February 10 is the kind of date historians love because it shows how history is made in more than one way. Some February 10 milestones are loud—like a computer defeating a world chess champion in a match that helped define the modern relationship between humans and machines. Others are quiet but enormous—like treaties that reorganized global power and set up new centuries of conflict, commerce, and colonization.
For the Bangalee sphere, February 10 holds something equally important but often overlooked in global “today in history” lists: a major Bengali poet from Chittagong, Nabinchandra Sen, whose work belongs to the long cultural road that shaped Bengali public imagination before Tagore.
And in the background, the date carries an international observance that is deeply relevant to South Asia’s everyday life: World Pulses Day—a UN-designated reminder that lentils, beans, and chickpeas are not just food, but policy, sustainability, and survival.
Below is a comprehensive, globally balanced February 10 report with quick-glance tables, deeper context for major events, and expanded birth/death anniversaries.
February 10 At A Glance
| Year | Region | Event | Why It Still Matters |
| 1763 | Europe / Global | Treaty of Paris (1763) signed | Ended the Seven Years’ War and reshaped empires |
| 1840 | United Kingdom | Queen Victoria marries Prince Albert | Helped define modern royal image-making |
| 1847 | Bengal (Chittagong) | Nabinchandra Sen born | A major Bengali poet before Tagore |
| 1936 | Nazi Germany | Law/decree on Secret State Police (Gestapo) | Legal architecture of repression |
| 1947 | Europe | Paris Peace Treaties signed | Post-WWII settlement that shaped Cold War Europe |
| 1962 | Cold War (Berlin) | Powers–Abel spy exchange | Symbolic peak of Cold War espionage |
| 1996 | United States / Tech | Deep Blue beats Kasparov (Game 1) | “Human vs machine” becomes a global story |
| Annual | UN / Global | World Pulses Day | Food security and sustainability focus |
The Bangalee Sphere
Historical Events
1847: Birth Of Nabinchandra Sen (Chittagong) — A Pre-Tagore Bengali Literary Giant
On February 10, 1847, Nabinchandra Sen was born in Noapara village, Chittagong (then in the Bengal Presidency). He is widely described as one of the most important Bengali poets before Rabindranath Tagore, and Banglapedia notes his birth date and early education.
Why it matters today
- Bengali identity is built through literature as much as politics. Sen’s era shows how Bengali public imagination was already forming through poetry, history, and cultural pride well before the 20th-century “headline” movements.
- A Bengal lens on colonial trauma: Sen is remembered for writing on the Battle of Plassey and the arrival of British rule with striking darkness, which makes him valuable for understanding how 19th-century Bengali intellectuals processed power loss as a civilizational shock.
- Chittagong’s cultural footprint: For Bangladesh-facing readers, the Chittagong connection is important. It reminds us that Bengal’s literary map has always been wider than one city or one elite circle.
How February 10 fits your February series (Bangladesh/West Bengal)
If your “On This Day” project runs all February, February 10 is a strong day to highlight how cultural memory builds—a theme that later connects naturally to language and identity debates in the 20th century. (Even when the key “movement date” is later in the month, culture is often where the groundwork is laid.)
Famous Births (Bangalee Sphere)
Here are February 10 birthdays that readers in Bangladesh/India will recognize, anchored where possible in high-visibility almanac sources and regional references:
| Name | Born | Profession | Why They Matter |
| Nabinchandra Sen | 1847 | Bengali poet | Major pre-Tagore poet; Chittagong-born; part of Bengal’s literary foundation |
| Mark Spitz | 1950 | Athlete | Globally known Olympic swimmer; often listed in Feb 10 almanacs |
| Laura Dern | 1967 | Actor | High-profile global cinema figure; common Feb 10 birthday listing |
Cultural/Festivals (Bangalee Sphere)
- February 10 does not reliably map to a fixed pan-regional religious festival on the Gregorian calendar, since many observances depend on lunar calculations.
- In pop-culture calendars in South Asia, February 10 is often labeled “Teddy Day” (Valentine Week), which is social-media driven rather than religious or state-sanctioned.
International Observances & Holidays
Major International Days
World Pulses Day (UN/FAO) — February 10
The UN marks February 10 as World Pulses Day, and FAO explains that the UN General Assembly designated the date to raise awareness of pulses’ role in sustainable food systems.
Why it matters today
- A global day that feels local in South Asia: In Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka—pulses are not a niche food. They are daily nutrition, especially for households navigating rising food costs.
- Climate and soil health: Pulses are often framed as sustainability-friendly crops in global agriculture discussions, which is exactly why the UN/FAO platform chose them for an international observance.
- A storytelling gift for journalists: This is an ideal “explain-it-with-real-life” day—lentils on a plate connected to global SDGs, food security, and resilience.
National Days
February 10 is more prominent for historic commemorations (treaties, wars, political turning points) than for widely shared independence/republic days across many countries.
Global History
United States: Politics, Civil Rights, Tech Advancements
1996: Deep Blue Defeats Garry Kasparov (Game 1) — The Day AI Became Dinner-Table Talk
On February 10, 1996, IBM’s Deep Blue defeated world chess champion Garry Kasparov in the first game of their match, a landmark event in the public history of artificial intelligence.
Why it matters today
- This wasn’t “general intelligence,” but it changed belief. Deep Blue’s victory became a cultural turning point because it made millions ask whether machines could outperform humans in other expert domains.
- The origin story of modern AI anxiety—and fascination: Many of today’s debates (jobs, creativity, machine autonomy) have psychological roots in moments like this, when a machine crosses a symbolic line in public view.
- A reminder that technology history is also media history: The match mattered partly because it was widely reported, framed as “man vs machine,” and turned into a global narrative.
1962: The “Bridge Of Spies” Exchange (Powers For Abel)
On February 10, 1962, U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers was exchanged for Soviet spy Rudolf Abel—a Cold War milestone commonly associated with Berlin’s Glienicke Bridge.
Why it matters today
- Espionage as state-to-state language: The swap shows how adversaries can still communicate through controlled rituals, even when trust is near zero.
- Public symbolism: It wasn’t just an exchange; it became a mythic Cold War image—proof that intelligence conflicts were not abstract, but personal and embodied.
Russia / USSR: Politics, Civil Rights, Tech Advancements
1947: Paris Peace Treaties Signed — “The War Ends On Paper”
The Paris Peace Treaties were signed on February 10, 1947, formally settling peace terms between the Allied powers and several former Axis-aligned European states. Britannica notes the signing date and broad purpose.
Why it matters today
- Peace is a design project: These treaties demonstrate how wars don’t truly end when guns fall silent; they end when borders, reparations, and political systems are negotiated.
- Cold War foundations: Postwar settlements shaped the fault lines that later hardened into Cold War blocs and influence zones.
China: Politics, Civil Rights, Tech Advancements
February 10’s China-linked story often appears through the larger Cold War and postwar diplomacy ecosystem, and through global security dynamics rather than a single universally cited “China-only” headline event in mainstream international almanacs.
United Kingdom: Royal Family, Parliamentary Acts, Colonial History
1840: Queen Victoria Marries Prince Albert
Queen Victoria and Prince Albert were married on February 10, 1840, at the Chapel Royal, St James’s Palace, London.
Why it matters today
- Royal branding before social media: Victorian royal imagery helped shape modern expectations of monarchy as family drama plus national symbol.
- Cultural diffusion: Victorian-era norms traveled widely through empire and media, affecting fashion, ceremony, and public ideals far beyond Britain.
Europe: Wars, Art Movements, EU Formation
1763: Treaty Of Paris Ends The Seven Years’ War — The Empire Map Changes
The Treaty of Paris (1763) was signed on February 10, 1763. Britannica describes it as concluding key Franco-British conflicts of the Seven Years’ War and notes the signing date and parties.
Why it matters today
- Global war, global consequences: This treaty reshaped imperial holdings and influenced long-term trajectories in North America, Europe, and beyond.
- South Asia connection (indirect but real): The Seven Years’ War era included imperial rivalry that also touched India’s wider political economy, helping set patterns of European competition that later intensified colonial control.
1936: The Legal Architecture Of The Gestapo
February 10, 1936 appears in documentary archives for Nazi Germany’s legal framework around the Secret State Police (Gestapo), a piece of the broader machinery of repression.
Why it matters today
- How authoritarianism writes itself into law: This is an example of how states can formalize extraordinary powers through legal texts, making repression appear “normal” on paper.
Australia
Australia’s February 10 relevance is often strongest through global treaty systems and war outcomes that reshaped the Indo-Pacific strategic environment.
Canada
Canada appears directly in Paris Peace Treaty-era documentation and conference participation in widely cited historical summaries.
Rest Of World: Asia, Africa, South America
February 10 has one of those “global story hooks” that works across regions: food, security, and technology—World Pulses Day (food systems), Cold War exchanges (security), and Deep Blue vs Kasparov (technology). That trio makes the date unusually useful for global audiences.
Notable Births & Deaths (Global)
Famous Births
| Name | Year | Nationality | Why They’re Famous |
| Bertolt Brecht | 1898 | German | Influential playwright/poet; shaped modern theatre and political art |
| Leontyne Price | 1927 | American | Opera legend; major cultural figure often noted in Feb 10 lists |
| Mark Spitz | 1950 | American | Olympic swimming icon; repeatedly listed in Feb 10 roundups |
| Laura Dern | 1967 | American | Award-winning actor with major cultural reach |
Famous Deaths
| Name | Died | Nationality | Cause/Legacy |
| Arthur Miller | 2005 | American | Playwright (Death of a Salesman, The Crucible); died Feb 10 |
| Alex Haley | 1992 | American | Author of Roots; major public-history storyteller |
| Shirley Temple Black | 2014 | American | Child star turned diplomat; died Feb 10 |
“Did You Know?” Trivia
- A UN food day lands on a very South Asian plate: World Pulses Day (Feb 10) is a UN-backed observance, and pulses are central to nutrition and affordability across South Asia.
- A treaty date can be more powerful than a battlefield date: The Treaty of Paris (1763) signed on Feb 10 helped define a new imperial order after a truly global war.
- The “AI moment” people remember began with one chess game: Deep Blue’s Feb 10, 1996 win over Kasparov is still used as shorthand for machine capability breakthroughs.
Takeaways
February 10 is a date where the world’s big themes overlap: empire-making and treaty power, the legal mechanics of state control, public spectacles that shape culture, and technology milestones that alter how humans see themselves. In the Bangalee sphere, it’s also a reminder that history is not only made by rulers and wars—sometimes a poet born in Chittagong helps build the cultural vocabulary a people later use to explain their struggles and identity.







