The Scotsman

NOW & THEN

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15 OCTOBER

1520: King Henry VIII ordered bowling alleys to be installed at the Palace of Whitehall.

1582: Many Catholic countries changed over to the Gregorian calendar and skipped ten days.

1705: The British fleet, under the command of Lord Peterborou­gh, occupied Barcelona.

1815: Napoleon Bonaparte arrived on the island of St Helena to begin his exile.

1827: Charles Darwin was admitted to Christ’s College, Cambridge.

1839: Queen Victoria and Prince Albert were betrothed. She proposed to him and confided to her diary: “It was a nervous thing to do, but Albert could not propose to the Queen of England. He would never have presumed to take such a liberty.”

1851: The Great Exhibition at Crystal Palace at London’s Hyde Park closed after five months.

1851: Gold was discovered in Melbourne, Australia.

1880: The building of Cologne Cathedral was completed, 633 years after it had begun.

1894: Alfred Dreyfus was arrested in France on treason charges.

1895: The first motor show in Britain was held in Tunbridge Wells.

1915: HMS Hawke was sunk off the east coast of Scotland by submarine action and more than 400 of her crew perished.

1917: Spy Mata Hari was executed by firing squad in Paris, having been found guilty of espionage for the Germans.

1924: US president Calvin Coolidge declared the Statue of Liberty a national monument.

1928: German dirigible Graf Zeppelin made first commercial flight across Atlantic, landing at Lakehurst, New Jersey, US.

1928: The voting age for women was reduced from 30 to 21 in Britain, equal with men.

1937: The Ernest Hemingway novel To Have and Have Not was published.

1940: A 500lb bomb hit Broadcasti­ng House, London, killing seven people. Bruce Belfrage was reading the news at the time, and paused for only a second before continuing.

1940: The Great Dictator, a satirical movie starring Charlie Chaplin, was released.

1945: Pierre Laval, French leader of Vichy government’s collaborat­ion with the Germans, was executed for treason.

1962: King Olav V of Norway arrived in Edinburgh on first royal state visit to Scotland since the Union of the Crowns.

1987: A hurricane killed 18, destroyed millions of trees and caused estimated £300 million of damage to buildings, mainly in south-east England.

1990: Mikhail Gorbachev was awarded Nobel Peace Prize.

1993: Nelson Mandela and South African president FW de Klerk were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for their efforts to dismantle apartheid.

1995: There were fresh demands for boxing to be banned after Scottish bantamweig­ht champion James Murray died in hospital from injuries he received in a British title fight in Glasgow two days earlier.

2011: Legoland Florida, the world’s largest Legoland theme park, was opened.

2012: Hilary Mantel won the Man Booker Prize for her novel Bring Up The Bodies.

 ??  ?? 0 The Great Dictator, a satirical movie starring Charlie Chaplin, was released on this day in 1940.
0 The Great Dictator, a satirical movie starring Charlie Chaplin, was released on this day in 1940.

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