Christianity is officially recognised in the Roman Empire under an edict of Galerius Valerius Maximus |
|
311 |
Chinese and Arab astronomers observe a new star in the sky – a supernova |
|
1006 |
Henry IV of France issues the Edict of Nantes, allowing freedom of religion to the Huguenots |
|
1598 |
Cavalier poet Richard Lovelace presents a petition to Parliament on behalf of King Charles I, and is imprisoned |
|
1642 |
Samuel Pepys makes the first reference in his diary to the great plague |
|
1665 |
George Washington inaugurated as the first President of the USA |
|
1789 |
The USA more than doubles its land area, by purchasing the Louisiana Territory from the French for $15 million |
|
1803 |
Nicaragua declares independence from the Central American Federation |
|
1838 |
In a lecture at the Royal Institution in London, J. J. Thomson of the Cavendish Laboratory announces his discovery of
the electron – a subatomic particle, over 1,800 times smaller than a proton |
|
1897 |
The Republic of Hawaii cedes itself to the USA |
|
1900 |
'Casey' Jones dies when the Cannonball Express hits a stationary train near Vaughn, Mississippi |
|
1900 |
Debussy's ballet Pelleas et Melisande first performed, in Paris |
|
1902 |
St. Louis Exhibition (World Fair) opens |
|
1904 |
Albert Einstein completes his doctoral thesis at the University of Zurich |
|
1905 |
Winston Churchill moves a second reading of the Irish Home Rule Bill in the House of Commons |
|
1912 |
The Federal Industrial Institute for Women – the first women's federal prison in the USA – opens in
Alderson, West Virginia |
|
1927 |
Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford become the first celebrities to leave their footprints in concrete at Grauman's
Chinese Theater in Hollywood |
|
1937 |
The animated cartoon short Porky's Hare Hunt debuts in movie theaters, introducing Happy Rabbit, an early
version of Bugs Bunny |
|
1938 |
New York World's Fair opens; NBC broadcasts President F. D. Roosevelt's opening day ceremonial address,
inaugurating its regularly scheduled television service in New York City |
|
1939 |
HMS Seraph surfaces near Huelva, in south–west Spain, to cast adrift a dead man dressed as a courier and
carrying false invasion plans – successfully disguising the Allied invasion of Sicily |
|
1943 |
Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun commit suicide (by gunshot and cyanide pills respectively) after being married for less than
40 hours. Soviet soldiers raise the Victory Banner over the Reichstag building. Stalag Luft I prisoner–of–war camp, near Barth,
Germany, is liberated by Soviet soldiers, freeing almost 9,000 American and British airmen |
|
1945 |
Boulder Dam is renamed Hoover Dam |
|
1947 |
The first Land Rover is exhibited at the Amsterdam Motor Show |
|
1948 |
The Organisation of American States is established in Bogotá¡ |
|
1948 |
Anne Frank's diary is published in English for the first time, as The Diary of a Young Girl |
|
1952 |
Suez Canal re–opened |
|
1957 |
First London performance of My Fair Lady |
|
1958 |
K–19, the first Soviet nuclear submarine equipped with nuclear missiles, is commissioned |
|
1961 |
The Bristol Bus Boycott begins, in protest against the Bristol Omnibus Company's refusal to employ Black or Asian
bus crews, drawing national attention to racial discrimination in the United Kingdom |
|
1963 |
Bob Dylan opens his first UK tour in Sheffield |
|
1965 |
Muhammad Ali stripped of the world heavyweight boxing title for refusing the draft |
|
1967 |
Brighton Belle makes its last journey from London Victoria to Brighton |
|
1972 |
In a televised statement, Richard Nixon accepts responsibility for the bugging of the Watergate building in 1972, and
announces that White House Counsel John Dean has been fired and other top aides, notably H. R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman, have resigned |
|
1973 |
Saigon falls to Communist forces, and is renamed Ho Chi Minh City. The South Vietnamese government surrenders
unconditionally, ending the Vietnam war. |
|
1975 |
Terrorists seize the Iranian embassy in London |
|
1980 |
Beatrix succeeds as Queen of the Netherlands, following the abdication of Juliana |
|
1980 |
125,000 die following a cyclone in Bangladesh with winds of up to 146 mph |
|
1991 |
Monica Seles, the world No. 1 in women's tennis, is stabbed in the back by Gunter Parche, a 39–year–old
unemployed lathe operator obsessed with Steffi Graf, during a quarter–final match in Hamburg |
|
1993 |
CERN announces that use of World Wide Web protocols will be available to anyone, free of charge |
|
1993 |
Virgin 1215 officially begins broadcasting |
|
1993 |
Austrian racing driver Roland Ratzenberger dies in a crash during qualifying for the San Marino Grand Prix run at
Imola |
|
1994 |
Ellen DeGeneres's character on her sitcom Ellen comes out as gay, making the show one of the first major
television shows featuring an openly gay main character |
|
1997 |
London's third nail bomb in a month, in a gay pub in Soho, kills two and injures 73 |
|
1999 |
Three people are killed by British suicide bomber Mohammed Hanif in a café in Tel Aviv |
|
2003 |
Richard Cazaly, 23, a suspect in the inquiry into the stabbing of Abigail Witchalls in Little Bookham, Surrey on 20 30
April, dies in an Edinburgh hospital after a suspected drugs overdose |
|
2005 |
Russian scientists confirm that two skeletal remains found near Yekaterinburg are the remains of Alexei and Anastasia,
two of the children of the last Tsar of Russia, whose entire family was executed at Yekaterinburg by the Bolsheviks |
|
2008 |
Chrysler files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy |
|
2009 |
Seven civilians and the perpetrator are killed, and another ten injured, at a Queen's Day parade in Apeldoorn,
Netherlands in an attempted assassination on Queen Beatrix |
|
2009 |
At least 103 lives are lost when an overloaded ferry capsizes on the Brahmaputra river in India |
|
2012 |
Willem–Alexander succeeds as King of the Netherlands, following the abdication of Queen Beatrix |
|
2013 |