After being besieged in Rome by his own generals, Western Roman Emperor Anthemius is captured in St. Peter's
Basilica and put to death |
|
473 |
Byzantine emperor Michael I, under threat by conspiracies, abdicates in favor of his general Leo the Armenian, and
becomes a monk (under the name Athanasius) |
|
813 |
Baldwin IV, aged 13, succeeds his father Amalric I as King of Jerusalem – with Raymond III, Count of Tripoli, as
regent and William of Tyre as chancellor. He died eleven years later, having suffered from leprosy since childhood |
|
1174 |
A coalition of Flemish cities defeats the Count of Artois at the Battle of the Golden Spurs (Courtrai) |
|
1302 |
Charles IV, Count of Luxembourg and King of Bohemia, is elected King of the Romans (effectively the heir to the Holy
Roman Emperor) |
|
1346 |
English adventurer Martin Frobisher sights Greenland |
|
1576 |
Marlborough and Prince Eugene defeat the Duc de Vendome at the Battle of Oudenarde |
|
1708 |
The dwarf planet Pluto passes inside the orbit of Neptune, for the last time before 1979 (according to calculations) |
|
1735 |
A Papal bull condemns Jesuit toleration of Confucianism in China |
|
1742 |
Captain James Cook sets sail from Plymouth on his last voyage to find the North West Passage |
|
1776 |
The Marquis de Lafayette presents the Declaration of the Rights of Man to the French National Assembly, and Jacques
Necker is dismissed as Finance Minister – sparking the Storming of the Bastille |
|
1789 |
The United States takes possession of Detroit from Great Britain, under
the terms of the Jay Treaty |
|
1789 |
French astronomer Jean–Louis Pons observes the first of 36 comets that he would discover in the next 27 years –
more than any other person in history |
|
1801 |
Alexander Hamilton, former Secretary of the US Treasury, is mortally wounded in a duel with Vice President Aaron Burr
– against whom he had campaigned as unworthy of election as Governor of New York State. He would die the next day |
|
1804 |
John Keats visits Robert Burns' birthplace at Alloway, Ayrshire, and composes the sonnet Written in the cottage
where Burns was born |
|
1818 |
London's Waterloo Station is officially opened |
|
1848 |
Napoleon III and Emperor Franz Joseph of Austria sign the Treaty of Villafranca, ending the Second Italian War of
Independence – a crucial step in the unification of Italy |
|
1859 |
Massacre of Christians in Damascus ends |
|
1860 |
In the Anglo–Egyptian War, the British fleet begins begins the bombardment of Alexandria |
|
1882 |
The Mexican city of Tijuana is founded |
|
1889 |
Japanese entrepreneur Kokichi Mikimoto creates the first cultured pearl |
|
1889 |
The Lumière brothers, Auguste and Louis, demonstrate movie film technology to scientists |
|
1895 |
Scientist Saloman Andrée and two fellow Swedes leave Spitzbergen in a doomed attempt to explore the Arctic by balloon |
|
1897 |
Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino (FIAT) is founded in Turin by Giovanni Agnelli |
|
1899 |
Twenty–year–old textile worker Grace Mae Brown is drowned by her boyfriend Chester Gillette on Big Moose Lake,
New York, after she told him she was pregnant. Her life would inspire Theodore Dreiser's 1925 novel An American Tragedy |
|
1906 |
Babe Ruth makes his Major League debut for the Boston Red Sox |
|
1914 |
The Allenstien and Marienwerder regions of Prussia (Poland) vote in a plebiscite to remain as part of Germany |
|
1920 |
The Irish War of Independence ends in a truce, after almost two and a half years of fighting |
|
1921 |
Eric Liddell wins the Olympic 400 metres final in Paris, after refusing to run in the heats for the 100 metres (his
favoured distance) on the Sunday |
|
1924 |
German engineer and inventor Engelbert Zaschka flies his large human–powered aircraft about 20 meters at Berlin
Tempelhof Airport without assisted take–off |
|
1934 |
The Vichy regime is formally established, with Philippe Pétain as 'Chief of the French State' |
|
1940 |
A former US packet steamer, renamed Exodus, leaves France with some 4,500 Jewish passengers, bound for British
Mandatory Palestine. In an exercise directed by Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin, it would be boarded by British forces one week later, sailed
into Haifa, and the passengers returned to France on other (more suitable) ships |
|
1947 |
The Zairean province of Katanga declares itself independent under Prime Minister Moise Tshombe |
|
1960 |
Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird is first published in the United States |
|
1960 |
Telstar makes its first transmission from Maine to France |
|
1962 |
US frogman Fred Baldasare becomes the first person to swim the English Channel underwater |
|
1962 |
Chess's 'Match of the Century' begins in Reykjavik as Bobby Fischer challenges Boris Spassky for the world
title. Fischer would win by 12½ points to 8½, briefly ending 24 years of Soviet domination and providing a huge boost to American
morale as the Cold War continued |
|
1972 |
123 of the 134 passengers and crew lose their lives when a Boeing 707 operated by the Brazilian airline Varig crashes on
approach to Paris Orly Airport. The incident would lead to a ban on smoking in aeroplane toilets |
|
1973 |
Chinese archaeologists announce the discovery of the 'terracotta army' near the ancient capital, Xian |
|
1975 |
Gay News is fined £1,000 for blasphemous libel in a private prosecution brought by Mary Whitehouse, after
publishing a poem suggesting that Jesus was gay (The love that dares to speak its name, by James Kirkup) |
|
1977 |
216 Spanish and foreign tourists lose their lives when a tanker carrying liquid gas crashes and explodes at a campsite
near Tarragona, on Catalonia's Costa Daurada |
|
1978 |
The US space laboratory Skylab 1 (unoccupied for the last five of its six years in orbit) disintegrates and
falls to Earth; debris is scattered across the southern Indian Ocean and Western Australia. (It was supposed to stay in orbit until the
mid–80s, when the Space Shuttle would have come to its rescue) |
|
1979 |
The Britannia Road Bridge over the Menai Straits is opened by the Prince of Wales |
|
1980 |
All 119 passengers and crew lose their lives when a Boeing 737 operated by the Ecuadorean airline TAME crashes near the
city of Cuenca |
|
1983 |
A 78–day land dispute begins in Canada as police and Mohawk members of the First Nation community exchange fire
at the town of Oka, Quebec |
|
1990 |
All 261 passengers and crew lose their lives when a Douglas DC–8 operated by a Canadian company for Nigeria Airways
crashes in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia |
|
1991 |
Terry Fields, Labour MP for Liverpool Broadgreen since 1983, is sentenced to 60 days in prison for refusing to pay his
poll tax |
|
1991 |
During the Bosnian War, the Bosnian Serb army, under the command of Ratko Mladic, overruns lightly–armed Dutch
peacekeepers and takes control of the United Nations "safe area" of Srebrenica. A twelve–day massacre of more than 8,000
Bosniaks, mainly men and boys, would ensue |
|
1995 |
Nelson Mandela addresses the House of Commons |
|
1996 |
The World Aids Conference in South Africa announces trials for a new HIV vaccine, developed at the universities
of Oxford and Nairobi, which would begin in Oxford in August |
|
2000 |
The Royal Family turns out in force for a thanksgiving service for the Queen Mother, who will be 100 on 4 August |
|
2000 |
Christine Goodwin, a 65–year–old who was born male but has lived as a woman for 18 years, wins the right to
be recognised as a woman and to be allowed to marry, at the European Court of Human Rights |
|
2002 |
209 lives are lost in a series of co–ordinated bomb blasts on Mumbai's suburban train network. Suspicion
falls on Islamic militant groups operating in Kashmir |
|
2006 |
At least 74 lives are lost in suicide bombings at two locations in the Ugandan capital, Kampala |
|
2010 |