The Storming of Bastille
Pearl Harbor bombing
bombing in pearl harbor
The French people - more precisely a crowd of Parisians and National Guards - stormed the castle of the Bastille on the 14th of July, 1789. The event marks the beginning of the French revolution.
70 CE refers to the year 70 of the Common Era, a calendar system used to denote years in the Gregorian calendar. This year is significant in history, particularly for the Jewish people, as it marks the destruction of the Second Temple in Jerusalem by the Romans during the First Jewish-Roman War. This event had profound religious and cultural implications for Judaism and is often seen as a pivotal moment in Jewish history.
The calendar is intended to mark the number of years since the death of King Herod the Great. The Roman abbot Dionysus Exiguus devised the new Christian calendar in 533. He knew that it was impossible to say when Jesus was born, but he knew, or thought he knew, when Herod died. So, he chose to begin his Christian calendar on the year of Herod's death, and he based this on the reign of the Roman emperor Augustus. Unaware that Augustus only adopted that name four years after his reign began, going by his birth name of Octavius until then, Exiguus commenced his calendar just 4 years too late.
The Storming of Bastille
Black Tuesday
the mass extiction
It marks his beginning to be a responsible adult.
nun of yo dambuise wack's
Invasion of Poland
The Jewish new year is the holiday Rosh Hashana which literally translates to "head of the year".
Pearl Harbor bombing
The Jewish festival that is celebrated every month is called Rosh Chodesh, which marks the beginning of a new month in the Jewish calendar.
The collapse of the star's core is the event that marks the beginning of a type II supernova. This collapse leads to the rapid release of energy, causing the outer layers of the star to be expelled in a violent explosion.
The shedding of the uterine lining, known as menstruation, marks the end of one menstrual cycle and the beginning of a new one.