Wikipedia:Recent additions

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.

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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.

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Did you know...

[edit]

9 March 2026

[edit]
  • 00:00, 9 March 2026 (UTC)
Halloween Martin
Halloween Martin

8 March 2026

[edit]
  • 00:00, 8 March 2026 (UTC)
Curlew sandpiper
Curlew sandpiper
  • ... that the small curlew sandpiper (pictured) respects neighbour territories when chasing intruders away?
  • ... that Abdul Rahman Salama, who currently serves as a Governor of Raqqa, used to work at a stone quarry?
  • ... that Tolkien: Man and Myth was described as particularly valuable for readers interested in "understand[ing] Tolkien from a religious perspective"?
  • ... that Katy Marchant won three British National Track Championships medals within a year of taking up track cycling?
  • ... that the Annamite striped rabbit was described by scientists as a new species after it was discovered in a Laotian market?
  • ... that tensions erupted between two local CDU associations after Thomas Kossendey ran as a candidate for a constituency?
  • ... that a Uruguayan-born victim of the September 11 attacks had founded a community in Sydney to help Uruguayans immigrating to Australia?
  • ... that in October 2025, over 1,500 Alaskans protested at a whale statue?

7 March 2026

[edit]
  • 12:00, 7 March 2026 (UTC)
Miniature from the Book of Hours of Boussu
Miniature from the Book of Hours of Boussu
  • ... that when the medieval Book of Hours of Boussu (miniature pictured) was restored in 2020, it was discovered that the spine of the book was still sewed with the original thread?
  • ... that Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh may have facilitated the killing of a political rival through a United States airstrike?
  • ... that Russian astrophysicist Inna Nikolaevna Leman-Balanovskaja was sentenced to five years in a Siberian labor camp as a result of false charges?
  • ... that several aesthetic and gameplay elements of the video game Quarantine II: Road Warrior, in which the player drives a weaponized hovercab, were inspired by the Mad Max franchise?
  • ... that Hans-Joachim Hacker worked at a state-owned food processing plant before joining the Volkskammer and Bundestag?
  • ... that despite being promoted exclusively through word of mouth, New York City's Henry Phipps Plaza West was fully occupied within a year of opening?
  • ... that net-filter coffee is named for its spoon-shaped filter, which resembles a hand net?
  • ... that the Minneapolis Police Department initially attributed one of the murders committed by spree killer Andrew Cunanan to one of his victims?
  • ... that March 7th first appeared on October 8th?
  • 00:00, 7 March 2026 (UTC)
Elinor Barker
Elinor Barker

6 March 2026

[edit]
  • 12:00, 6 March 2026 (UTC)
St. Paul's Reformed Episcopal Church
St. Paul's Reformed Episcopal Church
  • ... that a pastor of a Chicago church (pictured) resigned after it was discovered that he had previously been defrocked in 1915 for having multiple wives?
  • ... that local custom at Pyapon Mountain dictates that all jewelry must be hidden from view to avoid offending Pyapon Taung Shinma?
  • ... that Dai Dai Ames and Justin Pippen joined the Cal Bears after it replaced nearly all of its players in 2025?
  • ... that some of the largest specimens of Aciculolenus palmeri were around 9 millimeters long?
  • ... that the films of Wei Shujun often meditate on the process of making films for the Chinese cinema industry?
  • ... that a Galilean fortress once thought to be built by Akko-Ptolemais against the Hasmoneans, was actually built by the Hasmoneans to monitor Akko?
  • ... that mathematician Grete Hermann wrote political philosophy articles for Der Funke and Sozialistische Warte under various pseudonyms during the German resistance to Nazism?
  • ... that the Unsanctioned set of Magic: The Gathering cards are illegal in the game's tournaments due to their satirical nature?
  • ... that Belle Hassan once milked goats on television?
  • 00:00, 6 March 2026 (UTC)
Bosco Nordio nature reserve
Bosco Nordio nature reserve

5 March 2026

[edit]
  • 12:00, 5 March 2026 (UTC)
Simone Giertz
Simone Giertz
  • ... that the "Queen of Shitty Robots" (pictured) built a "Pussy Grabs Back Machine"?
  • ... that Alex Honnold's memoir Alone on the Wall was called a "celebration of nonthinking" by The Atlantic?
  • ... that Uruguayan perennial candidate Domingo Tortorelli campaigned on promises such as a 15-minute workday and installing free milk taps on every street corner?
  • ... that the Harvard–Dudley line once used streetcars made from two smaller streetcars?
  • ... that out of appreciation for the game's background music, the art director of Splatoon 2: Octo Expansion created a fictional, in-game DJ character to associate it with?
  • ... that in the 1970s, Walter Steding became known for his electric violin, which he played while wearing flashing goggles "synced" to his brainwaves?
  • ... that the modern increase of people named Ava is often credited to Hollywood actress Ava Gardner?
  • ... that Kelly Curtis jumped from heptathlon to skeleton?
  • ... that Beyond Dreams, about an ex-convict torn between a heist and housekeeping, won the Church of Sweden's Film Prize?
  • 00:00, 5 March 2026 (UTC)
Report on the Japanese surrender at Singapore in September 1945 by Brigadier J. D. Rogers
  • ... that John David Rogers represented Australia at the Japanese surrender in Singapore in September 1945 (video featured)?
  • ... that the lyricist of "Coffee Houser Sei Addata" wrote its last lyrics on a cigarette packet?
  • ... that a John Robert Cozens painting set the record auction price for an 18th-century English watercolour at £2.4 million?
  • ... that the design of the Moffat distillery building reflects the style of the surrounding farm buildings?
  • ... that the Russian voice actress who portrayed the lead role in the top two highest-grossing Russian films of all time is also an accomplished ice skater?
  • ... that a reviewer said that the musicians on the Christian music compilation 4-Way Noise Explosion would prompt a wave of people leaving Christianity?
  • ... that Kurt Wright did not seek reelection to the Burlington City Council due to federal regulations that would have made him leave his radio show?
  • ... that the Cheyenne Mountain Complex is the alternate command center for both the North American Aerospace Defense Command and the United States Northern Command?
  • ... that a teacher was fired for reading Dawn McMillan's book I Need a New Butt! to his second-grade class?

4 March 2026

[edit]
  • 00:00, 4 March 2026 (UTC)
Bella Ramsey
Bella Ramsey
  • ... that Bella Ramsey (pictured) is the youngest person ever to be nominated twice for a Primetime Emmy lead-actress award?
  • ... that German settler newspapers played a significant role in agitating for the Herero and Nama genocide?
  • ... that British academic Kadiatu Kanneh-Mason quit her job to raise seven children and encouraged them to become musicians?
  • ... that the artworks in the Louvre's Gallery of the Five Continents are meant to dialogue with each other?
  • ... that a 1998 referendum to repeal South Carolina's unenforceable interracial marriage ban was opposed by more than 38 percent of voters?
  • ... that the mother of a man who was murdered by Martín Ríos said that the case opened a social debate in Argentina on the difference between psychosis and psychopathy?
  • ... that the excavator of the Palazzo delle Colonne had to publish his findings from photographs and memory after World War II interrupted the excavation and vandals destroyed the records?
  • ... that Confederate Navy officer Alexander F. Warley commanded the ironclad ram CSS Manassas to attack two ships on which he had previously served as a U.S. Navy sailor?
  • ... that some of the tracks on Karrionic Hacktician and Skin Stripper are only a few seconds long?
  • ... that Comic Beam has published manga making fun of its low sales?

3 March 2026

[edit]
  • 00:00, 3 March 2026 (UTC)
House of the Pelplin Abbots
House of the Pelplin Abbots
  • ... that the voivode of a Polish region bought a townhouse (pictured) for his brother, an abbot who converted it to an inn?
  • ... that in 2025, Liz Pelly published the book Mood Machine, a critical examination of Spotify including the platform's promotion of fake artists?
  • ... that "Aeao" was involved in a multi-platform trend joined by numerous K-pop celebrities nine years after its release?
  • ... that Viktor Pylypenko ended a relationship with his Emirati boyfriend and returned to Ukraine to fight in the Russo-Ukrainian war?
  • ... that Ottoman Iraq's nationality law was a legal basis for Saddam Hussein to classify up to two million Iraqis as "inauthentic" and expel as many as 400,000 of them?
  • ... that actor Dominic Sessa made his film debut with a breakthrough role as a student in the Christmas film The Holdovers?
  • ... that Boone and Scenic Valley Railroad 8419 was one of the first Chinese steam locomotives to be exported to the United States?
  • ... that Scottish politician Tam Dalyell opposed devolution, warning it would become a "motorway without exit to a separate state"?
  • ... that, in Agnes Borinsky's queer interpretation of the Bible's Song of Songs, audience members placed offerings on a "shrine to the dead"?

2 March 2026

[edit]
  • 00:00, 2 March 2026 (UTC)
Strand Arcade
Strand Arcade

1 March 2026

[edit]
  • 12:00, 1 March 2026 (UTC)
Drawing of a male Alphasida zapaterii
Drawing of a male Alphasida zapaterii
  • 00:00, 1 March 2026 (UTC)
Ritva Auvinen
Ritva Auvinen