The Battle of Bannockburn begins |
|
1314 |
Henry VIII of England and Francis I of France sign a secret treaty against Holy Roman Emperor Charles V |
|
1532 |
Spanish explorer Pedro de Mendoza dies at sea, while returning from Argentina |
|
1537 |
All provincial printing offices closed by order of the Star Chamber |
|
1585 |
The mutinous crew of Henry Hudson's fourth voyage sets Hudson, his son and seven loyal crew members adrift in an
open boat in what is now Hudson Bay; they are never heard from again |
|
1611 |
The Vice–Chancellor of Cambridge University receives a parcel containing a religious treatise written by John Frith,
that was found in the stomach of a fish. The University republished the book as Vox piscis |
|
1626 |
William Penn signs a treaty of friendship with native Americans |
|
1683 |
The first evening newspaper – Dawks's News–Letter – is published in London |
|
1696 |
Battle of Plassey: Robert Clive's small British force defeats a much larger Indian army led by Siraj ud Daula,
Nawab of Bengal |
|
1757 |
Pope Pius VI signs an armistice with Napoleon |
|
1796 |
John Jacob Astor forms the Pacific Fur Company |
|
1810 |
Great Britain revokes the restrictions on American commerce, thus eliminating one of the chief causes of the War of
this year |
|
1812 |
Adolphe Saxe is granted a patent for the saxophone |
|
1846 |
The "June Days" insurrection breaks out in France |
|
1848 |
Keble College, Oxford, opens |
|
1870 |
Banff National Park – Canada's first – is created |
|
1887 |
The International Olympic Committee is founded at the Sorbonne in Paris, at the initiative of Baron Pierre de Coubertin |
|
1894 |
George V is crowned |
|
1911 |
The German SDP newspaper Vorwarts calls on the government to sue for peace |
|
1915 |
Wiley Post (USA) and Harold Gatty (Australia) take off from Roosevelt Field, Long Island, on a flight that would set the
record for a round–the–world flight: 8 days, 15 hours, 51 minutes |
|
1931 |
Dail makes provision for internment without trial to control the IRA |
|
1939 |
Norwegian–born Canadian explorer Henry Larsen begins the first successful west–to–east navigation of
the Northwest Passage from Vancouver |
|
1940 |
Germany's latest fighter aircraft, a Focke–Wulf Fw 190, is captured intact when it mistakenly lands at
RAF Pembrey, Carmarthenshire |
|
1942 |
British diplomats Guy Burgess and Donald Maclean flee to the Soviet Union |
|
1951 |
SS United States – the largest ocean liner ever constructed entirely in the United States, and the
fastest ocean liner to cross the Atlantic in either direction (retaining the Blue Riband for the highest average speed since her maiden voyage in the following year) is christened and launched |
|
1951 |
RMS Queen Elizabeth leaves for New York on schedule, despite attempts by striking seamen to delay the departure |
|
1955 |
Nasser elected unopposed as President of Egypt |
|
1956 |
The US Food and Drug Administration declares Enovid to be the world's first officially approved combined oral
contraceptive pill |
|
1960 |
US President Lyndon B. Johnson and Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin meet in Glassboro, New Jersey for a three–day
conference |
|
1967 |
IBM announces that from January 1970 it will price its software and services separately from hardware, in a move seen
as the creation of the modern software industry |
|
1969 |
Terms for Britain's entry into the Common Market are agreed in Luxembourg |
|
1971 |
US President Richard M. Nixon and White House Chief of Staff H. R. Haldeman are taped talking about using the CIA to
obstruct the FBI's investigation into the Watergate break–ins |
|
1972 |
Chancellor of the Exchequer Anthony Barber announces that he is to float the pound temporarily – seen as a first
step towards devaluation |
|
1972 |
A fire at a house in Hull, in which a six–year–old boy loses his life, is passed off as an accident; it
later emerges as the first of 26 deaths by fire caused over the next seven years by serial arsonist Peter Dinsdale |
|
1973 |
John Paul II, on his second visit to his native Poland since becoming Pope, holds a private meeting with Lech Walesa,
founder and leader of Solidarity – which has been banned for eighteen months, since martial law was declared following social tensions
in Poland |
|
1983 |
A bomb planted by Sikh terrorists explodes at Narita International Airport (Tokyo); an hour later, the same group
detonates a second bomb aboard an Air India Boeing 747 off the coast of Ireland, killing all 329 on board |
|
1985 |
The IMF agrees to offer associate membership to the Soviet Union |
|
1991 |
Sonic the Hedgehog is released in America – then to PAL and Japanese audiences a month later |
|
1991 |
New York mafia leader John Gotti is sentenced to life imprisonment, for racketeering and five counts of murder. He
died ten years later, aged 61 |
|
1992 |
The Nintendo 64 home video game console is released in Japan |
|
1996 |
Sir Simon Rattle is appointed to succeed Claudio Abbado three years later as Principal Conductor of the Berlin
Philharmonic Orchestra. At 44, he will be the youngest ever |
|
1999 |
18 die in a fire at a backpackers' hostel in Childers, Queensland |
|
2000 |
Ten climbers and a local guide lose their lives when a high–altitude base camp near Nanga Parbat (Pakistan) is
stormed by militants (whose identity was never confirmed; it is believed that their intention was just to capture the climbers for ransom) |
|
2013 |
Nik Wallenda becomes the first man to successfully walk across the Grand Canyon on a tight rope |
|
2013 |
The last of Syria's declared chemical weapons are shipped out for destruction |
|
2014 |
The UK votes in a referendum, by a 52% majority, to leave the EU |
|
2016 |
A series of terrorist attacks in Pakistan leaves 96 dead and over 200 wounded. Responsibility is taken jointly by a
breakaway Taliban group and ISIL |
|
2017 |