Battles of January 28 summaries plus museums, artwork, books and songs

Battles of January 28 including descriptions of the battles, geographic locations, associated artwork, and museums where a person can find associated artifacts and artwork.

Songs of the day:

Morgan’s Way to Panama variation 1 (Sea Shanty English point of view)

Morgan’s Way to Panama variation 2 (Sea Shanty English point of view)

Panama’s Golden Cup variation 1 (Spanish Baroque Spanish point of view)

Panama’s Golden Cup variation 2 (Spanish Baroque Spanish point of view)

1. Battle of Aliwal

Date: January 28, 1846

War: First Anglo-Sikh War

Cause: The battle was triggered by the Sikh army, led by Ranjodh Singh Majithia, crossing the Sutlej River into British-held territory to cut off British supply lines. The British forces, under Sir Harry Smith, moved to intercept them.

Result: A decisive British victory. The British charge broke the Sikh infantry squares, leading to a rout across the river and the capture of the Sikh camp and artillery. This victory was a turning point in the war.

Paintings & Art

  • Painting: Charge of the 16th (Queen’s Own) Lancers at the Battle of Aliwal, 28 January 1846
  • Artist: Henry Martens (engraved by J. Harris)
  • Year: c. 1847

Museums & Artifacts

  • National Army Museum (London, United Kingdom): Holds the original watercolors and aquatints by Henry Martens and Michael Angelo Hayes depicting the battle, as well as uniforms and weaponry from the 16th Lancers.
  • The Queen’s Royal Lancers and Nottinghamshire Yeomanry Museum (Nottinghamshire, United Kingdom): Houses specific artifacts related to the 16th Lancers’ famous charge at this battle.

Location

  • General: Aliwal, Ludhiana District, Punjab, India.
  • Coordinates: 30°56′38″N 75°37′16″E

Recommended Book

Above: A painting in the style of Henry Martens depicting the decisive charge of the 16th Lancers against Sikh infantry at the Battle of Aliwal.

2. The January 28 Incident (First Battle of Shanghai)

Date: January 28, 1932

War: Undeclared Sino-Japanese War (Interwar Period)

Cause: Tensions boiled over after a staged incident where Japanese monks were beaten in Shanghai. Using this as a pretext, Japanese marines launched an attack on the Zhabei district of Shanghai to expand their control and suppress Chinese anti-Japanese boycotts.

Result: A military standoff that lasted over a month. While the Japanese eventually captured positions after heavy reinforcement, the fierce Chinese resistance forced a negotiated demilitarization of Shanghai rather than a total occupation at that time.

Paintings & Art

  • Painting/Print: Japan Invasion: January 28 or Shanghai Incident (Political Cartoon/Lithograph)
  • Artist: Bernard Partridge (for Punch Magazine)
  • Year: 1932

Museums & Artifacts

  • Shanghai Songhu Memorial Hall for the Anti-Japanese War (Shanghai, China): A massive museum located at the site of the battle, dedicated entirely to the 1932 and 1937 battles of Shanghai, featuring excavated weapons, uniforms, and extensive photographic archives.
  • National Museum of China (Beijing, China): Contains documents and artifacts relating to the 19th Route Army which defended the city.

Location

  • General: Zhabei District (now Jing’an District), Shanghai, China.
  • Coordinates: 31°15′00″N 121°27′00″E

Recommended Book

  • Shanghai 1932: The First Sino-Japanese War by Donald A. Jordan.

Imagined painting

Above: A social realist painting from the 1930s depicting intense street fighting between Japanese marines and Chinese soldiers in the Zhabei district during the January 28 Incident.

3. Action of 28 January 1945

Date: January 28, 1945

War: World War II

Cause: A Royal Navy squadron comprising the cruisers HMS Diadem and HMS Mauritius intercepted a German destroyer flotilla attempting to move from Norway to the Baltic Sea to support the defense of the German homeland. Result: A strategic British success. One German destroyer was heavily damaged and the flotilla was forced to return to port, delaying their redeployment and exposing them to further air attacks, although no ships were sunk during the engagement itself.

Paintings & Art

  • Painting: HMS Diadem (Naval portrait often associated with her late-war service)
  • Artist: Generic naval photography and draftsmanship from the Admiralty
  • Year: c. 1944–1945

Museums & Artifacts

  • Imperial War Museum (London, United Kingdom): Houses logs, reports, and photographic records of HMS Diadem and the Home Fleet’s actions off Norway.
  • Royal Naval Museum (Portsmouth, United Kingdom): Contains general artifacts related to the Dido-class and Fiji-class cruisers involved in the battle.

Location

  • General: North Sea, approximately 35 miles northwest of Bergen, Norway.
  • Coordinates: 60°48′00″N 4°30′00″E

Recommended Book

4. Seizure of Helsinki (Start of Finnish Civil War)

Date: January 28, 1918

War: Finnish Civil War

Cause: Following growing class tensions and the collapse of the Russian Empire, the Red Guards (socialist paramilitary) mobilized to seize control of the capital, Helsinki, from the conservative Senate.

Result: The Red Guards successfully took control of Helsinki on January 28, forcing the Senate to flee to Vaasa. This event effectively marked the outbreak of full-scale civil war in Finland.

Paintings & Art

  • Painting: Red Guards on the March (Representative of the era/subject)
  • Artist: Various contemporary artists (e.g., works by Jalmari Ruokokoski depicting the Red side, though often later)
  • Year: c. 1918

Museums & Artifacts

  • Military Museum of Finland (Helsinki, Finland): Features a dedicated exhibition on the Civil War, including uniforms of both the Red and White Guards and weaponry used during the seizure of the capital.
  • The Lenin Museum (Tampere, Finland): Holds artifacts and history regarding the socialist movement and the revolution that sparked the war.

Location

  • General: Helsinki, Finland (Senate Square and Government Palace).
  • Coordinates: 60°10′10″N 24°57′09″E

Recommended Book

5. Battle of Mata Asnillos (Sack of Panama)

Date: January 28, 1671 (Old Style / Julian Calendar)

War: Anglo-Spanish Privateer Wars (Unofficial)

Cause: The famous privateer Henry Morgan led a massive expedition of buccaneers across the Isthmus of Panama. His goal was to capture Panama City (Panama Viejo), which was the richest city in the Spanish New World and the transit point for Peruvian silver. The Spanish governor, Don Juan Pérez de Guzmán, deployed his forces on the plains of Mata Asnillos outside the city to stop the pirates.

Result: Privateer/English Victory. Morgan’s forces used superior tactics to shatter the Spanish cavalry and infantry. The Spanish attempt to use a herd of oxen to stampede the pirates failed. Following the battle, Panama City was looted and burned to the ground (either by the Spanish to deny it to Morgan, or by the pirates), leading to the abandonment of the site and the founding of the modern Panama City (Casco Viejo) nearby.

Paintings & Art

  • Painting: The Sack of Panama (Illustration)
    • Artist: Howard Pyle
    • Year: c. 1900
  • Engraving: Battle of Mata Asnillos (Featured in The Buccaneers of America)
    • Artist: Jan Luyken (attributed)
    • Year: 1678
  • Painting: Morgan at Panama
    • Artist: Unknown (19th-century engraving)
    • Year: c. 1850

Museums & Artifacts

  • Patronato Panamá Viejo (Panama City, Panama): An open-air archaeological museum preserving the ruins of the original city destroyed after the battle. It contains weapons, ceramics, and items recovered from the ashes.
  • National Maritime Museum (Greenwich, United Kingdom): Houses maps and navigational instruments from the era of privateers and Henry Morgan.

Location

  • General: Panama Viejo, Panama City, Panama
  • Coordinates: 9.0075° N, 79.4850° W

Recommended Book

  • Empire of Blue Water: Captain Morgan’s Great Pirate Army, the Epic Battle for the Americas, and the Catastrophe That Ended the Outlaws’ Bloody Reign by Stephan Talty.
  • Imagined Painting
  • The Visualized Moment: The Failure of the Spanish Oxen Charge

    This painting depicts the decisive and most famous tactical moment of the battle on the plains outside Panama City. The Spanish defenders, outmatched by Henry Morgan’s battle-hardened privateers, attempted a desperate stratagem: they drove a massive herd of oxen and bulls toward the pirate lines, hoping the stampede would break their ranks and allow the Spanish cavalry to cut them down.

    The image captures the moment this tactic spectacularly backfired. Morgan’s sharpshooters fired volleys into the approaching herd. The noise and pain caused the animals to panic, turn aside, and stampede directly into the Spanish right wing, causing chaos among their own horsemen.

    Explanation of Pictorial Elements

    • The Stampeding Herd (Center): The bulls are the central focus of the action. They are shown mid-stampede, kicking up dust and creating a physical barrier between the two forces. Their direction—pushing toward the right side of the frame—visually represents them turning against their Spanish handlers.
    • Henry Morgan’s Privateers (Left Foreground):
      • Uniforms/Attire: They are dressed not in standardized military uniforms, but in the practical, motley attire of buccaneers of the era: loose trousers, rough shirts, waistcoats, and various headwear like bandanas and slouch hats. The prominent red coats worn by some figures represent common imported clothing of the time, often adopted by privateer leaders to denote status.
      • Action: They are shown holding their ground, firing muskets at the herd or preparing for close-quarters combat with cutlasses, representing the discipline Morgan managed to instill in his irregular force.
    • Spanish Cavalry (Right & Midground):
      • Attire: The Spanish forces are depicted with more formal military gear typical of European colonial garrisons, including metal breastplates, helmets (resembling late-era morions or burgonets), and high leather boots.
      • Action: They are shown in disarray. The horsemen on the right are struggling to control their mounts amid the stampeding bulls, illustrating the confusion that led to their defeat.
    • Background Elements:
      • Panama Viejo (Distance): In the far background, the walled city of Panama Viejo is visible. This establishes the high stakes of the battle—the richest city in the Spanish Main. The prominent tower hints at the cathedral tower that still stands as a ruin today.
      • Geography: The flat, dusty terrain represents the savanna of Mata Asnillos where the battle took place. Palm trees are included to emphasize the tropical location on the Isthmus of Panama.
    • Artistic Style: The painting emulates the Baroque battle painting style prevalent in the late 17th century. It uses dramatic lighting (chiaroscuro) to highlight the central action, thick smoke to convey the “fog of war,” and a somewhat stylized, theatrical composition meant to glorify the chaotic spectacle of the engagement.

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Tags: military museum, military artwork, battles, Military History, War History, Battle Art, War Paintings, War Art, Military Art, Museum Visit, Art History, Historical Artifacts, Museum Collection, Battlefield Tours, History Museum, Museum Life, History In Art, Historic Preservation, January 28, On This Day, History, Military History, War History, Historical Events, History Buff, World History, Battle Of Aliwal, Sikh Wars, Shanghai Incident 1932, 19th Route Army, WWII, Naval History, Royal Navy, Finnish Civil War, Helsinki 1918, Henry Morgan, Pirate History, Panama Viejo, National Army Museum, Imperial War Museum, Shanghai History

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Battles of January 27 summaries plus museums, artwork, books and songs

Battles of January 27 including descriptions of the battles, geographic locations, associated artwork, and museums where a person can find associated artifacts and artwork.

Songs of the day:

To Start Anew – variation 1 (Yiddish folk song)

To Start Anew – variation 2 (Yiddish folk song)

Tokugawa Fallen (Traditional Japanese Minyo Song)

Fushimi Shadows (Skate Punk Modern Song)

Restoration Dawn – variation 1 (Pop Funk Modern Song)

Restoration Dawn – variation 2 (Pop Funk Modern Song)

1. Battle of Toba-Fushimi

Date: January 27, 1868 (January 27-31, 1868)

War: Boshin War (Japan)

Cause: Tensions had reached a breaking point between the forces of the Imperial Court (allied with the Satsuma and Chōshū domains) and the Tokugawa Shogunate. Following the Shogun Tokugawa Yoshinobu’s “resignation,” dissatisfactions regarding his continued influence led him to march his army from Osaka toward Kyoto to deliver a letter of protest to the Emperor, sparking a direct military confrontation.

Result: Decisive Imperial victory. Despite being outnumbered 3 to 1, the Imperial forces possessed superior modern weaponry (Armstrong guns and Minie rifles). The defeat of the Shogunate forces shattered their morale and ultimately led to the Fall of Edo and the Meiji Restoration, modernizing Japan.

Paintings & Art Painting: Picture of the Great Battle of Toba-Fushimi (Toba Fushimi Daisenso no Zu)

  • Artist: Unknown / Utagawa School (Often attributed to artists like Mousai or Utagawa Kuniteru II who created woodblock prints of the event).
  • Year: c. 1868

Museums & Artifacts Kyoto National Museum (Kyoto, Japan)

  • Description of holdings: The museum holds a significant collection of artifacts from the Meiji Restoration era, including Nishiki-e (woodblock prints) depicting the battle, imperial uniforms, and weaponry used by the “Satcho” alliance.

Location

  • General: Fushimi Ward, Kyoto, Japan.
  • Coordinates: 34°55′47″N 135°44′25″E

Recommended Book The Collapse of the Tokugawa Bakufu, 1862–1868 by Conrad Totman.


2. The Lifting of the Siege of Leningrad (Operation January Thunder)

Date: January 27, 1944 (Official end of the siege) (September 8, 1941-January 27, 1944)

War: World War II (Eastern Front)

Cause: German Army Group North had besieged the city of Leningrad (St. Petersburg) since September 1941, aiming to starve the city into submission. The Soviet Leningrad-Novgorod Strategic Offensive was launched to permanently drive German forces away from the city outskirts.

Result: Soviet victory. On January 27, Joseph Stalin formally announced the end of the siege. It was the deadliest blockade in human history, resulting in over 1 million civilian deaths, but the city was never taken.

Paintings & Art Painting: Leningrad Woman (Leningradka)

  • Artist: Yaroslav Nikolaev
  • Year: 1942 (Created during the siege)

Museums & Artifacts State Memorial Museum of the Defense and Siege of Leningrad (St. Petersburg, Russia)

  • Description of holdings: This museum is entirely dedicated to the event. It houses personal diaries (including that of Tanya Savicheva), bread ration cards, shrapnel, improvised stoves (“burzhuyka”), and extensive art collections created by artists trapped within the city during the blockade.

Location

  • General: St. Petersburg, Russia (The siege perimeter surrounded the city).
  • Coordinates: 59°56′N 30°19′E

Recommended Book Leningrad: The Epic Siege of World War II, 1941-1944 by Anna Reid.


3. Liberation of Auschwitz (Vistula–Oder Offensive)

Date: January 27, 1945

War: World War II

Cause: As part of the massive Soviet Vistula–Oder Offensive, the Red Army pressed west across Poland toward Germany. The 60th Army of the First Ukrainian Front advanced upon the town of Oświęcim to secure the area and key bridges.

Result: Soviet Victory / Liberation. Soldiers of the 322nd Rifle Division entered the camp, encountering brief resistance from retreating German units. They liberated approximately 7,000 surviving prisoners. The date is now commemorated internationally as Holocaust Remembrance Day.

Paintings & Art Painting: Arrival of a Transport (and other sketches)

  • Artist: David Olère (A survivor who worked in the Sonderkommando; his art is primary visual testimony).
  • Year: c. 1946–1950s

Museums & Artifacts Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum (Oświęcim, Poland)

  • Description of holdings: The site itself is a living museum, preserving the barracks, gas chambers, and crematoria. Collections include piles of victims’ shoes, suitcases with names, canisters of Zyklon B, and art created illegally by prisoners during their captivity.

Location

  • General: Oświęcim, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, Poland.
  • Coordinates: 50°02′09″N 19°10′42″E

Recommended Book Auschwitz: A New History by Laurence Rees.

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Tags: military museum, military artwork, battles, Military History, War History, Battle Art, War Paintings, War Art, Military Art, Museum Visit, Art History, Historical Artifacts, Museum Collection, Battlefield Tours, History Museum, Museum Life, History In Art, Historic Preservation, January 27, On This Day, History, Military History, War History, Historical Events, History Buff, World History,  Boshin War, Samurai History, Meiji Restoration, Siege Of Leningrad, WWII, Eastern Front, Red Army, Auschwitz, Holocaust Remembrance Day, We Remember, Never Again, Kyoto National Museum, Dark Tourism, Memorial

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Battles of January 25 summaries plus museums, artwork, books and songs

Battles of January 25 including descriptions of the battles, geographic locations, associated artwork, and museums where a person can find associated artifacts and artwork.

Songs of the day:

The Bulge Blues Variation 1 (1940s Swing)

The Bulge Blues Variation 2 (1940s Swing)

The Watch is Failed (1940s German Cabaret)

1. Battle of the Bulge (Conclusion)

Date: December 16, 1944 – January 25, 1945

(Note: January 25 marks the official end of the offensive as designated by the U.S. Army, when German forces were pushed back to their original lines.)

War: World War II (Western Front)

Cause: Nazi Germany launched a massive, surprise counter-offensive through the dense Ardennes forest, attempting to split the Allied lines, capture the port of Antwerp, and encircle four Allied armies to force a negotiated peace.

Result: Allied victory. The German offensive was repelled, exhausting their reserve forces and paving the way for the final Allied invasion of Germany.

Paintings & Art

  • Painting: Battle for Monte in the Ardennes
    • Artist: Robert Noel Blair
    • Year: 1945 (Painted in January during the campaign)
  • Painting: Thunder in the Ardennes
    • Artist: Anthony Saunders
    • Year: Contemporary (c. 2000s)

Museums & Artifacts

  • Bastogne War Museum (Bastogne, Belgium): Features immersive 3D scenarios, tanks, and extensive personal artifacts from the battle.
  • National Museum of Military History (Diekirch, Luxembourg): Houses one of the largest collections of vehicles and weapons from the Battle of the Bulge, including rare German tank destroyers.
  • Bulge Relics Museum (Vielsalm, Belgium): Displays items recovered directly from the northern face of the battlefield.

Location

  • General: The Ardennes region, Belgium and Luxembourg.
  • Coordinates: 50.0036° N, 5.7196° E (Bastogne, a central hub of the battle).

Recommended Book

2. Action of 25 January 1797

Date: January 25, 1797

War: French Revolutionary Wars (Anglo-Spanish War)

Cause: A British frigate squadron under Commodore George Stewart intercepted the Spanish ship of the line San Francisco de Asís in the Gulf of Cádiz, attempting to capture the larger but isolated vessel.

Result: Spanish victory. The San Francisco de Asís successfully fought off the three British frigates, inflicting damage on them before retreating safely to Cádiz.

Paintings & Art

  • Painting: Combate entre el San Francisco de Asís y tres fragatas inglesas (Battle between San Francisco de Asís and three British frigates)
    • Artist: Unknown (Spanish Naval School)
    • Year: c. 1800s
  • Painting: Rescue of the Santísima Trinidad at the Battle of Cape St Vincent (The San Francisco fought here shortly after)
    • Artist: Antonio de Brugada Vila
    • Year: Mid-19th Century

Museums & Artifacts

  • Museo Naval de Madrid (Madrid, Spain): Holds the specific oil painting of this action as well as models and logs from the Spanish navy of the era.

Location

  • General: Gulf of Cádiz, off the coast of Andalusia, Spain.
  • Coordinates: 36.5333° N, 6.2833° W.

Recommended Book

3. Battle of Spion Kop (Conclusion)

Date: January 23–25, 1900 (Note: While the fighting peaked on the 24th, the British retreated overnight, and Boer forces reoccupied the summit on the morning of January 25, marking the definitive end of the engagement.)

War: Second Boer War

Cause: British forces under General Sir Redvers Buller attempted to break the Boer siege of Ladysmith by capturing the strategic hilltop of Spion Kop to command the surrounding area.

Result: Boer victory. The British suffered heavy casualties in the “acre of massacre” and were forced to withdraw, leaving the Boers in control of the heights.

Paintings & Art

  • Painting: General view of the field of battle before Spion Kop
    • Artist: Frank Dadd
    • Year: 1900
  • Painting: Louis Botha & the Battle of Spion Kop
    • Artist: James E. McConnell
    • Year: 1974

Museums & Artifacts

  • Ditsong National Museum of Military History (Johannesburg, South Africa): Houses Boer War artillery, uniforms, and art.
  • Ladysmith Siege Museum (Ladysmith, South Africa): Focuses specifically on the siege and the relief battles, including Spion Kop.
  • Spion Kop Battlefield (KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa): The site itself is an open-air museum with monuments, mass graves, and the original trenches.

Location

  • General: Spion Kop hill, near Ladysmith, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
  • Coordinates: 28.6500° S, 29.5167° E.

Recommended Book

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For more “Military History Inside Out” please follow me at www.warscholar.org, on Facebook at warscholar, on twitter at Warscholar, on youtube at warscholar1945 and on Instagram @crisalvarezswarscholar. Or subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Spotify

Tags: military museum, military artwork, battles, Military History, War History, Battle Art, War Paintings, War Art, Military Art, Museum Visit, Art History, Historical Artifacts, Museum Collection, Battlefield Tours, History Museum, Museum Life, History In Art, Historic Preservation, January 25, On This Day, History, Military History, War History, Historical Events, History Buff, World History, Battle Of The Bulge, WWII, Ardennes 1944, Spion Kop, Boer War, South African History, Naval Warfare, Age Of Sail, Museo Naval, Bastogne War Museum, Historical Artifacts

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