Wikipedia:Did you know archive
Appearance
This is a record of material that was featured on the Main Page as part of Did you know (DYK). Recently created new articles, greatly expanded former stub articles and recently promoted good articles are eligible; you can submit them for consideration.
Archives are generally grouped by month of Main Page appearance. (Currently, DYK hooks are archived according to the date and time that they were taken off the Main Page.) To find which archive contains the fact that appeared on Did you know, go to the article's talk page and follow the archive link in the DYK talk page message box or the Article Milestones box.
Did you know...
3 April 2026
- 12:00, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
- ... that lawyer Gilbert Ray Hawes (pictured) exposed an American diplomat for bribing the president of Venezuela?
- ... that Catherine, Princess of Wales, gave her first public musical performance by playing the piano at the 2021 Together at Christmas service?
- ... that the remains of the first Catholic bishop in Tasmania were not returned to the island until 150 years after his death?
- ... that the men's basketball program at Tulane University was eliminated following a point-shaving scandal in 1985?
- ... that the male editors of the women's magazine Asjraq resigned in its fourth issue, announcing that their duties were complete?
- ... that opera singer Zdenka Ziková was once arrested by the Yugoslavian secret police?
- ... that the Indonesian novel Verses of Love has been read as a challenge to Salman Rushdie's The Satanic Verses?
- ... that Pieter van der Hoog was paid for delivering a baby with a piece of the black cloth covering the Kaaba?
- ... that a book about fly biology was listed for sale for more than US$23 million—plus shipping?
- 00:00, 3 April 2026 (UTC)
- ... that a severed hairy leg (pictured) signalled censorship in a newspaper during the Brazilian dictatorship?
- ... that artist Andrew Mroczek curated an exhibition treating T-shirts as fine art objects?
- ... that the European population of the rare Lebanese wild apple is mainly concentrated in a single national park, 58 percent of which was burnt by extreme wildfires in 2023?
- ... that Nala Ray, the daughter of a Baptist minister, left an OnlyFans channel making millions of dollars per year to return to Christianity?
- ... that the writers' collective Forum Lingkar Pena has been called a "factory for story writers"?
- ... that parents once mistook a student's doodle of the video game character Xiao for a Satanic hate symbol?
- ... that Ridgeway Plaza calls itself North America's largest halal food market?
- ... that ballet choreographer Cameron Fraser-Monroe applied to the Royal Winnipeg Ballet School on a whim and received a scholarship?
- ... that a Japanese developer turned Wikipedia into a card-collecting gacha game?
2 April 2026
- 12:00, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
- ... that the island Grimskär (pictured) was probably used for executions of criminals, whose bodies were left there on display as a warning to passing ships?
- ... that the wedding of Jan Opaliński became infamous due to several accidents and quarrels?
- ... that the lyrics of "Bull Believer" were inspired by Cocaine & Rhinestones and contain references to Mortal Kombat and Augustine of Hippo?
- ... that soprano Muriel Wilson stated that her ability to sing was impaired after her skull was fractured in a car accident?
- ... that the MacBook Neo uses a processor found in iPhones?
- ... that the 2026 Lake Tahoe avalanche was the deadliest in the United States since 1981?
- ... that Vinson Cunningham based his novel Great Expectations on his work for Barack Obama's presidential campaign?
- ... that some forms of the Romanian lăutari violin have extra strings that are added only for resonance and never played directly?
- ... that a convicted bank robber argued that a restitution law could not apply to him because it did not exist when he committed the crime?
- 00:00, 2 April 2026 (UTC)
- ... that Governor Joe (pictured) was "Not Afraid of Longhairs"?
- ... that men ceased to exist in 2009?
- ... that the Los Angeles Metro wants you to ride their D?
- ... that African Nigeria played in the NFL?
- ... that Karl Marx made an arrangement of a Christmas carol?
- ... that Ben Franklin was inspired by an internet meme?
- ... that a moth flew into a podiatrist's office because the light was on?
- ... that the Armed Forces of the Philippines have a cobra that they use for combat?
- ... that horses suffered a ban in November 2025?
- ... that Romeo and Juliet are a same-sex couple?
- ... that E.T. wants Osama bin Laden to fuck off?
1 April 2026
- 12:00, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
- ... that they did surgery on a grape (pictured)?
- ... that Elvis the Pelvis got rickets from hibernating?
- ... that sardines had engines?
- ... that Robert Uzgalis made the Leaning Tower of Pisa straight?
- ... that French girls premiered on a livestream?
- ... that Tarzan is currently an advisor for higher education?
- ... that there's a term?
- ... that Krispy Kream is not allowed to sell doughnuts?
- ... that a fashion designer expressed his career frustrations with a golden shower?
- ... that Allah made sure that Queen Elizabeth II was in bed by 19:15?
- 00:00, 1 April 2026 (UTC)
- ... that Kim Petras (pictured) was described as the "world's youngest" person to transition?
- ... that a textile cooperative that helps to lift trans women out of poverty was named after activist Nadia Echazú?
- ... that sixteen countries fully recognize a non-binary gender marker for all individuals?
- ... that Sharifa Yazmeen, a transgender Egyptian-American theatre director, was the inaugural winner of the Barbara Whitman Award?
- ... that the novel We Are Green and Trembling was inspired by a 17th-century explorer who was born as a woman but lived as a man?
- ... that the trans woman Hannah Nokes was profiled in 1936 after getting electricity in her house?
- ... that a benefit concert for the trans community paid tribute to Alice Litman, who took her life after being denied gender-affirming care?
- ... that Marsha P. Johnson once stated that there were "no straight people"?