The Scotsman

NOW & THEN

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FEBRUARY 7

1301: First Prince of Wales created – Edward of Caernarvon later became King Edward II. 1912: The ice-cream cornet was introduced in Britain.

1922: Foot-and-mouth disease swept through Britain, causing thousands of cattle to be slaughtere­d.

1928: An amended version of the Book Of Common Prayer was approved by the Church of England. It included sexual equality in the wedding service. 1940: Walt Disney’s Pinocchio had its world premiere.

1941: The British captured Benghazi, Libya.

1944: German forces began an offensive against the Anzio bridgehead in Italy.

1947: British proposal for dividing Palestine into Arab and Jewish zones with administra­tion as trusteeshi­p was rejected by Arabs and Jews.

1947: Main group of Dead Sea Scrolls discovered.

1962: Coal mine explosion in Saarbrueck­en, Germany, killed 298 miners.

1969: Nigerian planes bombed and strafed a crowded market in village in secessioni­st Biafra, killing more than 200 people.

1971: US Apollo 14 astronauts sped toward splashdown in Pacific Ocean after their visit to the Moon.

1974: Grenada, in the Windward Isles, a British colony since 1783, became a fully independen­t state within the Commonweal­th. 1976: Two women made sporting history: Joan Bazely became the first woman football referee of an all-male match at Croydon, and Diana Thorne became the first woman jockey to win under National Hunt Rules on Ben Ruler at Stratford.

1984: Bruce Mccandless, from Challenger, became the first person to walk in space without being attached to his spacecraft. 1986: Haiti’s president-for-life, Jean-claude Duvalier, went into exile, ending 29-year dynasty in the Caribbean republic.

1986: Lindy Chamberlai­n, the mother convicted in the “dingo baby” case, was freed in Australia when new evidence emerged to support her innocence. 1989: River Ness burst its banks, flooding parts of Inverness and wrecking the 127-yearold railway bridge over the river. 1991: The IRA launched a mortar bomb attack on 10 Downing Street from a van in Whitehall. One of the bombs blasted a hole in the back garden, shattering

the window of the room in which John Major and his war cabinet were meeting. No-one was hurt. 1995: Allan Stewart resigned as Scottish Officer industry minister over a pick-axe incident with M77 protesters.

1999: Crown Prince Abdullah became the King of Jordan on the death of his father, King Hussein.

2008: The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, faced demands for his resignatio­n after calling for parts of Islamic law, or sharia, including aspects of marriage and financial laws, to be introduced in Britain.

2009: Across the Australian state of Victoria, bushfires, which were started deliberate­ly, raged for over a week and caused more than 200 deaths. The fires destroyed almost 2,000 homes.

 ?? ?? ↑ A young women enjoys an ice-cream cornet, introduced to the UK today in 1912, on the beach in 1939
↑ A young women enjoys an ice-cream cornet, introduced to the UK today in 1912, on the beach in 1939

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