Wikipedia:Main Page history/2013 August 23

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From today's featured article

Albert Bridge at night

Albert Bridge is a Grade II* listed road bridge over the River Thames in London, connecting Chelsea to Battersea. Designed and built by Rowland Mason Ordish in 1873 as a toll bridge, it was commercially unsuccessful; six years after its opening it was taken into public ownership and the tolls were lifted. The Ordish–Lefeuvre Principle design proved structurally unsound, and thus between 1884 and 1887 it was modified to incorporate elements of a suspension bridge. The Greater London Council carried out further strengthening work in 1973 by adding two concrete piers, which transformed the central span into a simple beam bridge. As a result of these modifications the bridge is an unusual hybrid of three different bridge types. The strengthening works were unable to prevent further deterioration as the result of heavy traffic loads and rotting of the timber deck structure caused by the urine of the unusually high number of dogs using the bridge. In 2010–2011 the bridge underwent major refurbishment work. Although often proposed for closure or demolition, it is one of only two Thames road bridges in central London never to have been replaced. (Full article...)

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Did you know...

From Wikipedia's newest content:

Pricasso at a press conference for Sexpo in Sydney, March 2012

  • ... that Pricasso (pictured), an Australian artist who paints with his genitals and buttocks, studied furniture design after failing to get an art degree?
  • ... that the IFEM was referred as the "most active organization" dealing with international emergency medicine development?
  • ... that Kumaravel Premkumar is the Indian national record holder in long jump?
  • ... that in 2006, Puerto Rican singer Zion embarked on his solo career, which includes "The Way She Moves" with R&B singer Akon?
  • ... that kosynierzy, the war scythe wielding peasantry militia, became one of the symbols of the struggle for Polish independence?
  • ... that Geoffrey Davis compared the mass rapes during the Bangladesh Liberation War to the Nazi Lebensborn program?
  • ... that French children learn the mnemonic Mais où est donc Ornicar ? to help them remember their language's coordinating conjunctions?
  • In the news

    Bradley Manning
  • U.S. soldier Chelsea Manning (formerly Bradley Manning, pictured) is sentenced to 35 years in prison for releasing classified information to WikiLeaks.
  • Flooding in northeastern China and eastern Russia kills at least 85 people.
  • The CIA officially acknowledges its role in organizing the 1953 Iranian coup d'état.
  • The World Championships in Athletics in Moscow conclude with Russia winning the most gold medals.
  • Ecuador announces it will reopen Yasuni National Park to oil drilling, ending a six-year initiative aimed at protecting the rainforest.

    Recent deaths: Dezső Gyarmati

  • On this day...

    August 23: Day of Remembrance for Victims of Stalinism and Nazism/Black Ribbon Day in Canada and the European Union

  • 1514Ottoman forces defeated the Safavids at the Battle of Chaldiran, gaining control of eastern Anatolia and northern Iraq.
  • 1929Palestine riots: Arabs began attacking Jews in Hebron in the British Mandate of Palestine, killing over sixty people in two days.
  • 1943World War II: The decisive Soviet victory in the Battle of Kursk gave the Red Army the strategic initiative for the rest of the war.
  • 1989Singing Revolution: Approximately two million people joined hands (pictured) to form an over 600 km (370 mi) long human chain across the Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian Soviet republics to demonstrate their respective desires for independence.
  • 2010 – A former Philippine National Police officer hijacked a tourist bus in Manila and held its occupants hostage for nearly 11 hours before being killed by police.

    More anniversaries: August 22 August 23 August 24

    It is now August 23, 2013 (UTC) – Reload this page
  • Today's featured picture

    Lysimachia monelli

    Lysimachia monelli is a species of flowering plant in the family Myrsinaceae, native to the Mediterranean region. Though commonly blue (hence the common name blue pimpernel), orange examples as pictured here also exist. The orange-coloured flowers have a higher concentration of the pigment pelargonidin, while blue flowers have a higher concentration of malvidin.

    Photograph: Hans Hillewaert

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