In today's world, Wikipedia:Recent additions/2023/January has become a topic of great importance and interest. Since its emergence, Wikipedia:Recent additions/2023/January has captured the attention of millions of people around the world, generating debates, discussions and, in many cases, concrete actions. Its impact has transcended borders, cultures and generations, becoming a focal point of attention for experts, researchers, professionals and the general public. In this article, we will analyze various aspects related to Wikipedia:Recent additions/2023/January, exploring its origins, evolution, implications and possible future scenarios. Throughout these pages, we will unravel the mysteries surrounding Wikipedia:Recent additions/2023/January, breaking down its importance and relevance in the current context, providing a comprehensive and updated vision on this topic that concerns us so much.
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 during the bloody siege of Badajoz, William Nicholas(pictured) was wounded by musket-ball and bayonet, but continued to give orders and was carried up the breach, only to be shot again?
... that David Bowie frequently updated the lyrics for his song "Young Americans" to keep them contemporary?
... that after complaints of A Pickle for the Knowing Ones lacking punctuation, the author published a second edition with full pages of punctuation in the appendix?
... that Fernando Cajías, who belongs to the first generation of professional historians in Bolivia, composed part of history academia's "Mirista wing"?
... that a mercury spill occurred at Agua Fria High School when students discovered and started playing with an unsecured supply of the element?
... that industrial designer Cesar Vergara started designing trains because he "thought most were awful looking"?
... that the Three Tuns, a 17th-century pub in Alcester, has been left roofless since a 2021 fire?
... that of up to 300 bullets fired in the Ash Street shootout between U.S. Army Rangers and alleged drug dealers, none were reported to have hit anyone?
... that before Paul Goodman became known for his views on education, he wrote an autobiographical novel about a teacher's sexual relationship with his student?
... that as a last-minute substitute in a premiere performance at Oper Frankfurt, Elena Manistina sang from the side while the assistant director mimed onstage?
... that the agent at 14th Place station was the target of an attempted murder?
... that Arab troops under King Faisal missed the 24 January 1917 capture of Wejh by two days because they had been celebrating the capture of £20,000 in gold?
... that the Sangage Sheikhdom was the last holdout of native Swahili resistance to Portuguese colonization in northern Mozambique?
... that author John Neal said reading too much of Logan would kill you?
26 January 2023
00:00, 26 January 2023 (UTC)
1946 Romanian propaganda poster
... that Soviet-trained commissar Dumitru Petrescu supervised propaganda (example pictured) aimed at purging a "nest of reactionaries" out of the Romanian Army?
... that Gogu Rădulescu, a member of the Romanian Communist Party central committee, was allegedly spied on by his colleagues through Lăutari performers, called upon to "sing him the blues"?
... that although Andrzej Żuławski's film Possession is referred to as a psychological drama and horror, its genre is still a matter of controversy?
... that when visiting Britain during World War II, naval officer Kalyani Sen(pictured) reported that Indian women were breaking down prejudices against men and women working together by joining the military?
... that the lobby of New York's 630 Ninth Avenue is decorated with stylized movie cameras, evoking the building's original purpose?
... that Sosates was described as the "Jewish Homer", but all of his works are lost?
... that health economist Selma Mushkin estimated in the early 1970s that up to 50 percent of poor children in Washington, D.C., were affected by lead poisoning?
... that after the release of Enola Holmes in 2020, the original author's estate sued Netflix, claiming that it violated copyright laws because it depicted Sherlock Holmes as having emotions?
... that a new parasite was described from a certain shrew's feces?
00:00, 24 January 2023 (UTC)
Mercedes-Benz Vision EQXX
... that the Mercedes-Benz Vision EQXX(pictured) traveled more than 1,000 km (621 mi) from Sindelfingen to Cassis on a single charge with energy to spare?
... that the mass Messe in A by Christopher Tambling, originally set for high voices, proved so popular that a four-part version was commissioned?
... that American football player Joe Hall, whose position was running back, weighed up to 340 pounds (150 kg) during his career?
... that Group A of the 2006 FIFA World Cup featured the highest-scoring opening game in World Cup history since the competition began using a single match opening format?
... that when Australian Brihony Dawson debuted as the first non-binary host of reality TV franchise The Challenge, they decided not to imitate the "ominous" style of the U.S. host?
... that the Japanese male–male romance magazine June was originally pitched to its publisher as a "mildly pornographic magazine for women"?
... that the cremated remains of AIDS activist Ortez Alderson were thrown onto the South Lawn of the White House in the ACT UP Ashes Action of 1992?
... that PeopleSound was Europe's most visited music streaming site in 2000, and had offered any artist £100 for each song they uploaded?
... that American football linebackerSegun Olubi grew up in New Jersey, Minnesota, Arizona, England, and California, and attended four different colleges in Idaho, California, and Arkansas?
... that after the Forest Park Carousel(pictured) was acquired for $30,000 in 1972, one of its later operators likened the deal to "buying a Rembrandt for $25"?
... that Elisabeth Waterhouse founded the National Chamber Music Course summer school in 1974 and has managed it since?
... that Soviet cruiser Vasily Chapayev was ordered to sail on 24 December 1976, but its crew refused to comply, causing the removal of its senior officers?
... that Jiří Kylián had all the dancers in his ballet Bella Figura appear topless to equalise men and women?
... that Canadian artist Tom Forrestall spent six months painting his own car?
00:00, 21 January 2023 (UTC)
Charles Wolley-Dod
... that British Imperial Airways manager Charles Wolley-Dod(pictured) and two crew members were killed in an unexplained plane crash in Germany in 1937?
... that after Archimedes first defined convex curves, mathematicians lost interest in their analysis until the 19th century, more than two millennia later?
... that British architect Diane Haigh transformed one historic building into an art gallery and another into a hospice?
... that Liu Ji'en was assassinated just 60 days after being crowned the emperor of the Northern Han?
... that the developers of Sonic felt the series' linear design contained "little room for evolution" so they decided to make Sonic Frontiers an open world game?
... that Governor Miguel Barbosa Huerta said that his predecessor's death in office was a punishment from God – and then died in office himself?
... that a yellow-spotted emerald(pictured) specimen was found for the first time in the United Kingdom in 2018, when a wildlife photographer used Twitter to identify it?
... that Nobel laureate Thomas Mann reportedly did not want his Reflections of a Nonpolitical Man to be translated into English during his lifetime due to its chauvinistic content?
... that Ariana Orrego was the first Peruvian gymnast to compete at the Olympic Games?
... that before Sarah Elmaleh voiced the player character in the video game Anthem, developed by BioWare, she voiced characters in a mod of an earlier BioWare game?
... that the Loddon Bridge disaster, which killed three people, led to changes in how falsework was managed on British construction sites?
... that because of dotations made by Napoleon to his supporters, the Kingdom of Westphalia was never fiscally solvent under French rule?
... that Andrew Leake was called "Queen Anne's handsome captain"?
... that the founders of New York City's Circle in the Square Theatre had a total of $320 when they leased an inn in 1951?
... that Nina de Creeft Ward worked on art that resembles corpses of extinct and endangered species to show "how people have caused a scourge to the balance of nature"?
... that an old cookbook recommends eating tiger meat to ward off tigers?
00:00, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
Emblem in Promptuarium Iconum Insigniorum
... that the title page of Promptuarium Iconum Insigniorum shows an eagle atop a globe flanked by serpents (pictured), which symbolizes worldly triumph?
... that after Jim Sheddan ditched his Hawker Typhoon in the North Sea upon it being damaged by anti-aircraft fire, he spent 19 hours in an inflatable dinghy?
... that Bulkboeken ('bulk books') were cheap reprints of Dutch literary classics, published from 1971 to the late 1990s, and again from 2007?
... that statistics for the roller coaster Steel Curtain were announced through a scratch card?
18 January 2023
12:00, 18 January 2023 (UTC)
Coat of arms of Raphael de Mercatellis
... that the library of Raphael de Mercatellis(coat of arms pictured) was the first library in the Low Countries to "reveal an extensive interest in what we may call Renaissance ideas"?
... that the president of his own party criticized the speed at which members of the Congress of Puebla moved to appoint Sergio Salomón Céspedes as the substitute governor?
... that the luxury passenger steamer Stephen Furness was taken into Royal Navy service during the First World War and was sunk by a U-boat, with the loss of more than 100 lives?
... that Pap of Armenia survived an assassination attempt by Roman legions during a battle, but was later murdered by the Romans during a feast?
... that the Communist Opposition was the most popular slate in the 1931 Czechoslovak municipal election in Unhošť?
... that according to Ren Xiaoping, the first reference to a body swap occurs in the Chinese short story "Judge Lu", in which the titular character performs a head transplant on his friend's wife?
00:00, 18 January 2023 (UTC)
A hallway, an example of a liminal space
... that research suggests liminal spaces(example pictured) appear unsettling by falling in the uncanny valley of physical places?
... that Park Ji-hyun helped to expose an online sex-crime ring and later became the interim co-chair of the Democratic Party of Korea at the age of 26?
... that the Aesculapian Club, founded in Edinburgh in 1773, still meets twice a year?
... that the talabaw soup (pictured), which consists primarily of bamboo shoots, is the essential dish of Myanmar's Karen people, who use it to supplement rice?
... that Lord Cottenham resigned from MI5 during the Second World War, as he did not support the war with Germany?
... that the BK inequality was used to identify implausibly lucky Florida Lottery winners, whose involvement in illegal activities was later confirmed by investigations?
... that the Argentina and Netherlands national football teams have played each other at every other FIFA World Cup since 1998?
... that Don Luce led a group of Americans to a secret part of a South Vietnamese prison where inmates were kept in squalor in what were called "tiger cages"?
... that the Blemyomachia is an epic poem describing a historical clash between the Roman Empire and the Blemmyes in the Nile valley?
... that to comply with a law that restricted liquor sales near churches, the Peninsula New York placed its cocktail lounge up a flight of stairs and down a long hallway?
... that campaigning by climate activist Kimiko Hirata halted plans to build 17 new coal-fired power plants following the Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan?
... that the only known specimen of the Cretaceous lizard Carsosaurus contains preserved embryos?
... that exactly how "man of mystery" Max Wenner fell from an airliner flying over Belgium remains a mystery?
00:00, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Row NYC Hotel, formerly the Royal Manhattan
... that the Royal Manhattan Hotel(pictured), sold for $10 million in 1969, attracted no buyers when it was placed for sale at $1.8 million just six years later?
... that París Galán, who introduced a style of drag performance in Bolivia, became the first-ever transgender individual to win elective office in the country?
... that when asked by reporters why he was retiring, U.S. Supreme Court justice Thurgood Marshall replied: "What's wrong with me? I'm old. I'm getting old and coming apart"?
14 January 2023
12:00, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
Janet Sorg Stoltzfus
... that American educator Janet Sorg Stoltzfus(pictured) established the first foreign school in northern Yemen?
... that, when discussing his music project Love or Loved, K-pop star B.I said that he felt the opposite of love was not "I don't like you", but rather "I loved you before"?
00:00, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
Commander and soldiers of the Detached Unit of the Polish Army
... that businessman Usman Ja'far was the first locally born governor of West Kalimantan elected in nearly 40 years?
... that although it was rejected by the lesbian mainstream when it was first released, Kamikaze Hearts has since been called a milestone in queer cinema?
... that Paramount Chief Matilda Lansana Minah V has backed a 30-percent quota for the representation of women in the parliament of Sierra Leone?
... that fighter pilot Winton W. Marshall used the jet exhaust of his F-86 Sabre to extinguish the fire from a crashed B-47 bomber?
... that a man who fatally shot a Florida woman waving a gun at him from her front yard after a road-rage incident was not charged in connection with her death?
... that according to Chinese physician Zhu Zhenheng, apparent possessions are typically no more than confusion caused by mucus?
... that American teacher Marc Fogel was sentenced to 14 years in Russian prison for possessing a small amount of marijuana, but has gotten little public attention compared to Brittney Griner?
... that the dinosaur Bashunosaurus was first mentioned in a scientific paper in 1989, but was only formally named in 2004?
... that Patty Loveless's musical career rebounded after she underwent surgery to repair a blood vessel on her vocal cords?
... that Monaco GP was the most popular arcade driving game in the United States in 1981?
... that Walter von Pückler earned the nickname Dreschgraf ('Thrashing Count') due to his frequent use of violent, antisemitic language?
11 January 2023
12:00, 11 January 2023 (UTC)
Ruby Tandoh
... that when baker Ruby Tandoh(pictured) publicly came out, she mocked critics who suggested that she had romanced a male contest judge?
... that while most lichens that grow on plants live on the surface, the sole species in Amazonotrema grows partially among the cells of the tree bark on which it lives?
... that the developers of Among Us VR said that the game could have been too spooky?
00:00, 10 January 2023 (UTC)
Kyiv's old post office after its explosion
... that Kyiv's Central Post Office was built after military forces deliberately destroyed its predecessor (pictured) less than a year after it was completed?
... that according to Viktor Kožený's lawyer, Fox Hill Prison in the Bahamas is known for "breaking even the toughest of men"?
... that one of the districts in the city of Astrakhan is named after Bolshevik leader Aleksandr Trusov?
... that Lady Gaga said she was in a dark state of mind when writing the song "Free Woman" but got over it after completing the song?
... that after saying that joining the Three-Self Patriotic Movement was "against the will of God", Chinese theologian Jia Yuming joined it and became its vice chairperson?
... that workers had to somersault to safety when the Secor Bridge collapsed in 1911?
... that croton seeds were already being used as a laxative when Chinese physician Wang Haogu discovered that they could also be used to treat diarrhea?
... that National Football League player Grant Hermanns won his state high-school wrestling championship just months after a near-fatal staph infection?
... that Kamibox's video game A Joke That's Worth $0.99 is permanently on special offer because Itch.io does not allow $0.99 as a regular price?
8 January 2023
12:00, 8 January 2023 (UTC)
Skull in Ye Olde White Harte
... that Ye Olde White Harte, reputed to be "one of Hull's most haunted pubs", has a skull of unknown provenance (pictured) in the bar?
... that after a lifetime of feeling undervalued, Nergisî gained the appreciation of the Ottoman sultan and was sent to the front as a chronicler, only to fall from his horse and die on his way?
... that a Washington state radio station turned to "professional bikini watchers"—military recruiters—to report on crowds at local beaches?
... that Michael S. Farbman's reporting of the Russian Civil War in winter 1917–18 was described by The Observer as "one of the outstanding successes of the time in special correspondence"?
... that people are prone to such a strong distaste for uncertainty that they might value a $50 gift card more than a lottery ticket that yields a $50 or $100 gift card with equal probability?
... that Concentricities, a 2019 clarinet–cello–piano trio by Graham Waterhouse, musically depicts a theme of circular, spiraling, or oscillating concentric phenomena in nature and human structures?
... that Wan Abubakar submitted his resignation to run for reelection, but retracted it when his candidacy failed?
... that Sarah Mardini worked as a humanitarian for refugees and now could be sentenced to 25 years in prison?
... that Quasar Data Products' ruggedized QDP-300 microcomputer alerts the user if it is potentially overheating by sounding an alarm?
... that a 2016 leaflet published by the British government warned that Brexit would increase the cost of living and lead to a decade or more of uncertainty?
... that the Macks Creek Law originated in response to a state legislator getting a traffic ticket?
... that James B. Jones got his nickname, "Jawbone", from his time as a traveling soap salesman?
... that George Balanchine said that a solo in his ballet Episodes(pictured) should evoke the image of a fly in a glass of milk?
... that L. J. Potts translated the Poetics as Aristotle on the Art of Fiction, a title accused of " dangerously the wide gap between Aristotle and ourselves", but later called "creative genius"?
... that Atlanta's "quicker picker-upper" aired martial arts movies, professional wrestling, jazz music, and Japanese-language programming?
... that despite published scholarship to the contrary, Andrew Planta neither received a doctorate nor taught mathematics at Erlangen?
... that in November 2022, Leicester City Council used the Food Act 1984 in combination with a royal charter of 1199 to levy a charge on the organisers of two Christmas light switching-on events?
... that artist Isaac Sailmaker(painting shown) was referred to in contemporary journals and books as "the father of British sea painting"?
... that the audience sometimes heckles defeated sumo wrestlers by throwing zabuton onto the stage at them?
... that while at high school, Johann Georg Seidenbusch declared to Our Lady: "ad carissimam Sponsam te eligo" (I choose thee as my dearest Bride)?
... that Cincinnati hired Louisville's head football coach to replace their own outgoing head coach just days after the two teams were announced as opponents for the 2022 Fenway Bowl?
... that when the former Clarence Hotel in Brighton began to collapse in 1990, the resulting closure of North Street diverted 120 buses per hour in each direction for a week?
... that when serving as Governor of Riau, Soeripto helped found the province's first daily newspaper?
... that Culver City's Measure VY would have allowed 16-year-olds to vote, but it fell short by 16 votes out of over 16,000?
5 January 2023
12:00, 5 January 2023 (UTC)
Sao Sanda
... that Sao Sanda(pictured), the last princess of Yawnghwe, is one of only two living princesses to have attended the 1947 Panglong Conference?
... that New York mayor Michael Bloomberg said that the only calls on his bat phone were from salespeople offering magazine subscriptions or insurance policies?
00:00, 5 January 2023 (UTC)
Monument to the Founders of Kyiv, depicted on a Ukrainian banknote
... that the 2021 film West Side Story was banned in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman, and Bahrain, likely due to the transgender character Anybodys?
... that according to legend, Giriyak Stupa was constructed over the body of a dead goose?
... that the parliamentary sign-language interpreter could not make out what South African MP Joan Fubbs tried to say in her tribute to President Cyril Ramaphosa?
... that a section of Mississippi Highway 489 was designated as the Jason Boyd Memorial Highway to commemorate the MDOT superintendent who was killed while removing debris from the road?
... that Minnesota legislator Claudia Meier cosponsored a bill freeing women from having to take their husbands' last names, and then took her husband's last name?
... that retired Indonesian general and politician Mochamad Hasbi fled from arrest for seven years after he was sentenced to a year in prison in relation to a corruption case?