In today's world, Wikipedia:Recent additions/2022/October is a topic that has captured the attention of millions of people around the world. Whether due to its historical relevance, its impact on contemporary society or its influence on popular culture, Wikipedia:Recent additions/2022/October is a topic that continues to generate interest and debate. Over the years, Wikipedia:Recent additions/2022/October has been the subject of countless research, discussions and analysis, leading to a greater understanding of its complexities and the identification of multiple perspectives on it. In this article, we will explore some key aspects related to Wikipedia:Recent additions/2022/October, with the aim of delving into its meaning and scope in different contexts.
Archive page of the Main Page Did you know section
"WP:DYKA" redirects here. For the list of approved Did you know nominations, see WP:DYKNA.
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.
... that Windham William Sadler(pictured) made the first crossing of the Irish Sea by balloon in 1817, five years after his father had failed to achieve the same feat?
... that the "awkward, cramped galleries" at 2 Columbus Circle later housed New York City government offices?
... that the perpetrator of the 2015 Heze bombing was described as normal just days before the attack?
... that after civil rights activist Andrew Goodman was murdered, Mary Doyle Curran found and published a poem that Goodman had written for her class?
... that at 6 by 22 metres (20 by 72 feet), Zeitlaich is Jonas Burgert's largest oil painting?
... that John Allen Lewis printed the Los Angeles Star, the first newspaper to appear in Los Angeles in 1851, with two pages written in English and two in Spanish?
... that Frederick the Great personally convicted six judges for their involvement in the Miller Arnold case and sentenced them to a custodial penalty?
... that William of Littlington opposed the division of England and Scotland into two Carmelite provinces in 1303, was excommunicated, and did four years' penance in Paris?
... that Cardigan Donuts has sold a Super Mario Kart–inspired rainbow doughnut with white chocolate frosting, gold walnuts, and cereal marshmallows?
... that Lanfranco Cirillo is the architect of Putin's Palace, a palace complex on the Black Sea coast allegedly built for Vladimir Putin which is estimated to have cost over one billion US dollars?
... that the "father of French fighter aircraft" (pictured) became interested in flying whilst suspended from the French Army following a court-martial?
... that the relative rarity of the radiodontTitanokorys(video featured) in Marble Canyon suggests that the deposits in which it was found may represent the outermost edge of its distribution in life?
... that Iraqi poet Isa Hasan al-Yasiri ran away from school at 10 years old, before travelling with a camel caravan overnight to another village?
... that Welsh footballerJon Morgan went on to become a college principal after retiring?
... that the founder of the Guide to the Free World, helping people leave Russia after its invasion of Ukraine, said she was told: "It's good that you get out of Russia, but a pity that you won't be shot"?
... that the Shiba Inu memes of NAFO have been called "an actual tactical event against a nation state"?
... that you could place bets on a lettuce becoming the British prime minister?
00:00, 27 October 2022 (UTC)
Shannon Lucid
... that when astronaut Shannon Lucid(pictured) returned to Earth after six months in orbit, she was presented with a box of M&M's?
... that the Regensburg Botanical Society, founded on 14 May 1790, is the world's oldest extant botanical society?
... that decades after its closure, the station house of the Chicago "L"'s Madison station would house a hot dog stand?
... that before entering politics, Romina Pérez worked at the Center for Legal Studies and Social Research, which "became a 'nursery' for intellectual and political cadres of the Movement for Socialism"?
... that Marcela Revollo's pragmatic approach to legislating led her to cooperate with both neoliberal and socialist governments on women's rights legislation?
... that the abandoned 17th-century Grimethorpe Hall in South Yorkshire, England, has been proposed as a potential new headquarters for the Grimethorpe Colliery Band?
... that athletic trainer Gian Piero Ventrone, nicknamed "marine" for his very hard and tiring training sessions, made his players ring a "bell of shame" when they were too exhausted to continue?
00:00, 26 October 2022 (UTC)
Skiagraph of 3-month-old infant by Sydney Rowland, 1896
... that before bungee jumping with White House aides in New Zealand, senior White House correspondent Bill Plante said he was "proving that you're never too old to do something really stupid"?
25 October 2022
12:00, 25 October 2022 (UTC)
Firebug and spider by the Master of the Brussels Initials
... that the level of detail in medieval depictions of firebugs(example pictured) has been cited as evidence that the Master of the Brussels Initials "knew the bug in nature"?
... that Tropical Storm Hermine in September 2022 produced record-breaking rainfall in the Canary Islands amounting to more than 20 times the monthly average?
... that according to one historian, James S. Rains made a "significant contribution to the Confederate war effort" by getting drunk?
... that César Mascetti was reportedly the first Argentine journalist to interview a member of the Beatles when he met a naked George Harrison on a Rio de Janeiro beach?
... that IBM EduQuest equipped the floppy drives in their computer systems with a dust shield to prevent the intrusion of dirt and chalk dust?
... that nightclub singer Rommy Revson earned millions of dollars from her 1986 invention of the scrunchie(examples pictured), which she originally named after her pet poodle?
... that the beat in Taylor Swift's song "Holy Ground" was described by Brad Nelson of The Atlantic as "insistent enough to act as punctuation for the lyrics"?
... that portraits of Lucy de László with a violin (one portrait pictured), painted by her husband, are recognised as some of the first examples of portraiture to include womens' talents in them?
... that Queen Camilla has said that her childhood at The Laines was "perfect in every way"?
... that despite a "No Rock & Roll" sign in the studios of the Utica College radio station, students played it anyway?
... that Kenyan coffee farmer "Pinkie" Jackson amassed Africa's largest collection of native butterflies?
... that following a gun battle with Polish legionnaires, five leaders of the Vilna Soviet of Workers Deputies committed suicide rather than surrendering?
... that Robert Nimmo's command of the UN Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan remains the longest ever command of a United Nations operation?
... that the Victory Theatre, the first theater on 42nd Street to show adult movies, later became a children's theater?
... that Rebeca Delgado created Freedom of Thought for Bolivia after being told by her previous party that she should leave if she wanted to be a "freethinker"?
... that Brooklyn Nine-Nine character Amy Santiago has straight hair because the show's two Latina regular cast members feared that one of them would be fired?
... that Adam Kingsmill, who is missing most of his right leg, played stand-up ice hockey until 2016?
... that a 28-year-old tire store manager drowned his four children in the same station wagon in which his father fatally shot himself in the head?
... that "perhaps the most notable wedding gown in existence" within the United States was once worn in St. Mary's-in-Tuxedo?
20 October 2022
12:00, 20 October 2022 (UTC)
Severo Aguilar
... that following his election to the Constituent Assembly, Severo Aguilar(pictured) had to trek four hours and hitch a ride on a truck in order to get to the assembly's headquarters in Sucre?
Doyle spiral illustrating plant growth in a 1911 Popular Science article
... that circle packings in the form of a Doyle spiral(pictured) were used to model plant growth long before their mathematical investigation by Doyle?
... that Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed, India's second Muslim president, was also the second Indian president to die in office?
... that while some lichen species in the genus Piccolia have ranges which span multiple continents, others are restricted to single islands?
... that Stardust, the title of a composition by Taylor Scott Davis for eight voices a cappella commissioned by Voces8, became also the name of the vocal ensemble's 2022 tour?
... that the roadless Solace Provincial Park in the Temagami area of Ontario, Canada, is considered as one of the most isolated, wild places in the province?
... that Malaysian poet Wong Phui Nam wrote in English, despite feeling no connection to the English literary tradition?
... that the depiction of conservative Catholic intellectuals in the play Heroes of the Fourth Turning was praised both by its subjects and by liberal New York theater critics?
... that some analysts considered Víctor Hugo Zamora's appointment as hydrocarbons minister to be a gesture to oil companies, guaranteeing "covert continuity" between the Áñez and Morales governments?
... that former child refugee Ann Beaglehole has become a historian specialising in refugee history?
... that one reviewer of the British reality TV series Make Me Prime Minister said "Technically it's worth five stars. In every other way, I wish I was dead"?
18 October 2022
12:00, 18 October 2022 (UTC)
Folio of a medieval copy of the Amṛtasiddhi
... that the Amṛtasiddhi(folio pictured), translated as 'the attainment of immortality', is an early text about what later became haṭha yoga?
... that from 1912, Jindřiška Flajšhansová was the principal editor of Ženské listy, a Czech journal that became a women's "survival manual" during World War I?
... that Don Lemon "didn't mean to set the internet on fire" when teasing the rebranding of CNN Tonight to Don Lemon Tonight?
00:00, 18 October 2022 (UTC)
Jack Johnson vs. James J. Jeffries
... that The New York Times claimed that if Johnson beat Jeffries(fight pictured), black people would "misinterpret his victory as justifying claims to much more than mere physical equality with their white neighbors"?
... that Windows 3.1 had a special version, known as Modular Windows, that was controlled via television?
... that during the 1960s and 1970s, American artist Robert Bauer painted figures that were a mixture of 20th-century avant-garde funk and 17th-century Dutch realism?
... that yoga nidra, a state of consciousness "in which Buddhas may access secret knowledge", is being studied for potential treatment of sleep problems?
... that Kotaku revised an article about Nintendo Switch emulation after Nintendo complained that the previous version encouraged piracy?
... that the book Working from Within details how W. V. Quine only began to use the term "naturalism" years after he had already developed the key tenets of the philosophy?
... that the owner of a Louisiana radio station was killed while in the process of putting it back on the air?
... that the white design on the national Māori flag(pictured) is a traditional Māori koru, or fern frond, representing renewal and hope for the future?
... that Cathie Dunsford(pictured) was unable to find many books about lesbianism in the 1970s, but by the 1980s had herself become a writer and anthologist of lesbian literature?
... that in 1816, a copy of the long-lost Institutes by the Roman jurist Gaius was discovered, hidden underneath writings by Saint Jerome?
... that Ruth M. Anderson recorded a "timeless" Spain in her photographs of the 1920s?
... that Cleo Damianakes's 1920s book dust jacket designs "made sex respectable", but Hemingway did not like the "large misplaced breasts" on A Farewell to Arms?
... that The Summer Hikaru Died went from drawings on a Twitter account to receiving three times more orders than copies available in its first print run?
... that a doctor told Howie Shanks that he only had a few weeks to live, but he lived another 31 years?
... that medievalist Edward Rand rang the doorbell of Harvard president Charles William Eliot and asked him: "I would like to go to Harvard; do you have any money?"
... that Nick Kerbawy did not receive his college tennis championship trophy until 14 years after winning it?
... that the dining room at Ardress House has no internal doors and can only be reached using an external entrance?
7 October 2022
00:00, 7 October 2022 (UTC)
Interior of St. Martin, Sindelfingen
... that the flat wooden ceiling of St. Martin(pictured), the Lutheran main church of Sindelfingen built in the 11th century, is still preserved?
... that Cephas L. Bard, the first American physician in Ventura, California, was also the first person to die in the hospital he built there?
... that independent media and scholars estimate that thousands might have perished in the Yarkand Massacre in 2014?
... that Reconstructing Womanhood by Hazel Carby, about the history of American black women writers, was said to be a "landmark study" and "groundbreaking"?
... that the search engine of Geliyoo was found to be retrieving its results from Google, in contrast to the company's claims of spending 10 million Turkish liras on development?
... that at the time of its construction in 1920, the Howard Theatre in Atlanta was the second-largest movie theater in the world, with a seating capacity of 2,700?
... that Oglethorpe County High School worked with the University of Georgia to bring their dropout rate from 65 dropouts in 1985–86 to just 4 in 1987–88?
... that when pieces from Mendelssohn's German Liturgy were sung by the Thomanerchor(pictured) in 2022, a reviewer noted "a captivating purity in the tone of devotional Reformation romanticism"?
... that the only run scored by John Gamble was a game-winner?
... that despite the commercial success of previous Kendrick Brothers films, star Kirk Cameron said that Lifemark was unable to secure a distributor due to its pro-life stance?
... that the elite men's race at today's London Marathon is expected to feature three of the five fastest men in history?
... that Bob Dylan recorded "To Ramona" in a single take, for an album recorded in a single three-hour session?
... that during his first air-sea rescue mission with the Irish Air Corps, Barney McMahon landed to refuel with a mixture of petrol and paraffin, filtered through a pair of tights?
... that William Anders took the iconic photograph Earthrise(pictured)?
... that an investigation into the Royal Oak post office shootings led one congressman to accuse the Postal Service of having been "asleep at the switch"?
... that Gil Kim played professional baseball in the Netherlands, China, Australia, Spain, and Venezuela, scouted in Mexico and the Dominican Republic, and coaches in Canada?
... that Hamim Tohari, the current spokesperson of the Indonesian Army, was once removed from his post after being caught using a phone during a meeting with the commander-in-chief?
... that TreasuryDirect, a website for purchasing US Treasury securities, originated in 1986 as a computerized service conducted over postal mail?
... that the manga series Reptilia was inspired in part by a story from Japanese folklore about a woman who is transformed into a snake, told to author Kazuo Umezu as a child?
... that Nancy Reagan jumped out of her bath when she heard that her husband had been elected President of the United States?