Wikipedia:Recent additions
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...
9 January 2024
- 00:00, 9 January 2024 (UTC)
- ... that Chopin's heart (composer pictured) was smuggled into Poland by his sister?
- ... that Shen Zigao, the first Anglican bishop of Chinese descent, was consecrated at All Saints Church, Shanghai, in 1934?
- ... that before filming National Football League games, former Green Bay Packers video director Al Treml was trained in photography while serving in the United States Army?
- ... that the Russian propaganda outlet Sputnik compared the Global Engagement Center to the Ministry of Truth in George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four?
- ... that Giovanni Bonfanti scored a goal on his debut in a European competition?
- ... that The New Zealand Herald opposed a children's hospital in favour of a statue of Queen Victoria?
- ... that the Hank Aaron State Trail was regularly visited by Hank Aaron until his death in 2021?
- ... that it is controversial whether there are things that do not exist?
8 January 2024
- 00:00, 8 January 2024 (UTC)
- ... that Nancy Nash (pictured) had to convince her parents to let her not attend the University of Texas to instead become an actress in 1926?
- ... that a letter to the American people allegedly written by Osama bin Laden has been cited as an example of online youth radicalization?
- ... that "Hare Hare Yukai" is credited with originating the genre of cover dance videos, in which individuals attempt to replicate dance choreography on video-sharing websites?
- ... that F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote the short stories "The Jelly-Bean" and "May Day" at the Allerton 39th Street House?
- ... that Lachlan Murdoch was forced to resign as a director of Prime Media Group because the company owned a radio station on Queensland's Sunshine Coast?
- ... that small-business leaders such as Guillermo Torrez sympathized with the Movement for Socialism despite its anti-capitalist rhetoric?
- ... that Olivia Rodrigo can write ballads about homeschooled girls as well as about songbirds and snakes?
- ... that when her husband was captured by the Turks, Queen Morphia hired a band of secretly armed fake monks and merchants to infiltrate the prison and rescue him – only for him to be captured again?
7 January 2024
- 00:00, 7 January 2024 (UTC)
- ... that the Great Divine Temple of Caodaism holds the cosmos ball (pictured), which represents the Jade Emperor's universe?
- ... that the curator aedium sacrarum et operum locorumque publicorum was responsible for the upkeep of public works and buildings in ancient Rome?
- ... that British intervention reversed the lacquering of a statue in New Zealand?
- ... that Harry Dunn guarded a stairwell and Nancy Pelosi's office during the January 6 United States Capitol attack?
- ... that the Kansas Business Hall of Fame includes the founders of Pizza Hut and Russell Stover Candies?
- ... that three first-team All-Americans – Logan Eggleston, Zoe Fleck, and Asjia O'Neal – played on the University of Texas's NCAA volleyball championship team in 2022?
- ... that the WoodmenLife Tower hosts a livestream of a peregrine falcon nest on its 28th floor?
- ... that Genghis Khan was extremely charismatic and renowned for his generosity towards his followers?
6 January 2024
- 00:00, 6 January 2024 (UTC)
- ... that Dolly de Leon (pictured) was the first Filipino to be nominated for a Golden Globe or a BAFTA Award for Best Supporting Actress?
- ... that a neighborhood in Virginia lost its public park because its city government did not build a fence?
- ... that having painted a domestic scene depicting his nude wife, Robert Ballagh felt that he had to produce a nude painting of himself as a follow-up?
- ... that ten people have died trying to cross the Cascade Saddle?
- ... that Maciej Grabowski became the Polish minister of environment in 2013 despite having no environmental experience?
- ... that a design for the 1930s New Zealand penny depicted a rugby player?
- ... that the new Catalogue of Works of Carl Friedrich Abel, listing 420 compositions, was introduced at a festival celebrating Abel's tercentenary in Köthen?
- ... that although Olga Hartman believed that her basic research on marine worms had no practical value, it was applied to experimental studies of oysters?
5 January 2024
- 00:00, 5 January 2024 (UTC)
- ... that the Brazilian cruiser Almirante Barroso (pictured) was on a voyage to circumnavigate Earth with Prince August Leopold on board when the republic was proclaimed in Brazil?
- ... that archaeologists found that Updown Girl, who was buried in England in the 7th century, had a mixture of West African and European DNA?
- ... that until April 2023, when the genus Triassosculda was discovered, the mantis shrimp fossil record contained a gap of more than a hundred million years?
- ... that when Abbess Stephanie of Courtenay's niece's marriage to the king of Jerusalem was annulled, the court's reasoning was so flimsy that a noted jurist had to ask Stephanie to explain it to him?
- ... that the wood-pasture hypothesis posits that semi-open wood pastures and not primeval forests are the natural vegetation of temperate Europe?
- ... that Julia Figueredo was the first indigenous woman to be elected president of La Paz's parliamentary delegation?
- ... that fewer than half of the seventy cues composed by Dmitri Shostakovich for the 1971 film King Lear made it into the final cut?
- ... that the song "Poison" can soothe babies?
4 January 2024
- 00:00, 4 January 2024 (UTC)
- ... that in 2017, Eustace Tilley (pictured) missed his annual turn on the cover of The New Yorker because of Donald Trump?
- ... that during the British period, the tomb of Khan Muhammad was used as an office and residence for the executive engineer?
- ... that after his professional American football career, Lou Daukas became a lawyer?
- ... that the thought of her sister Ioveta being a common nun was so abhorrent to the queen of Jerusalem that she ordered the construction of the Convent of Saint Lazarus for Ioveta to rule as an abbess?
- ... that the great-nephew of Leon Trotsky was a physician for the Black Panther Party and helped deinstitutionalize Willowbrook State School?
- ... that the entire inventory of historic string instruments in Canada's Musical Instrument Bank are loaned to musicians in a competition held every three years?
- ... that cabinet-maker Stephen Badlam simultaneously served as a justice of the peace and a brigadier-general?
- ... that misidentifications of the crested cuckoo-dove have led to claims that the extinct Choiseul pigeon is still around?
3 January 2024
- 00:00, 3 January 2024 (UTC)
- ... that Geordie Greep (pictured) has an accent that has been described as "geographically unclassifiable"?
- ... that the owner of 130 West 30th Street would have renamed the structure the "Beaver Pelt Building" if it could not be named after its architect?
- ... that the murder of Jiang Ge led to public debate in China over the actions of Jiang's roommate during her murder?
- ... that George Willis Pack, a Northerner and Lincoln supporter, financed a monument to Confederate governor Zebulon Vance in Asheville, North Carolina?
- ... that the painter of The Rape of Lucretia updated the ancient legend by setting the scene in the bedroom of a contemporary Italian home?
- ... that the projector at the Walter Reade Theater had to be modified to screen Nathaniel Dorsky's short film Triste?
- ... that Dacrytherium, literally meaning 'tear beast', was named after its "tear-pit"?
- ... that the construction of the Rajiv Lochan Temple has been variously attributed to two mythical kings and a god?
2 January 2024
- 00:00, 2 January 2024 (UTC)
- ... that if the double-headed Romano-British dragonesque brooch type (example pictured) represents any real animal, it may be hares rather than dragons?
- ... that human rights activist Adeeb Youssef was imprisoned and tortured but later became the governor of Central Darfur?
- ... that the Cross Temple in Fangshan, Beijing, is the only surviving Nestorian Christian site in China?
- ... that Switch Disco's song "Everything" saw a 185-percent increase in its Spotify streams after it was used in the seventh series of Love Island?
- ... that after popularizing the term rizz, Kai Cenat stopped using the term himself, saying that TikTok had butchered the word?
- ... that Forbes said of the Jetson One aircraft, "Flying Cars Are Here"?
- ... that after accepting the job of team physician for the Green Bay Packers in 1962, E. S. Brusky was not paid a salary for at least the first nine years of his tenure?
- ... that examples of artificial planets in science fiction include Riverworld, the Well World, and the Death Star?
1 January 2024
- 00:00, 1 January 2024 (UTC)
- ... that Criccieth Castle (pictured) combined the "latest advances in military technology" with the "haphazard Welsh castle building style"?
- ... that Jerry Atkinson, a manager for a department store, helped prevent the Green Bay Packers from becoming insolvent in 1949 and 1950?
- ... that the most tweeted word on New Year's Eve 2013 related to the anime opening theme "Guren no Yumiya"?
- ... that Carlos Santana Tovar, who represented Amazonas in the 1952 Venezuelan Constituent Assembly, was taken hostage during the 1921 revolution and escaped only years later?
- ... that Only Up! was removed from Steam twice: first over copyright violations and subsequently to alleviate the developer's stress?
- ... that the Lunar Ejecta and Meteorites experiment continuously overheated and had to be switched off during the lunar noon?
- ... that Brian Herbert, the son of Frank Herbert, may have left a poem out of a collection of his father's poetry because it was "too racy"?
- ... that Prince William reportedly used the name "Steve" while studying at the University of St Andrews to avoid attracting attention from the media?