| 370:
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Death of St. Eusebius of Vercelli
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| 714:
|
Death of Pepin II, ruler of France
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| 882:
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Election of Pope Marinus I
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| 882:
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Murder of Pope John VIII
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| 1431:
|
Coronation of Henry VI, King of England, as King of France
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| 1485:
|
Catherine of Aragon, the first wife of England's King Henry VIII born
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| 1515:
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Death of Alfonso d'Albuquerque
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| 1594:
|
Anne Balfour burned in Scotland as a witch
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| 1631:
|
Eruption of Mt. Vesuvius
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| 1653:
|
Oliver Cromwell became lord protector of England, Scotland and Ireland
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| 1770:
|
Composer Ludwig van Beethoven was born in Bonn, Germany.
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| 1773:
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The Boston Tea Party took place as some 50 American colonists boarded a British ship and dumped 342 chests of tea overboard into Boston harbor to protest tea taxes
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| 1775:
|
Novelist Jane Austen born
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| 1776:
|
Johann Wilhelm Ritter. German physicist who discovered the ultraviolet region of the spectrum and thus helped broaden man's view beyond the narrow region of visible light to encompass the entire electromagnetic spectrum from the shortest gamma rays to the longest radio waves. born
|
| 1809:
|
Napoleon Bonaparte was divorced from the Empress Josephine by an act of the French Senate
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| 1811:
|
One of history's strongest recorded earthquakes struck near New Madrid, Mo. The principal shock toppled chimneys 400 miles away in Cincinnati
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| 1828:
|
Alexander Ross Clarke English geodesist whose calculations of the size and shape of the Earth were the first to approximate accepted modern values with respect to both polar flattening and equatorial radius. born
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| 1835:
|
A fire in New York City destroys property estimated to be worth $20,000,000. Beginning in a store at Pearl and Merchant (Hanover) Streets, it lasts two days, ravages 17 blocks (52 acres), and destroys 674 buildings including the Stock Exchange, Merchants' Exchange, Post Office, and the South Dutch Church
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| 1843:
|
Josephine Shaw Lowell. American charity worker and social reformer, an advocate of the doctrine that charity should not merely relieve suffering but that it should also rehabilitate the recipient. born
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| 1863:
|
Philosopher and writer George Santayana. His original name JORGE AUGUSTN NICOLÁS RUIZ DE SANTAYANA. (Three Philosophical Poets, Character and Opinion of the United States, The Sense of Beauty, The Interpretations of Religion and Poetry, The Life of Reason, Scepticism and Animal Faith, Realms of Being, The Last Puritan) born
|
| 1863:
|
Confederate General Joseph Johnston takes command the Army of Tennessee, replacing Lt. General William Hardee
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| 1893:
|
The "New World" Symphony was premiered by Anton Seidl and the New York Philharmonic. "From the New World" is the actual subtitle of Dvorak's 9th and last symphony, signifying that Dvorak's ideas were inspired by music he heard in the western hemisphere
|
| 1896:
|
Colonel Griffith J. Griffith bequeathed 3,015 acres of his Rancho Los Feliz estate as a Christmas gift to the people of Los Angeles to be used as parkland. Griffith Park
|
| 1899:
|
Playwright and composer Noel Coward born
|
| 1901:
|
American anthropologist Margaret Mead. She was best-known for her studies of the nonliterate peoples of Oceania. born
|
| 1903:
|
Women ushers were employed for the first time at the Majestic Theatre in New York City
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| 1905:
|
Sime Silverman published the first issue of "Variety", the weekly show biz magazine. The first issue was 16 pages in length and sold for a nickel. "Variety" and "Daily Variety" are still going strong
|
| 1906:
|
Leonid Brezhnev (Russian leader of the Communist Party) born
|
| 1907:
|
Eugene H. Farrar became the first singer to broadcast on radio. He sang "Do You Really Want to Hurt Me?" from the Brooklyn Navy Yard in New York
|
| 1912:
|
The first postage stamp to depict an airplane was issued. It was a 20-cent parcel-post stamp
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| 1916:
|
Gregory Rasputin, the monk who'd wielded powerful influence over the Russian court, was murdered by a group of noblemen
|
| 1917:
|
SciFi author Arthur C. Clarke. Some of his science-fiction concepts have had remarkable parallels, particularly in the development of satellite communications. (A Space Odyssey, Islands in the Sky) born
|
| 1922:
|
New Polish President Gavriel Narutowicz is assassinated after only two days in office
|
| 1928:
|
Biochemist Bruce Ames born
|
| 1930:
|
In Spain, a general strike is called in support of the revolution
|
| 1935:
|
Ray W. Fuller U.S. biochemist who, as a pharmacological researcher at Eli Lilly & Co. from 1963, helped to create fluoxetine--the popular antidepressant drug known by the trademark Prozac. This drug combates depression by slowing the reabsorption of serotonin in the brain. born
|
| 1936:
|
Civil rights attorney Morris Dees born
|
| 1937:
|
Actress Joyce Bulifant born
|
| 1939:
|
Actress Liv Ullmann born
|
| 1939:
|
National Womens Party urges immediate congressional action on equal rights
|
| 1940:
|
British carry out an air raid on Italian Somalia
|
| 1941:
|
CBS news correspondent Lesley Stahl born
|
| 1943:
|
TV producer Steven Bochco born
|
| 1944:
|
The World War Two Battle of the Bulge began as German forces launched a surprise counter-attack against Allied forces in Belgium
|
| 1946:
|
Pop singer Benny Andersson (ABBA) born
|
| 1947:
|
Actor Ben Cross born
|
| 1949:
|
Rock singer-musician Billy Gibbons (ZZ Top) born
|
| 1949:
|
Chinese Communist leader Mao Tse-tung is received at the Kremlin in Moscow
|
| 1950:
|
President Truman proclaimed a national state of emergency in order to fight "Communist imperialism."
|
| 1951:
|
NBC-TV debuted "Dragnet" in a special preview, on "Chesterfield Sound Off Time". The Jack Webb (Sgt. Joe Friday) police drama opened its official TV run on January 3, 1952. Sgt. Fridays boss in this preview was played by Raymond Burr (later of Perry Mason and Ironside fame)
|
| 1959:
|
Actress Alison LaPlaca born
|
| 1960:
|
134 people were killed when a United Air Lines DC-8 and a TWA Super Constellation collided over over foggy New York harbor
|
| 1961:
|
Actor Jon Tenney born
|
| 1963:
|
Actor Benjamin Bratt (Law & Order) born
|
| 1968:
|
Spain voids the 1492 law which expelled Jews
|
| 1971:
|
Rhythm-and-blues singer Michael McCary (Boyz II Men) born
|
| 1971:
|
Don McLeans eight-minute-plus version of "American Pie" was released and became one of the longest songs with some of the most confusing lyrics to ever hit the pop charts. It was a disc jockey favorite since there were few songs long enough for potty breaks at the time. "American Pie" hit #1 on January 15, 1972
|
| 1972:
|
The Miami Dolphins became the first NFL team to go unbeaten and untied in a 14-game regular season
|
| 1973:
|
Jim Browns single-season rushing record in the NFL was smashed by O.J. Simpson. Brown rushed for 1,863 yards, while The Juice ran for 2,003 yards
|
| 1976:
|
President Jimmy Carter appoints Andrew Young as Ambassador to the United Nations
|
| 1978:
|
Cleveland becomes the first U.S. city to default since the depression
|
| 1985:
|
Reputed organized-crime chief Paul Castellano was shot to death outside a New York City restaurant
|
| 1987:
|
Former White House aide Michael K. Deaver was convicted of lying to a House subcommittee and a grand jury investigating whether he had violated federal ethics laws (he was fined and ordered to perform community service)
|
| 1987:
|
South Korea held its first direct presidential election in 16 years, choosing the government's handpicked candidate, Roh Tae-woo
|
| 1988:
|
President-elect Bush chose former Texas Senator John Tower to be his secretary of defense, a nomination that went down to defeat in the US Senate
|
| 1989:
|
Federal appeals court judge Robert S. Vance was killed by a mail bomb at his Alabama home. (Walter Leroy Moody Junior was later sentenced to death for killing Vance, and received seven life terms on federal charges in that killing and the death of civil rights attorney Robert E. Robinson.)
|
| 1990:
|
Jean-Bertrand Aristide was elected president of Haiti in the country's first democratic elections. (He was overthrown in a military coup in 1991, but was later restored to power.)
|
| 1991:
|
The UN General Assembly rescinded its 1975 resolution equating Zionism with racism by a vote of 111-to-25
|
| 1992:
|
Secretary of State Lawrence S. Eagleburger said Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic and Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic had to answer for atrocities committed in former Yugoslavia
|
| 1993:
|
The 100th anniversary of the premiere of the "New World" Symphony was celebrated by the Boston Symphony in Prague. A gala Dvorak concert featured lots of stars and lots of music
|
| 1993:
|
President Clinton announced the nomination of Bobby Ray Inman to succeed Les Aspin as defense secretary (Inman, however, later withdrew)
|
| 1994:
|
White House Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers announced she was leaving her job at the end of the year
|
| 1994:
|
The White House and Republicans traded barbs over whose tax plan was fairer to the middle class, a day after President Clinton presented a package of proposed tax cuts
|
| 1995:
|
President Clinton and congressional Republicans traded accusations as their budget impasse led to a second shutdown of the federal government
|
| 1996:
|
Former South Korean President Chun Doo-hwan, condemned to death for a 1979 coup and a deadly military crackdown the next year, had his sentence commuted to life imprisonment
|
| 1997:
|
UN weapons monitor Richard Butler left Iraq after failing to persuade President Saddam Hussein to open his palaces to inspections
|
| 1997:
|
A Pentagon-appointed panel concluded that the Army, Navy and Air Force should segregate male and female recruits in their earliest phases of basic training
|
| 1997:
|
In Japan, at least 700 mostly young TV viewers suffered nausea and epilepsy-like spasms after watching an animated cartoon that featured bright, flashing colors
|
| 1998:
|
The House delayed a debate set to begin the next day on four articles of impeachment against President Clinton
|
| 1998:
|
President Clinton ordered a sustained series of airstrikes against Iraq by American and British forces in response to Saddam Hussein's continued defiance of UN weapons inspectors
|
| 1999:
|
Israel and Syria ended two days of inconclusive peace talks in Washington and agreed to resume early in the new year
|
| 1999:
|
Torrential rains and mudslides in Venezuela left thousands of people dead and forced at least 120,000 to flee their homes
|
| 2005:
|
Sydney's newest motorway to open today
|
| 2005:
|
Business Brief for December 16, 2005
|
| 2005:
|
US offers to eliminate duties on Cotton, Africa says it's not enough
|
| 2005:
|
California class commemorates Holocaust
|
| 2005:
|
Imprisoned Haitian priest may need US doctors
|
| 2005:
|
Flooding in Nakhon Sri Thammarat
|
| 2005:
|
Police warn Sydneysiders to stay away from Eastern beaches
|
| 2005:
|
Senate rejects short-term extension of the USA PATRIOT Act
|
| 2005:
|
NYC transit deadline past, no strike or talks
|
| 2005:
|
West Wing star John Spencer dies from heart attack
|
| 2005:
|
President Bush of the United States authorized NSA surveillance of citizens, bypassing court warrants
|
| 2006:
|
Allegations New Zealand prison guards accept bribes from prisoners
|
| 2006:
|
HP France in trouble due to alleged monopolist behavior
|
| 2006:
|
Gilchrist scores second fastest Test century
|
| 2006:
|
Camel sacrificed at major Turkish airport
|
| 2006:
|
All executions suspended in Florida after error
|
| 2006:
|
Rally organizer arrested in Caledonia, Ontario
|
| 2006:
|
Toronto team-led research on Type 1 Diabetes 'groundbreaking'
|
| 2007:
|
Google announces testing of online reference tool
|
| 2007:
|
Two light aircraft in mid-air collision near East Midlands Airport
|
| 2007:
|
American singer Dan Fogelberg dies at age 56
|
| 2008:
|
New Zealand journalist deported from Fiji
|
| 2008:
|
Sharp increase in number of Zimbabwean cholera deaths
|
| 2009:
|
Alleged tax-haven scheme linked to Canada's largest brokerage firm
|
| 2009:
|
Boeing 787 "Dreamliner" makes maiden flight
|
| 2009:
|
Volcano eruption in Philippines prompts evacuations
|
| 2009:
|
Suicide bomber kills at least twenty in Pakistan town
|
| 2009:
|
Payment pending; Canadian recording industry set for six billion penalties?
|
| 2010:
|
Expedition 26 crew blast off to space station
|
| 2010:
|
Border agent killed in Arizona, four in custody
|
| 2010:
|
Jimmie Johnson named Driver of the Year
|
| 2010:
|
Vietnam fishing vessel sinks in South China Sea, 27 missing
|
| 2010:
|
Mark Zuckerberg named Time Person of the Year
|
| 2011:
|
Author and contrarian Christopher Hitchens dies at age 62
|