[It took just 18 minutes for the RMS Lusitania to sink after being torpedoed by a German U-boat 15 km (8 miles) off Ireland's Old Head of Kinsale. The last living survivor of the wreck, Audrey Lawson-Johnston (née Pearl), was just three months old when she was saved by her governess, Alice Lines. She was one of the lucky ones; only 289 of the dead were ever recovered, 65 of whom were never identified, with 885 victims unaccounted for. To this day, rumours persist that Lusitania was sunk because she was carrying 'contraband of war' and therefore considered a warship by the Imperial German Navy...]
558 CE - The dome of Constantinople's
Hagia Sophia collapsed following an earthquake; Emperor
Justinian I immediately ordered Isodorus the Younger to rebuild it, which he'd done by 562 CE.
1274 - Having been convoked on the final day of March 1272, the
Second Council of Lyons opened (in France, of all places, since that's where Lyons is) to regulate the election of the Pope; as presided over by
Gregory X, it was also called to act upon a pledge made by Byzantine Emperor
Michael VIII to end the
Great Schism by uniting the Eastern and Western churches.
1429 -
Joan of Arc ended the
Siege of Orléans after pulling an arrow from her own shoulder and returning, wounded, to lead the final charge; the victory marked a turning point in the
Hundred Years' War, although it did nothing to stop all that 'weaker sex' crap...
1664 - France's King
Louis XIV inaugurated the
Palace of Versailles, having officially moved his court there from Paris the previous day.
1697 - Stockholm's royal castle, the
Tre Kronor - parts of which dated back to medieval times - was destroyed by fire, only to be replaced early in the next century by the current
Royal Palace, built by
Nicodemus Tessin the Younger. Today, this remains the official residence of the Swedish Royal Family, while their private residence is at
Drottningholm Palace.
1718 - The city of
New Orleans was founded by
Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville, who'd been born in
Ville-Marie (which is better known today as Montreal).
1824 - The world premiere of
Ludwig van Beethoven's
Ninth Symphony was given at Vienna's
Kärntnertortheater. The work was conducted by
Michael Umlauf, under the
deaf composer's supervision; as it was Beethoven's first public appearance in a dozen years, the theatre was packed, and when the concert was over the crowd gave him five standing ovations.
1832 - The independence of Greece was recognized by the
Treaty of London, whereupon
Otto of Wittelsbach, Prince of Bavaria was elected
King.
1840 - The
Great Natchez Tornado struck
Natchez, Mississippi, killing 317 people and injuring 109 - making it the second deadliest tornado in
US history, after the
Tri-State Tornado.
1895 - Russian scientist
Alexander Stepanovich Popov demonstrated his invention - the world's first radio receiver - to the Russian Physical and Chemical Society in
Saint Petersburg; the Russians still celebrate this day as
Radio Day.
1915 - A German U-20 submarine sank the RMS Lusitania, killing 1,198 people (including 128 Americans and more than a hundred children); public reaction to the sinking turned many formerly pro-German Americans against the German Empire, and the event would be instrumental in the US entry into World War I.
1947 - NBC's
Kraft Television Theater debuted; the series would run for the next 11 years and launch many future movie stars in their careers, including
James Dean and
Grace Kelly.
1954 - During the
Indochina War the
Battle of Dien Bien Phu - which began on March 13th - ended in a French defeat at the hands of the
Viet Minh. In all 11,721 prisoners (of whom 4,436 were wounded) were taken by the Vietnamese in that battle alone, of whom only 3,290 were repatriated; the rest died of disease, privation, and abuse at the hands of their captors. The war effectively over, the following day the
Geneva Convention convened, with the victorious
Ho Chi Minh in attendance.
1960 - At the height of the
Cold War - and in the midst of the
U-2 Crisis - Soviet leader
Nikita Khrushchev announced that his nation was holding American pilot
Gary Powers, who'd been shot down in his
U-2 spy plane over
Sverdlovsk six days earlier.
1964 -
Pacific Air Lines Flight 773 crashed near
San Ramon, California, killing all 44 aboard; the
FBI later reported that the cockpit data recorder indicated the pilot and co-pilot had been shot by a suicidal passenger, later identified as Francisco Gonzales.
1974 - West German Chancellor
Willy Brandt resigned in scandal over allegations that one of his assistants,
Günter Guillaume, was a spy for East Germany's
Stasi; the story of the
Guillaume Affair was later told in the play
Democracy by
Michael Frayn.
1992 - Space Shuttle
Endeavour was launched on mission
STS-49 - its maiden voyage.
1999 - A jury found
The Jenny Jones Show and its producer
Warner Bros. liable in the shooting death of
Scott Amedure, after the show purposely deceived Jonathan Schmitz into appearing on a secret same-sex crush episode. Schmitz later murdered Amedure and a jury awarded Amedure's family US$25 million, an award which was later overturned; Schmitz was also sentenced to serve 25-50 years in prison where hopefully he's been overturned a few times himself.
2007 - The tomb of
Herod the Great was discovered by
Ehud Netzer, in the exact location at
Herodium where historian
Flavius Josephus said it was 2000 years ago.
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