Vero - Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries/May 11
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Vero - Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries/doc Template:Divhide
Images
Use only ONE image at a time
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Head of Constantine the Great
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Mosaic of Constantine the Great
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Tapa Tchermoeff
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Deep Blue
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Crossing of the Blue Mountains
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Artist depiction of Wham Paymaster Robbery
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Flag of Minnesota
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HMS Beagle
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Spencer Perceval
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Robert Gray
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Frontispiece of the Diamond Sutra
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Cast of a 2011 production of Cats
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Shireen Abu Akleh
Ineligible
| Blurb | Reason |
|---|---|
| 330 – The city of Byzantium was consecrated as Nova Roma, which became known as Constantinople, the new capital of the Roman Empire under Emperor Constantine the Great. | refimprove |
| 1647 – Peter Stuyvesant arrived in New Amsterdam to replace Willem Kieft as Director-General of New Netherland, the Dutch colonial settlement in present-day New York City. | trivial "in popular culture" examples |
| 1792 – American sea captain Robert Gray became the first known explorer of European descent to navigate the Columbia River in the Pacific Northwest. | unreliable sources |
| 1867 – The major powers of Europe signed the Treaty of London to resolve a crisis over the political status of Luxembourg between France and Prussia. | Too much uncited |
| 1918 – Tapa Tchermoeff became the only Prime Minister of the short-lived Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus. | Tchermoeff: no footnotes; Republic: refimprove |
| 1946 – The United Malays National Organisation, today Malaysia's largest political party, was founded, originally to oppose the constitutional framework of the Malayan Union. | multiple issues |
| 1949 – Siam was officially renamed Thailand, a name unofficially in use since 1939. | refimprove, original research, date not in article, section too long |
| 1960 – Israeli Mossad agents captured Adolf Eichmann, a Nazi leader and fugitive war criminal who was sometimes referred to as "the architect of the Holocaust", hiding in Argentina. | appears on December 15 |
| 1985 – During an association football match between Bradford City and Lincoln City in Bradford, England, a flash fire consumed one side of the Valley Parade stadium, killing 56 attendees. | refimprove sections |
| 1996 – A severe blizzard on Mount Everest caused the deaths of eight climbers, contributing to that year becoming the deadliest in the mountain's history at the time. | lots of CN tags (12) |
| 2022 – Shireen Abu Akleh (pictured) was killed by Israel Defense Forces in Jenin refugee camp. | Four orange tags. |
Eligible
- 1745 – War of the Austrian Succession: French forces defeated those of the Pragmatic Allies at the Battle of Fontenoy in the Austrian Netherlands in present-day Belgium.
- 1812 – Spencer Perceval was shot in the lobby of the House of Commons, becoming the only British prime minister to be assassinated.
- 1813 – William Lawson, Gregory Blaxland and William Wentworth departed westward from Sydney on an expedition to become the first confirmed Europeans to cross the Blue Mountains (depicted).
- 1858 – Minnesota was carved out of the eastern half of the Minnesota Territory and admitted as the 32nd U.S. state.
- 1880 – A land dispute between the Southern Pacific Railroad and settlers in Hanford, California, turned deadly when a gun battle broke out, leaving seven dead.
- 1894 – In response to a 28-percent wage cut, 4,000 Pullman Palace Car Company workers went on strike in Illinois, bringing rail traffic west of Chicago to a halt.
- 1910 – Glacier National Park was established in the U.S. state of Montana.
- 1928 – After a week-long standoff punctuated by military clashes, Japanese forces captured the city of Jinan, Shandong in China.
- 1963 – African Americans rioted in Birmingham, Alabama, in response to two bombings, perceiving local police to be complicit with the perpetrators.
- 1981 – Andrew Lloyd Webber's Cats, the first megamusical, opened at the New London Theatre.
- 1997 – Deep Blue (pictured) defeated Garry Kasparov in six games to become the first chess computer to win a match against a world champion.
- 1998 – India began the [[Pokhran-II|Template:Nowrap]] nuclear-weapons test, its first since the Smiling Buddha test 24 years earlier.
- 2010 – David Cameron took office as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom as the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats formed the country's first coalition government since the Second World War.
- 2011 – An earthquake registering Mw 5.1, the worst to hit the region for more than 50 years, struck near Lorca, Spain.
- 2013 – Two car bombs by unknown perpetrators exploded in Reyhanlı, Turkey, resulting in 52 killed and 140 injured.
- 2022 – Palestinian-American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh is shot and killed while reporting on an Israel Defense Forces raid on the Jenin Refugee Camp.
- Born/died: | Sophie Axelsdatter Brahe |b|1578| Hieronymus Karl Friedrich von Münchhausen |b|1720| Johann Friedrich Blumenbach |b|1752| Chang and Eng Bunker |b|1811| Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux |b|1827| Frederick Russell Burnham |b|1861| Frank Schlesinger |b|1871| William Grant Still |b|1895| Lise de Baissac |b|1905| Charles de Tricornot de Rose |d|1916| Natasha Richardson |b|1963| Juliette Récamier |d|1849| Dries Van Langenhove |b|1993| Douglas Adams |d|2001| Abel Goumba |d|2009| Doris Eaton Travis |d|2010| Sam Basil |d|2022|
Notes
- Smiling Buddha appears on May 18, so Pokhran-II should not appear in the same year
May 11 Template:Main page image/OTD
- 868 – A copy of the Diamond Sutra was printed in Tang-dynasty China, making it the world's oldest dated printed book.
- 1820 – HMS Beagle (pictured), the ship that would take Charles Darwin on his voyage, was launched.
- 1889 – Bandits attacked a U.S. Army paymaster's escort in the Arizona Territory, stealing more than $28,000.
- 1970 – Lubbock, Texas, was struck by a tornado that left 26 people dead.
- 2010 – Gordon Brown resigned as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and Leader of the Labour Party after failing to strike a coalition agreement with the Liberal Democrats.
- 2022 – Myanmar civil war: Government troops killed 37 unarmed civilians in Mondaingbin.