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This is a record of material that was 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 the article's talk page and follow the archive link in the DYK talk page message box or the Article Milestones box.
Did you know...
18 February 2026
- 12:00, 18 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that the sound of the cimpoi (pictured), a type of pastoral bagpipe, was often mimicked by folk violins and shepherd's flutes, inspiring Béla Bartók to imitate it on the piano?
- ... that an investigation on the collision of Air Serbia Flight 324 noted that, despite the aircraft leaking fuel, it was sent to park at the terminal anyway?
- ... that mining in Greenland began in 1782 with coal extraction on Disko Island?
- ... that Jacqueline Wilson said she quickly wrote her 101st book due to previously saying that she would die after publishing her 100th novel?
- ... that a rear admiral was wounded while flying on a combat mission off the escort carrier USS Marcus Island?
- ... that at the time of its construction, the MLC Building was the tallest building in Auckland?
- ... that visitors to the leisure area Piscinão de Ramos were warned not to wear red for their own safety?
- ... that the medieval Persian tale of a pact between three schoolfellows ended with a deadly clash between a ruler and a revolutionary?
- ... that during the 1944 founding congress of the Youth League of Transcarpathian Ukraine, Ivan Turyanytsia called for the formation of a people's militia invoking "an eye for an eye"?
- ... that Lim Chee Onn once worked as a roving condensed milk salesman, selling it from the back of a van, before becoming a Singaporean cabinet minister?
- 00:00, 18 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that drab stinkbugs (pictured) use fungus to protect their eggs from parasitic wasps?
- ... that Tom Maulson had a $30,000 bounty on his head because of his fishing activism?
- ... that during the 2023 Belgrade City Assembly election campaign, former mayor Aleksandar Šapić presented a construction project with images taken from a Salt Lake City school?
- ... that a motel room inside an Edward Hopper painting was reconstructed in 3D, allowing guests to sleep there?
- ... that Saya Hiyama was featured as a customized voice for air purifiers?
- ... that a critic said Justin Timberlake and Jay-Z performed as if they had "forever been friends" on their Legends of the Summer Stadium Tour?
- ... that Argelia Laya went from being a teacher to a communist guerrilla fighter?
- ... that the Flying Padres use aviation to evangelize?
- ... that voters elected a dead man to the South Dakota House of Representatives?
17 February 2026
- 12:00, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that the 17-arch Shuanglong Bridge (pictured) is considered the largest and most artistically valuable ancient stone bridge in Yunnan, China?
- ... that the circle packing theorem has been used to construct flattened maps of the human brain?
- ... that the band Self recorded an entire album using only toy instruments?
- ... that Ernst Hinsken smuggled a red lantern into the Bundestag to draw attention to Germany's economic struggles?
- ... that abortion-rights groups in Colorado opposed a 2016 ballot measure to create a statewide universal healthcare scheme?
- ... that the Florentine crab apple was previously considered a natural hybrid species?
- ... that Tim Burton designed the lighting and invitation for the runway show of the Alexander McQueen collection inspired by his films?
- ... that Belisarius broke the Siege of Ariminum to save a general who had refused his orders?
- ... that Gandy Malou-Mamel first played basketball at age 12 wearing a shirt and tie?
- 00:00, 17 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that a dual-mode locomotive in Spain (pictured) was intended to be used on a tourist train?
- ... that after Hilary Duff announced her return to music, searches for her on Spotify surged by 400%, with U.S. streams rising nearly 80% and first-time listeners up about 75%?
- ... that Ukrainian writer Mykhailo Starytsky financed his own theatre with proceeds from the sale of his rusk factory?
- ... that an ancient Chinese political manual included a posthumous chapter on zither music?
- ... that Abdullatif Al-Ghanim, who drafted the Constitution of Kuwait, later lamented that government policies "emptied it of its potential"?
- ... that in his 1720 Christmas cantata, Georg Philipp Telemann used folk music, a rarity in his church music?
- ... that some Internet users called for a female sitcom character to be canceled for harassing a male character?
- ... that in a 17th-century painting, the emperor Shah Jahan is depicted in profile, as painting him head-on was viewed as disrespectful?
- ... that former football player Christopher Judge won a contest to host the morning show on an Oregon TV station, helping launch his acting career?
16 February 2026
- 12:00, 16 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that William Bloomfield (pictured) is recognized as the first known Māori architect?
- ... that rock wrens build pavements made of flat stones to keep their nests dry?
- ... that the developers of Arlington Forest followed the U.S. government's recommendations for both residential architecture and racially restrictive covenants?
- ... that David Barsum Perley used his writings to explore what he considered the British betrayal of the Assyrian people?
- ... that an NFL team shared City Stadium with a local high school for over thirty years?
- ... that although An Ordinary Youth is based on the author's real-life experience, it begins with an epigraph saying "All details completely made up"?
- ... that the American Civil War inspired the design of the British Amazon-class sloops?
- ... that all Aboriginal languages in mainland Australia may have descended from a common ancestor spoken around 6,000 years ago?
- ... that powerlifter Stefi Cohen went down a weight class to bring her world record total to 25?
- 00:00, 16 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that after pollination Koelreuteria dilcheri fruits (fossil pictured) likely inflated like a balloon to drift on the wind for dispersal?
- ... that there is a football stadium on land once disputed between the US and Mexico?
- ... that Amy Williams won Great Britain's only medal at the 2010 Winter Olympics?
- ... that in 2017, it was said that 10,000 people gathered on Al-Rashid Street every day?
- ... that video game character Hu Tao mixes goth aesthetics with Chinese views on life and death?
- ... that the first Malaysian prime minister said that the State of Singapore would be the New York of the country?
- ... that the original draft of a novel was lost on a London bus and never recovered?
- ... that Melkart Abou Jaoude received his first Division I college football offer at the bagel store where he worked?
- ... that Salvador Dalí transformed a painting of horses into Hitler Masturbating?
15 February 2026
- 12:00, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that The Dance of Anitra (pictured) is one of the few sculptures by Edith Maryon known to have survived in private ownership?
- ... that a building in New York City had to be classified as a hospital despite containing classrooms and a dormitory?
- ... that sulfur mollies create rhythmic waves to avoid ending up in birds' beaks?
- ... that physical copies of Chama come with a short story about the premise of the album?
- ... that the Armenian politician Aram Piruzyan said the USSR's head of state asked for copies of his cookbook to give to Fidel Castro?
- ... that a U.S. Army veteran was claimed to be suffering from erotomania when he carried out a mass shooting at a Ford Motor Plant in Michigan?
- ... that Dawn Hope's first episode on Hollyoaks featured an entirely Black cast?
- ... that a bridge over the Schuylkill River does not actually cross the river?
- ... that Inugami Korone's catchphrase "yubi yubi" calls for her fans to cut off their fingers and give them to her?
- 00:00, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that in 1930s America, you could buy a quart of frozen salad (pictured) for a dollar?
- ... that Bruce Springsteen's ICE protest song, "Streets of Minneapolis", was written the day Alex Pretti was killed and performed live the same week?
- ... that Liu Shasha didn't own a mobile phone because it might take away from her learning billiards?
- ... that despite coincidental timing, Gap's ad featuring Katseye was not intended as a response to Sydney Sweeney's controversial jeans commercial?
- ... that at fifteen years old, Ebenezer Harcourt became the youngest footballer to play for the Nigeria national team?
- ... that when Titan Fleischmann's grandmother first heard her future grandson's name, she cried out of fear that he would be bullied for it?
- ... that Nigel Bluck's cinematography has been compared to the work of painter Edward Hopper?
- ... that the difficulty of finding Fluid Ounces's third studio album led some fans to believe it was an urban legend?
- ... that United States Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia did not endorse the statement, "everybody has got a right to the use of the English language"?
14 February 2026
- 00:00, 14 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that Calvin Duncan (pictured) was elected clerk of the same court that wrongfully convicted him of murder and sentenced him to life in prison?
- ... that there are cognitions about cognitions?
- ... that Billy Gallagher's Times Square cabaret was open from sundown to dawn, with a mix of "reputable people" and those "who had practical reasons for circulating after dark"?
- ... that the Cipero Tramway was the first operational railway in Trinidad and Tobago?
- ... that voice actor Rena Motomura prepared for an audition by practicing a single challenging line a hundred times a day?
- ... that Al-Qunayyah, a village in Jordan, is thought to have been the site of a Roman-era sanctuary?
- ... that to teach high school photography, Kent Kammerer took students on trips to the North Cascades and Olympic Peninsula in a home-built camper?
- ... that Astor Piazzolla's Oblivion has been called "exquisitely melancholic"?
- ... that Kamaipuʻupaʻa, the mistress of King Kamehameha V, blamed the 1871 Lānaʻi earthquake on a foreigner riding a horse?
13 February 2026
- 00:00, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that the tiny Abra aequalis (pictured) is a major food source for a species of large starfish?
- ... that Justin Timberlake's 2013 comeback single was promoted by relaunching Myspace?
- ... that George Brandt chose to have a song from the soundtrack of Pinocchio at his own funeral?
- ... that two tropical cyclones in the 1996 Pacific hurricane season made the unusual move of crossing over from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific?
- ... that the black-rumped magpie was made a full species in 2018?
- ... that after an international ice hockey career, Leszek Laszkiewicz was given an honorary citizenship of his hometown?
- ... that at Hagemeister Park, the Green Bay Packers' first stadium, fans would line the field or sit in their parked cars to watch games?
- ... that VTuber Sakamata Chloe used crowdsourcing for Christmas tree decorations?
- ... that the mating display of Servaea incana includes a "zigzag dance" in which a male moves in ever-narrowing arcs towards a female?
12 February 2026
- 00:00, 12 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that novelist Susie Boyt described Nesselrode pudding (example pictured) as tasting "of Christmas, without any of the disappointment"?
- ... that, according to Guyanese authorities, an oil tanker seized by the United States off the coast of Venezuela in 2025 was falsely flying Guyana's flag?
- ... that a 70-foot (21 m) statue of Lionel Messi was unveiled in India during his G.O.A.T. India Tour?
- ... that "Right Here, Right Now" was Giorgio Moroder's first song in 15 years to reach the top of the US Dance Club Songs chart?
- ... that future Slavic-language professor Marc L. Greenberg learned Slovene after his fiancée sent him a bilingual dictionary and started writing letters to him only in Slovene?
- ... that the Genshin Impact character Alhaitham is believed to be named after a polymath from the Islamic Golden Age?
- ... that Diego García Miravete and his college football team's games were closely monitored by the Mexican government in the early 1970s?
- ... that Erykah Badu recorded Mama's Gun at what was once Jimi Hendrix's apartment?
- ... that some reviewers thought that A Short Hike was too short?
11 February 2026
- 00:00, 11 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that a Washington state park (pictured) drew more visitors in 2021 than Yosemite National Park?
- ... that James I. Hopkins Jr., who signed the order to bomb Hiroshima, disappeared without a trace?
- ... that the critically endangered fish Quintana atrizona has not been seen in the wild since 2007–2008?
- ... that historian Allen French volunteered as a police officer during a labor strike?
- ... that a video showing preparations for a campaign speech for mayor of Kharkiv became one of YouTube's top ten most-watched videos of the day?
- ... that sanquette, a crêpe from Occitania, is made with blood fresh from slaughter?
- ... that the Canadian Joint Forces Command was created based on operational lessons from the war in Ukraine?
- ... that a radio station requested changes to a light-rail project?
- ... that Gu Yanwu destroyed all his poetry following the Manchu conquest and took to wandering across China?
10 February 2026
- 00:00, 10 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that the Bombay sandwich (example pictured) typically uses potatoes and chutney, but some versions use chocolate?
- ... that all five chaplains awarded the Medal of Honor since the American Civil War were Catholic priests?
- ... that the attorney of the last person executed by Peru requested Pope John Paul II's intervention to save his client's life?
- ... that mangroves reduced the impact of Cyclone Dana?
- ... that Variety once called Trisha Ziff a "photographer's photographer"?
- ... that the headquarters of Indonesia's 16th Mechanized Infantry Brigade was a Japanese military base, seized by Indonesian youths after Japan's surrender in 1945?
- ... that shark fin is one of the "four sea delicacies", a quartet of luxury seafoods in Chinese cuisine?
- ... that Immanuel Iheanacho was measured as a 14-year-old freshman at 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) and 325 lb (147 kg), with a 7 ft (2.1 m) wingspan?
- ... that in 1956 a person dressed as the anthropomorphic hedgehog and comic star Mecki traveled by helicopter to more than 100 cities in southern Germany to give children gifts?
9 February 2026
- 00:00, 9 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that the College of William & Mary was established by royal charter (pictured) 333 years ago today?
- ... that Richard Lee Morton became the head of the College of William & Mary's history department after two years of teaching?
- ... that Chandler Court and Pollard Park, which were designed and occupied by William & Mary faculty, have been called "two of Williamsburg's most appealing twentieth-century neighborhoods"?
- ... that Denver Mills, the first underclassman to be captain of the William & Mary football team, also played in the army and a single NFL game?
- ... that William & Mary's president was unable to get the college to fund the William and Mary Quarterly, so he paid for it himself?
- ... that Orlando Jones, the maternal grandfather of Martha Washington, was one of William & Mary's first students?
- ... that five speeches by William & Mary students helped to move Virginia's capital and establish Williamsburg?
- ... that Althea Hunt founded the William & Mary Theatre, but discouraged students from trying to make a career of it?
- ... that Thomas Jefferson pushed William & Mary to hire a man with little linguistic ability as its first professor of modern languages?
8 February 2026
- 00:00, 8 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that Yucatán molly males flare their "sails" (pictured) both to woo and to shoo?
- ... that Wales's first Commonwealth Games medallist in shooting walked off the podium when the wrong national anthem was played?
- ... that the writer of the visual novel SeaBed based it on a comic that he drew in his spare time at work?
- ... that Whispering Woods, the second novel set in the universe of Magic: The Gathering, was later declared non-canonical?
- ... that Olympian Nam Singh Thapa said his boxing career began when he was arrested and forced to compete in a match?
- ... that the original occupant of the Farnsworth House likened her experience there to that of a caged animal?
- ... that in 2002, Sarah Baxendale broke the Guinness World Record for the longest kiss featured on screen?
- ... that 16 years ago, a man in Ireland slipped on some ice?
7 February 2026
- 00:00, 7 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that a photograph of an airplane propeller taken by a camera with a rolling shutter (pictured) may distort the propeller into curves resembling the quadratrix of Hippias?
- ... that the remains of at least 970 people were discovered at the former Kilkenny Union Workhouse?
- ... that 17-year-old video game developers Andy Gavin and Jason Rubin obtained a contract with Electronic Arts by cold-calling them and sending them a copy of Dream Zone?
- ... that a baby elephant that starred in The Ark was kept in a van outside the director's home the night before filming?
- ... that Welsh-language activist Joseff Gnagbo came to Wales as a refugee from Ivory Coast?
- ... that the Fadettes of Boston was named after the titular character of George Sand's novel La Petite Fadette?
- ... that zoologist Evelyn Shaw also worked in the catering industry alongside her husband?
- ... that the Atlanta Central Library, Marcel Breuer's last completed design, was nearly demolished less than three decades after completion?
- ... that an Alabama TV station deemed "The Puppy Episode" unsuitable for family viewing?
6 February 2026
- 00:00, 6 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that the Oceanic Steamship Company (advertisement pictured) beat a rival company in a trans-Pacific race, bought the rival's ships, and added them to its own fleet?
- ... that the play Sagittarius Ponderosa by MJ Kaufman recreates the scent of a tree as part of the performance?
- ... that there were no sex acts in Thea Ehre's nude performance at the 2021 Porn Film Festival Vienna?
- ... that Gerta Hüttl-Folter became interested in Russian culture after staying with Maria Razumovsky's family while homeless?
- ... that the author of Five Bullets was unaware for a year that Fear and Fury was also being written about the same 1984 shooting, and for the same publishing house?
- ... that a church in Colorado merged with another congregation, was sold, became a nightclub, and then was bought by an offshoot of the merged congregation?
- ... that volumes of one writer's journalism were variously described as "prattling pieces", delivering "a snigger a minute", and having a "soufflé touch"?
- ... that American football player Taco Dowler is the twin of a football player who was called "Burrito"?
- ... that the cover artworks for Metallica's Load and Reload were created by mixing blood with semen and urine, respectively?
5 February 2026
- 00:00, 5 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that Nemiah Wilson (pictured) ran a tailoring business while playing in the NFL?
- ... that Yun Jin's appearance in Genshin Impact draws inspiration from legendary Chinese figures like Hua Mulan?
- ... that Donald Rumsfeld helped develop a mobile game?
- ... that Gennady Trifonov was one of the few Soviet dissidents who argued for gay rights?
- ... that Christian missionaries in China translated and published an inflammatory anti-Christian treatise?
- ... that a judge acquitted Ben Obumselu of manslaughter due to his "promise as a scholar"?
- ... that the MPLA launched the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Angola in 1963 hoping to secure support from the Organisation of African Unity, but the move had the opposite effect?
- ... that Alberto Giacometti chose the dying photographer Eli Lotar as the subject of his last sculptures, but himself died before finishing them?
- ... that Cyril Karabus was convicted of manslaughter and forgery in 2004, a verdict he learned of only eight years later?
4 February 2026
- 00:00, 4 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that a 17th-century painting (pictured) may depict the emperor Jahangir listening as a portrait of his dead father speaks to him?
- ... that Achmad Soebardjo said that he adopted a surname after hearing a voice while urinating in prison?
- ... that Munich's "Shirker's Alley" got its nickname in the 1930s because people used it to avoid giving the Hitler salute at a nearby Nazi memorial?
- ... that creation of wethers, castrated male sheep or goats, is recorded as far back as the Minoan civilization in the Bronze Age?
- ... that Allison Lanier traveled between New York and Los Angeles to film for her regular role on The Young and the Restless?
- ... that the writer of How to Survive from Nine to Five and Between the Covers was inspired by her 27 office jobs and her visit to a strip club, respectively?
- ... that the baritone Jubilant Sykes, active in spirituals, gospel and funk, recorded the role of the Celebrant in Leonard Bernstein's Grammy-nominated Mass?
- ... that Fluminense FM used to broadcast horse races before becoming "the gateway to Brazilian rock in the 80s"?
3 February 2026
- 00:00, 3 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that Cuba's Girardinus fish (pictured) may have evolved into different species because the island's rivers are often interrupted by waterfalls or vanish underground?
- ... that Tinashe's 333 and Wishy's Triple Seven are both named for angel numbers?
- ... that slipper lamps produced in the Umayyad era sometimes carried bilingual inscriptions with "The Light of Christ" in Greek, alongside "God" (Allah) in Arabic?
- ... that Anahit Ananyan was credited with starting Armenia's tomato heritage?
- ... that the relocation of a Mexico City monument resulted in the water-level indicators on its pedestal losing their original geographic alignment?
- ... that a pre-order ticket campaign for Rhapsody in August saw ¥300 of the ¥1,300 ticket price go to the assistance of birds affected by the Gulf War?
- ... that Allan Ludwig has been described as the "founding father" of gravestone studies?
- ... that during the 1939 Abbeville Conference, the first meeting of the Anglo-French Supreme War Council, the parties agreed not to launch large-scale operations against Germany?
- ... that Haruka No. 2 plays two recorders using her nose, one with each nostril?
2 February 2026
- 00:00, 2 February 2026 (UTC)
Veronika scratching herself with tools
- ... that Veronika the cow can scratch herself using brooms (depicted)?
- ... that a popular series interviews celebrities without an interviewer?
- ... that a Mexican vice admiral who exposed radioactive milk imports was accused of treason and sent to the Revillagigedo Islands?
- ... that "King Scum" escaped from prison by pretending to be a solicitor?
- ... that a psychiatrist expressed concern about a patient's paranoia to a colleague the day before the patient killed him?
- ... that Sarah, Lady Holte, owned hundreds of slaves in Barbados, but only ever met one?
- ... that the socialist newspaper Radenik was banned after it referred to Jesus as a "socialist, communist, and revolutionary"?
- ... that Lorenzo Dow Thompson threw Abraham Lincoln in a wrestling match?
- ... that A Taxonomy of Office Chairs applies evolutionary classification to furniture?
1 February 2026
- 00:00, 1 February 2026 (UTC)
- ... that the Washington DC Snowball Fight Association was formed when around 2,000 people showed up to a snowball fight (pictured) organized over Facebook?
- ... that Emily Sutton illustrated an abridged children's edition of Shakespeare's First Folio with "red-cheeked gentlemen, sword-wielding warriors and ladies in striking attire"?
- ... that gamblers in Myanmar worship the spirit Thone Myo Shin to ensure victory in cockfights?
- ... that John A. Jakle has co-authored nine books on "roadside America", including books on motels, road signs, gas stations, parking lots, and fast-food restaurants?
- ... that Ellie Goulding tied Adele for the most UK number one albums by a British female artist when Higher Than Heaven topped the charts?
- ... that Robert Van de Graaff, inventor of the Van de Graaff generator, turned to physics after injuries kept him from playing football at Alabama?
- ... that an unlockable vehicle in Kururin Squash! contains a reference to Super Mario Bros. by honking the horn?
- ... that the kingship ideology of the Lozi Kingdom emphasised powerful ancestral royal spirits, believed to affect the present?
- ... that the Casablanca-class escort carrier USS Anzio once took the place of an entire fleet?