Wednesday, January 9, 2013

January 9 in history


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JAN 08      INDEX      JAN 10
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Events


475 – Byzantine Emperor Zeno is forced to flee his capital at Constantinople, and his general, Basiliscus gains control of the empire.

681 – Twelfth Council of Toledo: King Erwig of the Visigoths initiates a council in which he implements diverse measures against the Jews in Spain.

1127 – Jin–Song Wars: Invading Jurchen soldiers from the Jin dynasty besiege and sack Bianjing (Kaifeng), the capital of the Song dynasty of China, and abduct Emperor Qinzong and others, ending the Northern Song dynasty.

1150 – Prince Hailing of Jin and other court officials murder Emperor Xizong of Jin. Hailing succeeds him as emperor.

1349 – The Jewish population of Basel, Switzerland, believed by the residents to be the cause of the ongoing Black Death, is rounded up and incinerated.

1431 – Judges' investigations for the trial of Joan of Arc begin in Rouen, France, the seat of the English occupation government.

1760 – Ahmad Shah Durrani defeats the Marathas in the Battle of Barari Ghat.

1788 – Connecticut becomes the fifth state to be admitted to the United States.

1793 – Jean-Pierre Blanchard becomes the first person to fly in a balloon in the United States, a feat that was witnessed by George Washington and other Founding Fathers.

1799 – British Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger introduces an income tax of two shillings to the pound to raise funds for Great Britain's war effort in the Napoleonic Wars.

1806 – Admiral Horatio Lord Nelson receives a state funeral and is interred in St Paul's Cathedral.

1816 – Sir Humphry Davy tests his safety lamp for miners at Hebburn Colliery.

1822 – The Portuguese prince Pedro I of Brazil decides to stay in Brazil against the orders of the Portuguese King João VI, beginning the Brazilian independence process.

1839 – The French Academy of Sciences announces the Daguerreotype photography process.

1857 – The Fort Tejon earthquake strikes California, registering an estimated magnitude of 7.9.

1858 – Anson Jones, the last President of the Republic of Texas, commits suicide.

1861 – American Civil War: The "Star of the West" incident occurs near Charleston, South Carolina. It is considered by some historians to be the "First Shots of the American Civil War".

1861 – Mississippi becomes the second state to secede from the Union before the outbreak of the American Civil War.

1863 – American Civil War: The Battle of Fort Hindman begins in Arkansas.

1878 – Umberto I becomes King of Italy.

1880 – The Great Gale of 1880 devastates parts of Oregon and Washington with high winds and heavy snow.

1894 – New England Telephone and Telegraph installs the first battery-operated telephone switchboard in Lexington, Massachusetts.

1903 – Hallam Tennyson, 2nd Baron Tennyson, son of the poet Alfred Tennyson, becomes the second Governor-General of Australia.

1903 – Wind Cave National Park in South Dakota is established.

1909 – Ernest Shackleton, leading the Nimrod Expedition to the South Pole, plants the British flag 97 nautical miles (180 km; 112 mi) from the South Pole, the farthest anyone had ever reached at that time.

1914 – Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity Inc., the first historically black intercollegiate Greek-letter fraternity to be officially recognized at Howard University, is founded.

1916 – World War I: The Battle of Gallipoli concludes with an Ottoman Empire victory when the last Allied forces are evacuated from the peninsula.

1917 – World War I: The Battle of Rafa is fought near the Egyptian border with Palestine.

1918 – Battle of Bear Valley: The last battle of the American Indian Wars.

1921 – Greco-Turkish War: The First Battle of İnönü, the first battle of the war, begins near Eskişehir in Anatolia.

1923 – Juan de la Cierva makes the first autogyro flight.

1923 – Lithuanian residents of the Memel Territory rebel against the League of Nations' decision to leave the area as a mandated region under French control.

Hogarth Press in the 1930s
(before destroyed by WWII bomb)
from whatwasthere.com
1924 – Virginia Woolf and her husband bought 52 Tavistock Square, in the Bloomsbury district of London, where they set up the Hogarth Press in the basement. In addition to Woolf's novels, Hogarth published many significant writers of the 20th Century, including Freud, T.S. Eliot, Chekhov, Dostoevsky, Katherine Mansfield, and E.M Forster.

1927 – A fire at the Laurier Palace movie theatre in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, kills 78 children.

1938 – Paul of Greece marries Frederica of Hanover in Athens.

1941 – World War II: First flight of the Avro Lancaster.

1945 – World War II: United States soldiers, under the lead of General Douglas MacArthur, invade Luzon in the Philippines.

1947 – Elizabeth "Betty" Short, the Black Dahlia, is last seen alive.

1957 – British Prime Minister Sir Anthony Eden resigns from office following his failure to retake the Suez Canal from Egyptian sovereignty.

1960 – President of Egypt Gamal Abdel Nasser opens construction on the Aswan Dam by detonating ten tons of dynamite to demolish twenty tons of granite on the east bank of the Nile.

1964 – Martyrs' Day: Several Panamanian youths try to raise the Panamanian flag on the U.S.-controlled Panama Canal Zone, leading to fighting between U.S. military and Panamanian civilians.

1965 – The Mirzapur Cadet College formally opens for academic activities in East Pakistan (now Bangladesh).

1991 – Representatives from the United States and Iraq meet at the Geneva Peace Conference to try to find a peaceful resolution to the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait.

1992 – The Assembly of the Serb People in Bosnia and Herzegovina proclaims the creation of Republika Srpska, a new state within Yugoslavia.

1996 – First Chechen War: Chechen separatists launch a raid against the helicopter airfield and later a civilian hospital in the city of Kizlyar in the neighboring Dagestan, which turns into a massive hostage crisis involving thousands of civilians.

2004 – An inflatable boat carrying illegal Albanian emigrants stalls near the Karaburun Peninsula while on the way to Brindisi, Italy; exposure to the elements kills 28.

2005 – Mahmoud Abbas wins the election to replace Yasser Arafat as President of the Palestinian National Authority. He replaces interim president Rawhi Fattouh.

2005 – The Sudan People's Liberation Movement and the Government of Sudan sign the Comprehensive Peace Agreement to end the Second Sudanese Civil War.

2007 – Apple CEO Steve Jobs unveils the first iPhone.

2011 – Iran Air Flight 277 crashes near Orumiyeh in the northeast of the country, killing 77 people.

2013 – A SeaStreak ferry traveling to lower Manhattan, New York City, crashes into the dock, injuring 85 people.

2014 – An explosion at a Mitsubishi Materials chemical plant in Yokkaichi, Japan, kills at least five people and injures 17 others.

2015 – The perpetrators of the Charlie Hebdo shooting in Paris two days earlier are both killed after a hostage situation. Elsewhere, a second hostage situation, related to the Charlie Hebdo shooting, occurs at a Jewish market, Hypercacher, in the eastern Paris suburb of Vincennes.



Saints' Days and Holy Days

Traditional Western

Within the Octave of the Epiphany.


Contemporary Western

Adrian of Canterbury
Black Nazarene (Manila, Philippines)


Anglican, Episcopal, Lutheran

Julia Chester Emery (Episcopal Church (USA))


Eastern Orthodox

January 9 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)

Feasts

Afterfeast of the Theophany of Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ

Saints

Prophet Shemaiah (Samaia, Semeias), (III Kings 12:22), (10th century BC)
Martyr Polyeuctus of Melitene in Armenia (259)
Martyr Antonina of Nicomedia, martyred at sea
Martyr Lawrence, martyred in the arena, by the pagans
Saint Peter of Sebaste, Bishop of Sebaste in Armenia (c. 395)
Saint Eustratius the Wonderworker, of Tarsus (821)
Venerable Basil and Gregory the Wonderworkers, uncles of Saint Eustratius (9th c.)

Pre-Schism Western Saints

Virgin-Martyr Paschasia, venerated from ancient times in Dijon in France (c. 178)
Epictetus, Jucundus, Secundus, Vitalis, Felix and seven other Companions
      - Twelve martyrs in North Africa, probably under Decian (c. 250)
Virgin-martyr Marciana of Mauretania, in Mauritania in North Africa (c. 303)
Saint Marcellinus of Ancona, Bishop of Ancona (566)
Saint Waningus (Vaneng), Benedictine abbot (c. 686)
Saint Maurontus (Maurontius, Mauruntius), founder of the monastery of
      Saint-Florent-le-Vieil on the Loire in France (c. 700)
Saint Adrian, Abbot of Sts Peter and Paul, later called St Augustine's,
      in Canterbury (710)
Saint Brithwald (Brihtwald), a monk and then the Abbot of Reculver in Kent,
      and in 693 becoming the ninth Archbishop of Canterbury (731)
Saint Foellan (Foilan, Fillan), born in Ireland, he accompanied his mother,
      St Kentigerna, and his relative, St Comgan, to Scotland, where he lived
      as a monk (8th c.)

Post-Schism Orthodox Saints

New Martyr Parthena of Edessa, in Macedonia (1375)
Hieromartyr Philip, Metropolitan of Moscow and Wonderworker of all Russia (1569)
Saint Jonah (Miroshnichenko), (Peter in Schema), founder of Holy Trinity
      Monastery in Kiev, Wonderworker (1902)

New Martyrs and Confessors

New Hieromartyr Paul (Nikolsky), Priest (1943)
Other commemorations

Commemoration of the great earthquake at Constantinople (869)
Translation of the relics (903) of St. Judoc, hermit of Ponthieu
Commemoration of Stefan Yavorsky, Metropolitan of Ryazan and Murom
      (1722) – defender of Orthodoxy
Commemoration of Schema-Archimandrite Gabriel (Starodub), Native of Poltava
      (2010) and of his spiritual Father, Schema-Archimandrite Vitaly (Sidorenko)



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