The Scotsman

NOW & THEN

-

November 26

1688: French king Louis XIV declared war on the Netherland­s.

1778: Captain Cook discovered Maui in the Sandwich Islands (now Hawaii).

1793: France replaced the Gregorian calendar with the Republican calendar.

1789: First national Thanksgivi­ng Day in United States.

1832: HMS Beagle, with Charles Darwin aboard, left Tahiti bound for New Zealand.

1857: First Australian parliament opened in Melbourne.

1912: Ten people died as severe south-westerly gale hit the west of Scotland. Troon suffered the worst flooding in its history, with four feet of water covering all streets in the vicinity of the Cross.

1914: HMS Bulwark blew up in Sheerness Harbour, Kent, killing 700.

1922: Howard Carter and the Earl of Carnarvon became the first men to see inside the tomb of Tutankhame­n, near Luxor, since it was sealed 3,000 years previously.

1940: Half a million Jews in Warsaw, Poland, were ordered by Nazi Germany to live within a walled ghetto.

1942: Soviet forces counteratt­acked at Stalingrad, ending the Second World War siege and forcing Germans to retreat.

1945: David Lean’s Brief Encounter, starring Trevor Howard and Celia Johnson, was released.

1949: India adopted constituti­on as federal republic within British Commonweal­th.

1966: The world’s first major tidal power station was opened at St Malo, France.

1969: The rock band Cream gave their farewell concert at the Royal Albert Hall, London.

1970: A Bolivian painter, disguised as priest, tried to kill Pope Paul in Manila, Philippine­s, but the pontiff escaped injury.

1972: Race Relations Act came into force in Britain. Employers could no longer discrimina­te on grounds of colour.

1978: Muslim religious leaders and politician­s seeking to topple Shah of Iran called general strike that virtually paralysed Iran.

1979: The Internatio­nal Olympic committee re-admitted China after 21 years.

1981: Shirley Williams became the first MP elected under SDP banner when she won the Crosby by-election.

1983: Gold bars worth £25 million were stolen from Heathrow Airport.

1987: Typhoon in Philippine­s killed 270 people and damaged or destroyed 14,000 homes.

1992: The Queen agreed to pay income tax on her personal fortune, council tax on Balmoral and Sandringha­m, and contribute more to the Royal Family budget.

2008: Woolworths, the high street retailer which had been trading since 1909, went into administra­tion.

2008: Gunmen carried out a series of coordinate­d attacks across the Indian city of Mumbai (Bombay), killing almost 200 people and injuring around 300.

2012: Ten children were killed and 15 people were injured when a Syrian government jet dropped a cluster bomb on a playground.

 ??  ?? 0 Howard Carter (right) hands over the key to the tomb of Tutankhamu­n, which he entered on this day in 1922
0 Howard Carter (right) hands over the key to the tomb of Tutankhamu­n, which he entered on this day in 1922

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom