May 29th is
Biscuit Day
Coq Au Vin Day
Escalator Day *
Paperclip Day
Learn About Composting Day
International Day of UN Peacekeepers *
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MORE! Joseph Haydn, Sojourner Truth and Oswald Spengler, click
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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS
Bahá’i: Ascension of Baha’u’Llah, the founder of the faith
Columbia and Venezuela –
(Christ’s) Ascension Holiday
Nepal – Republic Day
Nigeria – Democracy Day
Pakistan – Ramadan Bank Holiday
Turks and Caicos Islands – Heroes’ Day
United States and U.S. territories: Memorial Day
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On This Day in HISTORY
1453 – Ottoman armies under Sultan Mehmed II Fitah capture Constantinople after a 53-day siege, ending the Byzantine Empire
1453 – French banker Jacques Coeur’s possessions are confiscated because of a rumour started by his debtors, that he poisoned the King’s mistress, Agnès Sorel, who had died suddenly in February, 1450. Courtier Jeanne de Vendôme and Italian Jacques Colonna formally accuse Coeur of murder, without any evidence to support their charge, but King Charles VII gives orders for his arrest and seizure of his goods, reserving for himself a large sum of money for the war in Guienne. Commissioners, all of whom either owe Coeur money, or are holders of his forfeited estates, try him for a whole laundry list of crimes, so he is found guilty and imprisoned. In 1455, he escapes, making his way to Rome, where he comes under the protection of Nicholas V, and upon the death of Nicolas, is made captain of a fleet of galleys by Calixtus III, and sent to the relief of Rhodes during the ongoing war with Turks, but becomes ill and dies on the way
1630 – John Winthrop, founder of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, begins his History of New England
1660 – Charles II is restored to the throne of England, Scotland and Ireland
1677 – Treaty of Middle Plantation establishes a peace between Virginia colonists and the local Indians
1716 – Louis-Jean-Marie Daubenton born, French naturalist and pioneer in plant physiology; first director of the Museum of Natural History in Paris
1721 – South Carolina is formally incorporated as a royal colony
1727 – Peter II Alexeyevich, 11-year-old grandson of Peter the Great, becomes Tsar of Russia
1733 – The right of Canadians to enslave natives is upheld at Quebec City. For about two centuries, slavery was legal in New France, and in Lower Canada under British rule. Captive human beings were owned by people from almost every level of society, including governors, bishops, military officers, merchants, priests, blacksmiths and tailors. James McGill, founder of McGill University, had slaves. So did Marguerite d’Youville, the Grey Nuns founder who was canonized in 1990. Two-thirds of the slaves in New France were natives, mostly from the Pawnee nations of modern-day Nebraska, whose French Canadian name – Panis – became a synonym for an indigenous slave of any origin. Between 1629 and 1833, there were over 4,100 slaves in Quebec, many in Quebec City, where owning a slave was a status symbol. Black slaves were twice as expensive as native slaves.
1736 – Patrick Henry born, fiery orator of the American Revolution, Virginia planter, attorney and politician
1753 – Joseph Haydn’s first opera, Krumme Teufel (‘The Limping Devil’) premieres in Vienna
1765 – Patrick Henry makes his speech against the Stamp Act to Virginia’s House of Burgesses, answering a cry of “Treason!” with, “If this be treason, make the most of it!”
1787 – The Virginia Plan, drafted by James Madison, is presented by Edmund Randolph to the Constitutional Convention, proposing a strong central government composed of three branches: legislative, executive, and judicial
1790 – Rhode Island is last of the original 13 colonies to ratify the U.S. Constitution
1848 – Wisconsin becomes the 30th U.S. state
1849 – Abraham Lincoln says “You can fool some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you cannot fool all of the people all of the time.”
1851 – Sojourner Truth delivers her “Ain’t I a Woman?” speech at the Woman’s Rights Convention in Akron OH
1852 – Jenny Lind, the ‘Swedish Nightingale’ completes a very successful two-year American tour, and donates her considerable profits to charity
1860 – Isaac Albéniz born, Spanish composer, piano prodigy; a Spanish nationalist school of music leader; Iberia, Suite española, Cantos de España
1861 – Dorothea Dix offers her help in setting up hospitals for Union Army
1874 – G.K. Chesterton born, English author, playwright, poet critic and philosopher; Father Brown mystery series
1876 – Helen Woodard Atwater born, American author-editor, first full-time editor of the Journal of Home Economics
1880 – Oswald Spengler born, German historian and philosopher; Der Untergang des Abendlandes (The Decline of the West)
1889 – August Strindberg’s play Hemsoborna, based on his novel, The People of Hemsö, premieres in Copenhagen
1892 – Alfonsina Storni born, Argentinian poet, important modern Argentine and Latin-American poet
1897 – Erich Wolfgang Korngold born in Austria, first composer of international stature to compose film scores for Hollywood after moving to the U.S. during the rise of Nazi Germany; notable orchestral scores for Errol Flynn vehicles: Captain Blood, The Adventures of Robin Hood, The Sea Hawk
1900 – Escalator Day * The Otis Elevator Company registers the trade name “Escalator”
1906 – T. H. White born, English author; The Once and Future King series
1908 – Diana Morgan born, Welsh playwright and screenwriter; Bats in the Belfry,
A Run for Your Money, Hand in Hand
1912 – Curtis Publishing fires 15 young women for dancing the “Turkey Trot” during their lunch break
1912 – The Ballets Russes premieres their ballet L’après-midi d’un faune (The Afternoon of a Faun) in Paris, choreographed by Vaslav Nijinsky
1913 – Igor Stravinsky’s score The Rite of Spring debuts in Paris, provoking a riot
1917 – John Fitzgerald Kennedy born, 35th U.S. President
1919 – Albert Einstein’s light-bending prediction is confirmed by Arthur Eddington
1922 – The U.S. Supreme Court rules organized baseball is a sport, not a business, so it is not subject to antitrust laws
1923 – Louisiana’s Attorney General declares it is legal for women to wear slacks in public
1932 – “Bonus Army” of WWI veterans, many out of work during the Great Depression, starts assembling in Washington, D.C. to insist on cash-payment redemption of their service certificates, awarded in 1924 but not set for redemption until 1945
1942 – Bing Crosby records “White Christmas”, biggest selling record to date
1943 – Meat and Cheese are rationed in the U.S. as part of the war effort
1953 – Edmund Hillary (New Zealand) and Tenzing Norgay (Nepal) are first to reach the summit of Mount Everest as part of a British Expedition
1956 – Arnold Schoenberg’s Modern Psalm premieres
1965 – Bob Dylan’s album Bringing It All Back Home hits #1 in the UK
1968 – The Truth in Lending Act (TILA), requiring disclosure of terms and conditions of finance charges in consumer credit transactions; placing restrictions on garnishing wages; and authorizing the National Commission on Consumer Finance, goes into effect
1969 – Crosby, Stills and Nash, the group’s first album, debuts
1971 – The Rolling Stones’ single “Brown Sugar” hits #1 in the U.S.
1989 – Student protesters in China construct a replica of Statue of Liberty
1990 – Boris Yeltsin is elected President of the Russian Republic
1995 – Pink Floyd releases a 2-CD album, Pulse
1999 – NASA’s Space Shuttle Discovery completes its first docking with the International Space Station
2002 – The first International Day of United Nations Peacekeepers *
2004 – The World War II Memorial is dedicated in Washington DC
2005 – French voters soundly reject the European Union’s proposed constitution
2014 – President Obama approves US military training of ‘moderate’ Syrian rebels to fight the regime of Bashar al-Assad and al Qaeda-linked groups
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