July 2026 8 articles

History Habits
  • 11 mins read

The Thunderstorm That Forged Freedom – How Vermont’s Bold Stand on July 8, 1777, Wrote the First American Ban on Slavery and the Radical Blueprint for Self-Made Independence

In the sweltering heat of a New England summer, amid the chaos of a revolution hanging by a thread, a ragtag group of frontier delegates...

History Habits
  • 11 mins read

The Desperate Charge at Otumba – How a Handful of Starving Survivors Toppled an Empire on July 7, 1520

On July 7, 1520, in the sun-baked plains near Otumba (or Otompan), a ragged band of about 400–500 exhausted Spanish conquistadors and roughly 1,000–2,000 Tlaxcalan...

The Unbreakable Spear – How Epaminondas Shattered Sparta’s Myth of Invincibility at Leuctra on July 6, 371 BC

In the sweltering summer heat of central Greece, on a dusty plain near the obscure Boeotian village of Leuctra, the impossible happened. On July 6,...

History Habits
  • 10 mins read

The Spear That Shattered Sparta – Epaminondas’ Final Triumph at Mantinea on July 4, 362 BC – And the Unbreakable Habit of Focused Strikes That Can Transform Your Life Today

In the sweltering summer heat of the Peloponnese, on what we now mark as July 4, 362 BC, the plains near Mantinea witnessed one of...

History Habits
  • 12 mins read

The Inferno of Chesma – How One Daring Naval Gambit in 1770 Ignited a Blueprint for Crushing Overwhelming Odds in Your Own Life

On July 5, 1770, in the sun-baked waters of the Aegean Sea near the western coast of Anatolia, a ragtag Russian squadron—far from home, outnumbered,...

The River Crossing That Forged an Empire – Constantine’s Masterstroke at Adrianople on July 3, 324 AD

In the sweltering heat of a Thracian summer, on July 3, 324 AD, two Roman emperors faced off across the muddy waters of the Hebrus...

History Habits
  • 13 mins read

The Ambush at Dawn – How Li Shimin’s Bold Strike at Xuanwu Gate Forged China’s Golden Age on July 2, 626 AD

Imagine the first light of dawn breaking over the massive walls of Chang'an, the grand capital of the young Tang dynasty. The air is thick...

History Habits
  • 14 mins read

The Alexandria Oath That Toppled Tyrants and Built the Colosseum – How One Sweltering July 1 in 69 AD Launched Vespasian’s Empire from the Margins – And the Battle-Tested, No-Nonsense Plan to Proclaim Your Own Victory Today

On July 1, 69 AD, in the sun-baked streets of Alexandria, Egypt, a Roman prefect named Tiberius Julius Alexander did something quietly revolutionary. He ordered...