Hadrian, emperor of Rome, dies of heart failure at Baiae on the Gulf of Naples |
|
138 |
The Norse King Glúniairn recognises Máel Sechnaill mac Domnaill as High King of Ireland, and agrees to pay
taxes and accept Brehon Law; the event is considered to be the founding of the city of Dublin |
|
988 |
Spanish warrior El Cid (Rodrigo Diaz de Bivar) dies – supposedly of grief at the defeat of his forces by the Moors |
|
1099 |
Most of London is burnt to the ground, in the most severe of several early fires |
|
1212 |
Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick, defeats Henry VI's Lancastrian forces and takes the King prisoner, at the
Battle of Northampton |
|
1460 |
Portuguese explorer Nicolau Coelho returns to Lisbon, after discovering the sea route to India as a companion of Vasco
da Gama |
|
1460 |
Lady Jane Grey is proclaimed Queen of England |
|
1553 |
William I, Prince of Orange (William the Silent) is assassinated at his home in Delft by Balthasar Gérard, a
Catholic supporter of Philip II of Spain, who hoped to collect a reward offered by Philip. In fact he was quickly captured, and brutally
tortured and slaughtered; but his parents were rewarded with three estates in their Burgundian homeland |
|
1584 |
Theodore II, Tsar of Russia, assassinated |
|
1605 |
Battle of Langport (near Yeovil, Somerset): Parliamentary forces destroy the last Royalist field army and take control
of the West of England |
|
1645 |
Benjamin Franklin blocks a plan for the unification of Britain's American colonies |
|
1754 |
Peter III, Tsar of Russia, dethroned |
|
1762 |
Louis XVI of France declares war on England in support of the American colonies |
|
1778 |
Wyoming is admitted as the 44th US state |
|
1890 |
Paris Metro opens |
|
1900 |
A temperature of 134 °F (57 °C) – the highest ever recorded on Earth – is recorded in Death Valley,
California |
|
1913 |
17 people are killed and 70 injured, and over 160 houses destroyed, in a day of violence in Belfast "Belfast's
Bloody Sunday"), after Protestant loyalists attack Catholic enclaves in retaliation for an IRA ambush of a police raiding party |
|
1921 |
Mongolia is proclaimed an independent state |
|
1921 |
The so–called "Monkey Trial" opens in Dayton, Tennessee, when John T. Scopes, a young high school science
teacher, is accused of teaching evolution in violation of the Butler Act |
|
1925 |
Kevin O'Higgins, Vice–President of the Executive Council of the Irish Free State, is assassinated by the IRA
in retaliation for ordering the execution of 77 political prisoners |
|
1927 |
Rheims Cathedral re–opened after restoration of bomb damage sustained during World War I |
|
1938 |
Howard Hughes begins a 91–hour flight around the world that will set a new record |
|
1938 |
The Battle of Britain begins, as the Luftwaffe attacks convoys in the Channel in order to engage RAF Fighter Command |
|
1940 |
The Vichy Government is established in France |
|
1940 |
At least 340 Jewish men, women and children are murdered – some 300 of them locked in a barn which was then set on fire
– in Jedwabne, in German–occupied Poland. About 40 non–Jewish Poles are implicated as perpetrators. (Knowledge of the event
only becomes widespread around the year 2000) |
|
1940 |
The Allied invasion of Sicily (Operation Husky) begins |
|
1943 |
The engagement of Princess Elizabeth to Lt. Philip Mountbatten is announced |
|
1947 |
British Prime Minister Clement Attlee recommends Muhammad Ali Jinnah as the first Governor–General of Pakistan |
|
1947 |
Britain's first parking meters appear in Mayfair |
|
1958 |
Telstar – the first TV communications satellite – is launched |
|
1962 |
David Broome, on Beethoven, becomes the first British rider to win the World Showjumping Championship |
|
1970 |
Northern Ireland Secretary William Whitelaw informs the House of Commons that he has held secret talks with the IRA, who
demanded (in return for peace) a total withdrawal of British forces, the right to self–determination by the Irish people, and an amnesty
for political prisoners – essentially a re–statement of "routine and unworkable demands", which he knew the British Government
would not accept; but before he'd even had the chance to discuss the matter with his Cabinet colleagues, hostilities had recommenced in Belfast
over the distribution of housing amongst Catholics and Protestants |
|
1972 |
The Bahamas gain full independence within the Commonwealth of Nations |
|
1973 |
Cher petitions for divorce from Gregg Allman after ten days of marriage |
|
1975 |
Four mercenaries – three British and one American – are executed by firing squad in Angola |
|
1976 |
A chemical leak forms a poison cloud over Meda, near Seveso, Italy |
|
1976 |
The Cable and Broadcasting Act is passed, allowing cable broadcasting in the UK |
|
1984 |
Nigerian diplomat Umaru Dikko is discovered in a diplomatic bag (attempt by the Nigerian ruling junta to smuggle him
out of Britain) |
|
1984 |
The Greenpeace vessel Rainbow Warrior is blown up in Auckland harbour by French Government agents; one crew
member – Fernando Pereira, a freelance Dutch photographer, of Portuguese origin – drowns |
|
1985 |
All 200 people on board lose their lives in the USSR's worst–ever airline disaster, when an Aeroflot Tupolev
Tu–154 stalls and crashes near Uchkuduk, Uzbekistan |
|
1985 |
Glasgow Rangers FC signs its first Catholic player – Maurice 'Mo' Johnstone, from Nantes, for £1.5
million |
|
1989 |
Boris Yeltsin takes office as the first elected President of Russia |
|
1991 |
South Africa is readmitted into the International Cricket Council following the end of Apartheid |
|
1991 |
Former Panamanian leader Manuel Noriega is sentenced to 40 years in prison for drug and racketeering offences, after
being indicted by federal grand juries in Miami and Tampa, Florida |
|
1992 |
The battered bodies of Lin Russell and her six–year–old daughter Megan are found half a mile from their
home in Kent, after being reported missing the previous evening. Megan's nine–year–old sister Josie survived despite serious
head injuries. 38–year–old Michael Stone was convicted of two murders and one attempted murder, and lost two appeals (the first
after a key witness was found to have lied) |
|
1996 |
MPs vote themselves a 26% pay rise (as recommended by the Senior Salaries Review Body) |
|
1996 |
British troops of NATO's S–For shoot one Bosnian war criminal (Simo Drijaca) dead and capture another (Milan Kovacevic) |
|
1997 |
100,000 hunters demonstrate in Hyde Park, London |
|
1997 |
In London, scientists report the findings of the DNA analysis of a Neanderthal skeleton which supports the "out of
Africa" theory of human evolution, placing an "African Eve" at 100,000 to 200,000 years ago |
|
1997 |
Government figures suggest that one in four British homes are now using the Internet – a 100% increase over the
same time last year |
|
2000 |
Street violence erupts in East Belfast after the Orange Order's Drumcree march is again prevented from marching down
Garvahy Road |
|
2000 |
Home Secretary David Blunkett announces to Parliament that he is reclassifying cannabis from Class B to Class C |
|
2002 |
Peter Paul Rubens's painting The Massacre of the Innocents is sold for £49.5 million (US$76.2 million),
at a Sotheby's auction, to Lord Thomson (Canada's richest man) |
|
2002 |
Hurricane Dennis causes billions of dollars' worth of damage in the Florida Panhandle |
|
2005 |
Turkish–American adventurer Erden Eruç begins the first entirely solo and entirely human–powered
circumnavigation of the Earth, from Bodega Bay, near San Francisco |
|
2007 |
122 lives are lost when the Russian cruise ship Bulgaria sinks in the Volga river near Syukeyevo, Tatarstan |
|
2011 |
The last Volkswagen Beetle rolls off the production line in Puebla, Mexico |
|
2019 |