Battle of Lewes: Henry III is defeated by the barons under Simon de Montfort |
|
1264 |
Battle of Agnadello: the French army overcomes the Venetians |
|
1509 |
The first permanent English settlement in North America is established at Jamestown, Virginia |
|
1607 |
Henry IV of France is assassinated in Paris by fanatical monk Francois Ravaillac, and succeeded by Louis XIII |
|
1610 |
Louis XIV becomes King of France, aged 4 |
|
1643 |
In the War of the Austrian Succession, a British fleet under Admiral George Anson defeats the French at the First
Battle of Cape Finisterre |
|
1747 |
The Oaks is run for the first time, at Epsom |
|
1779 |
A Constitutional Convention convenes in Philadelphia, to write a new Constitution for the United States – but is
not yet quorate; George Washington presides |
|
1787 |
Edward Jenner carries out the first successful smallpox vaccination |
|
1796 |
Pasha Yusuf Karamanli of Tripoli declares war on the USA |
|
1801 |
Meriwether Lewis and William Clark set out from the confluence of the Missouri and Mississippi rivers, to find a route
to the Pacific coast |
|
1804 |
A ruling junta is created in Paraguay, and proclaims independence |
|
1811 |
The Illustrated London News is published for the first time |
|
1842 |
HMS Driver arrives at Spithead, becoming the first steamship to circumnavigate the world |
|
1847 |
Nelson College and Nelson RFC contest the first game of rugby played in New Zealand |
|
1870 |
Robert A. Chesebrough patents Vaseline |
|
1878 |
The second modern Olympiad, and the first at which women competed, opens in Paris |
|
1900 |
The Franco–British Exhibition opens at White City, London |
|
1908 |
Charles Furnas, sitting alongside Wilbur Wright, becomes the first air passenger |
|
1908 |
The Rockefeller Foundation begins operations with a $100 million donation from John D. Rockefeller |
|
1913 |
BBC broadcasts from Savoy Hill for the last time |
|
1932 |
In Peru, five–year–old Lina Medina becomes the youngest confirmed mother in medical history |
|
1939 |
Samuel Goldwyn buys out Chaplin, Fairbanks and Pickford and takes control of United Artists |
|
1939 |
Local Defence Volunteer Force (later renamed the Home Guard) formed |
|
1940 |
Israel proclaimed an independent state as the British mandate ends |
|
1948 |
Atlantic Records is founded by Ahmet Ertegun, son of the Turkish ambassador to the USA |
|
1948 |
The Tal–y–llyn Railway opens in Wales – the first railway in the world to be operated by volunteers |
|
1951 |
Knights of the Round Table – the first British–made Cinemascope film – is shown at the Empire
Theatre, Leicester Square |
|
1954 |
The Warsaw Pact is signed by eight countries including the Soviet Union – placing all member countries under one
military command |
|
1955 |
Royal Navy frogman Commander Lionel 'Buster' Crabbe disappears while allegedly bugging visiting Soviet ships
near Portsmouth |
|
1956 |
Petrol rationing ends in the UK after five months, following the Suez Crisis |
|
1957 |
The River Nile is diverted to allow the building of the next stage of the Aswan High Dam |
|
1964 |
French workers support demonstrating students with a one–day strike |
|
1968 |
Andreas Baader is freed from custody by Ulrike Meinhof, Gudrun Ensslin and others – a pivotal moment in the
formation of the Red Army Faction |
|
1970 |
Skylab I – the USA's first space station – is launched at Cape Kennedy |
|
1973 |
Chess first performed, in London |
|
1986 |
Coup in Fiji against the influence of Indian immigrants in government |
|
1987 |
Winnie Mandela is sentenced to six years' imprisonment for complicity in the kidnapping and beating of four youths.
But she didn't go to prison, and the sentence was quashed in 1993 |
|
1991 |
President Chirac of France travels in the Channel Tunnel and lunches with the Queen on British beef, at the start of a
state visit |
|
1996 |
Popular unrest in Jakarta erupts in riots, leaving the city in a state of anarchy |
|
1998 |
Scientists warn that a "second wave" of new variant Creuzfeld–Jakob Disease – the human variant of
BSE of "mad cow disease" – could strike in a few years' time, and could be much more serious than the 99 cases discovered so
far |
|
2001 |
Piers Morgan, editor of the Daily Mirror, is sacked after publishing fake pictures of British soldiers abusing
Iraqi prisoners (his employers saying that he had fallen victim to a "calculated and malicious hoax") |
|
2004 |