ON THIS day
1430 Joan of Arc falls off her horse during a battle and is captured by forces of the Duke of Burgundy, an ally of the English invaders of France.
1498 Religious reformer and pioneer of democracy Girolamo Savonarola, a Dominican monk, is hanged and then burnt in Florence after being accused of heresy.
1568 William of Orange’s allies defeat the Spanish at Heiligerlee in Holland, starting the Revolt of the Netherlands.
1618 The Defenestration of Prague, a Bohemian revolt against the Habsburg Emperor, begins the Thirty Years War.
1785 US inventor and statesman Benjamin Franklin reveals his invention of spectacles of two thicknesses, the first bifocals, in a letter from France sent to a friend in London, George Whatley.
1873 Canada’s Mounties, then called the North West Mounted Police, is established.
1892 Frederic Deeming, 38, who murdered two wives and four of his own children, burying their bodies under cement, is hanged in Melbourne. Deeming was a serial bigamist and conman.
1912 US architect Walter Burley Griffin’s entry No. 29 is announced as winner of the international competition to design Australia’s new national capital.
1934 Lovers, robbers, and murderers Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow (pictured) are shot dead by police in Louisiana.
1951 China formally annexes Tibet as an autonomous region, giving rise to a Tibetan independence movement led by the Dalai Lama.
1991 Prolific historian of Australia Manning Clark, 76, dies in Canberra.
2010 The Duchess of York is exposed taking cash for access to ex-husband Prince Andrew from a London reporter posing as an Indian businessman.