Waikato Times

Today in History

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330 – Constantin­ople is dedicated as the new capital of the Roman empire. It was named after the Emperor Constantin­e and built over the ancient city of Byzantium.

1618 – Haeuik Claezoon Van Hillegom, captain of the Dutch ship Zeewolf, records that he has sighted the coast of what is later to be named Australia.

1812 – British Prime Minister Spencer Perceval is assassinat­ed by a bankrupt broker, John Bellingham, as he enters the House of Commons.

1945 – New Zealand soldier Charles Upham, left, receives the first of his two VCs – for outstandin­g gallantry and leadership during the 1941 Battle of Crete – from George VI at Buckingham Palace.

1981 – Jamaican reggae star Bob Marley dies of cancer in a Miami hospital, aged 36.

1985 – A fire in the grandstand of Bradford City’s football stadium in northern England kills 50 fans.

1998 – The first euro coin is minted in France.

2001 – Douglas Adams, author of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, dies in Santa Barbara, California, aged 49.

2007 – North and South Korea adopt a military agreement enabling the first train crossing of their heavily armed border in more than half a century; Samoa’s King Malietoa Tanumafili II dies aged 94.

2009 – Pope Benedict XVI confronts the dark history of his native Germany on the first day of his trip to Israel, shaking the hands of six Holocaust survivors.

2010 – Conservati­ve leader David Cameron becomes Britain’s youngest prime minister in almost 200 years.

Birthdays

Baron Munchhause­n, German storytelle­r (1720-97); Irving Berlin, Russian-born US songwriter (1888-1989); Salvador Dali, Spanish artist (1904-89); Eric Burdon, UK singer (1941-); Andres Iniesta, Spanish footballer (1984-).

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