Henry VIII's marriage to Anne Boleyn is annulled; her brother George Boleyn, 2nd Viscount Rochford, is
executed for treason (along with four others) in respect of his alleged incestuous relationship with her |
|
1536 |
Anne of Denmark is crowned Queen of Scotland |
|
1590 |
Louis Joliet and Jacques Marquette set out to explore the Mississippi |
|
1673 |
Catherine the Great, Empress of Russia, dies |
|
1727 |
Frederick the Great of Prussia defeats the Austrians at Czaslau and Chotusitz |
|
1742 |
The Buttonwood Agreement: 24 merchants meet under a buttonwood tree in Wall Street, New York, and agree to found the
New York Stock Exchange |
|
1792 |
Muhammad Ali becomes Wāli of Egypt |
|
1805 |
Napoleon orders the annexation of the Papal States to the French Empire |
|
1809 |
The Constitution of Norway is signed, and Crown Prince Christian Frederick of Denmark is elected as King |
|
1814 |
Members of the Melbourne Football Club codify the first rules of Australian rules football |
|
1859 |
Thomas Cook's first package holiday leaves London for Paris |
|
1861 |
The first colour photographs are displayed at the Royal Institution |
|
1861 |
The International Telegraph Union (later the International Telecommunication Union) is established in Paris |
|
1865 |
Aristidies wins the first Kentucky Derby, at Louisville |
|
1875 |
Revised English Bible (New Testament) published |
|
1881 |
Comic Cuts – the first weekly comic – published by Alfred Harmsworth |
|
1890 |
Queen Victoria lays the foundation stone of London's Victoria & Albert Museum |
|
1899 |
Baden Powell's British garrison at Mafeking is relieved by Colonel Plumer, after a 217–day siege by the Boers |
|
1900 |
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, by L. Frank Baum, is first published in the United States; the first copy is given
to the author's sister |
|
1900 |
Norway claims its independence from Sweden |
|
1905 |
Britain's last Liberal Party government, led by H. H. Asquith, falls |
|
1915 |
Parliament passes the Daylight Saving Act |
|
1916 |
KLM's first flight |
|
1920 |
Chiang Kai–Shek made supreme war lord in Canton |
|
1926 |
Vidkun Quisling and Johan Bernhard Hjort form Nasjonal Samling – the national–socialist party of Norway |
|
1933 |
The Marquess of Bute sells half of the city of Cardiff for £20 million |
|
1938 |
Columbia Lions and Princeton Tigers play in the United States' first televised sporting event – a collegiate
baseball game in New York |
|
1939 |
German forces invade France and occupy Brussels |
|
1940 |
The 'Dam Busters' raid: 617 squadron bursts the Mohne and Eder dams |
|
1943 |
German forces begin a major offensive against Tito's partisans in Yugoslavia |
|
1943 |
England's game against Argentina in Buenos Aires is abandoned after 21 (or 36) mins due to heavy rain |
|
1953 |
US Supreme Court rules segregation in public schools unconstitutional |
|
1954 |
Prime Minister Sir Anthony Eden hosts a ground–breaking half–hour television election programme for the
Conservative Party – echoing the first televised press conference, staged earlier in the same year by US president Dwight D. Eisenhower |
|
1955 |
The much–heralded 'Big Four' summit in Paris (between the USA, USSR, UK and France) fails after U2 spy
plane recriminations |
|
1960 |
Hong Kong erects a wall to keep out Chinese immigrants |
|
1962 |
Bob Dylan plays the Royal Albert Hall – his first major London appearance |
|
1964 |
President Gamal Abdel Nasser demands dismantling of the peace–keeping UN Emergency Force in Egypt |
|
1967 |
The Soviet spacecraft Venera 5 begins its descent into the atmosphere of Venus – sending back atmospheric
data before being crushed by pressure |
|
1969 |
Dubliner Tom McLean becomes the first person to row across the Atlantic |
|
1969 |
Televised Watergate hearings begin in the US Senate |
|
1973 |
33 civilians are killed and 300 injured when the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) detonates four car bombs in Dublin and
Monaghan |
|
1974 |
The Symbionese Liberation Army's headquarters in Los Angeles are raided by police; six members, including Camilla
Hall, are killed |
|
1974 |
Charlie Chaplin's body is found, in its coffin, ten miles from where it was stolen on 2 March |
|
1978 |
On the eve of presidential elections, Maoist guerrilla group Shining Path attacks a polling location in Chuschi (a town
in Ayacucho), starting the Internal conflict in Peru |
|
1980 |
37 crew members are killed and 21 injured, when the USS Stark is hit by two missiles fired from an Iraqi
Dassault Mirage F1 fighter jet |
|
1987 |
The General Assembly of the WHO eliminates homosexuality from the list of psychiatric diseases |
|
1990 |
Three days of anti–government protests begin in Bangkok, leading to a military crackdown that results in 52
officially confirmed deaths, hundreds of injuries, many disappearances, and more than 3,500 arrests |
|
1992 |
Malawi holds its first multi–party elections |
|
1994 |
US Army veteran Shawn Nelson is shot and killed by police after going on a rampage in an M60 tank that he stole from
the California Army National Guard Armory in San Diego |
|
1995 |
US Admiral Jeremy 'Mike' Boorda shoots himself as revelations that he wore decorations to which he may not have
been entitled are made public |
|
1996 |
Nazir Mohammed, Kashmiri guerrilla leader, announces that the four Western hostages kidnapped on 4 July 1995 were shot
in December |
|
1996 |
President Mobutu flees to Morocco as Laurent Kabila's rebel troops march into Kinshasa; Zaire is renamed the
Democratic Republic of Congo |
|
1997 |
Ehud Barak, Israel's most decorated soldier, replaces Binyamin Netanyahu as prime minister in a sweeping election
victory (58% to 41.5%) |
|
1999 |
Arsenal and Galatasaray fans clash at the UEFA Cup Final in Copenhagen – an event viewed by the media as part of
a retaliation for the killing of two Leeds United fans by Galatasaray supporters on 5 April |
|
2000 |
Braving severe weather conditions on as little as half a cup of porridge a day, Royal Marine commandos Charlie Paton
and Corporal Alan Chambers become the first Britons to reach the geographical North Pole without outside support |
|
2000 |
Izzedin Salim, head of the American–appointed Iraqi Governing Council, is assassinated by a car bomb in Baghdad
– just six weeks before the USA is due to cede power |
|
2004 |
Police foil what would have been one of the biggest robberies in British history – it would have dwarfed the
Great Train Robbery and Brinks–Mat – at Heathrow Airport |
|
2004 |
The USA's first legal same–sex marriages are performed in Massachusetts |
|
2004 |
Independent (former Labour) MP George Galloway defends charges that he profited from Saddam Hussein's regime in
Iraq, before the US Senate |
|
2005 |
Rob Gauntlett becomes the youngest Briton to climb Mount Everest, one week after his 19th birthday |
|
2006 |
In a test run agreed by both governments, trains from North and South Korea cross the 38th Parallel for the first time
since 1953 |
|
2007 |