Piers Gaveston, favourite of Edward II, is taken prisoner in Scarborough Castle (where he had settled the previous
year) by a group of nobles led by Thomas of Lancaster and Guy de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick; he would be brutally executed by them one
month later |
|
1312 |
Catherine of Aragon (aged 13) is married by proxy to Arthur, Prince of Wales (who is 12) |
|
1499 |
French explorer Jacques Cartier sets sail on his second voyage to North America with three ships, 110 men, and Chief
Donnacona's two sons (whom Cartier had kidnapped during his first voyage) |
|
1535 |
Anne Boleyn is executed, after being found guilty of adultery, treason and incest |
|
1536 |
Queen Elizabeth I orders the arrest of Mary, Queen of Scots |
|
1568 |
Spanish Armada sets sail from Lisbon |
|
1588 |
Decisive defeat in the Battle of Rocroi, by French forces under the duc d'Enghien, marks the symbolic end of Spain
as a dominant land power |
|
1643 |
The Rump Parliament declares England a Commonwealth |
|
1649 |
English forces begin an invasion of Jamaica, which would result in its capture from Spain |
|
1655 |
French physicist, mathematician, astronomer and musician Jean–Pierre Christin proposes the reversal of the Celsius
scale (from water boiling at 0 degrees and ice melting at 100 degrees, to vice versa) |
|
1743 |
Napoleon institutes the Legion d'Honneur |
|
1802 |
Captain Sir John Franklin and his ill–fated Arctic expedition depart from Greenhithe, Kent (on the Thames estuary) |
|
1845 |
Mexico ratifies the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, ending the Mexican–American War and ceding California, Nevada,
Utah and parts of four other modern–day states to the USA for US$15 million |
|
1848 |
Oscar Wilde released from Reading Gaol |
|
1897 |
The 169 islands of the Kingdom of Tonga (the Friendly Islands) become a British protectorate (Times) |
|
1900 |
Simplon Tunnel officially opened, linking Italy and Switzerland through the Alps |
|
1906 |
Parks Canada, the world's first national park service, is established as the Dominion Parks Branch under the
Department of the Interior |
|
1911 |
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk lands at Samsun on the Anatolian Black Sea coast, initiating what would become known as the
Turkish War of Independence |
|
1919 |
In a coup d'état engineered by the allegedly Fascist organisation Zveno, and the Bulgarian Army,
Kimon Georgiev is installed as Prime Minister of Bulgaria |
|
1934 |
Egypt closes the Suez Canal to Israeli ships and commerce |
|
1950 |
The city of South Amboy, New Jersey, is devastated when a barge containing munitions destined for Pakistan explodes in
its harbour |
|
1950 |
11 Bengalis die when police open fire on protesters demanding state recognition of Bengali language in the Bengali
Language Movement, at Silchar Railway Station in Assam |
|
1961 |
Soviet spacecraft Venera 1 passes Venus, becoming the first man–made object to fly by another planet
(it had lost contact with Earth a month earlier and did not send back any data) |
|
1961 |
Marilyn Monroe's rendition of Happy Birthday proves to be the highlight of a birthday salute to President
John F. Kennedy at Madison Square Garden |
|
1962 |
The New York Post Sunday Magazine publishes Martin
Luther King Jr.'s 'Letter from Birmingham Jail' (a.k.a. The Negro Is Your Brother), defending the strategy
of non–violent resistance to racism |
|
1963 |
Tui Malila, a Madagascar radiated tortoise, dies. Presented to the Tongan royal family by Captain Cook in 1773 or 1777,
it was therefore at least 188 years old – the world's oldest tortoise |
|
1965 |
The Soviet Union launches Mars 2, which would become the first man–made object to reach the surface of
Mars (although the landing system failed and the lander was lost) |
|
1971 |
Royal Navy frigates sail inside Iceland's 50–mile fishing limit |
|
1973 |
Gaullist Valery Giscard d'Estaing is elected President of France, narrowly defeating the Communist–backed
Socialist candidate, Francois Mitterand (who would eventually succeed him seven years later) |
|
1974 |
Sophia Loren is jailed for one month for non–payment of £2,500 tax in 1970 |
|
1982 |
South African aircraft launch raids on bases in Zambia, Zimbabwe and Botswana, purportedly used by the
anti–apartheid African National Congress (ANC) |
|
1986 |
US President Ronald Reagan signs the Firearm Owners Protection Act – prohibiting the sale to civilians of
automatic firearms manufactured after this date |
|
1986 |
Croatia votes for independence |
|
1991 |
17 days after the election of a Labour government, Health Secretary Frank Dobson announces that the sponsorship of
sports events by tobacco firms is to be outlawed |
|
1997 |
The Foreign office confirms that King Faud of Saudi Arabia has pardoned British nurses Lucille McLaughlin, 32 (from
Dundee) and Deborah Parry, 39 (Alton, Hants) of the murder of their Australian colleague Yvonne Gilford in 1996 |
|
1998 |
Security at the House of Commons comes under scrutiny after Fathers 4 Justice protesters attack prime minister Tony
Blair with a bag of purple flour |
|
2004 |
A mystery buyer, believed to be Roman Abramovich, pays £478,000 for the 1896–1909 FA Cup – a record
for an item of football memorabilia. (Made in 1896 to replace the one stolen from a Birmingham shop window, it was presented to Lord Kinnaird
in 1909 to mark his 20–year–plus presidency of the FA after the Association realised it didn't have a copyright on it.) At the
same auction, Alan Ball's World Cup winner's medal is sold for £164,000 |
|
2004 |
EgyptAir Flight 804 crashes into the Mediterranean while traveling from Paris to Cairo, killing all 66 people on board |
|
2016 |
An estimated global television audience of 1.9 billion watches the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle at St.
George's Chapel, Windsor |
|
2018 |