
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


On 15 June 1859, an American farmer shot a pig on San Juan Island in the Pacific Northwest. The pig belonged to the Hudson’s Bay Company, and within weeks the dispute escalated into a military standoff between the United States and Britain. Five hundred American soldiers faced five British warships carrying over two thousand men. For twelve years, the island was jointly occupied whilst diplomats negotiated. The dispute was finally resolved in 1872 when Kaiser Wilhelm I ruled in favour of the United States. No shots were fired in anger. The episode became known as the Pig War. On the same date in 763 BC, Assyrian scholars recorded a solar eclipse. That observation became one of the most important timestamps in ancient chronology. Because eclipses are predictable, astronomers could calculate the exact date and use it as a fixed point to anchor the chronology of the ancient Near East. Two stories from 15 June, separated by nearly three millennia, united by the unexpected weight of small things.
By Clara ValeOn 15 June 1859, an American farmer shot a pig on San Juan Island in the Pacific Northwest. The pig belonged to the Hudson’s Bay Company, and within weeks the dispute escalated into a military standoff between the United States and Britain. Five hundred American soldiers faced five British warships carrying over two thousand men. For twelve years, the island was jointly occupied whilst diplomats negotiated. The dispute was finally resolved in 1872 when Kaiser Wilhelm I ruled in favour of the United States. No shots were fired in anger. The episode became known as the Pig War. On the same date in 763 BC, Assyrian scholars recorded a solar eclipse. That observation became one of the most important timestamps in ancient chronology. Because eclipses are predictable, astronomers could calculate the exact date and use it as a fixed point to anchor the chronology of the ancient Near East. Two stories from 15 June, separated by nearly three millennia, united by the unexpected weight of small things.