The Malta Independent 7 May 2024, Tuesday
View E-Paper

On this day in history: Find out major events that occurred around the world on 6 October

Monday, 6 October 2014, 07:57 Last update: about 11 years ago

Today is Monday, October 6, the 279th day of 2014. There are 86 days left in the year.

Highlights in history on this date:

1536 - William Tyndale, who translated the first English Bible, is executed for heresy in Vilvoorde, the Netherlands.

1683 - Thirteen families from Krefeld, Germany, arrive in present-day Philadelphia to begin Germantown, one of America's oldest settlements.

1789 - An irate crowd enters the Versailles palace outside Paris. Troops of the Marquis de Lafayette protect the royal family, who are taken to Paris as hostages of the revolution.

1889 - The Moulin Rouge in Paris opens its doors to the public; inventor Thomas Edison shows his first motion pictures in West Orange, New Jersey.

1908 - Turkey grants concession to Germany to build a railroad to Ankara.

1918 - French occupy Beirut in the Ottoman Empire.

1927 - In the United States, the era of talking pictures arrives with the opening of "The Jazz Singer," starring Al Jolson, a movie which features both silent and sound-synchronized scenes.

1937 - Japanese aggression in China is condemned by League of Nations.

1939 - In an address to the Reichstag, Adolf Hitler denies having any intention of war against France and Britain.

1949 - American-born Iva Toguri D'Aquino, convicted as Japanese wartime broadcaster "Tokyo Rose," is sentenced in San Francisco to 10 years in prison and fined $10,000.

1953 - Britain sends forces to British Guiana to prevent coup by communists.

1958 - U.S. nuclear submarine Seawolf surfaces off New England's coast after establishing a world record by remaining submerged for two months.

1964 - As Cambodia is dragged into the Vietnam war, China pledges to Prince Norodom Sihanouk, Cambodian chief of state, that it will give his country economic and military aid.

1972 - Train carrying religious pilgrims derails and catches fire near Saltillo, Mexico, killing at least 208 people.

1973 - Egypt and Syria launch a surprise attack on Israel as it observes Yom Kippur.

1976 - Coup in Thailand results in military takeover.

1979 - Pope John Paul II becomes the first pontiff to visit the White House, where he is received by U.S. President Jimmy Carter.

1981 - Egyptian President Anwar Sadat is shot to death by extremists while reviewing a military parade.

1989 - Typhoon Angela kills at least 118 people on northern coast of Luzon, Philippines.

1991 - An Indonesia air force plane crashes into a government building in Jakarta, killing 102 people and injuring more than 5,000.

1992 - The U.N. Security Council unanimously votes to create a war-crimes commission for Bosnia-Herzegovina.

1996 - Yao Wenyaun, the last surviving member of the "Gang of Four," which promoted class struggle under Chairman Mao Zedong during the Cultural Revolution, is freed from prison. In jail for 20 years, he was convicted in 1981 for plotting to seize power after Mao's death in 1976.

1997 - The spiritual leader of Muslim militant group Hamas is released by Israel in exchange for two Mossad agents captured after a bungled assassination attempt in Jordan.

1998 - The U.N. Security Council declares that the Serbs have not complied with resolutions demanding a cease-fire in Kosovo, setting the stage for a military intervention in the Yugoslav province.

1999 - Overwhelmed by rising waters on the Niger River, officials open the floodgates of two major dams, submerging 400 villages and leaving more than 300,000 homeless. Some 500 are believed drowned.

2000 - An official inquiry into the infection of more than 200 Irish hemophiliacs with HIV and hepatitis C confirms that the government's Blood Transfusion Service Board knowingly put them at risk in the early 1980s by selling infected blood products to hospitals.

2002 - The Qatar-based Al Jazeera satellite television network broadcast an audiotape made by Osama bin Laden where the speaker on the tape warned the U.S. of future attacks.

2004 - The European Union recommends setting mostly Muslim Turkey on a course for full membership in the union. The commissioners set stiff conditions to prevent far poorer Turkey from backtracking on the sweeping democratic and human rights reforms being demanded.

2005 - Rescue workers dig through mud, searching for victims of landslides and pulling bodies from swollen rivers, after a week of steady rain in Central America and Mexico leaves more than 160 dead.

2006 - The fledgling U.N. Human Rights Council ends its second session after failing to approve any decisions addressing the world's worst abuses.

2007 - Ruling-party lawmakers claim victory for Pakistan's President Gen. Pervez Musharraf as voting ends in the presidential election.

2008 - Wall Street joins in a worldwide cascade of despair over the financial crisis, driving the Dow Jones industrials to their biggest loss ever during a trading day. They close below 10,000 for the first time since 2004.

2009 - A top suspect wanted for orchestrating the killings of thousands of people in Rwanda's 1994 genocide - including children, hospital patients, priests and even an elderly and revered African queen - is captured.

2010 - A method for building complex molecules has paid off by helping to fight cancer, protect crops and make electronic devices - and now it has earned its developers, two Japanese scientists and an American researcher, a Nobel Prize.

2011 - The Nobel Prize in literature is awarded to a Swedish psychologist,Tomas Transtromer, who used his spare time to craft sparsely written poems about the mysteries of everyday life - commuting to work, watching the sun rise or waiting for nightfall.

2012 - Israel scrambles fight jets to intercept a drone that crossed deep into Israeli airspace from the Mediterranean sea, shooting the aircraft down over the country's southern desert.

2013 - Clashes erupt across much of Egypt between security forces and supporters of the ousted president, leaving 44 dead as rival crowds of supporters of the military and backers of theIslamist Mohammed Morsi it deposed pour into the streets around the country to mark a major holiday.

Today's Birthdays:

Louis Philippe, king of France (1773-1850); Jenny Lind, Swedish soprano (1820-1887); Charles Edouard Jeanneret, Swiss architect known as "Le Corbusier" (1887-1965); Thor Heyerdahl, Norwegian anthropologist and leader of Kon-Tiki expedition (1914-2002); Hafez Assad, former Syrian president (1930-2000); Britt Ekland, Swedish actress (1942--); Elizabeth Shue, American actress (1963--).

Thought For Today:

Every ambitious man is a captive, and every covetous one, a pauper - Arab proverb

 

 

  • don't miss