The Crusaders regain Antioch – defeating Kerbogha, the Turkish Atabeg of Mosul |
|
1098 |
Edward IV is crowned King of England |
|
1461 |
Spanish troops recover Minorca from the French |
|
1756 |
Thomas Hickey, Continental Army private and bodyguard to General George Washington, is hanged for mutiny and sedition
(during the American War of Independence) |
|
1776 |
Washington defeats the British at the Battle of Monmouth, New Jersey |
|
1778 |
John Whitelocke lands at Ensenada in an attempt to recapture Buenos Aires – the second British invasion of the
Río de la Plata – but is defeated by the locals |
|
1807 |
Queen Victoria is crowned in Westminster Abbey |
|
1838 |
The ballet Giselle, with music by Adolphe Adam, is premiered in Paris |
|
1841 |
Adolphe Sax patents the saxophone |
|
1846 |
60 pointers and setters take part in the first modern ("conformation") dog show, at
Newcastle–upon–Tyne Town Hall |
|
1859 |
Robert O'Hara Burke, Irish explorer of Australia (partner of W. J. Wills) dies of starvation on returning from the
exploration of the mouth of the Flanders River |
|
1861 |
Australian bushranger Ned Kelly is captured at Glenrowan |
|
1880 |
The US Congress authorises President Theodore Roosevelt to acquire rights from Colombia for the construction of the
Panama Canal |
|
1902 |
More than 635 lives are lost when the SS Norge runs aground on Hasselwood Rock in the North Atlantic, 270
miles northwest of Ireland |
|
1904 |
Mutiny on the battleship Potemkin after sailors are shot for complaining about bad food |
|
1905 |
The first Zeppelin airliner, the Deutschland, crashes in a forest near Osnabruck |
|
1910 |
Westminster Cathedral consecrated |
|
1910 |
The Nakhla meteorite – the first one to suggest signs of aqueous processes on Mars – falls to Earth in Egypt |
|
1911 |
Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Austria (and his wife) are shot by the Bosnian revolutionary Gavrilo Princip at Sarajevo |
|
1914 |
The Treaty of Versailles is signed, ending the state of war between Germany and the Allies of World War I |
|
1919 |
Alexander I, King of Serbia, proclaims the new constitution of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes – known
thereafter as the Vidovdan Constitution |
|
1921 |
The shelling of the Four Courts in Dublin by Free State forces begins the Irish Civil War |
|
1922 |
The ruins of a pre–Mayan city are discovered near Orizaba, Mexico |
|
1925 |
Mercedes–Benz is formed by the merger of the companies owned by Gottlieb Daimler and Karl Benz |
|
|
1926 |
President Roosevelt orders a federal gold vault to be built at Fort Knox, Kentucky |
|
1935 |
Thirty–six "confessed" German spies are shot in the Soviet Union, on the orders of Josef Stalin |
|
1937 |
Romania cedes Bessarabia (current–day Moldova) to the Soviet Union, after facing an ultimatum presented two days
earlier |
|
1940 |
The British Eighth Army retreats to El Alamein |
|
1942 |
Yugoslavia is expelled from Cominform because of its "hostility to the USSR" |
|
1948 |
The British/US airlift to Berlin begins |
|
1948 |
Dick Turpin (elder brother of Randolph Turpin) beats Vince Hawkins at Villa Park, to become the first black British
boxing champion in the modern era |
|
1948 |
The massacre of between 100,000 and 200,000 suspected Communist sympathisers, on the orders of South Korean President
Syngman Rhee, begins |
|
1950 |
North Korean forces take Seoul, despite the bombing of the Hangang Bridge by the South Koreans in an attempt to impede
their progress. They massacre between 700 and 900 doctors, nurses, inpatient civilians and wounded soldiers at the Seoul National University
Hospital |
|
1950 |
England lose 1–0 to the USA in the first round of the World Cup finals in Brazil |
|
1950 |
Forty–four people are killed in a conflict with the police, as factory workers in Poznan take to the streets to
protest against Poland's Communist government |
|
1956 |
France orders the release of 30 Algerian political prisoners, in an attempt to win Muslim support over French plans
for the colony's future |
|
1958 |
Forty–five coal miners lose their lives in a gas explosion at the Six Bells Colliery in Abertillery, Monmouthshire |
|
1960 |
The Stonewall riots begin in New York City, marking the start of the Gay Rights Movement |
|
1969 |
Elections are held for the Northern Ireland Assembly, which will lead to power–sharing between unionists and
nationalists in the province for the first time |
|
1973 |
In Ethiopia, armed forces take control of government buildings and broadcasting |
|
1974 |
Three Britons and one American are sentenced to death by firing squad, and a further nine men sentenced to prison
terms ranging from 16 to 30 years, for their mercenary roles during the Angolan civil war |
|
1976 |
The Seychelles becomes an independent republic within the Commonwealth |
|
1976 |
Chemical weapons are used against civilians for the first time, when Iraqi warplanes bomb the Iranian town of Sardasht |
|
1987 |
Spain's longest–ever trial, over toxic olive oil, ends |
|
1988 |
In Sri Lanka, the government announces a ceasefire agreement with the Tamil Tigers |
|
1989 |
Seven months after being ousted as Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher announces that she will retire from the House of
Commons at the next election |
|
1991 |
The British Lions defeat South Africa 18–15 to clinch the 3–match test series (2–0 up with one to play) |
|
1997 |
Mike Tyson is disqualified from a world title fight after biting off a piece of Evander Holyfield's ear |
|
1997 |
Elián Gonzalez, Cuban shipwreck survivor and "tug–of–love" victim, flies from Washington to
Havana to be reunited with his father, stepmother and half–sibling |
|
2000 |
Serbian authorities yield to international pressure and hand over former Yugoslavian president Slobodan Milosevich to
face trial on charges of mass killings, ethnic cleansing and war crimes |
|
2001 |
The Coalition Provisional Authority hands sovereign power to the interim government of Iraq, ending US–led rule |
|
2004 |