Battle of Augsburg: The Hungarians defeat the East Frankish army under King Louis the Child, using the famous
'feigned retreat' tactic (as described by Sun Tzu in The Art of War, in the 6th century BC) |
|
910 |
At the instigation of Louis IX of France, the so–called Disputation of Paris starts between a Christian monk and
four rabbis |
|
1240 |
In the Peasants' Revolt, the rebels arrive at Blackheath, where they are met by government representatives who
unsuccessfully attempt to persuade them to return home |
|
1381 |
The French army, led by Joan of Arc in her first offensive, capture the city of Jargeau and English commander,
William de la Pole, 1st Duke of Suffolk |
|
1429 |
Magdalen College, Oxford, founded |
|
1458 |
The city of Helsinki (belonging to Sweden at the time) is founded by King Gustav I of Sweden |
|
1550 |
Fleet of the Massachusetts Bay Company docks at Salem with 700 Puritan colonists |
|
1630 |
Thomas Willett is appointed as the first mayor of New York City |
|
1665 |
Jean–Baptiste Denys, surgeon to Louis XIV, successfully transfuses the blood of a sheep into a
12–year–old boy |
|
1667 |
Library of John Cotton (now part of the British Library) presented to the nation |
|
1700 |
The French explorer Marc–Joseph Marion du Fresne and 25 of his men are killed by Māori in New Zealand |
|
1772 |
Pope Pius VII excommunicates Napoleon Bonaparte |
|
1809 |
German inventor Karl Drais makes the first recorded ride on his Laufmaschine (running machine –
derogatorily known as the dandy horse), for a distance of about seven kilometres in Mannheim |
|
1817 |
34,000 French soldiers land at Sidi Ferruch, 27 kilometers west of Algiers, to begin their invasion of what had been an
Ottoman province since 1529 |
|
1830 |
Sir William Clarke and Sir Charles Wheatstone patent the electric telegraph |
|
1837 |
Baseball introduced to America by Abner Doubleday |
|
1839 |
200 people die after a theatre catches fire in Quebec |
|
1846 |
In the American Civil War, Ulysses S. Grant gives the Confederate forces under Robert E. Lee a victory when he pulls
his Union troops from their position at Cold Harbor, Virginia and moves south |
|
1864 |
Vast areas of Assam, India, are devastated by an earthquake measuring 8.5 on the Richter scale |
|
1897 |
Carl Elsener takes out a patent for the Swiss Army knife |
|
1897 |
General Emilio Aguinaldo declares the Philippines' independence from Spain |
|
1898 |
Rotherhithe Tunnel (to Stepney) opened |
|
1908 |
Hamburg–Amerika liner Imperator leaves Spithead on her maiden voyage |
|
1913 |
Massacre of Phocaea: on the eastern coast of the Aegean Sea, Turkish irregulars slaughter 50 to 100 Greeks and expel
thousands of others in an ethnic cleansing operation in the Ottoman Empire |
|
1914 |
King Constantine of Greece abdicates in favour of his second son Alexander |
|
1917 |
Britain's last Sunday postal delivery |
|
1921 |
Al Capone is arrested by the Untouchables |
|
1931 |
Bolivia and Paraguay negotiate a ceasefire to end the Chaco War (fought over an area of territory thought to be rich in
oil) |
|
1935 |
The Battle of Bordeaux: in a FIFA World Cup quarter–final, three players (two Brazilian and one Czech) are sent
off, three Brazilians leave the field with injuries, and two Czech players play on with a broken leg and a broken arm respectively. The match
ends 1–1 after extra time and has to be replayed |
|
1938 |
The Baseball Hall of Fame opens in Cooperstown, New York |
|
1939 |
Anne Frank receives a diary for her thirteenth birthday, and begins writing in it |
|
1942 |
Germany liquidates the Jewish Ghetto in Brzeżany, Poland (now Berezhany, Ukraine). Around 1,180 Jews are led to
the city's old Jewish graveyard and shot |
|
1943 |
Medgar Evers, civil rights lawyer, murdered in front of his home in Jackson, Mississippi by white segregationists |
|
1963 |
Nelson Mandela and seven others are sentenced to life imprisonment for sabotage |
|
1964 |
The Beatles are awarded MBEs in the Queen's birthday honours |
|
1965 |
The US Supreme Court declares all state laws that prohibit interracial marriage to be unconstitutional |
|
1967 |
Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi is barred from holding office for six years after a judge in Allahabad rules her
1971 election victory illegal |
|
1975 |
US cyclist and hang glider pilot Bryan Allen wins the second £100,000 Kremer Prize for making the first
human–powered crossing of the English Channel, in Gossamer Albatross (see 23 August 1977) |
|
1979 |
Derek Hatton, deputy leader of Liverpool Council, is expelled from the Labour Party after being found guilty of
membership of the left–wing Militant faction |
|
1986 |
In a speech made at the Brandenburg Gate, US President Ronald Reagan publicly challenges Mikhail Gorbachev to tear
down the Berlin Wall |
|
1987 |
Jean–Bédel Bokassa, former Emperor of the Central African Republic, is sentenced to death for crimes
committed during his 13–year rule |
|
1987 |
Princess Anne is awarded the title Princess Royal |
|
1987 |
The parliament of the Russian Federation formally declares the Federation's sovereignty (the date celebrated since
its second anniversary as Russia Day) |
|
1990 |
Boris Yeltsin becomes the first democratically–elected President of Russia; Leningrad votes to change its name
back to St. Petersburg |
|
1991 |
The Sri Lankan Army massacres 152 minority Tamil civilians in the village of Kokkadichcholai, near the eastern province
town of Batticaloa |
|
1991 |
Mount Pinatubo, in the Philippines, erupts after lying dormant for 600 years |
|
1991 |
Nicole Simpson, estranged wife of O. J. Simpson, and her friend Ronald Goldman, are murdered outside Simpson's home
in Los Angeles |
|
1994 |
Four people killed by a bomb on the Moscow underground as the Presidential election approaches |
|
1996 |
Japanese geneticists announce that they have succeeded in adding jellyfish genes to mice, making them fluorescent
– a possible aid to the diagnosis of cancer |
|
1997 |
HM the Queen reopens the Globe Theatre in London |
|
1997 |
Operation Joint Guardian begins when a NATO–led UN peacekeeping force enters the Yugoslavian province of Kosovo |
|
1999 |
London's Millennium Bridge closes, two days after opening, after reports of unexpected lateral vibration |
|
2000 |
Tony Blair announces sweeping changes to the legal and judicial systems, including the abolition of the position of
Lord Chancellor and replacement of the Law Lords with an American–style Supreme Court |
|
2003 |
Mike Tyson retires from boxing, three weeks before his 39 th birthday, after losing to Irish journeyman
Kevin McBride on a technical knockout |
|
2005 |
A disputed presidential election in Iran leads to wide–ranging local and international protests |
|
2009 |
Forty–nine civilians are killed and 58 others injured in an attack on a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida; the
gunman, Omar Mateen, is killed in a gunfight with police |
|
2016 |
Hundreds of thousands of people protest in Hong Kong against proposed legislation regarding extradition to mainland
China |
|
2016 |
British cyclist Chris Froome is hospitalised with a fractured right femur, a fractured elbow, and fractured ribs, after
crashing into a wall at 60 kph (37 mph) while blowing his nose, on a training ride in France |
|
2016 |