... that Maximiliano Hernández Martínez (pictured) believed that hanging colored lights across San Salvador would cure a smallpox epidemic?
- ... that a lane behind a tenement in Edinburgh is decorated as a Wild West town?
- ... that a German pastor let a deposed East German head of state stay in his house?
- ... that the 2024 American remake of Have I Got News for You has a permanent host, something that the original show dispensed with in 2002?
- ... that when guitarist Pete Wade was 19, he moved to Nashville with $3, his suitcase, two ham sandwiches, and the telephone numbers of Don Helms and Jerry Rivers?
- ... that a tornado near Chicago was produced by a storm with a hydrodynamical helicity four times higher than the threshold favorable for tornadogenesis?
- ... that Victoria Siddall is the first woman to be appointed the director of the 168-year-old National Portrait Gallery in London?
- ... that North Korean series The Taehongdang Party Secretary was created to help promote the consumption of potatoes during a rice shortage?
- ... that a baby penguin from Australia is "an absolute unit"?
11 October 2024
- 00:00, 11 October 2024 (UTC)
- ... that because the capital of The Gambia is on a small island, its population has overflowed into Serekunda (pictured) in the nearby municipality of Kanifing?
- ... that Nancy S. Steinhardt completed her doctorate on medieval Chinese architecture before she was able to see any in person?
- ... that much of Archcliffe Fort was demolished in the 1920s to allow for expansion of a railway?
- ... that Alfred Sully, who led US forces during the Sioux Wars, was married to a Yankton Sioux woman?
- ... that The Right and the Wrong was the first feature film produced natively in Trinidad and Tobago?
- ... that a 23-day CBC strike thrust Don Goodwin into the Canadian national spotlight and into "folk-hero status"?
- ... that the lyric video for an Olivia Rodrigo song included a teaser that she would tour in support of her album Guts?
- ... that the Cosmere Roleplaying Game surpassed Frosthaven to become the most-funded tabletop game on Kickstarter in August 2024?
- ... that "Honest Ike" stole more than $200,000 from the Alabama treasury?
10 October 2024
- 00:00, 10 October 2024 (UTC)
- ... that while the objects on the Farnese Artemis (pictured) had initially been identified as female breasts, the museum housing the statue now describes them as bull scrotums?
- ... that in the history of fisheries in the Philippines, the once-dominant local municipal fisheries were supplanted first by commercial fisheries, and then by aquaculture?
- ... that Eliza Legzdina has attributed opinions of her work to the "horrification of the female body"?
- ... that the center squeeze has been blamed for costing Gary Johnson the 2016 US presidential election?
- ... that voice actress Atsuko Tanaka named several pandas?
- ... that seven people died when their helicopter struck supporting wires of a Texas TV station's tower and crashed?
- ... that Michael P. Walsh oversaw the construction of 15 buildings as the president of Boston College?
- ... that Jer Lau, who appeared in the film Over My Dead Body, also performed its theme song because the director felt his role was too minor?
- ... that the search for mammals on Booby Island was a bust?
9 October 2024
- 00:00, 9 October 2024 (UTC)
- ... that after a career as an opera singer and Broadway musical star, Winfield Blake (pictured) became a vaudeville comedian as one half of the duo Blake and Amber?
- ... that a Picasso sculpture at University Village was called "half as high and twice as sexy as the Great Sphinx of Egypt"?
- ... that country music singer Buck Owens bought a bankrupt TV station in California from his sister?
- ... that according to the mayor of Utica, 13-year-old Nyah Mway was the first Karen person to be killed in America by police?
- ... that Ratnākara's Haravijaya is the longest extant Sanskrit mahākāvya?
- ... that Betty Brussel set three competitive swimming records on the same day at the age of 99?
- ... that both scholars and activists believe that diet culture is often intertwined with racism and other forms of prejudice?
- ... that G. R. Pantouw supported the Dutch puppet state of East Indonesia because he wanted to push the Netherlands into abandoning colonialism?
- ... that a Cretan man found a 1st-century statue of Aphrodite while trying to drill a well, and then reburied it?
8 October 2024
- 00:00, 8 October 2024 (UTC)
- ... that the water of Asik-Asik Falls (pictured) comes from a source inside a cliff?
- ... that Mokulubete Makatisi placed eighth at the 2022 Commonwealth Games women's marathon despite running in new shoes that she had received on the eve of the race?
- ... that the developer of The Crimson Diamond first created a series of pixel-art rooms and later built a game around the house she had designed?
- ... that some of the work of lesbian feminist filmmaking pioneer Norma Bahia Pontes is lost media?
- ... that the government used military trucks and bulldozers to rescue people from a tropical storm?
- ... that Milan A. P. Harminc, the consul-general of the Slovak Republic in London, broke with his government at the outbreak of World War II and sided with the Allies?
- ... that there was a doomsday cult named after Neo from The Matrix?
- ... that a woman was considered a witch because her husband prepared chocolate instead of her?
7 October 2024
- 00:00, 7 October 2024 (UTC)
- ... that Blue Mountain Pottery wares (example pictured) had a distinctive drip glaze, particularly blue-green and black, so that each piece was unique?
- ... that Australian train driver Bill Morrow received the Soviet Union's Lenin Peace Prize alongside Fidel Castro?
- ... that among the Orang Asli of Negeri Sembilan, chica is only collected during kenduri rituals?
- ... that Sailor Moon co-stars Emi Shinohara and Rika Fukami were born on the same date?
- ... that almost 45 percent of Taiwan's beer purchases come from rechao restaurants?
- ... that Janet Panetta started dancing as physical therapy for childhood polio?
- ... that the flag of La Guaira is based on the design of a banner from a 1797 conspiracy against Spanish rule in Venezuela?
- ... that chef Victor Albisu created a bulgogi taco that honors the Koreatown neighborhood of his hometown of Annandale, Virginia?
- ... that the first dogs in space returned to Earth with a parachute?
6 October 2024
- 00:00, 6 October 2024 (UTC)
- ... that Rika Nakagawa (pictured) won a national debate competition as an active tarento?
- ... that in 1989 the Barcelona women's second football team was knocked out of the Catalan Cup in the same round as the Barcelona women's first team?
- ... that Tuhi Martukaw led youth delegations to the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues for ten years in a row?
- ... that unused placeholder sounds from Smash Hit were reused in Teardown?
- ... that announcers at a Virginia radio station were warned that playing more than three rap songs an hour could get them fired?
- ... that of the 16 aircraft which took part in the Doolittle Raid, only the one piloted by Edward J. York landed intact?
- ... that "Bed Chem" and "Juno" are the "horniest" tracks on Short n' Sweet, according to one critic?
- ... that Moses Benjamin Wulff founded a printing press that reprinted The Guide for the Perplexed for the first time in centuries?
- ... that New York City's Queens Zoo once received a lion cub despite having no lion enclosure?
5 October 2024
- 00:00, 5 October 2024 (UTC)
- ... that the Italian Campaign of 1796–1797 (battle pictured) demonstrated that Napoleon was a "great strategist"?
- ... that Muhammad Khaznadar's museum was said to have "surpassed every other museum in the world" in Phoenician and Carthaginian antiquities?
- ... that William, Prince of Wales, inspired the character of Prince Wheeliam in Cars 2?
- ... that Hurry Up Tomorrow is planned to be the Weeknd's final album under his stage name?
- ... that Columbus Airport saw commercial air service before being certified for public use by the Civil Aeronautics Authority?
- ... that Lisa Blatt, the first woman to argue 50 cases before the Supreme Court of the United States, "elicits laughs and the occasional sharp response from the justices" for her witty delivery?
- ... that Oxford is the first city in the United Kingdom to adopt a zero emission zone?
- ... that although Pachyballus ornatus is named for its bright pattern, the female is dark and plain while young?
- ... that retired model Leticia Sardá had no idea that she was the subject of a four-year global search?
4 October 2024
- 00:00, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
- ... that after some of Anders Årfelt's lion sculptures (example pictured) were struck during the 2017 Stockholm truck attack, the city ordered new versions weighing 3 tonnes?
- ... that pastry chef and television judge Benoit Blin cut off the tips of his fingers in a kitchen accident during his service in the French Navy?
- ... that the Netflix-released film A House in Jerusalem is inspired by the history of the director's Palestinian family, who were expelled in 1948 from what had become Israel during the Nakba?
- ... that former Commonwealth Games diver Nicky Cooney became a police officer?
- ... that in 1917 British soldiers in France opened fire on mutineers from the Egyptian Labour Corps, killing at least 27 of them?
- ... that Maryvonne Le Dizès commissioned a trio for saxophone, trombone and violin during her time as a violinist with the Ensemble intercontemporain?
- ... that Patrick Tse's performance in the film Time won him the Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actor at the age of 85, making him the award's oldest recipient?
- ... that Elham Mahamid Ruzin, a blind Muslim Arab, won a silver medal for Israel at the 2024 Paris Paralympics?
- ... that attractions at the 1939 World's Fair included a roller coaster, a ski slope, and scantily clad women?
3 October 2024
- 00:00, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
- ... that much to his dismay, Andrea Navagero (pictured) was named the Venetian ambassador to France in 1529?
- ... that a major anime piracy website had over 100 million monthly visits and was one of the top 200 most popular Internet properties?
- ... that while Council Working Parties only formally prepare decisions of the Council of the European Union, they de facto shape the majority of those decisions?
- ... that actress Norma Phillips starred in a 52-episode silent film series in 1914 that interviewed real-life celebrities?
- ... that mutilated body parts found in the spring of Tattarisuo in 1931 were used to practice black magic?
- ... that Dezső Varga was the first Szekler ice hockey player to be inducted into the IIHF Hall of Fame?
- ... that at least 69 countries have "no net loss" environmental policies?
- ... that in Hindu mythology, Madhavi, who was blessed with the miraculous ability to regain her virginity after each childbirth, was married to three kings, each in exchange for 200 rare horses?
- ... that the ending of the TV series Community features a fourth-wall-breaking monologue?
2 October 2024
- 00:00, 2 October 2024 (UTC)
- ... that many people who recover from tuberculosis lose more than half of their lung capacity (example pictured)?
- ... that Henry Kailimai and his Hawaiian Quintet were hired by Henry Ford to serve as official musicians for the Ford Motor Company?
- ... that when the Edward S. Harkness House was built, its owner took the address from his neighbor?
- ... that a New Testament manuscript was "barbarously scored with red chalk" by a book publisher?
- ... that Thomas Bertrand-Hudon is the first professional football player to wear a Guardian Cap during a regular season game?
- ... that the 1998 cyberpunk short story "CyberJoly Drim" caused a controversy in the Polish science fiction and fantasy community?
- ... that Ajah Pritchard-Lolo is Vanuatu's first Olympic weightlifter?
- ... that many hapa haole songs were written by non-Hawaiians and featured nonsensical, faux-Hawaiian lyrics?
- ... that Shoko Ikeda once admitted that Haruhi Suzumiya, a character she designed, was "just like me"?
1 October 2024
- 00:00, 1 October 2024 (UTC)
- ... that a statue of the Medicine Buddha (pictured), dating from the late 8th or early 9th century, never left its temple grounds until 2024?
- ... that Russian pianist Pavel Kushnir died on a hunger strike after his arrest for anti-war videos posted on a YouTube channel with five subscribers?
- ... that public health measures and advances in medical science in modern human history helped raise global life expectancy from about 31 years in 1900 to over 66 years in 2000?
- ... that Green Day's "Wake Me Up When September Ends" became closely associated with the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina?
- ... that scientists publishing in Liebigs Annalen were subject to criticism and attacks by editor Justus von Liebig?
- ... that English amateur geologist Charlotte Eyton wrote a number of papers and pamphlets on the geology of the Wrekin, a part of Shropshire, between 1862 and 1870?
- ... that the director of a Lake Erie-based walleye fishing tournament defended two anglers accused of cheating until he found weights in their winning fish two years ago today?
- ... that East Suffolk Park, a former student hostel in Edinburgh, was once an internment camp for enemy aliens?
- ... that football player Kyle Hergel said his biggest strength was "my nastiness"?