October 23

2011 Van earthquakes 2011

2011 Van earthquakes

On October 23, 2011, a shallow, powerful earthquake struck near Tuşba on the northeastern shore of Lake Van in eastern Turkey, killing hundreds, collapsing whole neighborhoods, and setting off an aftershock sequence that included a deadly shock centered near Erciş on November 9, 2011. The sequence exposed vulnerabilities in building practice, tested a winter relief effort, and reshaped local debates about seismic resilience. Read more


2004 Chūetsu earthquake 2004

2004 Chūetsu earthquake

On the evening of October 23, 2004, a strong inland earthquake struck central Niigata Prefecture near Ojiya, Japan, producing violent shaking, landslides and localized ground failure that left dozens dead, thousands injured and thousands of homes damaged. The Mw ≈ 6.6 quake and its long aftershock sequence exposed vulnerabilities in older housing, river‑terrace soils and lifeline networks and prompted changes to fault mapping, retrofitting and emergency coordination across Japan. Read more


Moscow theatre hostage crisis (Dubrovka, Nord-Ost siege) 2002

Moscow theatre hostage crisis (Dubrovka, Nord-Ost siege)

On the evening of October 23, 2002, armed militants led by Movsar Barayev seized the Dubrovka Theatre during a performance of the musical Nord-Ost, taking roughly 850 people hostage. After a multi-day standoff, Russian special forces pumped an undisclosed incapacitating agent into the theatre and stormed the building in the early hours of October 26. About 129 hostages died; all attackers were killed. The use of an opioid-based gas, secrecy about its composition, and shortcomings in the medical response made the operation one of the most controversial counterterrorism actions of the post-Soviet era. Read more


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Phillips disaster of 1989 1989

Phillips disaster of 1989

On the morning of October 23, 1989, a large release of flammable hydrocarbon vapor at the Phillips Petroleum complex in Pasadena, Texas, formed a vapor cloud that ignited, producing a violent vapor-cloud explosion and fires that killed 23 people, injured about 314, and devastated large portions of the plant. The disaster exposed mechanical-integrity and management failures, prompted investigations and litigation, and helped push industry and regulators toward stronger process-safety rules in the years that followed.

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1983 Beirut barracks bombings 1983

1983 Beirut barracks bombings

On October 23, 1983, two suicide truck bombs ripped through multinational barracks in Beirut — destroying the U.S. Marine headquarters at the Beirut International Airport and the French paratroopers’ Drakkar building — killing 299 members of the Multinational Force (241 U.S. Marines and 58 French paratroopers) and wounding hundreds more. The twin attacks, claimed at the time by a group calling itself “Islamic Jihad” and later widely attributed to Hezbollah operatives with support from Iran, forced a rapid reassessment of peacekeeping missions, force protection, and U.S. foreign policy in Lebanon.

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Hungarian Revolution of 1956 — Mosonmagyaróvár and Esztergom 1956

Hungarian Revolution of 1956 — Mosonmagyaróvár and Esztergom

The Hungarian Revolution began on October 23, 1956, as a student-led protest in Budapest that quickly became a nationwide uprising against Stalinist rule. While Budapest saw the largest fighting and greatest loss of life, towns such as Mosonmagyaróvár and Esztergom in northwestern Hungary experienced their own violent confrontations, reprisals, and contested acts of summary justice. This piece traces the arc from the long build-up of repression to the weeks of October–November when local councils rose, ÁVH units were seized, and, amid the confusion of retreat and Soviet return, civilians were shot, arrested, or executed — all against a backdrop of fragmentary records, survivor testimony, and decades of silence.

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Hungarian Revolution of 1956 1956

Hungarian Revolution of 1956

In Budapest on October 23, 1956, a student demonstration that began with a 16‑point program of demands exploded into a nationwide uprising against Soviet‑backed Stalinist rule. For weeks Hungarians fought in the streets, briefly installed a reform government under Imre Nagy and declared neutrality; on November 4 the Soviet Union sent overwhelming force to crush the revolt. Thousands were killed or wounded, hundreds executed or imprisoned, and nearly 200,000 fled the country — yet the memory of October lived on and helped shape Hungary's eventual break from Communist rule.

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