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Historical Events on November 18


  • 326 Old St. Peter’s Basilica consecrated in Rome (stood 4th – 16th century), later replaced by current Basilica
  • 794 Japanese emperor Kammu deallocates residence of Nara to Kioto
  • 1105 Maginulf is elected Antipope Sylvester IV
  • 1210 Pope Innocent III excommunicates Holy Roman Emperor Otto IV
  • 1302 Pope Boniface VIII issues papal bull (decree) “Unam sanctam” emphasizing the higher position of the spiritual in comparison with the secular order
  • 1307 William Tell reputedly shoots an apple off his son’s head
  • 1421 Southern sea floods 72 villages, killing estimated 10,000 in the Netherlands
  • 1424 Storm flood ravages Dutch coast

Earliest English Printed Book

1477 “The Dictes & Sayengis of the Philosophers,” the first dated printed book in England, is printed by William Caxton at his press in Westminster

Gama Reaches the Cape

1497 Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama reaches the Cape of Good Hope

1626 St. Peter’s Basilica is consecrated in Rome, replacing an earlier basilica on the same site and becoming the world’s largest Christian church

  • 1646 Seventh Council of Toledo of bishops convened by Visigothic King of Hispania Chindasuinth, extends treason laws to the clergy
  • 1667 Treaty of Bongaja: King Hassan-Udin of Makasar & VOC
  • 1686 Charles François Felix operates on King Louis XIV of France’s anal fistula after practising the surgery on several peasants.

Voltaire’s First Play

1718 Voltaire‘s first play, the tragedy “Oedipe” premieres in Paris, and first use of non de plume Voltaire by François-Marie Arouet

  • 1738 France & Austria sign peace treaty
  • 1742 Prussia and Great Britain sign an anti-French military covenant

1750 The original Westminster Bridge across the River Thames in London is opened in a midnight ceremony

  • 1755 Worst quake in Massachusetts Bay area strikes Boston; no deaths reported
  • 1787 First Unitarian minister in US ordained, Boston
  • 1803 Battle of Vertieres; Haitian population inflict final defeat on French force attempting to quell slave rebellion on colony of Saint-Dominque
  • 1804 Pulver Purim is first celebrated to commemorate miraculous escape of Rabbi Abraham Danzig from a gunpowder explosion in Vilna
  • 1820 Antarctica sighted by US Navy Captain Nathaniel B. Palmer
  • 1833 Netherlands & Belgium sign Treaty of Zonhoven

Letter by Göttingen Seven

1837 Letter by Göttingen Seven published protesting abolition of constitution of Kingdom of Hanover, by seven professors including Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm

  • 1852 Rose Philippine Duchesne dies in St. Charles, Missouri. She would be canonized on July 3, 1988 by Pope John Paul II.

Funeral of the Duke of Wellington

1852 State funeral of Duke of Wellington is held at St Paul’s Cathedral in London

  • 1861 The first provisional meeting of the Confederate Congress is held in Richmond, Virginia

The Celebrated Jumping Frog

1865 Mark Twain publishes the short story “The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County” in The New York Saturday Press

Arrested for Voting

1872 Suffragette Susan B. Anthony is arrested by a U.S. Deputy Marshal and charged with illegally voting

  • 1874 National Woman’s Christian Temperance Union organizes in Cleveland, Ohio
  • 1883 Antonín Dvořák‘s “Husitska” (Hussite Overture) premieres at the gala opening of the Prague National Theater
  • 1883 US and Canadian railroads set and synchronize four standard time zones – Eastern, Central, Mountain, and Pacific, replacing over 100 previous time zones
  • 1889 Oahu Railway begins public service in Hawaii

On the Study of Holy Scripture

1893 Pope Leo XIII publishes the encyclical Providentissimus Deus (On the Study of Holy Scripture), reviewing the history of Bible study

  • 1894 Richard Outcault’s early comic strip “Origin of a New Species” published in World
  • 1899 Trumper scores 208 in 185 mins (1 five 25 fours) NSW v Qld
  • 1901 The USA and Great Britain sign the Second Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, or Interoceanic Ship Canal Treaty
  • 1902 Brooklyn toymaker Morris Michtom names his stuffed teddy bear after US President “Teddy” Roosevelt [1]
  • 1903 Hay-Bunau-Varilla Treaty gives US exclusive canal rights in Panama
  • 1904 General Esteban Huertas steps down after the government of Panama fears he wants to stage a coup
  • 1905 Prince Carl of Denmark becomes King Haakon VII of Norway
  • 1906 Anarchists bomb St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome
  • 1906 Langdon Mitchell’s “New York Idea” premieres in NYC
  • 1909 US invades Nicaragua, later overthrows President Zelaya
  • 1911 First American performance of Ludwig Thuille’s opera “Lobetanz”, Metropolitan Opera in New York City
  • 1912 Cholera breaks out in Constantinople, in the Ottoman Empire
  • 1913 Lincoln Beachey becomes the first American pilot to perform an aircraft loop-the-loop in his Curtiss aeroplane near San Diego

1916 British General Douglas Haig finally calls off the First Battle of the Somme in World War I after more than 1 million soldiers are killed or wounded

  • 1917 Sigma Alpha Rho, a Jewish high school fraternity, is founded in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
  • 1918 Belgian troops re-enter Brussels, lost to the German invaders on 20 August 1914
  • 1918 Latvia declares independence from Russia
  • 1919 H. Tierney & J. McCarthy’s musical “Irene” premieres in NYC
  • 1920 Apollo Theater (Academy, Bryant) opens at 221 W 42nd St NYC
  • 1922 Turkish National Assembly nominates Abdülmecid II as caliph – the last Ottoman caliph
  • 1926 George Bernard Shaw accepts the Nobel Prize for Literature but refuses the prize money, saying “I can forgive Alfred Nobel for inventing dynamite, but only a fiend in human form could have invented the Nobel Prize”

On the Persecution of the Church in Mexico

1926 Pope Pius XI encyclical Acerba animi (On the Persecution of the Church in Mexico)

Steamboat Willie

1928 Walt Disney‘s “Steamboat Willie” is released, the first Mickey Mouse sound cartoon

  • 1929 Foundation stone for Umaid Bhawan Palace laid in Jodhpur, India. Originally built to provide employment for drought-stricken farmers, now one of world’s largest private residences
  • 1929 Large earthquake in Atlantic breaks transatlantic cable in 28 places
  • 1930 Musical “Smiles” with Bob Hope and Fred Astaire premieres in NYC
  • 1930 Sōka Kyōiku Gakkai, a Buddhist association later renamed Soka Gakkai, is founded by Japanese educators Tsunesaburo Makiguchi and Josei Toda.
  • 1932 The Disney cartoon Flowers & Trees is the first cartoon to receive an Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film
  • 1936 Main spans of the Golden Gate Bridge are joined
  • 1938 Trade union members elect John L. Lewis as the first president of the Congress of Industrial Organizations.
  • 1939 Dutch KNSM passenger ship Simón Bolívar hits German mine, 86 die
  • 1939 The Irish Republican Army explodes three bombs in Piccadilly Circus
  • 1940 George Matesky, New York City’s Mad Bomber places his first bomb at a Manhattan office building used by Consolidated Edison.

Italy Departs Abyssinia

1941 Benito Mussolini‘s Italian forces leave Abyssinia/Ethiopia, forced out by Allied attacks

  • 1941 British troops open attack on Tobruk, North Africa
  • 1941 Jerome Chodorov/Joseph Fields’ “Junior Miss” premieres in NYC

Skin of our Teeth

1942 Thornton Wilder‘s play “Skin of our Teeth” premieres in NYC (Pulitzer Prize for Drama 1943)

  • 1943 444 British bombers attack Berlin
  • 1943 First US ambassador to Canada, Ray Atherton, nominated
  • 1943 WWII: German submarine U-211 sunk east of the Azores in the Atlantic Ocean by British aircraft
  • 1945 Arnold Schoenberg‘s Prelude for orchestra and mixed choir premieres
  • 1949 The U.S. Air Force grounds B-29s after two crashes and 23 deaths in three days

Mass Executions End

1950 South Korean President Syngman Rhee forced to end mass executions

  • 1951 “See it Now” premieres on TV
  • 1951 British troops occupy Ismailiya, Egypt
  • 1951 Former Cubs first baseman & future TV star of Rifleman Chuck Connors is 1st player to oppose the major league draft
  • 1953 Anti-Revolutionary Party (ARP) accept female suffrage
  • 1955 The Bell X-2 rocket plane has its first powered flight, reaching Mach 0.992 at Edwards Air Force Base

We Will Bury You!

1956 Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev says the phrase “we will bury you!” to Western ambassadors at a reception at the Polish embassy in Moscow

  • 1957 Tunisia refuses Russian weapons
  • 1958 1st true reservoir in Jerusalem opens
  • 1958 Indians minority stockholders sell their stock to William Delay
  • 1959 Wash Senator Bob Allison wins AL Rookie of Year
  • 1960 Charlie Finley makes a bid to purchase expansion LA Angels
  • 1960 The Copyright Office issues its 10 millionth registration

1961 JFK sends 18,000 military advisors to South Vietnam

  • 1961 US Ranger 2 launched to Moon; failed
  • 1963 Bell Telephone introduces the touch-tone telephone to customers in Pennsylvania

First Moroccan Parliament

1963 King Hassan II opens the first Parliament in Morocco

  • 1963 The Dartford-Purfleet tunnel under River Thames opens
  • 1966 Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers’ pitcher Sandy Koufax announces his retirement due to an arthritic left elbow
  • 1966 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site
  • 1966 US Roman Catholic bishops end the rule of abstaining from meat on Fridays
  • 1967 British government devalues pound from US equivalent of $2.80 to $2.40
  • 1968 Soviets recover the Zond 6 spacecraft after a flight around the moon
  • 1969 Prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi assigned to the Tate and LaBianca murders, will eventually convict Charles Mason for orchestrating the killings

Pauling on Vitamin C

1970 American scientist Linus Pauling popularizes the idea that taking large doses of vitamin C can prevent or treat the common cold; the claim is largely unproven

Frazier vs. Foster

1970 Future HOF boxer Joe Frazier KOs defending champion Bob Foster in second round at Cobo Arena, Detroit, for the WBA, WBC and The Ring heavyweight titles

  • 1970 Netherlands and Albania form diplomatic relations
  • 1970 Russia lands self propelled rover on Moon
  • 1971 A British soldier is shot dead by the Irish Republican Army (IRA) in Belfast
  • 1971 China performs nuclear test at Lop Nor, PRC
  • 1973 Arab oil ministers cancel the scheduled 5 percent cut in production for EEC
  • 1973 Greek regime calls emergency crisis due to mass protests

The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway

1974 “The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway” album by English progressive rock band Genesis is released, their last to feature original frontman Peter Gabriel

Rufus ft. Chaka Khan

1975 “Rufus featuring Chaka Khan” 4th studio album by Rufus is released (Billboard Album of the Year 1976)

  • 1975 Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver returns to US
  • 1975 Calvin Murphy (Houston) ends NBA free throw streak of 58 games
  • 1976 MLB New York Yankees sign free agent pitcher Don Gullett
  • 1976 Spain’s parliament establishes democracy after 37 yrs of dictatorship
  • 1978 First flight of McDonnell Douglas F/A-18 Hornet fighter jet
  • 1978 Great Britain performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site

Jonestown Massacre

1978 In Jonestown, Guyana, 918 members of the Peoples Temple are murdered or commit suicide under the leadership of cult leader Jim Jones

  • 1978 Leo J Ryan, American politician, and 4 others, killed in Jonestown, Guyana by members of Peoples Temple, followed by ritual mass suicide of 914 members of the religious cult

Boxing Matches Shortened to 12 Rounds

1982 South Korean boxer Duk Koo Kim dies from injuries sustained during a 14-round beating by Ray Mancini in Las Vegas; WBC shortens title bouts to 12 rounds; WBA and WBO follow in 1988, and IBF in 1989

  • 1983 Argentina announces its ability to produce enriched uranium for nuclear weapons
  • 1983 MGM/UA releases nostalgic holiday film “A Christmas Story”, starring Peter Billingsley and Darren McGavin, based on anecdotes from humorist Jean Shepherd
  • 1984 Browns set team records for most sacks (11)
  • 1984 Flyers’ Ron Sutter fails on 11th penalty shot against Islanders
  • 1984 NBC premiere of the first part of fact based crime mystery “Fatal Vision”, based on Joe McGinnis’ novel about Jefferey MacDonald and the 1970 murders of his then-pregnant wife and two children
  • 1984 NJ Devils shutout NY Rangers 6-0
  • 1984 The Soviet Union helps deliver American wheat during the Ethiopian famine
  • 1985 Enterprise (OV-101) flies from Kennedy Space Center to Dulles Airport
  • 1985 Howard Stern Radio Show returns to NYC (WXRK 92.3 FM) with an afternoon drive slot
  • 1985 Paul McCartney releases film theme single “Spies Like Us”
  • 1987 31 people die in a fire at King’s Cross, London’s busiest tube station
  • 1987 Congressional committee reports on Iran-Contra affair
  • 1989 Pennsylvania is first to restrict abortions after US Supreme Court gave states the right to do so

1990 1st Solheim Cup Women’s Golf, Lake Nona G & CC: US beats Europe 11½-4½ in the inaugural event; Kathy Whitworth and Mickey Walker are the US and European captains

  • 1990 NFL NY Giants beat Det Lions 20-0, to run 1990 record to 10-0
  • 1991 Auburn men’s basketball team placed on 2 yr probation for recruiting violations and not eligible for post-season play 1991-92
  • 1991 France deports Marlon’s daughter Cheyenne Brando to Tahiti
  • 1991 Muslim Shi’ites release hostages Terry Waite & Thomas Sutherland

Siege of Vukovar Ends

1991 The Croatian city of Vukovar surrenders to Yugoslav People’s Army and allied Serb paramilitary forces after an 87-day siege

  • 1992 Howard Stern Radio Show premieres in Las Vegas, Nevada on KXTE 107.5 FM
  • 1993 27 killed at prison in Morazan, El Salvador

Nirvana Records MTV Unplugged

1993 American rock band Nirvana films a mostly acoustic set at Sony Music Studios in New York City, for the television series MTV Unplugged

  • 1993 Black and white leaders in South Africa approve a new democratic constitution
  • 1993 North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) passes US House of Representatives
  • 1993 North-Siberia record cold for November (-55°C)
  • 1993 Pearl Jam lead singer Eddie Vedder arrested for public drunkiness

Star Trek: Generations

1994 “Star Trek: Generations” film directed by David Carson and starring Patrick Stewart premieres

  • 1996 “Star Trek: First Contact” film directed by Jonathan Frakes and starring Patrick Stewart and Jonathan Frakes premieres
  • 1996 Eappen family hire Louise Woodward as their nanny, later charged with murder and convicted of involuntary manslaughter
  • 1997 “Titanic: Music from the Motion Picture” album is released by Sony Music Soundtrax
  • 1997 70s glam-rock star Gary Glitter (real name Paul Gadd) arrested by British police in child porn probe
  • 1997 A rare black pearl necklace is auctioned for a record $902,000
  • 1997 Arizona Diamondbacks & Tampa Bay Devil Rays expansion draft
  • 1997 FBI says no evidence of foul play in 1996 TWA 800 crash
  • 1997 Mavericks’ A. C. Green ties Randy Smith’s NBA record of 906 cons games
  • 1997 Warner Bros. releases “Songs from The Capeman”, ninth solo studio album by American singer-songwriter Paul Simon; it contains Simon’s own performances of songs from his Broadway musical flop
  • 1997 Willem de Kooning painting “Two Standing Women” sold for $4,182,500
  • 1999 In College Station, Texas, 12 are killed and 27 injured at Texas A&M University when a massive bonfire under construction collapses.
  • 2001 Home crowd favourite Leyton Hewitt wins his first of 2 season-ending Tennis Masters Cup titles with a 6–3, 6–3, 6–4 victory over Frenchman Sébastien Grosjean in Sydney, Australia
  • 2001 Phillips Petroleum and Conoco merge into a new company as ‘ConocoPhillips’, the third-largest oil and natural gas company in the US

Brainwashed

2002 Dark Horse/EMI posthumously releases “Brainwashed”, George Harrison‘s 12th and final studio album

  • 2002 Iraq disarmament crisis: United Nations weapons inspectors led by Hans Blix arrive in Iraq

Up!

2002 Mercury Nashville Records releases “Up!”, the 4th studio album by Shania Twain (Billboard Album of the Year, 2003)

  • 2003 In England, the Local Government Act 2003, repealing controversial anti-gay amendment Section 28, becomes effective
  • 2003 Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court rules the state’s ban on same-sex marriages is unconstitutional
  • 2003 The congress of the Communist Party of Indian Union (Marxist-Leninist) decides to merge the party into Kanu Sanyal’s CPI(ML).
  • 2004 Russia officially ratifies the Kyoto Protocol

One Direction Debut Album

2011 “The X Factor” group One Direction release their debut album “Up All Night” in Ireland and the UK

Macapagal-Arroyo Arrested

2011 Former Filipino President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo is arrested and held at Veterans Memorial Medical Center in Quezon City under charges of electoral sabotage

  • 2011 Video game Minecraft is officially released by Mojang
  • 2012 Israeli Gaza rocket strikes kill 80 alleged terrorist targets
  • 2012 Lewis Hamilton wins the 2012 US Formula One Grand Prix
  • 2013 20 people are killed after a train collides with a minibus in Cairo, Egypt
  • 2014 Jamaica win the 2014 Caribbean Cup in football

2015 “Kangaroo Dundee” wildlife TV series premieres featuring Brolga and Roger the ripped Kangaroo on BBC Two

  • 2015 French police raid terrorist cell in Saint Denis, killing 2 including the leader of the Paris terror attacks Abdelhamid Abaaoud
  • 2015 Two female suicide bombers aged 18 and 11 blow themselves up in Kano, Nigeria, killing 15 and injuring over 100

Third Hit Single Under 18

2017 Shawn Mendes is the first singer under 18 to have three No. 1 singles on Billboard’s Adult Contemporary chart

  • 2018 American missionary John Allen Chau killed on forbidden North Sentinel Island, Bay of Bengal by one of world’s most isolated tribe
  • 2018 APEC Summit in Papa New Guinea fails to produce a joint agreement for first time in two decades after US and China clash on definition of trade

The Young Men’s Magazine

2019 Book written by Charlotte Brontë at age 14 for her toy soldiers “The Young Men’s Magazine” is bought by the Brontë Society for €600,000 at auction in Paris

  • 2019 Deforestation of Brazil’s Amazon rainforest worst since 2008, has lost 9,762 sq km (3,769 sq miles) of vegetation in 12 months according to country’s Space Agency

West Bank Settlements

2019 Secretary of State Mike Pompeo reverses US policy regarding Israeli West Bank settlements as illegal after 24 years

  • 2019 World wind speeds have risen, 3x faster since 2010 than previous decades of decline, according to Princeton study published in “Nature Climate Change”
  • 2020 Floods and landslides effect more than 3 million people, killing at least 70 in wake of Typhoon Vamco in Cagayan Province, Philippines
  • 2020 Thailand’s parliament agrees to reforms, but not to the monarchy, after massive public protests were met by tear gas and water canons
  • 2020 US COVID-19 death toll passes 250,000, recorded cases at 11.5 million, hospitalizations at 76,830 amid a country-wide surge
  • 2021 US judge exonerates Muhammad Abdul Aziz and Khalil Islam for the killing of Malcolm X in 1965, saying they were “wrongly convicted”, after 55 years [1]
  • 2022 International Bureau of Weights and Measures votes to abandon the leap second, to take effect in 2035, originally inserted in 1972 to reconcile atomic and astronomical time scales [1]
  • 2024 Russian vetoes a UK-backed ceasefire plan to end Sudan’s 19-month civil war at the UN Security Council [1]

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