Constantine's Bridge, built over the Danube between Sucidava (Corabia, Romania) and Oescus (Gigen, Bulgaria) by the
Roman architect Theophilus Patricius, is officially opened |
|
328 |
John Guy sets sail from Bristol for Newfoundland, with 39 other colonists |
|
1610 |
The Star Chamber – established in the late 15th century to ensure the fair enforcement of laws against prominent
people, so powerful that ordinary courts would probably hesitate to convict them – is abolished, having become synonymous with social
and political oppression through the arbitrary use and abuse of its power |
|
1641 |
Battle of Lansdown: Royalists win |
|
1643 |
Isaac Newton publishes his masterpiece, Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica (Mathematical
Principles of Natural Philosophy) |
|
1687 |
The Second Continental Congress adopts the Olive Branch Petition – a final attempt to avoid war with Great Britain |
|
1775 |
George Hammond is appointed as the first British Ambassador to the USA |
|
1791 |
In Buenos Aires, the local militias repel the Second English Invasion |
|
1807 |
The Battle of Wagram – the largest battle of the Napoleonic Wars – is fought between the French and
Austrian Empires, about nine miles north–east of Vienna; Napoleon's costly but decisive victory would lead to the breakup of the
Fifth Coalition, the Austrian and British–led alliance against France |
|
1809 |
Venezuela's revolutionary congress adopts a declaration of independence from Spain |
|
1811 |
Battle of Chippewa: British forces defeated by Americans |
|
1814 |
The first gold sovereigns issued in Britain |
|
1817 |
The Spectator first published |
|
1828 |
French troops capture Algiers and seize its ruler's fabulous collection of jewellery |
|
1830 |
British Admiral Charles Napier – on behalf of Dom Pedro IV, regent for the rightful Queen Maria II –
defeats the navy of the Portuguese usurper Dom Miguel at the third Battle of Cape St. Vincent |
|
1833 |
Members of the Temperance movement travel from Leicester to Loughborough on Thomas Cook's first excursion |
|
1841 |
Britain introduces the world's first speed limit: 2 mph in towns, 4 mph in the country |
|
1865 |
The Salvation Army is founded at an open–air Christian Mission at Mile End, London |
|
1865 |
Germany takes possession of Cameroon |
|
1884 |
Edward VII pays for a free dinner for 450,000 Britons, to celebrate his coronation |
|
1902 |
Suzanne Lenglen (France) wins the first of five consecutive Wimbledon women's singles titles |
|
1919 |
Oliviera Salazar becomes virtual dictator of Portugal at the head of a fascist regime |
|
1932 |
Hormel Foods Corporation, of Austin, Minnesota, launches Spam onto the market |
|
1937 |
The UK government breaks off diplomatic relations with Vichy France |
|
1940 |
German troops reach the Dnieper river, on their invasion of the Soviet Union |
|
1941 |
The Labour Party wins its first absolute majority |
|
1945 |
The bikini goes on sale, after debuting during an outdoor fashion show at the Molitor Pool in Paris |
|
1946 |
The UK's National Health Service comes into operation |
|
1948 |
The Knesset passes the Law of Return, granting all Jews the right to immigrate to Israel |
|
1950 |
The BBC broadcasts its first daily television news bulletin – replacing newsreels, which were prepared in advance and
often several days old |
|
1954 |
Elvis Presley records his first single, That's All Right, at Sun Records in Memphis, Tennessee |
|
1954 |
The first assembly of the Western European Union opens in Strasbourg |
|
1955 |
Algerian independence is officially proclaimed, after an eight–year war with France |
|
1962 |
Maria Callas gives her last stage performance (in Tosca, at Covent Garden) |
|
1965 |
250,000 attend the Rolling Stones' free concert in Hyde Park, given in memory of Brian Jones |
|
1969 |
Kenyan statesman Thomas Joseph Mboya is assassinated in Nairobi |
|
1969 |
The US voting age is lowered from 21 to 18 years, as the twenty–sixth amendment to the Constitution is formally
certified by President Richard Nixon |
|
1971 |
The Cape Verde Islands become independent |
|
1975 |
Arthur Ashe defeats Jimmy Connors to become the first black Wimbledon men's singles champion |
|
1975 |
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the first elected prime minister of Pakistan, is ousted by General Zia ul–Haq's coup |
|
1977 |
HM the Queen presides over the 1000th annual open–air sitting of the Tynwald, the Parliament of the Isle of Man |
|
1979 |
Björn Borg becomes the first player to win the Wimbledon Men's Singles title five times in a row |
|
1980 |
Up to 30 police officers are injured by bricks and other missiles as rioting and looting breaks out in Toxteth, Liverpool |
|
1981 |
The Church of England votes to move towards the ordination of women priests |
|
1988 |
Colonel Oliver North is fined $150,000 and given a suspended prison sentence for his part in the Iran Contra affair.
His convictions would later be overturned |
|
1989 |
The Bank of England closes down UK branches of the Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI) over allegations
of fraud |
|
1991 |
Lyle Lovett, singer and songwriter, marries actress Julia Roberts |
|
1993 |
US President Bill Clinton imposes trade and economic sanctions against the Taliban regime in Afghanistan |
|
1999 |
Dolly the sheep, the first mammal to be successfully cloned from an adult cell, is born at the Roslin Institute in Edinburgh |
|
2006 |
North Korea tests four short–range missiles, one medium–range and one long–range. The long–range
missile reportedly fails in mid–air over the Sea of Japan |
|
2006 |
Trouble flares across Northern Ireland as security forces block the biggest ever Drumcree parade and Orangemen begin a
stand–off on the edge of Portadown |
|
1998 |
Orangemen disperse peacefully when a military operation bars their way down Portadown's Garvahy Road, but Unionists
condemn the government's blueprint for peace |
|
1999 |
Less than a week after Tony Blair is forced to back down on his proposal to impose on–the–spot fines on
drunken hooligans, his son Ewan, 16, is arrested for being drunk and incapable in Leicester Square |
|
2000 |
The largest hoard of Anglo–Saxon gold ever discovered in England, consisting of more than 1,500 items, is found
near the village of Hammerwich, near Lichfield, Staffordshire |
|
2009 |
The Shard, in London, is inaugurated as the tallest building in Europe, at 310 metres (1,020 ft) |
|
2012 |
NASA's Juno space probe arrives at Jupiter and begins a 20–month survey |
|
2016 |