Our mission
Make tragedy research easier to explore, compare, and understand.
Tragedia.org covers both the emotional and historical sides of tragedy. Some visitors come to learn about disasters, wars, and major events. Others want timelines, maps, statistics, memorial pages, or ways to compare one tragedy with another.
- Browse major tragedies by year, country, and category
- Compare disasters using measurable data
- Explore historical context through interactive tools
- Discover memorials, anniversaries, and significant dates
- Study large-scale events with maps and timelines
- Use printable or visual tools for education and research
Featured tools on Tragedia.org
These tools are designed to be highly searched, genuinely useful, and competitive in the history and disaster information space.
Historical Tragedy Timeline Explorer
Search by year, century, country, or event type to explore major tragedies across history in a structured and visual timeline.
Disaster Map of the World
View earthquakes, floods, wars, accidents, pandemics, and other tragedies on an interactive global map.
Historical Death Toll Comparator
Compare two events side by side with deaths, injuries, impact, duration, and historical significance.
"What Happened On This Day?"
Look up tragedies, disasters, famous deaths, and major historical events for any date of the year.
Tragedy by Country Explorer
Choose any country and browse the tragedies, disasters, conflicts, and major historical events connected to it.
Disaster Preparedness Checklist Generator
Generate practical emergency checklists for earthquakes, floods, fires, storms, volcanic eruptions, and more.
All mentioned tools
This is the full tool set planned for the site.
Who this site is for
Tragedia.org is made for people who need clear, structured information instead of scattered pages or hard-to-navigate archives.
Students: timelines, facts, summaries, and comparisons for assignments.
Teachers: classroom-friendly resources and data-backed tools.
Researchers: event comparisons, maps, statistics, and context.
Journalists: anniversary and historical reference tools.
General readers: accessible and engaging ways to understand world tragedies.
How the content is organized
We want the site to stay useful on both desktop and mobile devices, with a simple structure and easy navigation.
Frequently asked questions
A quick guide to the purpose and direction of the website.
A site built for learning, comparing, and exploring history
Tragedia.org is designed to become a practical destination for tragedy-related research and education, combining informative content with interactive tools that keep visitors engaged.