Monkey

Quiz Monkey
What do you want to know?

You are here:

On This Day
July
19 July

On This Day: 19 July

The Great Fire of Rome begins. Over the next nine days it would destroy two thirds of the city Click to show or hide the answer
During the Second War of Scottish Independence, Scottish forces under Sir Archibald Douglas are heavily defeated by the English forces of King Edward III on unfavourable terrain while trying to relieve Berwick–upon–Tweed Click to show or hide the answer
700 lives are lost when HMS Mary Rose sinks in the Solent Click to show or hide the answer
Queen Jane is deposed after only nine days on the throne, and replaced by Mary I Click to show or hide the answer
The Spanish Armada is sighted off the Lizard, on the south coast of Cornwall. With the English fleet trapped in Plymouth Harbour by an incoming tide, the Duke of Medina Sidonia is for riding into the harbour on the tide and incapacitate the defending ships at anchor; but this is expressly forbidden by Philip II Click to show or hide the answer
William III is defeated by the French Marshal Luxembourg at the Battle of Landen (Neerwinden) Click to show or hide the answer
Representatives of the Iroquois Confederacy sign the Nanfan Treaty, ceding a large territory north of the Ohio River to England Click to show or hide the answer
The Rosetta Stone is found at Rosetta, near Alexandra, Egypt Click to show or hide the answer
Coronation of George IV; his estranged wife Caroline is forcibly kept away Click to show or hide the answer
The Provincial Medical and Surgical Association – a forerunner of the The British Medical Association – is founded by Sir Charles Hastings at a meeting in the Board Room of the Worcester Infirmary Click to show or hide the answer
The steamship Great Western is launched at Bristol Click to show or hide the answer
SS Great Britain – the first ocean–going craft with an iron hull and screw propeller, and the largest vessel afloat anywhere in the world – is launched at Wapping by Prince Albert Click to show or hide the answer
Amelia Jenks Bloomer introduces knee–length trousers for women Click to show or hide the answer
Manhattan's last great fire begins early in the morning, but was subdued in the afternoon of the same day. Four firefighters and 26 civilians lose their lives, and 345 buildings are destroyed Click to show or hide the answer
The first women's rights assembly begins at Seneca Falls, New York State Click to show or hide the answer
Sayid Ali Mohammed, founder of the Ba'hai Sect, is executed in Persia by order of the Shah Click to show or hide the answer
At Buffington Island, Ohio, Confederate General John Hunt Morgan's raid into the north is mostly thwarted when a large group of his men are captured while trying to escape across the Ohio River Click to show or hide the answer
The Franco–Prussian War begins after Napoleon III declares war on Prussia Click to show or hide the answer
The final of the Men's Singles competition at the first All–England Tennis Championships is played at Wimbledon Click to show or hide the answer
The first line of the Paris Metro is opened Click to show or hide the answer
The first Tour de France is won by Maurice Garin Click to show or hide the answer
The building of Liverpool's Anglican Cathedral starts Click to show or hide the answer
An attack on the German front line by British and Australian forces at Fromelles, during the Battle of the Somme, ends in disaster as over 5,500 Australian personnel and more than 1,500 British lose their lives Click to show or hide the answer
A temporary cenotaph, made of wood and plaster, is erected in Whitehall for a parade of troops commemorating the end of the First World War. It formed such an unexpected focus for the nation's grief that a permanent one, in Portland stone, was later created by Sir Edward Lutyens Click to show or hide the answer
Liverpool's Anglican Cathedral is consecrated Click to show or hide the answer
In the USA, Richard Loeb and Nathan Leopold plead guilty to murdering 14–year–old Bobbie Franks – 'the perfect crime' Click to show or hide the answer
A general strike is called in Spain, mobilising workers' militias against the Nationalist forces Click to show or hide the answer
Two art exhibitions open in Munich: one of 'true German' art, the other of 'Degenerate, Bolshevik and Jewish' art Click to show or hide the answer
The Italian light cruiser Bartolomeo Colleoni is sunk by British and Australian ships in the Battle of Cape Spada, off Crete Click to show or hide the answer
The British Army's Intelligence Corps is founded Click to show or hide the answer
Winston Churchill launches his "V for Victory" campaign Click to show or hide the answer
Rome is heavily bombed by more than 500 Allied aircraft, inflicting thousands of casualties Click to show or hide the answer
Aung San, Prime Minister of the shadow Burmese government (father of Aung San Suu Kyi, and regarded as the father of modern Myanmar) is assassinated along with eight others by paramilitary supporters of former Prime Minister U Saw Click to show or hide the answer
Lyuh Woon–hyung, Prime Minister of the short–lived People's Republic of Korea, is assassinated in Seoul by 19–year–old Han Chigeun, a recent refugee from North Korea and an active member of a nationalist right–wing group Click to show or hide the answer
Laos gains independence Click to show or hide the answer
The Games of the XVth Olympiad open in Helsinki Click to show or hide the answer
Tunisia imposes a blockade on the French naval base at Bizerte; the French would capture the entire town four days later Click to show or hide the answer
Captain Joe Walker, USAF, flies a North American X–15 hypersonic rocket–powered aircraft to a record altitude of 106,010 meters (347,800 feet) – qualifying as a space flight under international convention Click to show or hide the answer
28–year–old secretary Mary Jo Kopechne drowns when a car driven by Senator Edward Kennedy, in which she was a passenger, plunges off a bridge and into Poucha Pond (a tidal inlet of the Atlantic Ocean). This happens between 15 and 105 minutes after they left a party on Chappaquiddick Island, Massachusetts, late in the evening of the previous day (at 23:15, according to Kennedy); he would report the incident to police at around 10:00 on this day Click to show or hide the answer
SS Great Britain returns to England from the Falklands Click to show or hide the answer
Clarence White, guitarist of The Byrds, dies several days after being left in a coma by a car crash Click to show or hide the answer
Film star Bruce Lee is found dead in the Hong Kong flat of actress Betty Ting Pei Click to show or hide the answer
Viking 1 lands on Mars and begins sending back TV pictures Click to show or hide the answer
Sagarmatha National Park is created in Nepal Click to show or hide the answer
The world's first Global Positioning System (GPS) signal is transmitted from Navigation Technology Satellite 2 (NTS–2) and received by Rockwell Collins in Cedar Rapids, Iowa Click to show or hide the answer
Sandinista forces enter Managua and overthrow the government of the Somoza family Click to show or hide the answer
The Greek oil tanker SS Atlantic Empress collides with another oil tanker, the Aegean Captain, in the Caribbean, and sinks, having spilled 287,000 metric tonnes of crude oil – the largest ship–based spill on record and the fifth–largest oil spill of any kind Click to show or hide the answer
The Games of the XXII Olympiad opens in Moscow – without USA, Canada, China, Japan, Kenya, West Germany et al Click to show or hide the answer
In a private meeting with US President Ronald Reagan, French President François Mitterrand reveals the existence of the Farewell Dossier, a collection of documents showing that the Soviet Union had been stealing American technological research and development Click to show or hide the answer
In one of the first militant attacks by Hezbollah, David S. Dodge – president of the American University of Beirut – is kidnapped Click to show or hide the answer
The skeleton of a new species of meat–eating dinosaur is unveiled to the media at the Natural History Museum in London, having been discovered six months earlier by plumber and amateur fossil hunter Bill Walker, 55, at a clay pit near Gatwick Airport in Surrey Click to show or hide the answer
Britain's most severe earthquake for over 100 years hits Wales and the West Click to show or hide the answer
268 lives are lost, 63 buildings destroyed and eight bridges demolished, when two dams above the village of Stava, near Tesero in Northern Italy, fail – one of Italy's worst ever disasters Click to show or hide the answer
The Polish parliament elects General Wojciech Jaruzelski as the country's first president – by one vote Click to show or hide the answer
One hundred and eleven lives are lost when a United Airlines DC–10 crash–lands at Sioux City, Iowa, after suffering a catastrophic failure of its tail–mounted engine Click to show or hide the answer
Anti–mafia magistrate Paolo Borsellino, and five members of his police escort, are killed in a terror attack by the Sicilian Mafia, in Palermo Click to show or hide the answer
Bosnian Serb President Radovan Karadzic – currently a fugitive after an arrest warrant was issued for him last week by the International War Crimes Tribunal – agrees to resign and withdraw from political and public life, having been ordered to do so by Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic, after marathon talks with US special envoy Richard Holbrooke Click to show or hide the answer
The Games of the XXVIth (Centenary) Olympiad open in Atlanta, Georgia, USA; the flame is lit by Muhammad Ali Click to show or hide the answer
The Provisional IRA announces its second ceasefire in three years – after the previous set of peace talks ended in stalemate – because of a "commitment by the two governments [UK and the Republic of Ireland] to inclusive peace talks" Click to show or hide the answer
Justin Rose, aged 17, finishes 4th in the Open at Royal Birkdale – the first amateur since 1953 to finish in the top five Click to show or hide the answer
Radio 1 DJ Tim Westwood is injured in a drive–by shooting while waiting at traffic lights in his car Click to show or hide the answer
Lord (Jeffrey) Archer is sentenced to four years' imprisonment for perjury and perverting the course of justice during his 1987 libel case against the Daily Star, which reported that he made payments to the prostitute Monica Coghlan Click to show or hide the answer
At least 21 soldiers are killed when a military checkpoint in Egypt's western desert province of New Valley Governorate is attacked by gunmen. Egypt reportedly declares a state of emergency on its border with Sudan Click to show or hide the answer

© Haydn Thompson 2020