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Historical Events on October 23


  • 425 Valentinian III is elevated to Roman Emperor, at the age of 6
  • 502 The Synodus Palmaris, called by Gothic King Theodoric the Great, discharges Pope Symmachus of all charges, thus ending the schism of Antipope Laurentius
  • 585 Burgundy king Guntram opens synod of Mâcon (Mastico)
  • 787 Byzantine empress Irene recovers Iconoclastic cult at Nicaea
  • 1086 Battle of az-Zallaqah: Almoravid army of Yusuf ibn Tashfin defeats the forces of Castilian King Alfonso VI
  • 1091 Tornado (possible T8/F4) strikes the heart of London killing two and demolishing the wooden London Bridge (OS 17 Oct) [1]
  • 1157 Battle of Grathe Heath ends the civil war in Denmark. King Sweyn III is killed and Valdemar I restores the country.
  • 1229 Otto II becomes earl of Gelre

Coronation of King Charles V

1520 Holy Roman Emperor Charles V crowned King of Germany

  • 1588 Remnants of Medina Sidonia’s Spanish Armada returns to Santander, Spain
  • 1641 Outbreak of the Irish Rebellion of 1641 – Catholic uprising in Ulster

Battle of Edgehill

1642 Battle of Edgehill (Warwickshire): King Charles I beat English parliamentarian forces

  • 1644 Sea battle of Fehmarn Sont: Adm Thijssen beats Denen
  • 1668 Jews of Barbados forbidden to engage in retail trade

Meal Tub Plot

1679 Meal Tub Plot against James Duke of York (future James II of England)

Massachusetts Bay Charter Revoked

1684 English King Charles II revokes the Massachusetts Bay Colony charter due to repeated violations of the charter’s terms including trading with other countries and running an illegal mint

  • 1690 Revolt in Haarlem after a ban on smoking in public
  • 1694 American colonial forces, led by Sir William Phipps, fail to seize Quebec
  • 1694 Siege of Spanish-held city of Ceuta on the north African coast begun by Moroccan forces – will be the longest siege in history lasting 26 years
  • 1702 Battle of Bay of Vigo: Dutch & English fleet destroy & occupy Spanish silver fleet & French squadron

1731 Library of manuscript collector Robert Cotton is badly damaged in a fire in London, lost are one of only two surviving copies of King John‘s Magna Carta (1215) and Asser’s biography of King Alfred [1]

War of Jenkins’ Ear

1739 War of Jenkins’ Ear starts: British Prime Minister, Robert Walpole, reluctantly declares war on Spain

  • 1760 First Jewish prayer books printed in North America
  • 1790 Slaves revolt in Haiti (later suppressed)
  • 1805 Sailing ship “Aeneus” sinks off Newfoundland killing 340
  • 1813 The Pacific Fur Company trading post in Astoria, Oregon is turned over to the rival British North West Company (the fur trade in the Pacific Northwest was dominated for the next three decades by the United Kingdom).
  • 1814 One of the first modern plastic surgeries in the West is performed by Joseph Carpue on a soldier’s nose in England using Indian techniques
  • 1819 First ship sails through the Erie Canal from Rome, New York, to Utica, New York
  • 1850 First US National Women’s Rights convention opens in Brinley Hall, Worcester, Massachusetts
  • 1853 Maastricht-Aken railway in Netherlands opens
  • 1854 English newspaper “The Times” gives precise British positions in Crimea during Crimean War
  • 1864 Battle of Westport, Missouri: Union General Samuel R Curtis defeats Confederate General Stirling Price
  • 1867 72 Senators are summoned by Royal Proclamation to serve as the first members of the Canadian Senate.
  • 1871 Replacement yacht Sappho (US) beats Livonia (UK) by 25:27 in race 5 to win 3rd America’s Cup off Newport, RI 4-1; original defender Columbia damaged so misses races 4 & 5
  • 1876 New Orleans Mint reopens as an assay office
  • 1888 Pelham Bay Park in Bronx vested
  • 1893 C. Dazey’s “In Old Kentucky” premieres in NYC (27 seasons)
  • 1905 Edward Milton Royle’s play “Squaw Man” premieres in NYC
  • 1910 Blanche Scott becomes the first woman to fly at a public event in the US in Fort Wayne, Indiana
  • 1910 Ritz Hotel in Madrid opens with 200 rooms and 100 bathtubs

1911 First aerial reconnaissance mission is flown by an Italian pilot over Turkish lines during the Italo-Turkish War

1915 An estimated 25,000 supporters in a women’s suffrage march on New York’s Fifth Ave, led by Anna Howard Shaw and Carrie Chapman Catt, founder of the League of Women Voters

  • 1915 First national horseshoe throwing championship in Kellerton, Iowa
  • 1917 1st Infantry division “Big Red One” shoots 1st US shot in WW I
  • 1919 Orchestra Hall, designed by C. Howard Crane opens in Detroit, Michigan; home of the Detroit Symphony, 1919-39 and 1989 to present, also known as The Paradise Theater, featuring top jazz performers and films, 1941-51
  • 1919 Romberg & Atteridge’s musical “Passing Show” premieres in NYC
  • 1920 African demonstrators shot in Port Elizabeth, South Africa
  • 1921 Green Bay Packers play 1st APFA (forerunner to NFL) game; beat Minneapolis Marines, 7-6 at Hagemeister Park, Green Bay, WI
  • 1921 Leos Janacek’s opera “Kat’a Kabanova” premieres in Brno
  • 1922 Channing Pollock’s play “Fool” premieres in NYC
  • 1923 A US patent (No. 1471465) is issued to American inventor Sebastian Hinton for a playground climbing structure popularly known as “monkey bars” [1]
  • 1923 Legendary Yankees slugger Babe Ruth makes a postseason exhibition appearance in a rival Giants uniform as NY beats Baltimore Orioles, 9-0 in a benefit game for former Giants owner John Day
  • 1927 Town of Netanya, Israel founded by Nathan Strauss

The Fred Allen Show

1932 Radio comedy program “The Fred Allen Show” premieres

Dillinger Gang Robbery

1933 John Dillinger and his gang rob Central National Bank, in Greencastle, Indiana. They take $75, 000.

  • 1934 Jean Piccard and Jeanette Ridlon attain a record balloon height of 10.9 miles (17.5 km) over Lake Erie
  • 1935 American mobsters Dutch Schultz, Abe Landau, Otto Berman, and Bernard “Lulu” Rosencrantz are fatally shot by organized crime hitmen at a saloon in Newark, New Jersey, what becomes known as “The Chophouse Massacre” to prevent them from killing the US Attorney prosecuting Schultz for tax evasion, what becomes known as “The Chophouse Massacre”
  • 1935 Chicago Cubs catcher Gabby Hartnett selected NL MVP

King’s Third Term

1935 Mackenzie King is elected as Prime Minister of Canada for the third time

  • 1942 All 12 passengers and crewmen aboard an American Airlines DC-3 airliner killed when it is struck by a U.S. Army Air Forces bomber near Palm Springs, California. Amongst the victims is composer Ralph Rainger (“Thanks for the Memory”)
  • 1942 During WWII, Britain launches major offensive at El Alamein, Egypt
  • 1942 First ships of invasion fleet to Morocco leave Norfolk
  • 1942 German units go through Red October factory in Stalingrad
  • 1943 First Jewish transport out of Rome reaches extermination camp Birkenau
  • 1944 Battle of Gulf of Leyte begins – largest naval battle of WWII near the Philippines
  • 1944 First Central Kitchen opens in Amsterdam

PM Enver Hoxha

1944 General Enver Hoxha becomes interim Prime Minister of Albania – retains the leadership until his death in 1985

  • 1944 Soviet army invades Hungary
  • 1944 Vice Admiral Takeo Kurita’s flagship the heavy cruiser Atago sinks during the Battle of Leyte Gulf

Robinson Signs with Royals

1945 American baseball player Jackie Robinson signs contract with Montreal Royals, minor league farm team of Brooklyn Dodgers

  • 1946 UN General Assembly 2nd session convenes (1st NYC-Flushing Meadows)
  • 1947 Husband and wife Carl Cori and Gerty Cori are the first spouses to be awarded joint Nobel Prizes in Physiology or Medicine for their discovery of the catalytic conversion of glycogen, alongside Bernardo Alberto Houssay
  • 1947 NAACP petition on racism “An Appeal to the World” presented to UN

Executive Order No. 355

1950 Filipino President Elpidio Quirino issues Executive Order No. 355 replacing the National Land Settlement Administration with Land Settlement Development Corporation (LASEDECO)

Graphitizing and Non-Graphitizing Carbons

1951 English chemist Rosalind Franklin first identifies the two types of carbon produced by temperature, in paper published by the Royal Society [1]

Limelight

1952 Charlie Chaplin‘s “Limelight”, starring himself and Claire Bloom, with an appearance by Buster Keaton, premieres in New York City; Not released in Los Angeles until 1972, winning Chaplin his only competitive Academy Award for original score

  • 1953 France grants Laos’ sovereignty
  • 1953 German FR applies to NATO
  • 1953 WTRF TV channel 7 in Wheeling-Steubenville, WV (CBS) 1st broadcast
  • 1954 Britain, France & US agree to end occupation of Germany
  • 1954 Pakistan Governor-General Ghoelan Mohammed disbands parliament
  • 1954 WSAU TV channel 7 in Wausau, WI (CBS) begins broadcasting
  • 1955 Dominican Professional Baseball League moves to winter play for first time
  • 1956 First video recording on magnetic tape is televised coast-to-coast
  • 1956 Thousands of Hungarians protest against the government and Soviet occupation (The Hungarian Revolution is crushed on November 4)
  • 1957 First test firing of Vanguard satellite launch vehicle, TV-3
  • 1958 De Gaulle offers Algerians defiance “peace of the brave”

1958 The Smurfs first appear in the story “Johan and Peewit” by Belgian cartoonist Peyo

  • 1958 The Springhill Mine Bump – underground earthquake traps 174 miners in No. 2 colliery at Springhill, Nova Scotia, deepest coal mine in North America. By 1st November rescuers had dug out 100 victims, with death toll at 74.
  • 1959 Chinese troops move into India, 17 die
  • 1961 USSR performs nuclear test at Novaya Zemlya USSR
  • 1962 USAF Major Robert A Rushworth takes X-15 to 40,800m
  • 1962 WCIV TV channel 4 in Charleston, South Carolina (NBC) begins broadcasting
  • 1963 New York Yankees name Yogi Berra as manager, replacing Ralph Houk who becomes the team’s general manager
  • 1964 Czech gymnast Věra Čáslavská wins the balance beam at the Tokyo Olympics; her 3rd gold medal of the Games with individual all-round and vault victories

First Non-Japanese Olympic Judo Champion

1964 Dutch 10th dan judoka Anton Geesink wins Open gold medal in the first ever Olympic judo competition in Tokyo; prevents clean sweep of the gold medals by Japan

Frazier Wins Gold

1964 Future undisputed world heavyweight boxing champion Joe Frazier dominates German Hans Huber for an easy points win and the Olympic heavyweight gold medal in Tokyo

  • 1964 Hungary beats Czechoslovakia 2-1 to win the men’s football gold medal at the Tokyo Olympics
  • 1964 Japan beats the Soviet Union 3-0 to claim the inaugural Olympic women’s volleyball gold medal in Tokyo; undefeated in 6-team round robin competition
  • 1964 Japanese gymnast Yukio Endo wins the parallel bars gold medal in the Tokyo Olympics; his 3rd gold medal of the Games (individual all-round and team); 4th career gold (1960, 64)

Latynina Wins 9th Gold

1964 Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina wins the floor exercise gold medal at the Tokyo Olympics; her second gold of the Games (team) and career 9th (1956, 1960, 1964), a gymnastics record

  • 1964 Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia finish 8-1 in inaugural Olympic men’s volleyball competition in Tokyo; Soviets win 10 team round robin on count back of sets won-lost
  • 1964 Time magazine uses the term “op art” for the first time to describe the optical illusions created by abstract art
  • 1966 Australian Jack Brabham is first to win F1 World Drivers Championship and International Cup for Constructors Championship in the same year; 2nd in season ending Mexican Grand Prix at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez
  • 1967 NJ Americans (later NY/NJ Nets) play 1st ABA game
  • 1968 American swimmer Kaye Hall sets a world record 1:06.2 to beat Canadian Elaine Tanner by 0.5s and win the 100m backstroke gold medal at the Mexico City Olympics
  • 1970 Charles Haughey and two others are found not guilty of illegal arms importation by a Dublin jury; the ‘Arms Trial’ began on 28 May 1970
  • 1970 Gary Gabelich sets an auto speed record of 622.4 mph (1,001 km/h)
  • 1971 Three Catholic civilians are shot dead by the British Army during an attempted robbery in Newry, County Down
  • 1971 Two female members of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) are shot dead by the British Army in the Lower Falls area of Belfast
  • 1971 WXLT (now WWSB) TV channel 40 in Sarasota-Bradenton, FL (ABC) begins

I’m Still in Love with You

1972 “I’m Still in Love with You” 5th studio album by Al Green is released (Billboard Album of the Year 1973)

  • 1972 Access credit cards introduced in Great Britain
  • 1972 Loyalist paramilitaries carry out raid on an Ulster Defence Regiment
  • 1972 WNJS TV channel 23 in Camden, NJ (PBS) begins broadcasting
  • 1973 19-year-old American tennis star Chris Evert retains her WTA Tour Championship at Boca Raton, Florida; beats Nancy Richey Gunter 6-3, 6-3 in the final
  • 1973 Arab oil embargo extended to the Netherlands
  • 1973 UN’s revised International Telecommunication Convention adopted
  • 1973 Yankee GM & President Lee MacPhail named AL president
  • 1974 Chicago Cubs trade 6-time MLB All Star outfielder Billy Williams to Oakland A’s for second baseman Manny Trillo and 2 pitchers
  • 1974 Lake Isaac in Cleveland Metroparks’ Big Creek Reservation dedicated
  • 1975 Battle between Cuba & South Africa troops in Angola
  • 1975 English rock star Elton John receives a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame
  • 1975 Islander Glenn Resch’s 5th shut-out opponent-Flyers 3-0
  • 1975 Nearly all women in Iceland (90%) stop work to protest the gender pay gap and the unequal distribution of unpaid labor, shutting down the country for a day

1977 Despite not driving in season ending Japanese Grand Prix, Austrian Niki Lauda wins his second Formula 1 World Drivers Championship by 17 points from Jody Scheckter of South Africa

  • 1977 Paleontologist Elso Barghoorn announces the discovery of a 3.4 billion-year-old single-celled fossil, one of the earliest life forms on Earth
  • 1977 Panamanians vote 2:1 to approve new Canal treaties
  • 1978 CBS raises LP prices to $8.98
  • 1978 China & Japan formally ends 4 decades of dissension
  • 1978 Punk rock singer Sid Vicious attempts suicide while at Riker’s Detention Center in NYC

Premier Tikhonov

1980 Nikolai Tikhonov succeeds Alexei Kosygin as Premier of the Soviet Union, due to illness

  • 1981 “Concerto for Orchestra” by American composer Roger Sessions premieres with Seiji Ozawa conducting the Boston Symphony Orchestra
  • 1981 US national debt hits $1 trillion
  • 1983 400,000 demonstrate in Brussels, against cruise missile
  • 1983 Suicide terrorist truck bomb kills 243 US personnel in Beirut
  • 1984 Chicago Cubs Rick Sutcliffe, selected as a unanimous choice as NL Cy Young
  • 1984 NBC airs BBC footage of Ethiopian famine
  • 1984 STS 51-A launch vehicle moves to launch pad

Haring’s Berlin Mural

1986 Artist Keith Haring commissioned to paint a mural on the Berlin wall by Checkpoint Charlie Museum 300 metres long

  • 1987 Dutch government gives Fokker’s Aircraft Ÿ212 million credit
  • 1987 France performs nuclear test at Mururoa Atoll
  • 1987 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site
  • 1987 US Senate rejects Robert Bork’s nomination to the Supreme Court by a bipartisan vote of 58-42
  • 1988 Boston Celtics play Spain in Madrid
  • 1989 Browns’ Bernie Kosar sets club record with a 97-yard TD pass
  • 1989 Hungary proclaims itself a republic & declares communist rule ended
  • 1989 US 62nd manned space mission STS 34 (Atlantis 5) returns from space
  • 1989 William Nicholson’s “Shadowlands” premieres in London
  • 1990 Iraq announces release of 330 French hostages

Emperor Stands on Chinese Soil

1992 Emperor Akihito becomes the first Emperor of Japan to stand on Chinese soil

  • 1993 Paramilitia kills 22 demonstrators at Bijbihara in Indian-controlled Kashmir
  • 1993 Seven people killed by IRA bomb attack in Belfast
  • 1995 “The MacNeil-Lehrer Report” becomes “The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer”, upon Robert MacNeil’s retirement (currently known as “PBS NewsHour”) on PBS
  • 1997 “Triumph of Love” opens at Royale Theater NYC
  • 1997 At 6:11 AM San Francisco experiences a power blackout due to sabotage
  • 1997 Dow Jones Industrial Average drops 186.88 points
  • 1997 Les Alexander, owner of Houston Rockets buys NHL’s Edmonton Oilers

Wye River Memorandum

1998 Israeli-Palestinian Conflict: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian Chairman Yasser Arafat agree to the Wye River Memorandum, resuming implementation of the stalled Oslo II Accord which established a level of self-government for Palestine; signed at the White House, In Washington D.C.

  • 2000 “Monday Night Miracle”, down 30-7 at the end of the third quarter, New York Jets pull together an improbable comeback with 4 touchdowns and a field goal in the fourth quarter, eventually defeating the Miami Dolphins 40-37 in overtime
  • 2001 Apple releases the iPod
  • 2001 Provisional Irish Republican Army of Northern Ireland commences disarmament following peace talks
  • 2002 Moscow Theatre Siege begins: Chechen rebels seize the House of Culture theater in Moscow and take approximately 700 theater-goers hostage
  • 2004 A powerful earthquake and its aftershocks hit Niigata prefecture, northern Japan, killing 35 people, injuring 2,200, and leaving 85,000 homeless or evacuated.

Irreplaceable

2006 “Irreplaceable” single released by Beyonce (Soul Train Music Awards Best R&B/Soul Single 2007, Billboard Song of the Year 2007)

Raising Sand

2007 Rounder Records releases “Raising Sand”, a collaborative album by American bluegrass singer Alison Krauss and British rock vocalist Robert Plant; tops the chart in Norway, peaks at #2 in US, UK, and Sweden

  • 2008 Joe Sakic scores his final career goal (#625) against the Edmonton Oilers
  • 2009 The UK markets had contracted by 0.4% in the third quarter against what was expected to be a period of growth, as a result of unexpectedly poor performance by the service sector
  • 2009 The United Nations “Rotterdam Rules” convention regulating international maritime carriage of goods is ratified with its twentieth signature.
  • 2011 7th Rugby World Cup Final, Eden Park, Auckland: Tournament favourites New Zealand edge France, 8-7; crowd 61,079
  • 2011 A powerful 7.2 magnitude earthquake strikes Van Province, Turkey, killing 582 people and injuring thousands.
  • 2012 12 people are killed and 40 are injured in a hospital fire in Tainan, Taiwan

Hello

2015 Adele releases her single “Hello,” becomes the first song with more than a million downloads in its first week

  • 2018 European Commission rejects Italy’s budget, first country to be rejected

Bohemian Rhapsody

2018 Freddie Mercury bio film “Bohemian Rhapsody” directed by Bryan Singer, starring Rami Malek (Best Actor Academy Awards 2019) premieres in London

  • 2018 Megyn Kelly is criticized after making comments supporting blackface on her NBC show
  • 2018 Microplastics found in human stools for the first time by Austrian scientists
  • 2018 The world’s oldest intact shipwreck, an ancient Greek vessel 2,400 years old, is found by archaeologists at the bottom of the Black Sea

Khashoggi Murder

2018 Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan rejects Saudi claim journalist Jamal Khashoggi killed accidentally, says it was premeditated murder

Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge

2018 World’s longest sea-crossing bridge, the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge at 55 km, is opened by Chinese President Xi Jinping

  • 2019 All Star point guard Kyrie Irving pours in 50 points, setting a new NBA record for points on debut with a new team as his Brooklyn Nets go down 127-126 at home to the Minnesota Timberwolves
  • 2019 Google’s research lab claims it achieved quantum supremacy by performing a calculation in three minutes that would take a supercomputer 10,000 years
  • 2019 Hong Kong Legislative Council scraps the extradition bill that sparked months of protests and unrest
  • 2019 Lorry containing 39 bodies of Vietnamese nationals found in Essex, England, man arrested for people smuggling and murder

Letter To You

2020 Columbia Records releases Bruce Springsteen‘s 20th studio album “Letter To You”, recorded with the E Street Band

The Queen’s Gambit

2020 Netflix releases miniseries “The Queen’s Gambit” starring Anya Taylor-Joy – 1st streaming show to win Emmy for Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series

  • 2021 Capture of Colombia’s most-wanted drug lord, Dairo Antonio Usuga ‘Otoniel’, in Colombia’s Uraba region, announced live on TV [1]
  • 2022 Brock Purdy plays against the Kansas City Chiefs, throwing for 66 yards and an interception
  • 2022 Xi Jinping secures record third term as general secretary of the Chinese Communist Party with a new seven-member Politburo Standing Committee, at the 20th National Party Congress in Beijing [1]
  • 2023 ‘Superfog’ conditions near New Orleans cause a motorway pile-up involving 158 vehicles, causing seven deaths [1]
  • 2024 French woman Gisèle Pelicot speaks in court in Avignon against her husband, accused of drugging and arranging other men to rape her, saying “it’s not for us to have shame – it’s for them” [1]
  • 2024 Tropical storm Trami / Kristine makes landfall in Divilacan, Philippines, creating severe flooding that kills at least 130 people [1]

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