Wednesday, March 13, 2013

March 13 in history



____________

MAR 12      INDEX      MAR 14
____________

624 – Battle of Badr: a key battle between Muhammad's army – the new followers of Islam and the Quraish of Mecca. The Muslims won this battle, known as the turning point of Islam, which took place in the Hejaz region of western Arabia.

874 – The bones of Saint Nicephorus are interred in the Church of the Holy Apostles, Constantinople.

1138 – Cardinal Gregorio Conti is elected Antipope as Victor IV, succeeding Anacletus II.

1591 – Battle of Tondibi: In Mali, Moroccan forces of the Saadi dynasty led by Judar Pasha defeat the Songhai Empire, despite being outnumbered by at least five to one.

1639 – Harvard College is named after clergyman John Harvard.

1697 – Nojpetén, capital of the Itza Maya kingdom, fell to Spanish conquistadors, the final step in the Spanish conquest of Guatemala.

1781 – William Herschel discovers Uranus.

1809 – Gustav IV Adolf of Sweden is deposed in a coup d'état.

1845 – Felix Mendelssohn's Violin Concerto receives its première performance in Leipzig with Ferdinand David as soloist.

1852 – The New York Lantern weekly debuts the Uncle Sam cartoon figure.

1862 – American Civil War: The U.S. federal government forbids all Union army officers from returning fugitive slaves, thus effectively annulling the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 and setting the stage for the Emancipation Proclamation.

1865 – American Civil War: The Confederate States of America agree to the use of slaves as soldiers.

1868 – The impeachment trial of President Andrew Johnson begins in the senate.

1881 – Alexander II of Russia is killed near his palace when a bomb is thrown at him. (Gregorian date: it was March 1 in the Julian calendar then in use in Russia.)

1884 – The Siege of Khartoum, Sudan begins, ending on January 26, 1885.

1897 – San Diego State University is founded.

1900 – Second Boer War: British forces occupy Bloemfontein, Orange Free State.

1920 – The Kapp Putsch briefly ousts the Weimar Republic government from Berlin.

1921 – Mongolia is proclaimed an independent monarchy, ruled by Russian military officer Roman von Ungern-Sternberg as a dictator.

1930 – The news of the discovery of Pluto is telegraphed to the Harvard College Observatory.

1933 – Great Depression: Banks in the U.S. begin to re-open after President Franklin D. Roosevelt mandates a "bank holiday".

1938 – World News Roundup is broadcast for the first time on CBS Radio in the United States.

1940 – The Russo-Finnish Winter War ends.

1943 – The Holocaust: German forces liquidate the Jewish ghetto in Kraków.

1954 – First Indochina War: Viet Minh forces under Vo Nguyen Giap unleashed a massive artillery barrage on the French to begin the Battle of Điện Biên Phủ, the climactic battle in the First Indochina War.

1957 – Cuban student revolutionaries storm the presidential palace in Havana in a failed attempt on the life of President Fulgencio Batista.

1961 – President John F. Kennedy sets up an economic assistance plan to promote social and economic growth in Latin America known as the Alliance for Progress.

1962 – Lyman Lemnitzer, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, delivers a proposal, called Operation Northwoods, regarding performing terrorist attacks upon Guantánamo Bay Naval Base, to Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara. The proposal is scrapped and President John F. Kennedy removes Lemnitzer from his position.

1963 – Police in Phoenix, Arizona arrest Ernesto Miranda and charge him with kidnap and rape. His conviction is ultimately set aside by the United States Supreme Court in Miranda v. Arizona.

1964 - Kitty Genovese Crime Scene
from whatwasthere.com
1964 – American Kitty Genovese was murdered in New York City. The media erroneously reports that many of the victim's neighbours witnessed the crime yet failed to help, prompting research into the “bystander effect.”

1969 – Apollo program: Apollo 9 returns safely to Earth after testing the Lunar Module.

1979 – The New Jewel Movement, headed by Maurice Bishop, ousts Prime Minister Eric Gairy in a nearly bloodless coup d'etat in Grenada.

1985 – The Kenilworth Road riot takes place at an association football match at Kenilworth Road in Luton, England with disturbances before, during and after an F.A. Cup 6th Round tie between Luton Town F.C. and Millwall F.C..

1988 – The Seikan Tunnel, the longest undersea tunnel in the world, opens between Aomori and Hakodate, Japan.

1991 – The United States Department of Justice announces that Exxon has agreed to pay $1 billion for the clean-up of the Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska.

1992 – The Mw 6.7 Erzincan earthquake strikes eastern Turkey with a maximum Mercalli intensity of VIII (Severe). At least 498 were killed in this strike-slip event on the North Anatolian Fault.

1996 – Dunblane massacre: in Dunblane, Scotland, 16 primary school children and one teacher are shot dead by spree killer Thomas Watt Hamilton who then commits suicide.

1997 – India's Missionaries of Charity chooses Sister Nirmala to succeed Mother Teresa as its leader.

1997 – The Phoenix Lights are seen over Phoenix, Arizona by hundreds of people, and by millions on television.

2003 – Human evolution: The journal Nature reports that 350,000-year-old footprints of an upright-walking human had been found in Italy.

2008 – Gold prices on the New York Mercantile Exchange hit $1,000 per ounce for the first time.

2012 – At least 28 people are killed in a bus crash in a motorway tunnel near the town of Sierre in the Swiss canton of Valais.

2013 – Pope Francis is elected, in the papal conclave, as the 266th Pope of the Roman Catholic Church.



Saints' Days and Holy Days

Traditional Western



Contemporary Western

Blessed Irmã Dulce Pontes
Euphrasia of Constantinople
Gerald of Mayo
Leander of Seville
Leticia
Nicephorus
Roderick
Sabinus of Hermopolis


Anglican, Episcopal, Lutheran

James Theodore Holly (Episcopal Church (USA))


Eastern Orthodox

March 13 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)

Saints

Hieromartyr Publius, Bishop of Athens (2nd c.)
Martyrs Alexander,[1][4] Dionysius and Frontonus, the "Basilikoi"
      (the Emperor's men), in Thessaloniki (c. 305)
Martyr Christina of Persia, scourged to death (4th c.)
Venerable Euphrasia, in the Thebaid (Thebais)
Martyr Abibus (Sabinus), at Hermopolis in Egypt, tied with stones
      and drowned in a river
Saint Marios (Marius), Bishop of Sebasteia
Venerable martyr Theoktistos, of the Great Lavra of St. Sabbas the Sanctified,
      reposed in peace (797)

Pre-Schism Western Saints

Martyrs Africanus, Publius, and Terence, at Carthage (250)
Saint Leander of Seville, Bishop of Seville (596)
Martyr Ramirus and Companions, at the monastery of St Claudio in Leon
      in Spain (c. 554 or 630)
Saint Mochoemoc (Mochaemhog, Pulcherius, Vulcanius), monk at Bangor
      in Co. Down under St Comgall, later founded Liath-Mochoemoc (c. 656)
Saint Kevoca (Kennotha, Quivoca), a saint honoured in Kyle in Scotland (7th c.)
Saint Gerald of Mayo, followed St Colman from Lindisfarne to Ireland
      and became his successor in the English monastery in Mayo (732)
Saint Ansovinus, Bishop of Camerino (840)
Saint Heldrad (Eldrad, Eldradus), abbot at Novalesa Abbey for thirty years (842)
Martyrs Rudericus (Roderick) and Salomon (Solomon), in Córdoba in Spain (857)

New Martyrs and Confessors

New Hieromartyr Nicholas Popov, Priest (1919)
New Hieromartyr Gregory Pospelov, Priest (1921)
New Hieromartyr Stephen (Bekh), Bishop of Izhevsk (1933)
New Hieromartyr Michael Okolovich, Priest (1938)

Other commemorations

Translation of the relics (846) of St. Nicephorus the Confessor,
      Patriarch of Constantinople (829)
Repose of Elder Ephraim of Valaam Monastery (1946)
Repose of Bishop Tikhon (Tikhomirov) of Kyrillov (1955)



No comments:

Post a Comment