Japanese Imperial Standard |
Bayeux Tapestry |
1087 Death of King William I of England, better recognized as William the Conqueror, Duke of Normandy, victor in the Battle of Hastings in 1066 in the Normans' defeat of King Harold II and the Saxons. William I challenged the succession of the Harold Godwinson, after the death of King Edward the Confessor, claiming he had been promised the throne. Harold II and his army were exhausted after battling Harold Hadrada of Norway's Viking invasion, along with Harold II's own brother fighting against him at the earlier Battle of Stamford Bridge in York. The famous Bayeux tapestry is an embroided cloth, roughly 18 inches by nearly 225 feet long, illustrating the events in needlework.
1513 James IV of Scotland is defeated and dies in the Battle of Flodden Field, ending Scotland's involvement in the War of the League of Cambrai.
1543 Mary Stuart, at nine months old, is crowned "Queen of Scots" in the central Scottish town of Stirling.
1569 Death of Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Flemish painter
1585 Birth of Armand Jean du Plessis, Cardinal Richelieu, French statesman (d. 1642)
1737 Birth of Luigi Galvani, Italian physician and physicist (d. 1798)
1739 The Stono Rebellion, the largest slave uprising in Britain's mainland North American colonies prior to the American Revolution, erupts near Charleston, South Carolina.
1754 Birth of William Bligh, British naval officer (d. 1817), who lost his ship, Bounty, in the famous mutiny.
1776 The Continental Congress officially names its new union of sovereign states the United States.
1791 Washington, D.C., the capital of the United States, is named after President George Washington.
1801 Alexander I of Russia confirms the privileges of Baltic provinces.
1815 Death of John Singleton Copley, American painter (b. 1738)
1828 Birth of Leo Tolstoy, Russian novelist (d. 1910)
1839 Sir John Frederick William Herschel, son of astronomer Sir Frederick Wilhelm Herschel, takes the first glass plate photograph. He also invented the modern blue print process.
1850 California is admitted as the thirty-first U.S. state.
The Compromise of 1850 transfers a third of Texas's claimed territory (now parts of Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Wyoming) to federal control in return for the U.S. federal government assuming $10 million of Texas's pre-annexation debt.
1886 The Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works is finalized.
1901 Death of Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, French painter (b. 1864)
1914 In World War I: The creation of the Canadian Automobile Machine Gun Brigade, the first fully mechanized unit in the British Army.
1922 Greco-Turkish War of 1919-1922 ends with Turkish victory over the Greeks.
1923 Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the founder of the Republic of Turkey, founds the Republican People's Party.
1924 The Hanapepe Massacre occurs on Kauai, Hawaii.
1926 The National Broadcasting Co. (NBC) was created as a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Radio Corporation of America (RCA).
1940 George Stibitz pioneers the first remote operation of a computer.
1942 In World War II: A Japanese floatplane drops an incendiary bomb on Oregon.
1944 In World War II: The Fatherland Front takes power in Bulgaria through a military coup in the capital and armed rebellion in the country. A new pro-Soviet government is established.
1945 End of the Second Sino-Japanese War; Japan formally surrenders to China.
1947 First actual case of a computer bug being found: a moth lodges in a relay of a Harvard Mark II computer at Harvard University.
1948 Republic Day of Democratic People's Republic of Korea first celebrated.
1954 Birth of Jeffrey Combs, American actor
1957 President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed into law the first civil rights bill to pass Congress since Reconstruction.
1965 The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development is established.
1965 Hurricane Betsy makes its second landfall near New Orleans, Louisiana, leaving 76 dead and $1.42 billion ($10–12 billion in 2005 dollars) in damages, becoming the first hurricane to top $1 billion in unadjusted damages.
1966 The National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act is signed into law by U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson.
1970 A British airliner is hijacked by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and flown to Dawson's Field in Jordan.
1971 The four-day Attica Prison riot begins, which eventually results in 39 dead, most killed by state troopers retaking the prison.
1976 Death of Mao Zedong, Chinese communist leader (b. 1893)
1991 Tajikstan gains independence from the Soviet Union, part of the mass exodus of Soviet satellite nations.
1993 The Palestine Liberation Organization officially recognizes Israel as a legitimate state.
2001 Ahmed Shah Massoud, leader of the Northern Alliance, is assassinated in Afghanistan by two al Qaeda assassins who claimed to be Arab journalists wanting an interview.
2001 The Pärnu methanol tragedy occurs in Pärnu County, Estonia.
2003 The Boston Roman Catholic Archdiocese agreed to pay $85 million to 552 people to settle clergy sex abuse cases.
2004 A bomb explodes outside the Australian embassy in Jakarta, killing 10 people.
2005 Federal Emergency Management Agency Director Michael Brown, the principal target of harsh criticism of the Bush administration's response to Hurricane Katrina, was relieved of his onsite command.
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