The Post

Today in History

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1182 – The high altar of Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris is consecrate­d.

1536 – Queen Anne Boleyn is beheaded outside the Tower of London on charges including adultery, incest and treason.

1649 – England is declared a Commonweal­th by an act of Parliament, making it a republic for the next 11 years.

1897 – Oscar Wilde is freed from

Reading jail after two years of hard labour.

1930 – White women in South Africa are granted the right to vote. 1935 – T.E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia) dies from injuries suffered in a motorcycle accident six days earlier. He was 46.

1958 – French West African states decide to form a federation within the French community.

1964 – UN Security Council calls for an end to all foreign interventi­on in the Congo, a ceasefire and withdrawal of mercenarie­s. 1987 – The attempted hijacking of an Air New Zealand plane at Nadi airport in Fiji is foiled when a cabin crew member hits the hijacker on the head with a whisky bottle. 1997 – China announces stronger restrictio­ns on the internet, aiming to curtail the use of email and the worldwide web among dissidents. 2018 – Prince Harry marries Meghan Markle, left, at Windsor Castle. They are given the titles of Duke and Duchess of Sussex. 2020 – WHO member states agree to set up an inquiry into the global response to the Covid-19 pandemic, including looking at the WHO itself.

Birthdays

Ho Chi Minh, Vietnamese politician (1890-1969); Malcolm X, US activist (1925-65); Pol Pot, Cambodian dictator (1925-98); Pete Townshend, UK musician (1945-); Grace Jones, Jamaican singer/actor (1948-); Victoria Wood, UK screenwrit­er/ comedian (1953-2016); Jodi Picoult, US author (1966-); Amy Adams, NZ politician (1971-); Andrew Johns, Australian league player (1974-).

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