- 379 Theodosius installed as co-emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire by Emperor Gratian
- 973 Pope Benedictus VI elected
Sumptuary Laws
1363 English King Edward III introduces his Sumptuary Laws, restricting what people ate and wore to preserve social status (largely ignored)
Rouen Surrenders to Henry V
1419 French city of Rouen surrenders to Henry V in Hundred Years' War
- 1492 Supplies to build Portuguese trading post Castelo de São Jorge da Mina (Elmina Castle) arrive on the Gold Coast (now Ghana), first European building south of the Sahara
- 1493 France cedes Roussillon & Cerdagne to Spain by treaty of Barcelona
- 1511 Italian city Mirandola surrenders to the French
Battle of Bogesund
1520 Battle of Bogesund: Christian II of Denmark defeats the Regent of Sweden, Sten Sture the Younger who is mortally wounded
- 1547 Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, is executed in the Tower of London for treason
- 1607 San Agustin Church in Manila is officially completed; the oldest church in the Philippines
Secret Partition Treaty
1668 French King Louis XIV and Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I sign a secret Partition Treaty, dividing the Spanish Empire if Charles II of Spain died without an heir
Steele Publishes "Crisis"
1714 Richard Steele publishes "Crisis" defending Hanoverian success
- 1770 Battle of Golden Hill (Lower Manhattan)
- 1785 First manned balloon flight in Ireland
- 1795 Democratic revolution in Amsterdam results in establishment of shot-lived Batavian Republic
- 1806 United Kingdom re-occupies the Cape of Good Hope following victory in the Battle of Blaauwberg over French vassal, the Batavian Republic. Establishes British rule in South Africa.
- 1808 Louis Napoleon signs 1st Dutch aviation law
- 1810 Cold Friday: temperature at Portsmouth, New Hampshire drops from 54°F to minus 12°F in one day with many frozen to death
- 1825 Ezra Daggett and nephew Thomas Kensett patent food storage in tin cans
- 1839 Aden conquered by British East India Company
- 1847 Mexican and indigenous Pueblo warriors kill territorial governor Charles Bent (47), and 5 others in a revolt against new American rulers in Taos, New Mexico Territory
- 1861 Georgia secedes from the Union (US Civil War)
- 1861 Mississippi troops take Fort Massachusetts and Ship Island (US Civil War)
- 1862 Battle of Mill Springs, Kentucky (Fishing Creek, Logan's Crossroads)
- 1863 General Mieroslawski appointed dictator of Poland
- 1865 NV Suriname Bank established
- 1865 Union occupies Fort Anderson, North Carolina
- 1871 1st Negro lodge of US Masons approved, New Jersey
Electric Lighting Begins
1883 The first electric lighting system employing overhead wires, built by Thomas Edison, begins service at Roselle, New Jersey
- 1885 Battle of Abu Kru (Battle of Gubat), Sudan: British Desert Column defeat Mahdist forces: 121 British and untold Mahdists killed
- 1886 Aurora Ski Club, 1st in US, founded in Minnesota
- 1893 Henrik Ibsen's play "The Master Builder" premieres in Berlin
- 1898 Brown defeats Harvard 6-0 in 1st intercollegiate hockey game
- 1899 Anglo-Egyptian Sudan forms
- 1903 1st regular transatlantic radio broadcast between US & England
- 1909 Eugene Walter's "Easiest Way" premieres in NYC
- 1910 Germany & Bolivia end commerce and friendship treaty
- 1910 US National Institute of Arts & Letters incorporated by Congress
- 1915 Neon Tube sign patented by George Claude
1915 World War I: 4 people in Norfolk are killed in the 1st German Zeppelin air raid attack on the United Kingdom
- 1917 The Silvertown explosion: 73 die when a munitions factory in Essex explodes.
- 1918 Finnish Civil War: The first serious battles between the Red Guards and the White Guard
- 1918 Soviets disallow a Constitution Assembly
- 1919 National elections held in Germany to form a National Constituent Assembly and draft a constitution
- 1921 Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras & El Salvador sign Pact of Union
- 1922 Geological survey says US oil supply would be depleted in 20 years
Britain's War Debt
1923 UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Stanley Baldwin and US Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon agree to reschedule repayment of Britain's $4.5 billion war debt over 62 years
- 1923 WMC-AM in Memphis TN begins radio transmissions
- 1925 -48°F (-44°C), Van Buren, Maine (state record)
- 1927 British government decides to send troops to China
- 1929 Acadia National Park, Maine established
World 500m Skating Record
1929 Finnish speed skater Clas Thunberg sets new world 500m record in 42.8 seconds in Davos, Switzerland
- 1932 Charlie Conacher becomes first Toronto player to score 5 goals in an NHL game as Maple Leafs rout the NY Americans, 11-3 at Maple Leaf Gardens
Jackson's Appeal Denied
1934 MLB Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis denies Joe Jackson's appeal for reinstatement into baseball; Jackson was banned after 1919 "Black Sox" World Series
- 1935 Coopers Inc. sells the world's first men's briefs in Chicago, calls it the "Jockey"
- 1935 KLM begins flight path between Curacao & Aruba
Transcontinental Air Record
1937 Millionaire Howard Hughes sets transcontinental air record (7h 28m 25s)
- 1938 General Motors begins mass production of diesel engines
- 1939 Ernest Hausen of Wisconsin sets chicken-plucking record of 4.4 sec
- 1940 LPGA Titleholders Championship Women's Golf, Augusta CC: Helen Hicks wins by 1 stroke ahead of Helen Dettweiler
"You Nazty Spy!"
1940 The Three Stooges film "You Nazty Spy!" about the Nazis released with the disclaimer "Any resemblance between the characters in this picture and any persons, living or dead, is a miracle."
- 1941 British offensive in Eritrea
- 1941 British troops occupies Kassalaf, Sudan
- 1942 Dutch Catholic priest and outspoken anti-Nazi Titus Brandsma arrested by German occupiers - later dies at Dachau concentration camp; posthumously canonized by Pope Francis, in 2022
- 1942 Japanese forces invade Burma
1st Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
1943 1st Warsaw Ghetto Uprising begins
- 1943 Joint Chiefs of Staff decide on invasion in Sicily
- 1947 SS Himera runs aground at Athens, kills 392
- 1949 Cuba recognises Israel.
- 1950 Maiden flight by Canada's Avro Canada CF-100 military plane
- 1952 NFL purchases struggling football franchise, New York Yanks from owner Ted Collins; moves club to Dallas, Texas
- 1952 PGA approves allowing black participants
Owens Athletic Commission Secretary
1953 American track and field olympian Jesse Owens named Illinois Athletic Commission secretary
1955 "Scrabble" debuts on board game market
- 1955 "The Millionaire" TV program premieres on CBS
1st Presidential TV News Conference
1955 1st presidential news conference filmed for TV (Eisenhower)
Alexander Cartwright Honored
1956 City of Hoboken, New Jersey dedicates a plaque honoring achievements of Alexander Cartwright in organizing early baseball at Elysian Field
- 1957 USSR performs atmospheric nuclear test
- 1958 Canadian Football Council renamed Canadian Football League
- 1960 Eisenhower & Premier Kishi sign US-Japanese Security pact
- 1964 KFME TV channel 13 in Fargo, North Dakota (PBS) begins broadcasting
- 1966 British composer Michael Tippett's cantata "Vision of St Augustine" premieres in London
- 1967 Herr Karl Tausch writes shortest will "Vse Zene" (All to wife)
O'Neill's "New Endeavor" Call
1968 Northern Ireland Prime Minister Terence O'Neill calls for "a new endeavour by organisations in Northern Ireland to cross denominational barriers and advance the cause of better community relations"
- 1968 WKBF TV channel 61 in Cleveland, Ohio (IND) begins broadcasting
- 1970 Eight Bishops of the Roman Catholic Church in the Netherlands say there should be room in the church for both married priests and celibate priests
Nixon Nominates Carswell
1970 US President Richard Nixon nominates G. Harold Carswell to Supreme Court, approval rejected by US Senate
- 1971 NHL Writers' Association renamed Professional Hockey Writers' Association
"Helter Skelter" at Manson Trial
1971 The Beatles' "Helter Skelter" is played at Charles Manson trial
- 1974 Belgium government of Leburton falls
- 1974 China and South Vietnam clash over the Paracel Islands, resulting in a Chinese victory
- 1974 Notre Dame beats UCLA, 71-70 in South Bend, Indiana to end Bruins' NCAA-record 88-game basketball win streak
- 1975 4 mail truck assault on El Al B-747 in Paris, escape to Iraq
- 1975 Triple J begins broadcasting in Sydney, Australia.
- 1977 Snow falls in Miami, Florida. This is the only time in the history of the city that snowfall has occurred. It also fell in the Bahamas.
- 1977 US President Ford pardons Iva Toguri D'Aquino (Tokyo Rose)
- 1977 World's largest crowd gathering - the Hindu Kumbh Mela in India attracts a then record 15 million people
- 1978 Eddie Mathews elected to Baseball Hall of Fame
1978 The last Volkswagen Beetle made in Germany leaves VW's plant in Emden. Beetle production in Latin America would continue until 2003.
- 1979 John N Mitchell (former US Attorney General) released on parole from federal prison
Mead's Posthumous Medal
1979 US President Jimmy Carter announces he is awarding Presidential Medal of Freedom posthumously to anthropologist Margaret Mead
First Concorde Agreement
1981 Formula One Constructors Association (FOCA) led by Bernie Ecclestone, the Fédération Internationale du Sport Automobile led by Jean Marie Balestre and the Formula One teams agree to the First Concorde Agreement granting FOCA the right to televise Formula One races and requiring all teams to compete in every race under fixed rules
Ali Prevents Suicide
1981 Muhammad Ali talks a despondent 21-year-old out of committing suicide
- 1981 US & Iran sign agreement to release 52 American hostages
- 1982 Aust-WI one-day game that produced a Privy Council libel case
- 1982 Heater explodes at Star Elementary School, Oklahoma, kills 6 children & teacher
- 1984 California Supreme Court rejects the request of quadriplegic Elizabeth Bouvia's to starve herself to death in a public hospital
- 1985 4 die in a car & train crash in Buda Ill
- 1986 Cerebral Palsy telethon raises $17 million
Peres in The Netherlands
1986 Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres visits Netherlands
- 1986 Spain recognizes Israel
- 1987 Guy Hunt becomes Alabama's 1st Republican governor since 1874
- 1988 "48 Hours" premieres on CBS-TV
- 1988 Disabled writer Christopher Nolan wins the Whitbread Book of the Year prize
- 1990 Police break up protests in Johannesburg against the cricket players defying a boycott on playing in apartheid South Africa
- 1990 Turning point in the exodus of hundreds of thousands of Kashmiri Hindus from Indian-administrated Kashmir due to violence from Muslim militants
- 1991 Eastern Airlines shuts down operations
- 1991 Iraq files SCUD missiles at Tel Aviv and other cities in Israel during the Gulf War
- 1992 Cerebral Palsy telethon raises $23.5 million
- 1992 IBM announces a nearly $5B loss for 1992
"The Wheel"
1993 Columbia Records releases "The Wheel", the eighth studio album by American singer-songwriter Rosanne Cash. co-produced by Cash and future husband John Leventhal
- 1993 Israel recognizes PLO as no longer criminal
- 1993 Oakland As unveil new elephant logo
- 1993 Robert M Gates, ends term as 15th director of CIA
- 1993 STS-54 (Endeavour) lands
- 1994 -20°F (-29°C) (5:32 AM) coldest day ever recorded in Cleveland Ohio
- 1994 -36°F (-38°C) in New Whiteland, Indiana (state record)
- 1995 Jean-Claude Juncker (28) sworn in as premier of Luxembourg
- 1996 NHL Board of Governors approves sale of Winnipeg Jets, officially clearing the way for the team to move to Phoenix, Arizona in time for 1996-97 season
Arafat's Hebron Return
1997 Yasser Arafat returns to Hebron after more than 30 years and joins celebrations over the handover of the last Israeli-controlled West Bank city.
Jordan Wizard's Part Owner
2000 Michael Jordan, who led the Chicago Bulls to 6 NBA championships as a player, returns to the NBA, joining the Washington Wizards as part owner and President of Basketball Operations
2001 Mexican drug lord Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán escapes from Puente Grande maximum-security prison near Guadalajara by bribing prison guards and hiding in a laundry cart
- 2002 "Tuck Rule Game" AFC Divisional Playoff Game; with under 2 minutes to play New England Patriots trail Oakland Raiders, 13-10 in a driving snowstorm, when a Tom Brady fumble ruled an incomplete pass. Patriots win 16-13 in overtime
- 2006 A Slovak Air Force Antonov An-24 crashes in Hungary.
- 2006 Terrorist blows himself up in Tel Aviv, killing only himself but injuring 20 people, one of them seriously
- 2006 The New Horizons probe is launched by NASA on the first mission to Pluto
- 2007 Armenian journalist Hrant Dink assassinated in front of his "Agos" newspaper's office by 17-year-old Turkish ultranationalist Ogün Samast
Event of Interest
2011 Joe Lieberman announces his retirement from the Senate at the end of his fourth term
- 2012 FBI shuts down Megaupload.com for alleged copyright infringement, hacker group Anonymous responds by attacking government and entertainment industry websites
- 2013 Calcium deposits are discovered on Mars by NASA’s Curiosity Rover
- 2013 Four climbers are killed by an avalanche in Glen Coe, Scotland
- 2013 The 2012-2013 NHL season begins after a 119-day lockout
- 2016 China's economic growth revealed as lowest for 25 years - 6.9% in 2015
Barrow President of Gambia
2017 Adama Barrow sworn in as President of Gambia in Dahkar as Senegalese troops enter Gambia to persuade former President Yahya Jammeh to leave
- 2017 High-rise building collapses in Tehran, killing 20 firefighters
El Chapo Extradited
2017 Mexican drug lord Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán is extradited to the United States to face trial for his leadership of the Sinaloa drug cartel
- 2021 The US death toll from COVID-19 passes 400,000
Uyghur Genocide
2021 US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says China is committing genocide in its repression of Uighurs and other Muslim people
- 2022 5G cellphone service launches in the US with airlines claiming it could interfere with airplane technologies
- 2022 Major report on antimicrobial resistance shows 4.95m deaths worldwide associated with drug-resistant bacteria, making untreatable infections now a leading cause of death [1]
2022 UK PM Boris Johnson eases Omicron COVID-19 restrictions, saying the current wave of infections has peaked
- 2023 Cyclone Cheneso makes landfall in northern Madagascar, killing at least 25 people and leaving about 40,000 homeless [1]
Jacinda Ardern Resigns
2023 New Zealand leader Jacinda Ardern announces she is stepping down as Prime Minister after five and a half years [1]
Alec Baldwin Indicted
2024 Actor Alec Baldwin indicted by a grand jury on involuntary manslaughter charges over the 2021 fatal shooting on a movie set [1]
- 2024 At least 70 miners are killed in a gold mine collapses in Kangaba district, south-west Mali, the latest in a series of small-scale mine disasters [1]
- 2024 UK declares national incident over rise of measles cases due to lack of vaccination, WHO’s European region also reports 5-fold increase 2022-2023 [1]
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