Tuesday, October 16, 2012

October 14 in history


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OCT 13      INDEX      OCT 15
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Events


222 – Pope Callixtus I is killed by a mob in Rome's Trastevere after a 5-year reign in which he had stabilized the Saturday fast three times per year, with no food, oil, or wine to be consumed on those days. Callixtus is succeeded by cardinal Urban I.

1066 – Norman Conquest: At the Battle of Hastings, fought on Senlac Hill, seven miles from Hastings, England, the English army is defeated and King Harold II of England is killed by the Norman forces of William the Conqueror.

1322 – Robert the Bruce of Scotland defeats King Edward II of England at Byland, forcing Edward to accept Scotland's independence.

1465 – Wallachian voivode Radu cel Frumos, younger brother of Vlad Ţepeş, issues a writ from his residence in Bucharest.

1582 – Because of the implementation of the Gregorian calendar this day does not exist in this year in Italy, Poland, Portugal and Spain.

1586 – Mary, Queen of Scots, goes on trial for conspiracy against Elizabeth I of England.

1656 – Massachusetts enacts the first punitive legislation against the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers). The marriage of church-and-state in Puritanism makes them regard the Quakers as spiritually apostate and politically subversive.

1758 – Seven Years' War: Austria defeats Prussia at the Battle of Hochkirch.

1773 – The first recorded Ministry of Education, the Commission of National Education, is formed in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.

1773 – Just before the beginning of the American Revolutionary War, several of the British East India Company's tea ships are set ablaze at the old seaport of Annapolis, Maryland.

1780:  In the early morning hours, a contingent of approximately 350 Patriot troops from the North Carolina and Virginia militias engages a group of British Loyalists, numbering between 400 and 900, at the Shallow Ford crossing of the Yadkin River in North Carolina.

1805 – Battle of Elchingen, France defeats Austria.
1806 – Battle of Jena–Auerstedt France defeats Prussia.

1808 – The Republic of Ragusa is annexed by France.

1812 – Work on London's Regent's Canal starts.

1840 – The Maronite leader Bashir II surrenders to the British Army and then is sent into exile on the islands of Malta.

1843 – The British arrest the Irish nationalist Daniel O'Connell for conspiracy to commit crimes.

1863 – American Civil War: Confederate troops under the command of General Robert E. Lee attempt to drive the American Union Army completely out of Virginia but fail when an outnumbered Union force repels the attacking Rebels at the Battle of Bristoe Station.

1882 – University of the Punjab is founded in a part of India that later became West Pakistan.

1884 – The American inventor, George Eastman, receives a U.S. Government patent on his new paper-strip photographic film.

1888 – Louis Le Prince films first motion picture: Roundhay Garden Scene.

1898 – The steamer ship SS Mohegan sinks after impacting the Manacles near Cornwall, United Kingdom, killing 106.

1908 – The Chicago Cubs defeat the Detroit Tigers, 2–0, clinching the World Series. It would be their last one to date.

1910 – The English aviator Claude Grahame-White lands his Farman Aircraft biplane on Executive Avenue near the White House in Washington, D.C..

1912:  Former President Theodore Roosevelt, campaigning for the White House as the Progressive (“Bull Moose”) candidate, with the fresh wound in his chest, and the bullet still within it, went ahead with his scheduled public speech in Milwaukee after being shot in the chest by New York saloon keeper John Schrank, declaring, “It takes more than one bullet to kill a bull moose.”

1913 – The Senghenydd Colliery Disaster, a massive coal-mine explosion in Wales, claims the lives of 439 miners. It was the United Kingdom's worst-ever coal mining accident.

1915 – World War I: The Kingdom of Bulgaria joins the Central Powers.

1920 – Part of Petsamo Province is ceded by the Soviet Union to Finland.

1925 – An Anti-French uprising in French-occupied Damascus, Syria. (All French inhabitants flee the city.)

1926 – The children's book Winnie-the-Pooh, by A. A. Milne, is first published.

1933 – Nazi Germany withdraws from the League of Nations.

1938 – The first flight of the Curtiss Aircraft Company's P-40 Warhawk fighter plane.

1939 – The German submarine U-47 sinks the British battleship HMS Royal Oak within her harbour at Scapa Flow, Scotland.

1940 – Balham underground station disaster in London, England, occurs during the Nazi Luftwaffe air raids on Great Britain.

1943 – Prisoners at the Nazi German Sobibór extermination camp in Poland revolt against the Germans, killing eleven SS guards, and wounding many more. About 300 of the Sobibor Camp's 600 prisoners escape, and about 50 of these survive the end of the war.

1943 – World War II: The American Eighth Air Force loses 60 B-17 Flying Fortress heavy bombers in aerial combat during the second mass-daylight air raid on the Schweinfurt ball bearing factories in western Nazi Germany.

1943 – José P. Laurel takes the oath of office as President of the Philippines (Second Philippine Republic).

1944 – World War II: Athens, Greece, is liberated by British Army troops entering the city as the Wehrmacht pulls out. This clears the way for the Greek government-in-exile to return to its historic capital city, with George Papandreou, Sr., as the head of government.

1944 – German Gen. Erwin Rommel, nicknamed "the Desert Fox," is given the option of facing a public trial for treason, as a co-conspirator in the plot to assassinate Adolf Hitler, or commit suicide by taking cyanide. He chooses the latter.

1947 – Captain Chuck Yeager of the United States Air Force flies a Bell X-1 rocket-powered experimental aircraft, the Glamorous Glennis, faster than the speed of sound over Southern California's Mojave Desert and becomes the first pilot and the first airplane to do so in level flight.

1949 – Eleven leaders of the American Communist Party are convicted, after a nine-month trial in a Federal District Court, of conspiring to advocate the violent overthrow of the U.S. Federal Government.

1949 – Chinese Civil War: Chinese Communist forces occupy the city of Guangzhou (Canton), in Guangdong, China.

1952 – Korean War: United Nations and South Korean forces launch Operation Showdown against Chinese strongholds at the Iron Triangle. The resulting Battle of Triangle Hill is the biggest and bloodiest battle of 1952.

1956 – Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, the Indian Untouchable caste leader, converts to Buddhism along with 385,000 of his followers (see Neo-Buddhism).

1957 – Queen Elizabeth II becomes the first Canadian Monarch to open up an annual session of the Canadian Parliament, presenting her Speech from the throne in Ottawa, Canada.

1958 – The American Atomic Energy Commission, with supporting military units, carries out an underground nuclear weapon test at the Nevada Test Site, just north of Las Vegas.

1958 – The District of Columbia's Bar Association votes to accept African-Americans as member attorneys.

1962 – The Cuban Missile Crisis begins, bringing the United States and the Soviet Union to the brink of nuclear conflict. A U.S. Air Force U-2 high-altitude reconnaissance plane and its pilot fly over the island of Cuba and take photographs of Soviet-made medium-range missiles capable of carrying nuclear warheads being installed and erected in Cuba, 90 miles off the American coastline.

1964 – Martin Luther King, Jr. received the Nobel Peace Prize for combating racial inequality through nonviolence.

1964:  Nikita Khrushchev is ousted as both premier of the Soviet Union and chief of the Communist Party after 10 years in power, sending him into retirement as a nonperson in the USSR. He was succeeded as General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union by his former protégé Leonid Brezhnev, who would eventually become the chief of state as well. The new Soviet leadership increased military aid to the North Vietnamese without trying to persuade them to attempt a negotiated end to hostilities. With this support and no external pressure to negotiate, the North Vietnamese leadership was free to carry on the war as they saw fit.

1964:  U.S. aircraft are permitted to fly with Laotian planes on operations against Communist movements along the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos. After considerable pressure from both Laos and the U.S. Air Force, the Pentagon authorized the Yankee Team jets to fly cover with the Laotian Air Force T-28s that were bombing the trails and installations used by the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops making their way into Laos. The U.S. jets protected the Laotian planes from North Vietnamese MiGs attacks.

1966 – The city of Montreal begins the operation of its underground Montreal Metro rapid-transit system.

1967 – The Vietnam War: The folk singer Joan Baez is arrested concerning a physical blockade of the U.S. Army's induction center in Oakland, California.

1968 – Vietnam War: Twenty-seven soldiers are arrested at the Presidio of San Francisco in California for their peaceful protest of stockade conditions and the Vietnam War.

1968 – Vietnam War: The United States Department of Defense announces that the U.S. Army and U.S. Marine Corps will send about 24,000 soldiers and Marines back to Vietnam for involuntary second tours of duty in the combat zone there.

1968 – Apollo program: The first live TV broadcast, by American astronauts in orbit, was performed by the Apollo 7 crew.

1968 – An earthquake rated at 6.8 on the Richter scale destroys the Australian town of Meckering, Western Australia, and it also ruptures all nearby main highways and railroads.

1968 – Jim Hines of the United States of America becomes the first man ever to break the so-called "ten-second barrier" in the 100-meter sprint in the Summer Olympic Games held in Mexico City with a time of 9.95 seconds.

1969 – The United Kingdom introduces the British fifty-pence coin, which replaces, over the following years, the British ten-shilling note, in anticipation of the decimalization of the British currency in 1971, and the abolition of the shilling as a unit of currency anywhere in the world.

1973 – In the Thammasat student uprising over 100,000 people protest in Thailand against the Thanom military government, 77 are killed and 857 are injured by soldiers.

1979 – The first Gay Rights March on Washington, D.C., the National March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights, demands "an end to all social, economic, judicial, and legal oppression of lesbian and gay people", and draws 200,000 people.

1981 – Citing official misconduct in the investigation and trial, Amnesty International charges the U.S. Federal Government with holding Richard Marshall of the American Indian Movement as a political prisoner.

1981 – Vice President Hosni Mubarak is elected as the President of Egypt one week after the assassination of the President of Egypt, Anwar Sadat.

1982 – U.S. President Ronald Reagan proclaims a War on Drugs.

1983 – Maurice Bishop, Prime Minister of Grenada, is overthrown and later executed in a military coup d'état led by Bernard Coard.

1994 – The Palestinian leader, Yasser Arafat, The Prime Minister of Israel, Yitzhak Rabin, and the Foreign Minister of Israel, Shimon Peres, receive the Nobel Peace Prize for their role in the establishment of the Oslo Accords and the framing of the future Palestinian Self Government.

1998 – Eric Rudolph is charged with six bombings including the 1996 Centennial Olympic Park bombing in Atlanta, Georgia.

2003 – Chicago Cubs fan Steve Bartman becomes infamously known as the scapegoat for the Cubs losing Game 6 of the 2003 National League Championship Series to the Florida Marlins.

2006 – The college football brawl between University of Miami and Florida International University leads to suspensions of 31 players of both teams.

2014 – A snowstorm and avalanche in the Nepalese Himalayas triggered by the remnants of Cyclone Hudhud kills 43 people.



Saints' Days and Holy Days

Traditional Western

Kallistus, Pope of Rome, Martyr.  Double.
Commemoration of the Octave of St. Edward.


Contemporary Western

Angadrisma
Fortunatus of Todi
Pope Callixtus I


Anglican, Episcopal, Lutheran

Joseph Schereschewsky (Episcopal Church (USA))


Eastern Orthodox

October 14 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)

Martyrs Nazarius, Celsius, Gervase and Protase, of Milan (54-68)
St. Parasceve (Petka) of Epibatos, Thrace,
      whose relics are in Iași, Romania (11th century)
Martyr Peter Apselamus of Eleutheropolis in Palestine (309)
Hieromartyr Silvanus of Gaza and with him 40 martyrs (311)
St. Nikola Sviatosha, prince of Chernigov
      and Wonderworker of the Kiev Caves (1143)
St. Cosmas, abbot of Yakhromsk (1492)
St. Euthymius the New of Thessalonica, confessor 889
St. Ignatius, metropolitan of Mithymna (1566)

Icon of the Mother of God of Yakhrom


Coptic Orthodox









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