Battle of Clontarf: King Brian Boru beats back Viking invaders, but is himself killed |
|
1014 |
Edmund Ironside succeeds to the English throne on the death of his father, Æthelred the Unready |
|
1016 |
Edward III founds the Order of the Garter |
|
1348 |
The Bayerische Reinheitsgebot (regulating the ingredients of beer) is signed in Ingolstadt |
|
1516 |
William Shakespeare born |
|
1564 |
William Shakespeare dies; Miguel de Cervantes, author of Don Quixote, dies |
|
1616 |
Charles I crowned in Westminster Abbey |
|
1661 |
Connecticut chartered as an English colony |
|
1662 |
Justine, or The Misfortunes of Virtue – by the Marquis de Sade – published |
|
1791 |
Warren Hastings, former Governor General of India, acquitted of high treason |
|
1795 |
Missolonghi captured by the Turks |
|
1826 |
Explorer John Stuart reaches the centre of Australia |
|
1860 |
Queen Victoria and Emperor Napoleon III turn down plans for a Channel tunnel |
|
1867 |
Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, Stratford–on–Avon, opened |
|
1879 |
Gilbert & Sullivan's Patience first performed (London) |
|
1881 |
Rupert Brooke dies of blood poisoning on the way to active service in the Dardanelles |
|
1915 |
Battle of Zeebrugge ends – Lt–Cdr Percy Thomson Dean VC killed |
|
1918 |
British Empire Exhibition at Wembley opened by King George V and Queen Mary |
|
1924 |
The BBC broadcasts the FA Cup final for the first time – Cardiff City beat Arsenal 1–0, and so take the
trophy out of England for the first time |
|
1927 |
The new Shakespeare Memorial Theatre opens at Stratford on Avon |
|
1932 |
Josef Stalin officially opens the Moscow underground system |
|
1935 |
German invasion forces King George and the Greek government to abandon Athens for Crete |
|
1941 |
German bombers hit Exeter, Bath and York in retaliation for the British raid on Lübeck – in what became known as
the Baedeker Blitz |
|
1942 |
Hitler's designated successor, Hermann Göring, sends him a telegram asking permission to take leadership of the
Third Reich. Martin Bormann and Joseph Goebbels advise Hitler that the telegram is treasonous |
|
1945 |
Allied forces in Italy reach the River Po |
|
1945 |
Oil pipeline from Kirkuk to Banias completed |
|
1952 |
Britain's first heliport opens beside the Thames in London |
|
1959 |
150,000 attend the biggest–ever anti–nuclear demonstration, in Hyde Park |
|
1962 |
Stirling Moss's career is ended as he crashes at Goodwood |
|
1962 |
The Soviet Union launches Soyuz 1, a manned spaceflight carrying cosmonaut Colonel Vladimir Komarov, into orbit |
|
1967 |
Students take over administration buildings at Columbia University in New York City, and shut down the university, in
protest against the Vietnam war |
|
1968 |
Britain's first decimal coins – 5p and 10p – enter circulation |
|
1968 |
Sirhan B. Sirhan sentenced to death for the murder of Senator Robert Kennedy |
|
1969 |
The Pakistan Army and Razakars massacre approximately 3,000 Hindu emigrants in the Jathibhanga area of East Pakistan
(now Bangladesh) |
|
1971 |
Protester Blair Peach receives fatal injuries during fighting between the Anti–Nazi League and the Metropolitan
Police's Special Patrol Group, in London; his death was later officially attributed to the SPG |
|
1979 |
£1 coin introduced in Britain |
|
1983 |
German magazine Stern announces that it has Hitler's diaries |
|
1983 |
Isolation of the AIDS virus announced |
|
1984 |
Coca–Cola changes its formula and releases New Coke. (The original formula is back on the market in less than three
months, after an overwhelmingly negative response) |
|
1985 |
Namibia becomes the 160th member of the United Nations, and the 50th member of the Commonwealth of Nations |
|
1990 |
US hostage Robert Polhill freed after 39 months' captivity in Beirut |
|
1990 |
Soviet republics granted the right to secede under certain conditions |
|
1991 |
In a UN–monitored referendum, Eritrea votes overwhelmingly for independence from Ethiopia |
|
1993 |
The world's oldest football – used in matches between soldiers and staff of the household of Mary, Queen of
Scots – goes on public display in Stirling |
|
1999 |
Five bystanders shot and taken hostage during a 50–mile car chase from the M6 through Horwich, Bolton, Bury and
Rochdale |
|
1999 |
Makhaya Ntini, 22, the first black cricketer to represent South Africa, is convicted of rape in East London |
|
1999 |
The first ever YouTube video, entitled Me at the Zoo, is posted by the site's co–founder Jawed Karim,
with the username 'jawed' (recorded by his high school friend Yakov Lapitsky) |
|
2005 |