History Challenge || July 11, 2026
Thomas Jefferson
Suez Canal
"July Crisis"
Roald Amundsen
Welcome to Kudos365 Weekly History Challenge. Test your knowledge of history and see how many of the questions you can answer correctly. A new History Challenge is released every Saturday.
Thomas Jefferson
Suez Canal
"July Crisis"
Roald Amundsen
Curious about what happened today in history? Discover highlights from July 17th, including important events and defining moments from around the world.
Looking through these three windows on history reminds us that while the tools of civilization evolve, the human story continues to be driven by many of the same hopes, challenges, and ambitions that have shaped every generation. Continue reading
Westrup Heide in the early morning during the heather blossom season, Haltern am See, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.
Dietmar Rabich, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons. View source.
Aesop (620 – 564 BC) Greek fabulist and story teller
NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day:
This sparkling, colorful gemstone is a spiral galaxy, NGC 300. It is one of the closest spiral galaxies to Earth, only about 6 million light-years away. But does it really look like this? Here is a more standard portrait of it. This unusual image combines the light from the stars and dust within the galaxy with the light from ionized clouds of interstellar gas shown in red (Sulphur), green (Hydrogen) and blue (Oxygen). Combining red and green light in different proportions makes yellow or orange light, most visible in the image. Light from other ionized gases is also at work in neon signs, fluorescent tubes and street lights. These massive clouds of ionized gas are typically created by young, massive stars that produce high-energy ultraviolet radiation capable of ionizing the gas. Massive stars are short-lived, compared with lighter stars like our sun, and explode as supernovas at the end of their lives. Some of the colorful clouds in the image could be hiding supernova remnants.
Photo by Team Ciel Austral Text: Cecilia Chirenti (NASA GSFC, UMCP, CRESST II)
Emerald swift (Sceloporus malachiticus) Finca El Pilar, Antigua Guatemala. Also known as the green spiny lizard.
Charles J. Sharp, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons. View source.
Fearless riders of the gale,
In your bleak eyes is the memory
Of sinking ships:
Desire, unsatisfied,
Droops from your wings.
You lie at dusk
In the sea’s ebbing cradles,
Unresponsive to its mood;
Or hover and swoop,
Snatching your food and rising again,
Greedy,
Unthinking.
You veer and steer your callous course,
Unloved of other birds;
And in your soulless cry
Is the mocking echo
Of woman’s weeping in the night.
This poem is in the public domain.
Leonora Speyer, (1872 - 1956) was an American poet and professional violinist born in Washington, D.C. She studied music in Brussels, Paris, and Leipzig. When she moved back to N.Y. in 1915, she started writing poetry. Speyer was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1927 for her poetry collection "Fiddler’s Farewell". She went to write other poetry collections.
NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day:
Is there an angry Sith using force lightning in the Tatacoa Desert? This is not science fiction, but a red sprite with multiple streamers! Ordinary lightning occurs when thundercloud particles collide, lose their electrons, and build up negative charge at the cloud bottom. The cloud’s negative charge repels negative charge deeper into the Earth, leaving Earth’s surface positively charged. The opposite charges attract, reaching towards each other and superheating the air into a white strike of plasma. Red sprites are millisecond events triggered by positive cloud-to-ground lightning. They extend up into the mesosphere where the air is too thin for thunder. Their red glow comes from heated molecular nitrogen. There are several potential causes for red sprites, including that the preceding positive lightning exposes the negatively charged cloud core to the positively charged upper atmosphere, allowing those charges to connect. NASA’s Juno has observed sprites on Jupiter, indicating that sprites occur on other planets!
Photo by Mario Vargas Text: Keighley Rockcliffe (NASA GSFC, UMBC CSST, CRESST II)
Adult woman of the Laarim Tribe smoking in a pipe, Kimotong, South Sudan.
Diego Delso, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons. View source.