Norman mercenaries land at Bannow Bay in Leinster, beginning the Norman invasion of Ireland |
|
1169 |
By the Treaty of Edinburgh–Northampton, the Kingdom of England recognises the Kingdom of Scotland as an
independent state |
|
1328 |
Dancing around the maypole is revived in the Strand, outside Somerset House, following the Restoration |
|
1661 |
The Act of Union, joining England and Scotland as the Kingdom of Great Britain, takes effect; the English and Scottish
parliaments are united at Westminster |
|
1707 |
Plant taxonomy is formally adopted under the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature, as Carl Linnaeus publishes
Species Plantarum |
|
1753 |
Josiah Wedgwood founds his pottery company |
|
1759 |
Mozart's opera The Marriage of Figaro first performed, in Vienna |
|
1786 |
Britain's first railway tunnel built |
|
1800 |
Charles IV of Spain abdicates in favour of Joseph Bonaparte, elder brother of Napoleon |
|
1808 |
Five of the Cato Street conspirators are hanged at Newgate Prison before a crowd of many thousands |
|
1820 |
The first penny blacks go on sale |
|
1840 |
The London Library is officially opened |
|
1841 |
Hong Kong Police Force, the world's second modern police force and the first in Asia, is established |
|
1844 |
Queen Victoria opens the Great Exhibition in the Crystal Palace, in Hyde Park |
|
1851 |
The Union army completes its occupation of New Orleans |
|
1862 |
Race riots begin in Memphis, Tennessee |
|
1866 |
The Folies Bergère opens in Paris |
|
1869 |
Alexandra Palace reopens, after being destroyed by fire in 1873 |
|
1875 |
Queen Victoria is proclaimed Empress of India |
|
1876 |
Construction begins in Chicago on the world's first skyscraper – the 10–storey Home Insurance Company
of New York building |
|
1884 |
Moses Fleetwood Walker becomes the first black person to play in a professional baseball game in the United States |
|
1884 |
Rallies are held throughout the United States demanding the eight–hour work day, culminating in the Haymarket
affair in Chicago, in commemoration of which May 1 is celebrated as International Workers' Day in many countries |
|
1886 |
The World's Columbian Exposition opens in Chicago |
|
1893 |
The US fleet destroys the obsolete Spanish Pacific fleet in Manila harbour, in the first major battle of the
Spanish–American War |
|
1898 |
Vaclav Nijinsky shocks Paris at the premiere of Debussy's L'apres–midi d'un faune |
|
1912 |
Reclamation work on the Zuyder Zee begins |
|
1919 |
The All–China Federation of Trade Unions is officially founded; today it is the largest trade union in the world,
with 134 million members |
|
1925 |
Cyprus becomes a British Crown colony |
|
1925 |
TUC calls for a general strike to encourage the government to intervene in the national coal dispute |
|
1926 |
The planet Pluto – now a dwarf planet – is officially named |
|
1930 |
President Hoover, in Washington DC, presses a button to open the Empire State Building in New York |
|
1931 |
Professor Auguste Picard makes the first ascent into the Stratosphere |
|
1931 |
The FA Cup final is televised for the first time – Sunderland beat Preston North End 3–1 |
|
1937 |
Orson Welles's film Citizen Kane is premiered in New York |
|
1941 |
German troops execute two hundred Communist prisoners at Kaisariani, Athens, in reprisal for the killing of General
Franz Krech by partisans at Molaoi four days earlier |
|
1944 |
Joseph Goebbels, Hitler's Minister of Propaganda, commits suicide along with his wife Magda, who inserts cyanide
pills into the mouths of their five daughters and one son. A German newsreader officially announces that Adolf Hitler has "fallen at his
command post in the Reich Chancellery fighting to the last breath against Bolshevism and for Germany". The Soviet flag is raised over the
Reich Chancellery, by order of Stalin. Up to 2,500 people die in a mass suicide in Demmin, in Prussian Pomerania, provoked by atrocities
committed by soldiers of the Soviet Red Army, in sacking the town on the previous day. Yugoslav Partisans liberate Trieste |
|
1945 |
The British gas industry is nationalised |
|
1949 |
The polio vaccine, developed by Jonas Salk, is made available to the public |
|
1956 |
A doctor in Japan reports an "epidemic of an unknown disease of the central nervous system", marking the
official discovery of Minamata disease (caused by mercury poisoning) |
|
1956 |
All five crew, and 29 of the 30 passengers, lose their lives when a Vickers Viking airliner crashes near Blackbushe
Airport in Hampshire |
|
1957 |
U2 spy plane, piloted by Gary Powers, shot down over the USSR |
|
1960 |
Off–course betting is legalised in the UK |
|
1961 |
Elvis Presley marries Priscilla Beaulieu |
|
1967 |
£750,000 in gold ingots stolen from a bullion van in Clerkenwell, London |
|
1967 |
Legoland Family Park opens at Billund, Denmark |
|
1968 |
Protests erupt after Richard Nixon announces that US and South Vietnamese forces would attack Vietnamese communists in
Cambodia |
|
1970 |
Amtrak (the National Railroad Passenger Corporation) takes over operation of the US passenger rail service |
|
1971 |
Sir Alf Ramsey's reign as manager of the England football team ends following their failure to qualify for the 1974
World Cup finals |
|
1974 |
Britain's first May Day Bank Holiday |
|
1978 |
Japan's Naomi Uemura, travelling by dog sled, becomes the first person to reach the North Pole alone |
|
1978 |
Admiral Sandy Woodward, Commander of the Falklands Battle Group (on his 50th birthday), crosses into the
Argentine exclusion zone in HMS Hermes and so begins the Falklands War |
|
1982 |
Pope John Paul II beatifies Edith Stein, a Jewish–born Carmelite nun who was gassed in the Nazi concentration
camp at Auschwitz |
|
1987 |
Anti–government protesters in Prague demand the release of dissident playwright Vaclav Havel |
|
1989 |
Disney–MGM Studios opens at Walt Disney World near Orlando, Florida |
|
1989 |
Three–time Formula One world champion Ayrton Senna is killed in an accident while leading the San Marino Grand
Prix at Imola, Italy |
|
1994 |
The body of George Mallory is found on Mount Everest, 75 years after his disappearance |
|
1999 |
SpongeBob SquarePants premières on Nickelodeon |
|
1999 |
An anti–capitalist demonstration in Parliament Square, London, erupts into violence |
|
2000 |
Israel lifts its five–month siege of Yasser Arafat's offices, under a deal brokered by the USA and Britain |
|
2002 |
In what would become known as the "Mission Accomplished" speech, on board the USS Abraham Lincoln
(off the coast of California), US President George W. Bush declares that "major combat operations in Iraq have ended" |
|
2003 |
Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia, and Slovenia join the European
Union, celebrated at the residence of the Irish President in Dublin |
|
2004 |
Same–sex marriage is legalised in Sweden |
|
2009 |
Al–Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden is shot and killed in Abbottabad, Pakistan, by US Navy seals |
|
2011 |
Pope John Paul II is beatified by his successor, Benedict XVI |
|
2011 |