February 3
In 960, Zhao Yiyin launched the Chen Qiao Mutiny, the yellow robe was added, and the Song Dynasty was established.
In 1468, Gutenberg, the inventor of Western lead movable type printing, died.
In 1481, Mehmed II of the Ottoman Empire succeeded to the throne.
In 1573, the Japanese warlord Yoshiaki Murakami was appointed as the ruler of the Sengoku period.
In 1809, the German composer Felix Mendelssohn was born.
In 1830, Greece was declaring its independence at the London Conference.
In 1894, the Chinese writer Xu Dishan was born.
The American painter Norman Rockwell came out as king.
In 1899, Lao She, a famous Chinese novelist, dramatist and outstanding language master, was born.
In 1901, the Japanese thinker Yukichi Fukuzawa died.
In 1917, agricultural educator Ding Zhenlin was born.
In 1978, the New York Times began to be distributed nationwide.
In 1924, the 28th President of the United States, Woodrow Wilson, died.
In 1997, South Africa's permanent constitution entered into force and apartheid ended.
Yu Qiuli, the leader of military and political work, died in 1999.