Vero - Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries/January 7
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Vero - Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries/doc Template:Divhide
Images
Use only ONE image at a time
-
Crown Prince Akihito in 1987
-
A 19th-century woman in the Philippines
-
Akihito
-
Io
-
Europa
-
Callisto
-
Galileo Galilei
-
Guy Menzies
-
Flag of the Template:Nowrap, the first use of the Italian tricolour
-
Francis, Duke of Guise
-
Crossing of the English Channel by Blanchard and Jeffries
-
Jerry Rawlings
-
Bank of North America
Ineligible
| Blurb | Reason |
|---|---|
| 1558 – Francis, Duke of Guise, retook Calais, England's last continental possession, for France. | refimprove section |
| 1598 – Boris Godunov became the first non-Rurikid Tsar of Russia. | refimprove |
| 1785 – Frenchman Jean-Pierre Blanchard, accompanied by American John Jeffries, became the first to cross the English Channel by air, in a balloon. | Blanchard: lead too short |
| 1922 – Dáil Éireann narrowly approved the Anglo-Irish Treaty, which ended the Irish War of Independence and established the Irish Free State as a self-governing dominion within the British Empire. | Treaty appears on December 6, War appears on July 11 |
| 1924 – The International Hockey Federation, the global governing body for field hockey, was founded in Paris in response to the sport's omission from the 1924 Summer Olympics. | refimprove, date not cited |
| 1940 – Winter War: Outnumbered Finnish troops decisively defeated Soviet forces at the Battle of Raate Road. | single source |
| 1975 – The National Commission on the Role of Filipino Women was established to promote empowerment and gender equality for women in the Philippines. | refimprove |
| 1989 – Akihito became Emperor of Japan upon the death of his father, Hirohito, who became known by the posthumous name Emperor Shōwa. | refimprove section |
| 1996 – A major blizzard pounded the East Coast of the United States, killing more than 100 people. | unreferenced sections |
| 2015 – The offices of the French satirical weekly newspaper Charlie Hebdo in Paris were attacked by a branch of Al-Qaeda, leaving twelve people dead. | outdated |
| Johann Heinrich Zedler |b|1706| | Too much uncited |
Eligible
- 1327 – The Parliament of 1327, which was instrumental in the transfer of the English Crown from King Edward II to his son, Edward III, began at the Palace of Westminster.
- 1610 – Through his telescope, Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei made the first observation of Jupiter's Galilean moons: Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto, although he was not able to distinguish the first two until the following night.
- 1782 – The Bank of North America (pictured) opened in Philadelphia as the de facto first central bank of the United States.
- 1931 – Australian aviator Guy Menzies (pictured) flew from Sydney to New Zealand's West Coast, making the first solo trans-Tasman flight.
- 1948 – Air National Guard pilot Thomas Mantell, flying in pursuit of an alleged UFO, was killed when his P-51 Mustang crashed near Fort Knox, Kentucky.
- 1955 – Marian Anderson became the first African-American to perform with the Metropolitan Opera in New York.
- 1978 – An article entitled "Iran and Red and Black Colonization" was published in the newspaper Ettela'at attacking Ruhollah Khomeini, then in exile in Iraq.
- 1989 – Representatives of Iranian leader Ruhollah Khomeini delivered a letter to Mikhail Gorbachev, inviting him to consider Islam as an alternative to communism, and predicting the dissolution of the Soviet Bloc.
- 1989 – In one of the most famous upsets in FA Cup history, Sutton United, a team in the fifth tier of English league football, defeated top-tier Coventry City.
- 1993 – The Fourth Republic of Ghana was inaugurated with Jerry Rawlings, the country's former military ruler, as president.
- 2010 – In Nag Hammadi, Egypt, Muslim gunmen opened fire on a crowd of Coptic Christians leaving church after attending Christmas Liturgy, killing eight of them, as well as one Muslim bystander.
- 2012 – A hot air balloon flight from Carterton, New Zealand, collided with a power line while landing, causing it to crash and killing all eleven people on board.
- Born/died this day: | Charles I of Anjou |d|1285| Nicholas Hilliard |d|1619| Joseph Dennie |d|1812| E. Louisa Mather |b|1815| Albert Bierstadt |b|1830| Eliezer Ben-Yehuda |b|1858| Anna Murray Vail |b|1863| Edmund Barton |d|1920| James Humphreys |b|1930| Li Shengjiao |b|1935| Raila Odinga |b|1945| Juan Gabriel |b|1950|Helena Válková |b|1951| Dorothea Douglass Lambert Chambers |d|1960| Nick Clegg |b|1967| Lewis Hamilton |b|1985| Zara Cisco Brough |d|1988| Caster Semenya |b|1991| Amanda Asay |d|2022
Notes
- Simon Marius appears on January 5, so Galilean moons should not appear in the same year
January 7: Christmas (Eastern Christianity; Julian calendar); Victory over Genocide Day in Cambodia (1979) Template:Main page image/OTD
- 1797 – The Italian tricolour was first adopted as an official flag by the government of the Cispadane Republic.
- 1904 – The Marconi International Marine Communication Company specified CQD (audio featured) as the distress signal to be used by its operators.
- 1939 – French physicist Marguerite Perey identified francium, the last element to be discovered in nature rather than by synthesis.
- 1979 – The People's Army of Vietnam captured Phnom Penh, marking the end of large-scale fighting in the Cambodian–Vietnamese War.
- 2020 – After 253 days without an operational government, a second round of investiture votes produced Spain's first coalition government since the Second Republic.