Belfast Telegraph

IT HAPPENED TODAY

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NOVEMBER 10

1483: Martin Luther, German religious reformer, was born in Eisleben.

1683: George II was born in Hanover.

1775: The US Marine Corps was founded.

1871: Henry Morton Stanley, sent to Africa by his newspaper to find Scottish missionary David Livingston­e (above), finally made contact with him at Ujiji on Lake Tanganyika with the words: “Dr Livingston­e, I presume.”

1910: Edward Elgar conducted the first performanc­e of his violin concerto, played by Fritz Kreisler, in the Queen’s Hall, London. Applause was described as worthy of the victory of the Battle of Trafalgar.

1928: Hirohito was crowned Emperor of Japan. The Crown Prince, aged 27, had been regent for seven years before taking over from his sick father.

1982: Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev died of a heart attack, aged 75.

1988: George Bush (above) was elected US President.

1991: In Calcutta, a record 95,000 people watched South Africa’s return to internatio­nal cricket. They won by three wickets.

1997: British au pair Louise Woodward walked free from a court in America when judge Hiller Zobel reduced her murder conviction to manslaught­er.

ON THIS DAY LAST YEAR: Nigel Farage described outgoing US President Barack Obama as a ‘’creature’’ and a ‘’loathsome individual’’ as he suggested Donald Trump would boost ties between America and UK.

BIRTHDAYS: Albert Hall, actor, 80; Sir Tim Rice, lyricist, 73; Roland Emmerich, film director, 62; Mackenzie Phillips, actress, 58; Eddie Irvine (above), former racing driver, 52; Steve Brookstein, singer, 49; Eve, rapper and producer, 39.

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