The Scotsman

Now & Then The Scotsman Sessions

The Scotsman Sessions are short video performanc­es, recorded by artists all around the country & introduced by our critics. To explore the first 400 in the series, visit

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27 MARCH

1703: Russia’s Czar, Peter the Great, founded St Petersburg. 1713: Spain agreed to cede Gibraltar and Minorca to Britain. 1802: Peace of Amiens between Britain and France, which achieved complete pacificati­on of Europe. 1871: The first rugby internatio­nal was played, Scotland defeating England in Edinburgh.

1878: Britain, fearing further Russian aggression, called out reserves and sent Indian troops to Malta.

1914: The first citrated blood transfusio­n was given in a Brussels hospital. Citrate, introduced by a Belgian surgeon, A Hustin, enabled blood to be bottled without clotting.

1942: British commandos made a dawn raid on the French port of St Nazaire, in which an old destroyer, the Campbeltow­n, full of explosives, rammed the main dock gate and put it out of action for the rest of the war.

1943: Aircraft carrier HMS Dasher blew up and sank off Arran, with the loss of more than 350 crew members.

1945: The last of more than 1,000 V2 rockets that fell on Britain in the Second World War exploded at Orpington, Kent.

1961: Britain’s first women traffic wardens went on duty in Leicester. 1964: United Nations peace force under Indian General Gyani took over in Cyprus.

1964: Earthquake measuring 8.9 on the Richter scale struck Alaska, claiming 118 lives.

1966: World Cup football trophy, which had been stolen from Central Hall, Westminste­r, on 20 March, was found under a hedge in a south-east London garden by a man walking his dog.

1970: Severe earthquake struck western Turkey, killing at least 1,087 and leaving 90,000 homeless. 1977: Two aircraft collided and exploded in fog on an airstrip at Los Rodeos Airport at Tenerife, Canary Islands, with 582 deaths.

1991: Commandos stormed a Singapore Airlines jet, killing four Pakistani hijackers who had threatened to set fire to the aircraft and its 120 passengers.

1992: Rosemary Aberdour – selfstyled “Lady Aberdour” – was jailed for four years at the Old Bailey for stealing £2.7m from a hospital charity. 1994: The Eurofighte­r took its first flight in Manching, Germany. 1995: President Nelson Mandela dismissed his estranged wife Winnie from South Africa’s government.

1998: The Food and Drug Administra­tion approved Viagra for use as a treatment for male impotence.

2008: The first day of operations at Heathrow Airport’s new £4.3 billion Terminal 5 descended into farce when flights were cancelled due to a series of problems including faulty lifts, broken escalators and the complete collapse of the baggage system. 2009: The rare 29-year-old whisky Port Ellen, which comes from an abandoned distillery in Islay that has been closed for 26 years, won the award for the world’s best single malt.

2009: A school near Aberdeen banned children from taking Easter eggs due to fears over allergies. 2020: Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Health Secretary Matt Hancock tested positive for coronaviru­s.

BIRTHDAYS

Tony Banks, British musician (Genesis), 74; Mariah Carey, American singer and actress, 55; David Coulthard MBE, Scottish Formula 1 driver and television presenter, 53; Julian Glover CBE, British actor, 89; Duncan Goodhew MBE, British gold medal-winning Olympic swimmer, 67; Patrick Mccabe, Irish novelist, 69; Admiral Sir Jock Slater, First Sea Lord and Chief of Naval Staff 1995-98, 86; Quentin Tarantino, film director, 61; Daphnetodd­obe, painter,77.

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 ?? ?? The first day of operations at Heathrow Airport’s new £4.3 billion Terminal 5 descended into farce on this day in 2008
The first day of operations at Heathrow Airport’s new £4.3 billion Terminal 5 descended into farce on this day in 2008

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