History

History claims here test myths and context—from Pop Art origins and medieval language to Spain’s expulsion of Jews, Einstein’s schooling, and U.S. Guam strategy.

221 History claim verifications avg. score 6.3/10 136 rated true or mostly true 85 rated false or misleading

“Cleopatra lived closer in time to the first moon landing in 1969 than to the construction of the Great Pyramid of Giza.”

True

This claim is true. Cleopatra died in 30 BCE, roughly 2,000 years before the 1969 moon landing. The Great Pyramid of Giza was completed around 2500–2570 BCE, placing it roughly 2,450–2,540 years before Cleopatra. Since the gap to the pyramid is consistently several centuries larger than the gap to the moon landing, Cleopatra indeed lived closer in time to the Apollo 11 mission than to the construction of the Great Pyramid.

“Napoleon Bonaparte was shorter than the average adult male of his time.”

False

This claim is false. Napoleon's recorded height of "5 pieds 2 pouces" was in pre-metric French units, which converts to approximately 1.67–1.69 m (about 5'7"). The average French adult male of his era stood roughly 1.64–1.65 m. Napoleon was therefore average or slightly above average height. The widespread myth stems from a unit-conversion error and British propaganda, not from historical fact. Multiple authoritative sources—including Encyclopædia Britannica and History.com—explicitly debunk this misconception.

“Marie Antoinette said the phrase "Let them eat cake" in response to being told that peasants had no bread.”

False

This claim is false. There is no historical evidence that Marie Antoinette ever said "Let them eat cake." The phrase predates her, appearing in Rousseau's Confessions (written 1765–1769) attributed to an unnamed princess when Marie Antoinette was still a child in Austria. The first printed attribution to her appeared only in 1843 — fifty years after her execution. Multiple authoritative sources confirm the quote is a myth rooted in political propaganda, not a documented historical event.

“Albert Einstein performed poorly in mathematics during his years as a student.”

False

This is a well-known myth with no credible evidence behind it. Einstein's actual school records show he earned top marks in mathematics, including perfect 6/6 scores in algebra, geometry, and physics on his 1896 Swiss Matura certificate. He mastered calculus before age 15. His only notable academic setback—failing the Zurich Polytechnic entrance exam—was due to weak performance in non-science subjects like French, not mathematics. The myth likely originated from a 1935 Ripley's column and confusion over the Swiss grading scale.

“In 1956, the Municipal Corporation of Greater Bombay required people to have a permit or license to walk on public streets in Bombay (now Mumbai), India.”

False

No credible legal or historical evidence provided shows that Bombay’s municipal corporation required a permit or license simply to walk on public streets in 1956. The cited laws and materials concern permits for particular street uses (such as structures, encroachments, or temporary occupations) and street-line/building-line controls, not ordinary pedestrian passage. Without a specific 1956 by-law or order imposing a walking-permit requirement, the claim is not supported.

“The Apollo 11 mission successfully landed astronauts on the Moon in 1969.”

True

The Apollo 11 mission definitively landed astronauts on the Moon in July 1969. This is confirmed by extensive contemporaneous NASA documentation, independent institutional records from the Smithsonian and National Archives, and Associated Press footage from the event.

“Jesus of Nazareth existed as a historical person.”

Mostly True

Most historians accept that Jesus of Nazareth existed as a historical person. The best-supported basis is scholarly consensus built from early Christian texts plus a few later, independent non-Christian references. Evidence is not contemporaneous and archaeology doesn’t directly attest Jesus, but these limits don’t overturn the mainstream historical conclusion.

“A group known as "Khanna Coolies" operated as bicycle-riding food porters delivering meals in Calcutta.”

False

No credible historical source documents a group specifically called "Khanna Coolies" operating as bicycle-riding food porters in Calcutta. While bicycles were widely used for deliveries and "coolie" was a common labor term in the city, these general facts do not establish the existence of this particular named group. Comprehensive food and cultural histories of Calcutta spanning centuries make no mention of them, and the claim appears to conflate plausible background conditions with an unverified specific assertion.

“The Slavic peoples share a common origin.”

Mostly True

The claim that Slavic peoples share a common origin is well-supported by mainstream scholarship. Multiple recent ancient DNA studies (2024–2025) from leading institutions converge on a shared ancestral homeland in southern Belarus and central Ukraine. Linguistic evidence also traces all Slavic languages to Proto-Slavic. However, direct genetic evidence from the earliest Slavic core regions remains limited, and significant regional divergence occurred after expansion. The core claim is accurate, but "common origin" slightly oversimplifies a complex picture.

“The Sahara Desert was once a lush, green landscape with rivers and abundant wildlife.”

Mostly True

The claim is well-supported by extensive scientific evidence. During recurring "African Humid Periods" — most notably roughly 11,000–5,000 years ago — large parts of the Sahara had significantly more rainfall, flowing rivers, lakes, and water-dependent wildlife including hippos, crocodiles, and large game. However, the phrasing slightly overgeneralizes: these green conditions were episodic rather than permanent, and geographically uneven rather than uniform across the entire desert.

“Fortune cookies originated in China.”

False

Fortune cookies did not originate in China. Multiple authoritative sources — including the Library of Congress and History.com — place their invention in early 1900s California, most commonly crediting Japanese-American Makoto Hagiwara (1914, San Francisco) or Chinese-American David Jung (1918, Los Angeles). The often-cited 14th-century Chinese moon cake story is characterized as speculative legend, not documented history. Chinese restaurants later popularized the cookies, but the treat itself is an American creation with Japanese antecedents.

“Christopher Columbus did not set sail in 1492 to prove the Earth was round; educated Europeans already accepted the Earth's spherical shape before Columbus's voyage.”

True

The claim is well-supported. Multiple high-authority sources — including the Library of Congress and NASA — confirm that Columbus's 1492 voyage aimed to find a westward trade route to Asia, not to prove Earth was round. Educated Europeans had accepted Earth's spherical shape for centuries, drawing on ancient Greek scholarship and medieval thinkers like Thomas Aquinas and Roger Bacon. The flat-Earth myth surrounding Columbus was largely a 19th-century fabrication. The real debate in 1492 concerned Earth's circumference and the feasibility of the westward route.

“Jawaharlal Nehru died from a sexually transmitted disease.”

False

The evidence does not support this claim. Reliable historical accounts describe Jawaharlal Nehru’s death as an acute cardiovascular event, while the STD/syphilis allegation rests on an unsourced, non-verifiable document and is widely described by mainstream outlets as a baseless rumor. A possible medical mechanism is not proof that it happened in Nehru’s case.

“A Hopi prophecy exists that predicts a political alliance between Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu.”

False

No authentic Hopi prophecy predicting a political alliance between Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu exists in any credible source. Traditional Hopi oral traditions do not name modern political figures. The only fringe source linking Trump to a "red hat" Hopi motif never mentions Netanyahu. Much of the popular "Hopi prophecy" corpus was fabricated or distorted by non-Hopi individuals. The real-world existence of a Trump-Netanyahu political relationship does not validate a nonexistent prophecy.

“The Great Pyramid of Giza was built by enslaved workers.”

False

The claim is not supported by modern archaeological evidence. Decades of excavations at Giza—including workers' villages with bakeries, breweries, and cemeteries with honorable burials—along with the Wadi el-Jarf papyri documenting skilled, well-rewarded laborers, consistently show the Great Pyramid was built by organized Egyptian citizens under a corvée (seasonal civic labor) system, not by enslaved people. The "slave-built" narrative traces to Herodotus and popular culture, not to primary evidence.

“The divergence between French-origin culinary terms (e.g., beef, pork, mutton) and English-origin animal terms (e.g., cow, pig, sheep) in the English language resulted from the medieval social class divide in which French-speaking Norman nobles consumed the meat while English-speaking peasants raised the animals.”

Misleading

This widely repeated explanation captures a real sociolinguistic backdrop — French was the prestige language of post-Conquest elites — but presents an unverified folk etymology as settled historical fact. The specific causal mechanism (nobles ate, peasants raised) originated as a 17th-century hypothesis, not documented medieval reality. French meat terms did not enter English until around 1300, roughly 250 years after the Conquest, and French speakers also used words for live animals, undermining the strict class-segregation premise the claim depends on.

“The Library of Alexandria was destroyed in a single catastrophic event, rather than through a gradual decline or multiple incidents.”

False

The claim that the Library of Alexandria was destroyed in a single catastrophic event is not supported by historical evidence. Multiple credible sources document several destructive episodes spanning centuries—including Caesar's fire (48 BCE), Aurelian's sack (~270 CE), the Serapeum's destruction (391 CE), and gradual institutional neglect. Crucially, evidence of continued library activity after Caesar's fire directly contradicts the single-event narrative. The scholarly consensus points to cumulative damage and decline, not one dramatic moment of destruction.

“Hristo Smirnenski was a communist.”

True

The claim is well-supported by multiple biographical and literary sources that identify Hristo Smirnenski as a member of communist organizations, including the Bulgarian Communist Party from 1921. The main caveat is that the label simplifies a political evolution and later cultural framing, but it does not overturn the basic historical fact of his communist affiliation.

“The Apollo 11 moon landing in 1969 was staged and did not actually occur as reported.”

False

The Apollo 11 moon landing in 1969 is one of the most thoroughly documented events in human history. Multiple independent lines of evidence confirm it occurred: returned lunar samples analyzed by scientists worldwide, contemporaneous tracking by international parties (including Cold War adversaries), and later orbital imaging of landing sites by non-NASA space agencies such as Japan's JAXA and India's ISRO. The conspiracy claim relies on logical fallacies — treating motive as proof and ignoring overwhelming corroborating evidence from independent sources.

“John Kiriakou has made public statements about his experiences at the CIA that are mostly accurate.”

Misleading

Kiriakou's core public disclosure — that the CIA waterboarded detainees as official policy — was substantially correct, later confirmed by the 2014 Senate Intelligence Committee report. However, his prominent specific claim that Abu Zubaydah broke after just 30–35 seconds of waterboarding was grossly inaccurate; Zubaydah was waterboarded 83 times. He also initially echoed false CIA claims about interrogation effectiveness. Calling his public statements "mostly accurate" overstates their reliability by ignoring these significant, well-documented errors.