Attempts by MP and JP John Bampton to collect unpaid poll taxes in Brentwood, Essex, end in a violent confrontation
that sparks the Peasants' Revolt |
|
1381 |
Joan of Arc is burned as a heretic in Rouen, on the orders of the English regent, John, Duke of Bedford |
|
1431 |
Columbus sets sail on his third voyage |
|
1498 |
Henry VIII marries Jane Seymour, a lady–in–waiting to each of his first two wives – and his third wife |
|
1536 |
Hernando de Soto lands at Tampa Bay, Florida, with 600 soldiers and aiming to find gold |
|
1539 |
Henry III becomes King of France, on the death of his elder brother Charles IX (who himself had succeeded his elder
brother Francis II) from tuberculosis at the age of 23 |
|
1574 |
Spanish defeat an English force under Sir John Norris at Cranon, Brittany |
|
1592 |
Christopher Marlowe is killed (allegedly) in a tavern brawl |
|
1593 |
The Gazette de France, the first French newspaper, is published for the first time |
|
1631 |
Habsburg Emperor Ferdinand II and Elector John George I of Saxony (representing most of the Protestant Estates of the
Holy Roman Empire) sign the Peace of Prague, effectively ending the civil war aspect of the Thirty Years' War; but other actions would
continue until the conclusion of the Peace of Westphalia in 1648 |
|
1635 |
Parliament retroactively annuls all honours granted by Charles I |
|
1642 |
Grenadier Guards formed |
|
1656 |
Future US President Andrew Jackson kills his rival plantation owner and horse breeder Charles Dickinson in a duel |
|
1806 |
Napoleon annexes Tuscany |
|
1808 |
House of Representatives is opened in Washington |
|
1808 |
Following Napoleon's abdication on 13 April, as a result of negotiations at Fontainebleau, the signing of the
Treaty of Paris returns French borders to their 1792 extent and exiles Napoleon to Elba |
|
1814 |
The British East India Company's ship Arniston is wrecked during a storm at Waenhuiskrans, near Cape
Agulhas (in present–day South Africa), with the loss of 372 lives – only six on board survive |
|
1815 |
Portuguese Minister of Justice Joaquim António de Aguiar issues a law seizing "all convents, monasteries,
colleges, hospices and any other houses" from the Catholic religious orders – earning him the nickname of
'O Mata–Frades' (the Friar–Killer) |
|
1834 |
John Francis attempts to assassinate Queen Victoria as she rides down Constitution Hill with Prince Albert |
|
1842 |
The Indian ship Fatel Razack lands off Trinidad, bringing the first 227 indentured Indian labourers into the
British colony |
|
1845 |
Smetana's opera The Bartered Bride first performed, in Prague |
|
1866 |
Memorial Day (following on from the previous year's Decoration Day) first observed in the USA, to honour those
who lost their lives while serving in the US Armed Forces |
|
1869 |
Morris William Travers and Sir William Ramsay discover krypton, noticing a brilliant green line in a spectrum |
|
1898 |
Japanese forces occupy Dairen, Russia |
|
1904 |
Three thousand London cab drivers go on strike |
|
1904 |
Ray Harroun, driving a Marmon Wasp, wins the first Indianapolis 500 race |
|
1911 |
Turkey's signing of the Treaty of London ends the Balkan War and creates the state of Albania |
|
1913 |
The Lincoln Memorial, in Washington DC, is dedicated |
|
1922 |
Various incidents in Canton, including the shooting of Chinese students in Shanghai, provoke a Chinese boycott of
British goods |
|
1925 |
Labour wins the general election –Ramsay Macdonald becomes prime minister |
|
1929 |
Hill station of Quetta, India, destroyed by an earthquake; 20,000 killed |
|
1935 |
1,047 bombers attack Cologne – the RAF's first 1,000–bomber raid of World War II |
|
1942 |
The British Citizenship Act confers British citizenship on all Commonwealth subjects |
|
1948 |
Auckland Harbour Bridge, New Zealand, is officially opened by Governor–General Charles Lyttelton, 10th Viscount
Cobham (cousin of Humphrey Lyttelton) |
|
1959 |
The first hovercraft is launched at Cowes, Isle of Wight |
|
1959 |
Former Prime Minister Évariste Kimba is one of several Congolese politicians publicly executed in Kinshasa on the
orders of President Joseph Mobutu |
|
1966 |
The Eastern Region of Nigeria declares itself independent as the Republic of Biafra |
|
1967 |
King Hussein of Jordan and President Abdel Nasser of Egypt sign a joint defence agreement; Nasser declares "Our
basic objective will be the destruction of Israel" |
|
1967 |
The threat of revolution recedes in France after Charles de Gaulle (reappearing publicly for the first time after his
flight to Baden–Baden) dissolves the National Assembly and announces an election, and about 800,000 of his supporters march through the
Champs–Élysées waving the tricolour |
|
1968 |
The British Trans–Arctic Expedition completes the first surface crossing of the Arctic, taking 464 days |
|
1969 |
The Open University receives its Royal Charter |
|
1969 |
Mariner 9 is launched at Cape Kennedy, on a mission to map the surface of Mars and study temporal changes in
the planet's atmosphere and surface |
|
1971 |
The Angry Brigade goes on trial over a series of 25 bombings throughout the United Kingdom |
|
1972 |
The official wing of the IRA announces a ceasefire, reserving the right of self–defence against attacks by the
British Army and sectarian groups; but the Provisional IRA (formed in 1969) dismisses the truce as having "little effect" on the
situation |
|
1972 |
Airbus Industrie's first product, the A300, enters service |
|
1974 |
The European Space Agency is established in Paris |
|
1975 |
President Zia Rahman of Bangladesh is shot dead in an attempted military coup |
|
1981 |
Spain joins NATO |
|
1982 |
The Goddess of Democracy, a 10–metre–high statue constructed on the spot from foam and
papier–maché over a metal armature, is unveiled by student demonstrators in Tiananmen Square, Beijing |
|
1989 |
Food riots in Argentina threaten the economic policies of new president Carlos Menem |
|
1989 |
France bans imports of British beef because of fears over BSE |
|
1990 |
Binyamin Netanyahu narrowly defeats Shimon Peres in Israel's prime ministerial election |
|
1996 |
Northern Ireland votes for representatives at talks about peace talks |
|
1996 |
The Duke and Duchess of York's marriage is annulled by decree absolute |
|
1996 |
Sara Thornton is released after a successful appeal against her conviction for the murder of her husband |
|
1996 |
Over 4,000 lives are lost in an earthquake in northern Afghanistan |
|
1998 |
Pakistan conducts its second nuclear test – Chagai–II – in the Kharan Desert in the south–west
of the country |
|
1998 |
Former French Foreign Minister Roland Dumas (78), a judge and close confidant of late President Francois Mitterrand,
is jailed for six months after being found guilty of illegally receiving funds from oil giant Elf Aquitaine between 1989 and 1992; his
ex–lover Christine Deviers–Joncour, and two top Elf executives, are also jailed for their roles in the country's biggest
sleaze scandal of recent times |
|
2001 |
At least 70 people associated with the National League for Democracy are killed by a government–sponsored mob
in the town of Tabayin (Depayin), in Burma. Aung San Suu Kyi flees the scene, but is arrested soon afterwards |
|
2003 |
The Convention on Cluster Munitions is adopted in Dublin (it was opened for signature on 3 December 2008 in Oslo, and
entered into force on 1 August 2010, six months after it had been ratified by 30 states) |
|
2008 |
Former Liberian president Charles Taylor is sentenced to 50 years in prison by the Sierra Leone Tribunal (a judicial
body set up by the government of Sierra Leone and the United Nations) for his role in atrocities committed during the Sierra Leone Civil War |
|
2012 |