The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

On this day

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1307: William Tell is reputed to have shot the apple off his son’s head on this day.

1558: Mary I, “Bloody Mary”, died andwas succeeded by Elizabeth I.

1796: Catherine the Great of Russia died of a stroke, aged 67.

1882: The royal astronomer witnessed an unidentifi­ed flying object from the Greenwich Royal Observator­y. Itwas described as a “strange celestial visitor – a circular object glowing green”.

1887: Field Marshal Viscount Montgomery of Alamein (Monty), who led the Eighth Army to victory in North Africa in World War II, was born in London.

1955: Anglesey became the first authority in Britain to introduce fluoride into its water supply.

1959: Two Scottish airports, Prestwick and Renfrew, became the first to offer duty-free goods in Britain.

1970: The Sun pictured its first Page Three girl, Stephanie Rahn.

1988: Franz Kafka’s manuscript of his classic novel The Trial (1925) was sold at Sotheby’s in London for £1million, a world record for a modern literary text. Kafka had died in poverty the year before.

2009: The unfinished novel The Original of Laura, by Vladimir Nabokov, was published 32 years after his death, despite him asking in his will for the manuscript to be burned.

ON THIS DAY LAST YEAR: The Church of England made history by approving legislatio­n allowing women to become bishops for the first time.

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