1648 |
|
The “shoemakers of Boston”–the first labor
organization in what would become the United States–is authorized by
the Massachusetts Bay Colony. |
1685 |
|
The Edict of Nantes is lifted by King Louis XIV.
The edict, signed at Nantes, France, by King Henry IV in 1598, gave the
Huguenots religious liberty, civil rights and security. By revoking the
Edict of Nantes, Louis XIV abrogated their religious liberties. |
1813 |
|
The Allies defeat Napoleon Bonaparte at Leipzig. |
1867 |
|
The Alaska territory is formally transferred to the U.S. from Russian control. |
1867 |
|
The rules for American football are
formulated at a meeting in New York among delegates from Columbia,
Rutgers, Princeton and Yale universities. |
1910 |
|
M. Baudry is the first to fly a dirigible across the English Channel–from La Motte-Breil to Wormwood Scrubs. |
1912 |
|
The First Balkan War breaks out between
the members of the Balkan League–Serbia, Bulgaria, Greece and
Montenegro–and the Ottoman Empire. |
1918 |
|
Czechs seize Prague and renounce Hapsburg’s rule. |
1921 |
|
Russian Soviets grant Crimean independence. |
1939 |
|
President Franklin D. Roosevelt bans war submarines from U.S. ports and waters. |
1944 |
|
Lt. General Joseph Stilwell is recalled from China by president Franklin Roosevelt. |
1945 |
|
A
group of the Venezuelan armed forces, led by Mario Vargas, Marcos Pérez
Jiménez, and Carlos Delgado Chalbaud, stages a coup d’état against
president Isaías Medina Angarita, who is overthrown by the end of the
day. |
1950 |
|
The First Turkish Brigade arrives in Korea to assist the U.N. forces fighting there. |
2003 |
|
Bolivian president Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada resigns in the wake of protests centered around Bolivia’s natural gas resources. |
2007 |
|
A suicide attack on a motorcade in
Karachi, Pakistan, kills at least 139 and wounds 450; the subject of the
attack, Pakistan’s former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, is not harmed. |
No comments:
Post a Comment