Alexander the Great dies in Iraq |
|
323 BC |
The Edict of Milan, signed by Constantine the Great and his co–emperor Valerius Licinius granting religious
freedom throughout the Roman Empire, is posted in Nicomedia, the eastern and most senior capital city of the Empire |
|
313 |
Wat Tyler's revolting peasants reach London and burn down John of Gaunt's Savoy Palace |
|
1381 |
Henry Grace à Dieu, built at the new Woolwich Dockyard and at over 1,000 tons the largest warship in the
world at this time, is dedicated |
|
1514 |
Martin Luther marries Katharina von Bora, against the celibacy rule decreed by the Roman Catholic Church for priests
and nuns |
|
1525 |
King Charles I marries Catholic princess Henrietta Maria of France and Navarre, at Canterbury |
|
1625 |
Peter the Great of Russia concludes a peace with Turkey |
|
1700 |
James Oglethorpe, provincial governor of Georgia, begins an unsuccessful attempt to take Spanish Florida during the
Siege of St. Augustine |
|
1740 |
Rhode Island becomes the first of Britain's North American colonies to ban the importing of slaves |
|
1774 |
Queen Victoria makes her first railway journey (from Slough to Paddington, in 23 minutes) |
|
1842 |
Vancouver is devastated in a fire |
|
1886 |
Mad King Ludwig II of Bavaria and his physician drown in Lake Sturnberg, near Munich |
|
1886 |
Lady Scott wins the first women's golf championship, at Lytham St. Annes |
|
1893 |
The Yukon Territory is separated from the Northwest Territories |
|
1898 |
Boxer Rebellion (starts) |
|
1900 |
Stravinsky's ballet Petroushka is performed for the first time, in Paris |
|
1911 |
A German daylight raid on London kills 162 (including 46 children) and injures 432 |
|
1917 |
TheUS Post Office bans the sending of human beings by mail, after 4–year–old May Piersdorff is sent for 53
cents by parcel post to visit her grandparents in Lewiston, Idaho |
|
1920 |
Sir Henry Seagrave dies at 98mph during a water speed record attempt on Windermere |
|
1930 |
The first V1 flying bombs land on London; only four of the eleven hit their targets |
|
1944 |
Umberto II leaves Italy for Spain |
|
1946 |
Princess Elizabeth lays the foundation stone of the National Theatre on London's South Bank |
|
1951 |
Soviet Air Force fighter jets shoot down two Swedish aircraft over international waters in the Baltic Sea – an
unarmed Douglas DC–3, and a Catalina flying boat involved in the search and rescue operation for the DC–3. The Catalina's
crew of five are saved, but there are no survivors from the eight–man crew of the Skytrain |
|
1952 |
The last British troops leave Suez |
|
1956 |
Real Madrid beat Stade de Reims 4–3 in the first European Cup Final, in Paris |
|
1956 |
Sir Eugene Aynesley Gossens, conductor and composer, dies |
|
1962 |
Nelson Mandela arrives on Robben Island to begin his life sentence |
|
1964 |
The New York Times begins publication of the Pentagon Papers, with extremely sensitive revelations about US
policy in the Vietnam War |
|
1971 |
Mrs. Geraldine Brodrick of Sydney gives birth to nonuplets (2 boys and 4 girls survive) |
|
1971 |
Inflation in the UK reaches 25% |
|
1975 |
Marcus Serjeant, aged 17, fires six blanks at the Queen in the Mall at the start of the Trooping the Colour ceremony |
|
1981 |
The Falklands War battles of Tumbledown and Wireless Ridge take place |
|
1982 |
Pioneer 10 becomes the first man–made object to leave the solar system, when it crosses the orbit of Neptune |
|
1983 |
John Paul Getty Jr. presents £20m to the National Gallery to start an endowment fund |
|
1985 |
The Queen bestows the title Princess Royal on Princess Anne (12th – Times) |
|
1987 |
The Soviet Union's first beauty contest is held |
|
1988 |
Mikhail Gorbachev and Helmut Kohl agree that Germany should be reunited |
|
1989 |
A jury in Anchorage, Alaska, blames recklessness by Exxon and Captain Joseph Hazelwood for the Exxon Valdez disaster,
allowing victims of the oil spill to seek $15 billion in damages |
|
1994 |
Gulf War veteran Timothy McVeigh is sentenced to death for his part in the Oklahoma bombing |
|
1997 |
The first ever inter–Korea summit begins as President Kim Dae–jung of South Korea and Kim Jong–il,
leader of North Korea, meet in Pyongyang |
|
2000 |
The USA withdraws from the Anti–Ballistic Missile Treaty; supporters of the decision argue that it was necessary
in order to test and build a limited defence system to protect the US from nuclear blackmail by a rogue state (e.g. Iran) |
|
2002 |
Hamid Karzai, US–backed interim leader of Afghanistan, becomes head of state with a landslide majority |
|
2002 |
The first Twenty20 cricket matches take place around England, to packed crowds and guarded press approval |
|
2003 |
Michael Jackson is acquitted on all ten counts of child molestation in Santa Maria, California |
|
2005 |
The Al Askari Mosque, near Baghdad – one of the most important Shia shrines in the world, built in 944 CE –
is bombed for a second time by Al–Qaeda |
|
2007 |
A capsule of the Japanese spacecraft Hayabusa ('peregrine falcon'), containing particles of the
near–Earth asteroid 25143 Itokawa, returns to Earth |
|
2010 |
As Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe visits Iran to meet Ayatollah Khamenei, intermediating between him and US
President Donald Trump, two oil tankers – the Japanese Kokuka Courageous and Norwegian Front Altair – are
attacked, allegedly with limpet mines, near the Strait of Hormuz, while transiting the Gulf of Oman |
|
2019 |