August 29 β Some important events on this day.
1350 ππΌ Battle of Winchelsea (or Les Espagnols sur Mer): The English naval fleet under King Edward III defeats a Castilian fleet of 40 ships
1526 ππΌ Battle of MohΓ‘cs: In a decisive battle the Hungarian Empire is conquered by the Ottoman Empire led by Suleiman the Magnificent
1533 ππΌ Atahualpa, last Sapa Inca Emperor is suspected to have been buried in Northern Peru or in Ecuador.
βοΈREAD THE ARTICLE!
1825 ππΌ Portugal recognizes the Independence of Brazil
1831 ππΌ Scientist and inventor Michael Faraday demonstrates 1st electric transformer
1842 ππΌ Great Britain and China sign Treaty of Nanking, ending the Opium war
1862 ππΌ Second Battle of Bull Run, fought in Manassas, Virginia begins, Confederate victory (US Civil War).
The culmination of the North Virginia campaign in 1862, the Union army led by John Pope faced the Confederates under General Robert E. Lee. Fought near the Bull Run tributary of the Potomac River half of Leeβs army under Major General Stonewall Jackson attacked Popeβs forces on the 29th with large losses on both sides.
The next day the rest of Leeβs army under lieutenant General James Longstreet launched a surprise right flanking attack in what was to be the largest simultaneous mass assault of the war. Popeβs forces could only retreat and starve off complete disaster by rearguard action.
1883 ππΌ Seismic sea waves created by Krakatoa eruption create a rise in English Channel 32 hrs after explosion. βοΈ READ THE ARTICLE!
1911 ππΌ Ishi, considered the last Native American to make contact with European Americans, emerges from the wilderness of northeastern California.
1949 ππΌ USSR performs its first nuclear test at Semipalatinsk, Kazakh SSR
1958 ππΌ Michael Jackson is born
2005 ππΌ Hurricane Katrina makes 2nd and 3rd landfall as a category 3 hurricane, devastating much of the U.S. Gulf Coast from Louisiana to Florida Panhandle. Kills more than 1,836, causes over $115 billion in damage.
2019 ππΌ Scientists announce there is no single βgayβ gene with genetics accounting for at most 25% of same-sex behavior, in study published in βScienceβ

