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Events
314 – Pope Sylvester I succeeds Pope Miltiades.
1504 – France cedes Naples to Aragon.
1578 – The Battle of Gembloux takes place.
1606 – Gunpowder Plot: Guy Fawkes is executed for plotting against Parliament and King James.
1747 – The first venereal diseases clinic opens at London Lock Hospital.
1801 – John Marshall is appointed the Chief Justice of the United States.
1814 – Gervasio Antonio de Posadas becomes Supreme Director of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata (present-day Argentina).
1846 – After the Milwaukee Bridge War, Juneautown and Kilbourntown unify as the City of Milwaukee.
1848 – John C. Frémont is court-martialed for mutiny and disobeying orders.
1849 – Corn Laws are abolished in the United Kingdom pursuant to legislation in 1846.
1862 – American Civil War: The state of Louisiana takes over the U.S. Mint at New Orleans.
1862 – Alvan Graham Clark discovers the white dwarf star Sirius B, a companion of Sirius, through an 18.5-inch (47 cm) telescope now located at Northwestern University.
1860s - Price, Birch & Company Dealers in Slaves DukeStreet, Alexandria, Virginia from whatwasthere.com |
1865 – American Civil War: Confederate General Robert E. Lee becomes general-in-chief.
1867 – Maronite nationalist leader Youssef Bey Karam leaves Lebanon on board a French ship bound for Algeria.
1897 – Czechoslav Trade Union Association is founded in Prague.
1891 – History of Portugal: The first attempt at a Portuguese republican revolution breaks out in the northern city of Porto.
1900 – Datu Muhammad Salleh is assassinated in Kampung Teboh, Tambunan, ending the Mat Salleh Rebellion.
1915 – World War I: Germany is the first to make large-scale use of poison gas in warfare in the Battle of Bolimów against Russia.
1917 – World War I: Germany announces that its U-boats will resume unrestricted submarine warfare after a two-year hiatus.
1918 – A series of accidental collisions on a misty Scottish night leads to the loss of two Royal Navy submarines with over a hundred lives, and damage to another five British warships.
1919 – The Battle of George Square takes place in Glasgow, Scotland.
1928 – Russian Marxist revolutionary Leon Trotsky was exiled to Kazakhstan.
1929 – The Soviet Union exiles Leon Trotsky.
1930 – 3M begins marketing Scotch Tape.
1942 – World War II: Allied forces are defeated by the Japanese at the Battle of Malaya and retreat to the island of Singapore.
1943 – World War II: German Field Marshal Friedrich Paulus surrenders to the Soviets at Stalingrad, followed 2 days later by the remainder of his Sixth Army, ending one of the war's fiercest battles.
1944 – World War II: During the Anzio campaign the 1st Ranger Battalion (Darby's Rangers) is destroyed behind enemy lines in a heavily outnumbered encounter at Battle of Cisterna, Italy.
1945 – World War II: US Army private Eddie Slovik is executed for desertion, the first such execution of an American soldier since the Civil War.
1945 – World War II: About 3,000 inmates from the Stutthof concentration camp are forcibly marched into the Baltic Sea at Palmnicken (now Yantarny, Russia) and executed.
1945 – World War II: The end of fighting in the Battle of Hill 170 during the Burma Campaign, in which the British 3 Commando Brigade repulsed a Japanese counterattack on their positions and precipitated a general retirement from the Arakan Peninsula.
1946 – Yugoslavia's new constitution, modeling that of the Soviet Union, establishes six constituent republics (Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, and Slovenia).
1946 – The Democratic Republic of Vietnam introduces the đồng to replace the French Indochinese piastre at par.
1949 – These Are My Children, the first television daytime soap opera is broadcast by the NBC station in Chicago.
1950 – U.S. President Harry S. Truman announces support for a program to develop the hydrogen bomb.
1953 – A North Sea flood causes over 1,800 deaths in the Netherlands and over 300 in the United Kingdom.
1957 – Eight people on the ground in Pacoima, California are killed following the mid-air collision between a Douglas DC-7 airliner and a Northrop F-89 Scorpion fighter jet.
1958 – Explorer program: Explorer 1: The first successful launch of an American satellite into orbit.
1958 – James Van Allen discovers the Van Allen radiation belt.
1961 – Project Mercury: Mercury-Redstone 2: Ham the Chimp travels into outer space.
1968 – Vietnam War: Viet Cong attack the United States embassy in Saigon, and other attacks, in the early morning hours, later grouped together as the Tet Offensive.
1968 – Nauru gains independence from Australia.
1971 – Apollo program: Apollo 14: Astronauts Alan Shepard, Stuart Roosa, and Edgar Mitchell, aboard a Saturn V, lift off for a mission to the Fra Mauro Highlands on the Moon.
1971 – The Winter Soldier Investigation, organized by the Vietnam Veterans Against the War to publicize war crimes and atrocities by Americans and allies in Vietnam, begins in Detroit.
1990 – The first McDonald's in the Soviet Union opens in Moscow.
1995 – President Bill Clinton authorizes a $20 billion loan to Mexico to stabilize its economy.
1996 – An explosives-filled truck rams into the gates of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka in Colombo, Sri Lanka killing at least 86 and injuring 1,400.
1996 – Comet Hyakutake is discovered by Japanese amateur astronomer Yuji Hyakutake.
2000 – Alaska Airlines Flight 261 crash: An MD-83, experiencing horizontal stabilizer problems, crashes in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Point Mugu, California, killing all 88 aboard.
2001 – In the Netherlands, a Scottish court convicts Libyan Abdelbaset al-Megrahi and acquits another Libyan citizen for their part in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland in 1988.
2003 – The Waterfall rail accident occurs near Waterfall, New South Wales, Australia.
2007 – Suspects are arrested in Birmingham in the UK, accused of plotting the kidnap, holding and eventual beheading of a serving Muslim British soldier in Iraq.
2009 – In Kenya, at least 113 people are killed and over 200 injured following an oil spillage ignition in Molo, days after a massive fire at a Nakumatt supermarket in Nairobi killed at least 25 people.
2010 – Avatar becomes the first film to gross over $2 billion worldwide.
2011 – A winter storm hits North America for the second time in the same month, causing $1.8 billion in damage across the United States and Canada and killing 24 people.
2013 – An explosion at the Pemex Executive Tower in Mexico City kills at least 33 people and injures more than 100.
Saints' Days and Holy Days
Traditional Western
Peter Nolasco, Confessor. Double.
Contemporary Western
Blessed Ludovica
Geminianus
John Bosco
Marcella
Anglican, Episcopal, Lutheran
Samuel Shoemaker (Episcopal Church (USA))
Eastern Orthodox
January 31 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)
Saints
Martyr Tryphaena of Cyzicus (1st century)
Martyrs Victorinus, Victor, Nicephorus, Claudius, Diodorus, Serapion,
and Papias, at Corinth (251 or 258)
Holy Wonderworkers and Unmercenaries Cyrus and John, and Martyrs Athanasia
and her daughters Theoctista, Theodota, and Eudoxia, at Canopus in Egypt (311)
Martyrs Saturninus, Thyrsus and Victor, at Alexandria
Martyrs Tharsicius, Zoticus, Cyriacus, and their companions, at Alexandaria
Saint Julius of Aegina (Julius of Novara), missionary priest to northern Italy (401)
Saint Athanasius, Bishop of Methone (ca. 880)
Pre-Schism Western Saints
Saint Geminian of Modena, Deacon and later successor of the Bishop
of Modena (348)
Saint Marcella of Rome (410)
Saint Madoes (Madianus), a saint who has left his name to a place
in the Carse of Gowrie in Scotland
Saint Áedan (Maedoc), first Bishop of Ferns in Co. Wexford in Ireland,
where he also founded and became abbot of a monastery (626)
Saint Adamnan, born in Ireland, he became a monk at Coldingham,
now in Scotland (681)
Saint Wilgils, father of St Willibrord, born in Northumbria in England, he settled
on the banks of the River Humber and lived as a hermit (ca. 700)[
Saint Bobinus, monk at Moutier-la-Celle. Later he became Bishop of Troyes (ca. 766)
Saint Ulphia (Wulfia, Olfe, Wulfe), hermitess near Amiens in France (8th c.)
Saint Eusebius, monk at St Gall in Switzerland and later lived as a hermit
on Mt St Victor in the Vorarlberg (884)
Saint John Angelus, born in Venice in Italy, he became a monk at Pomposa (ca. 1050)
Post-Schism Orthodox Saints
Venerable Nikita, recluse of the Kiev Caves, Bishop of Novgorod (1108)
Venerable Pachomius, abbot of Keno Lake Monastery (1525)
New Monk-martyr Elias (Ardunis) of Mt. Athos and Kalamata (1686)
Saint Arsenius the New, of Paros (1877)
Other commemorations
Synaxis of the Icon of the Most Holy Theotokos Koroniotissa or Dakryrroousis,Traditional Western
Peter Nolasco, Confessor. Double.
Contemporary Western
Blessed Ludovica
Geminianus
John Bosco
Marcella
Anglican, Episcopal, Lutheran
Samuel Shoemaker (Episcopal Church (USA))
Eastern Orthodox
January 31 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)
Saints
Martyr Tryphaena of Cyzicus (1st century)
Martyrs Victorinus, Victor, Nicephorus, Claudius, Diodorus, Serapion,
and Papias, at Corinth (251 or 258)
Holy Wonderworkers and Unmercenaries Cyrus and John, and Martyrs Athanasia
and her daughters Theoctista, Theodota, and Eudoxia, at Canopus in Egypt (311)
Martyrs Saturninus, Thyrsus and Victor, at Alexandria
Martyrs Tharsicius, Zoticus, Cyriacus, and their companions, at Alexandaria
Saint Julius of Aegina (Julius of Novara), missionary priest to northern Italy (401)
Saint Athanasius, Bishop of Methone (ca. 880)
Pre-Schism Western Saints
Saint Geminian of Modena, Deacon and later successor of the Bishop
of Modena (348)
Saint Marcella of Rome (410)
Saint Madoes (Madianus), a saint who has left his name to a place
in the Carse of Gowrie in Scotland
Saint Áedan (Maedoc), first Bishop of Ferns in Co. Wexford in Ireland,
where he also founded and became abbot of a monastery (626)
Saint Adamnan, born in Ireland, he became a monk at Coldingham,
now in Scotland (681)
Saint Wilgils, father of St Willibrord, born in Northumbria in England, he settled
on the banks of the River Humber and lived as a hermit (ca. 700)[
Saint Bobinus, monk at Moutier-la-Celle. Later he became Bishop of Troyes (ca. 766)
Saint Ulphia (Wulfia, Olfe, Wulfe), hermitess near Amiens in France (8th c.)
Saint Eusebius, monk at St Gall in Switzerland and later lived as a hermit
on Mt St Victor in the Vorarlberg (884)
Saint John Angelus, born in Venice in Italy, he became a monk at Pomposa (ca. 1050)
Post-Schism Orthodox Saints
Venerable Nikita, recluse of the Kiev Caves, Bishop of Novgorod (1108)
Venerable Pachomius, abbot of Keno Lake Monastery (1525)
New Monk-martyr Elias (Ardunis) of Mt. Athos and Kalamata (1686)
Saint Arsenius the New, of Paros (1877)
Other commemorations
at Lixouri, Cephalonia (1867)
Repose of Eugene Poselyanin (Pogozhev), spiritual writer (1931)
Repose of Elder Codratus (Condratus) of Karakalou monastery, Mt. Athos (1940)
Repose of Hieroschemamonk Stephen (Ignatenko) of Kislovodsk (1973)
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