This Week in History
HISTORY, 11 May 2015
Satoshi Ashikaga – TRANSCEND Media Service
May 11-17
QUOTE OF THE WEEK:
MAY 11
2013 At least 46 people are killed in a bombing in Reyhanlı, Turkey.
2011 The Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) together with the Government of Japan will not cap compensation payments resulting from the Fukushima I nuclear accidents.
- TEPCO News – insurancenews.com
- Japanese Energy Policy One Year Later, March 2011
- Japan approves energy plan reistating nuclear energy
- Ambiguities of Japan’s Nuclear Policy
- United States – Japan Joint Energy Plan
- Japan Lets U.S. Assume Control of Nuclear Cache
- Browse the whole part of the following agreement. And then, return to Article 16, especially its paragraph 3 that indicates one of the essential aspects of this international treaty. AGREEMENT FOR COOPERATION BETWEEN THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AND THE GOVERNMENT OF JAPAN CONCERNING PEACEFUL USES OF NUCLEAR ENERGY
- United States Department of Energy
- Nuclear Power and Foreign Policy
- Japan’s Crisis for Nuclear Power
2000 Second Chechen War: Chechen separatists ambush Russian paramilitary forces in the Republic of Ingushetia.
- Second Chechen War (2000 – 2006)
- Second Chechen War – The History Guy
- The Second Chechen War: The Information Component
- Crimes of War: Chechnya
- com
- Chechnya profile – Overview
1998 India conducts three underground atomic tests in Pokhran to include a thermonuclear device.
1997 Deep Blue, a chess-playing supercomputer, defeats Garry Kasparov in the last game of the rematch, becoming the first computer to beat a world-champion chess player in a classic match format.
1996 After the aircraft’s departure from Miami, Florida, a fire started by improperly handled chemical oxygen generators in the cargo hold of Atlanta-bound ValuJet Flight 592 causes the Douglas DC-9 to crash in the Florida Everglades killing all 110 on board.
1995 More than 170 countries extend the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty indefinitely and without conditions.
- UNODA: Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons
- Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons [NPT]
- The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) at a Glance
- Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (1968)
- NTI: Treaties and Regimes
1987 Klaus Barbie goes on trial in Lyon for war crimes committed during World War II.
1973 Citing government misconduct, Daniel Ellsberg has charges for his involvement in releasing the Pentagon Papers to The New York Times dismissed.
- History: Pentagon Papers
- National Archives: Pentagon Papers
- Daniel Ellsberg: ‘I’m sure that President Obama would have sought a life sentence in my case.’
- Pentagon Papers (Wikileaks)
- NSA Leaks and the Pentagon Papers: What’s the Difference between Edward Snowden and Daniel Ellsberg?
- Pentagon Papers – Infoplease.com
- Pentagon Papers – Summary
- The impact of the Pentagon Papers 40 years on
- Lessons from the Pentagon Papers
- Lesson Plan: Do the Actions of Whistleblowers Help or Hurt Society?
1972 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site.
1968 The Toronto Transit Commission opens the largest expansion of its Bloor–Danforth line, going to Scarborough in the East, and Etobicoke in the West.
1967 Andreas Papandreou, Greek economist and socialist politician, is imprisoned in Athens by the Greek military junta.
1965 USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk, USSR.
1963 Racist bombings in Birmingham, Alabama disrupt nonviolence in the Birmingham campaign and precipitate a crisis involving federal troops.
1962 US performs atmospheric nuclear test at Christmas Island.
1962 US sends troops to Thailand.
1960 In Buenos Aires, Argentina, four Israeli Mossad agents capture fugitive Nazi Adolf Eichmann who is living under the alias of Ricardo Klement.
1949 Israel joins the United Nations.
- List of the UN resolutions concerning Israel and Palestine
- The U.N. Relationship with Israel
- The UN and Israel: A History of Discrimination
- UN, Israel & Anti-Semitism
1949 Siam officially changes its name to Thailand for the second time. The name had been in use since 1939 but was reverted in 1945.
1946 UMNO (United Malays National Organization) is created.
1945 World War II: Off the coast of Okinawa, the aircraft carrier USS Bunker Hill is hit by two kamikazes, killing 346 of its crew. Although badly damaged, the ship is able to return to the U.S. under its own power.
- Kamikaze: Military Tactic
- Kamikaze – United States History
- Kamikaze Images
- – Listen to the Voices from the Sea (A collection of the diaries of the young Kamikaze pilots)
1944 World War II: The Allies begin a major offensive against the Axis Powers on the Gustav Line.
1943 World War II: American troops invade Attu Island in the Aleutian Islands in an attempt to expel occupying Japanese forces.
1918 The Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus is officially established.
1907 Thirty-two Shriners are killed when their chartered train derails at a switch near Surf Depot in Lompoc, California.
1880 Seven people are killed in the Mussel Slough Tragedy, a gun battle in California.
1867 Luxembourg gains its independence.
1857 Indian Rebellion of 1857: Indian rebels seize Delhi from the British.
MAY 12
2013 The World Health Organization announces that the Novel coronavirus 2012, the newly discovered coronavirus, also referred to as Saudi SARS, can be transmitted from person-to-person contact.
2008 An earthquake (measuring around 8.0 magnitude) occurs in Sichuan, China, killing over 69,000 people.
2007 Riots in which over 50 people are killed and over 100 are injured take place in Karachi upon the arrival in town of the Chief Justice of Pakistan Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry.
2006 Iranian Azeris interpret a cartoon published in an Iranian magazine as insulting, resulting in massive riots throughout the country.
2006 Mass unrest by the Primeiro Comando da Capital begins in São Paulo (Brazil), leaving at least 150 dead.
- Social unrest (Psychology)
- Are economic stagnation and unemployment fueling social unrest? (Social unrest index)
- Social Unrest (The Economic Times)
- Does the Sun and Solar Flares Affect Human Behavior?
- New Cycle Of Solar Activity May Cause Social Unrest
- How Solar Activity and Changes in Earth’s Magnetic Field Affect Human Consciousness and Health
- How Solar Flares Affect Human Health – Our Mind And Body
- Heavenly Signs: From Solar Flares to Social Unrest
2003 The Riyadh compound bombings, carried out by Al Qaeda, kill 26 people.
- CIA-al-Qaeda controversy
- YouTube videos: Hilary Clinton: We created Al Qaeda (1 min. 35 sec.) and ‘We Created al Qaeda.’ (1 min. 23 sec.)
- Top Ranking CIA Operatives Admit Al-qaeda Is a Complete Fabrication
- CIA’s “Funding” of Al Qaeda Documented
- Declassified Documents: CIA Helped Fund al Qaeda via Afghan Government / Sputnik International
- More Evidence ‘al Qaeda’ Is A CIA-ISI Contrivance
- Al Qaeda Created by CIA
- How CIA Helped Create Osama Bin Laden
- New Evidence of CIA Arming Al Qaeda Terrorists in Syria
- Muslim Terrorist Al-Qaeda Apparatus Was Created By CIA Was A Geopolitical Weapon
- Fake Al Qaeda
- CIA created Al Qaeda & US’s war against enemy that doesn’t exist at all
- Al-Qaeda: al-CIA duh
- The CIA link to al-Qaeda in Syria
- “… in politics nothing is accidental. If something happens, be assured it was planned this way.” – Franklin D. Roosevelt
2002 Former US President Jimmy Carter arrives in Cuba for a five-day visit with Fidel Castro becoming the first President of the United States, in or out of office, to visit the island since Castro’s 1959 revolution.
1982 During a procession outside the shrine of the Virgin Mary in Fátima, Portugal, security guards overpower Juan María Fernández y Krohn before he can attack Pope John Paul II with a bayonet. Krohn, an ultraconservative Spanish priest opposed to the Vatican II reforms, believed that the Pope had to be killed for being an “agent of Moscow“
1981 Francis Hughes starves to death in the Maze Prison in a Republican campaign for political prisoner status to be granted to Provisional IRA prisoners.
1978 In Zaire, rebels occupy the city of Kolwezi, the mining center of the province of Shaba (now known as Katanga). The local government asks the U.S.A., France and Belgium to restore order.
1975 Mayagüez incident: The Cambodian navy seizes the American merchant ship SS Mayaguez in international waters.
1970 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site.
1968 Vietnam War: North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces attack Australian troops defending Fire Support Base Coral, east of Lai Khe in South Vietnam on the night of 12/13 May, resulting in heavy casualties on both sides and beginning the Battle of Coral–Balmoral.
1962 US performs atmospheric nuclear test at Christmas Island.
1958 US performs atmospheric nuclear test at Enwetak.
1958 A formal North American Aerospace Defense Command agreement is signed between the United States and Canada.
1955 Austria regains its independence as the Allied occupation following World War II ends.
1955 Nineteen days after bus workers went on strike in Singapore, rioting breaks out and seriously impacts Singapore’s bid for independence.
- Singapore: Road to Independence, 1955 – 1965
- Road to Independence (Singapore)
- History of Singapore
- Singapore’s Road to Independence
1952 Gaj Singh is crowned Maharaja of Jodhpur.
1949 The western occupying powers approve the Basic Law for the new German state: The Federal Republic of Germany.
1949 The Soviet Union lifts its blockade of Berlin.
1948 Wilhelmina, Queen regnant of the Kingdom of the Netherlands cedes throne.
1945 Argentinian labour leader José Peter declares the Federación Obrera de la Industria de la Carne dissolved.
1942 The Holocaust: 1,500 Jews are sent to gas chambers in Auschwitz.
- The History Place – Holocaust Timeline
- Auschwitz Timeline 1942
- AUSCHWITZ: Technique and Operation of the Gas Chambers ©
- Holocaust Encyclopedia: Auschwitz
1942 World War II: Second Battle of Kharkov: In eastern Ukraine, Red Army forces under Marshal Semyon Timoshenko launch a major offensive from the Izium bridgehead, only to be encircled and destroyed by the troops of Army Group South two weeks later.
1941 Konrad Zuse presents the Z3, the world’s first working programmable, fully automatic computer, in Berlin.
1935 Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob Smith (founders of Alcoholics Anonymous) meet for the first time in Akron, Ohio, at the home of Henrietta Siberling.
1932 Ten weeks after his abduction, the infant son of Charles Lindbergh, Charles Jr., is found dead in Hopewell, New Jersey, just a few miles from the Lindberghs’ home.
1926 The Italian-built airship Norge becomes the first vessel to fly over the North Pole.
1885 North-West Rebellion: The four-day Battle of Batoche, pitting rebel Métis against the Canadian government, comes to an end with a decisive rebel defeat.
1881 In North Africa, Tunisia becomes a French protectorate.
- French conquest of Tunisia
- History of French-era Tunisia
- History of Tunisia
- A Brief History of Tunisia
MAY 13
2011 2 bombs explode in the Charsadda District of Pakistan killing 98 people and wounding 140 others.
2008 The Jaipur bombings in Rajasthan, India results in dozens of deaths.
2006 2006 São Paulo violence: a major rebellion occurs in several prisons in Brazil.
2005 The Bính Bridge opens to traffic in Hai Phong, Vietnam.
2005 The Andijan Massacre occurs in Uzbekistan.
1998 India carries out two nuclear tests at Pokhran, following the three conducted on May 11. The United States and Japan impose economic sanctions on India.
1998 Race riots break out in Jakarta, Indonesia, where shops owned by Indonesians of Chinese descent are looted and women raped.
- Jakarta Riot May 1998
- Modern Holocaust in Indonesia, May 13 – 15, 1998
- May 1998 Jakarta Riots
- Remembering/Forgetting May Riots
1995 Alison Hargreaves, a 33-year-old British mother, became the first woman to conquer Everest without oxygen or the help of sherpas.
1992 Li Hongzhi gives the first public lecture on Falun Gong in Changchun, People’s Republic of China.
1989 Large groups of students occupy Tiananmen Square and begin a hunger strike.
1981 Mehmet Ali Ağca attempts to assassinate Pope John Paul II in St. Peter’s Square in Rome. The Pope is rushed to the Agostino Gemelli University Polyclinic to undergo emergency surgery and survives.
1972 The Troubles: a car bombing outside a crowded pub in Belfast sparks a two-day gun battle involving the Provisional IRA, Ulster Volunteer Force and British Army. Seven people are killed and over 66 injured.
1969 Race riots, later known as the May 13 Incident, take place in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
- Sino Malay Race Riots in Kuala Lumpur
- The 1969 Riots Against the Chinese in Malaysia
- May 13 Incident
- Call on Malaysians regardless of race, religion or politics to unite and rally behind the SSS Anwar campaign for 3Saves – to Save Anwar, Save Pakatan Rakyat and Save Malaysia
- Malaysia’s 1969 Racial Riots: What caused the Riots?
- Political Development Continues to Stall in Malaysia
1967 Dr. Zakir Hussain becomes the third President of India. He is the first Muslim President of the Indian Union. He holds this position until August 24, 1969.
1958 Ben Carlin becomes the first (and only) person to circumnavigate the world by amphibious vehicle, having travelled over 17,000 kilometres (11,000 mi) by sea and 62,000 kilometres (39,000 mi) by land during a ten-year journey.
1958 May 1958 crisis: a group of French military officers lead a coup in Algiers demanding that a government of national unity be formed with Charles de Gaulle at its head in order to defend French control of Algeria.
1954 The anti-National Service Riots, by Chinese Middle School students in Singapore, take place.
1950 The first round of the Formula One World Championship is held at Silverstone.
1948 1948 Arab-Israeli War: the Kfar Etzion massacre is committed by Arab irregulars, the day before the declaration of independence of the state of Israel on May 14.
- Arab – Israeli War: The War 1948 – 49
- Israel’s War of Independence: Arab – Israeli War (1948)
- Arab – Israeli Conflict #2: 1948 War of Independence
- Israeli War of Independence: Background & Overview
- War of Independence
- 1948 Arab – Israeli War: Debates and Opinions
- The Six-Day War – 1948 Arab – Israeli War
- Review: Genesis, 1948: The First Arab Israeli war
1943 World War II: German Afrika Korps and Italian troops in North Africa surrender to Allied forces.
1941 World War II: Yugoslav royal colonel Dragoljub Mihailović starts fighting with German occupation troops, beginning the Serbian resistance.
1940 Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands flees her country to Great Britain after the German invasion. Princess Juliana takes her children to Canada for their safety.
1940 World War II: Germany‘s conquest of France begins as the German army crosses the Meuse. Winston Churchill makes his “blood, toil, tears, and sweat” speech to the House of Commons.
1917 Three children report the first apparition of Our Lady of Fátima in Fátima, Portugal.
- The Fatima Prophecies
- The Miracle of Fatima
- The Lady of Fátima & the Miracle of the Sun
- 10 “scientific” explanations against the Fatima Miracle of the Sun
- Top Ten Scientific Explanations for Fatima
1912 The Royal Flying Corps, the forerunner of the Royal Air Force, is established in the United Kingdom.
1888 With the passage of the Lei Áurea (“Golden Law”), Brazil abolishes slavery.
- Brazilian History: Abolition of Slavery
- History of Slavery and Abolition in Brazil
- Brazil: An Inconvenient History
- Photos Reveal Harsh Detail Of Brazil’s History With Slavery
- Brazilian Slavery
- History of African Slavery in Brazil
1830 Ecuador gains its independence from Gran Colombia.
- History of Ecuador
- A Brief History of Ecuador
- Ecuador’s History – From Ancient Incas Through to Modern Times
- Ecuador – Independence from the Spanish Crown
- Ecuador – First Years of Independence
MAY 14
2013 Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan declares a state of emergency in the northeast states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa due to the terrorist activities of Boko Haram.
2004 The Constitutional Court of South Korea overturns the impeachment of President Roh Moo-hyun.
1975 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site.
1970 The Red Army Faction is established in West Germany.
1963 Kuwait joins the United Nations.
1961 American civil rights movement: The Freedom Riders bus is fire-bombed near Anniston, Alabama, and the civil rights protesters are beaten by an angry mob.
1955 Cold War: Eight Communist bloc countries, including the Soviet Union, sign a mutual defense treaty called the Warsaw Pact.
1955 US performs nuclear test at Pacific Ocean.
1948 US performs atmospheric nuclear test at Enwetak.
1948 Israel is declared to be an independent state and a provisional government is established. Immediately after the declaration, Israel is attacked by the neighboring Arab states, triggering the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.
- Israeli Declaration of Independence
- Declaration of Israel’s Independence 1948
- Balfour Declaration of 2 November 1917, full text
- Balfour and Palestine, a legacy of deceit, by Anthony Nutting
- UK’s responsibility to the Palestinians
- “Palestinians Seek Apology for the Balfour Declaration”
1945 Bleiburg Massacre against Croatian soldiers after their surrender to British authorities that commit this genocide, in Bleiburg, Austria, from May 14 – 16.
- More Hidden Story Revealed: The Bleiburg Massacre
- Croatian Viewpoint: The Croatian Surrender to Partisans at Bleiburg
- Bleiburg Massacre (6 min. 15 sec.) video
- Bleiburg British Massacre Confessions (7 min. 26 sec.) video
- YouTube videos on Bleiburg Masscre Made by Partisans in three parts:
- Part 1.
- Part 2.
- Part 3.
1940 World War II: The Battle of the Netherlands ends with the Netherlands surrendering to Germany.
1945 The Philippines ratifies an independence agreement.
1889 The children’s charity, the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children is launched in London.
1879 The first group of 463 Indian indentured laborers arrives in Fiji aboard the Leonidas.
MAY 15
2013 An upsurge in violence in Iraq leaves more than 389 people dead over three days.
2012 U.S. scientists develop a device that can generate electricity from genetically-engineered viruses; these piezoelectric materials are a step toward the development of personal power generators.
- Researchers generate electricity from viruses
- Piezoelectricity: Using Viruses and Nanotechnology To Generate Electricity
- Berkeley Lab Scientists Generate Electricity from Viruses
2008 California becomes the second U.S. state after Massachusetts in 2004 to legalize same-sex marriage after the state’s own Supreme Court rules a previous ban unconstitutional.
1997 The United States government acknowledges the existence of the “Secret War” in Laos and dedicates the Laos Memorial in honor of Hmong and other “Secret War” veterans.
1991 Édith Cresson becomes France’s first female premier.
1988 Soviet war in Afghanistan: After more than eight years of fighting, the Soviet Army begins its withdrawal from Afghanistan.
- The Origins of the Soviet-Afghan War
- Soviet invasion of Afghanistan 1979
- Afghan War – Infoplease.com
- Afghanistan: Lessons from the Last War – THE SOVIET EXPERIENCE IN AFGHANISTAN: RUSSIAN DOCUMENTS AND MEMOIRS
- Soviet Afghan War, Al Qaeda and The Muslim Rebel Formula
- War in Afghanistan (1978 – Present)
1974 Ma’alot massacre: Members of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine attack and take hostages at an Israeli school; a total of 31 people are killed, including 22 schoolchildren.
1972 Okinawa, under U.S. military governance since its conquest in 1945, reverts to Japanese control.
1970 President Richard Nixon appoints Anna Mae Hays and Elizabeth P. Hoisington the first female United States Army Generals.
1969 People’s Park: California Governor Ronald Reagan has an impromptu student park owned by University of California at Berkeley fenced off from student anti-war protestors, sparking a riot called Bloody Thursday.
1966 After a policy dispute, Prime Minister Nguyễn Cao Kỳ of South Vietnam‘s ruling junta launches a military attack on the forces of General Tôn Thất Đính, forcing him to abandon his command.
1964 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site.
1957 At Malden Island in the Pacific Ocean, Britain tests its first hydrogen bomb in Operation Grapple.
1955 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site.
1951 The Polish cultural attaché in Paris, Czesław Miłosz, asks the French government for political asylum.
1948 Following the demise of Mandatory Palestine, the Kingdom of Egypt, Transjordan, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Saudi Arabia invade Israel thus starting the 1948 Arab–Israeli War.
1945 World War II: The Battle of Poljana, the final skirmish in Europe is fought near Prevalje, Slovenia.
1943 Joseph Stalin dissolves the Comintern (or Third International).
1942 World War II: in the United States, a bill creating the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC) is signed into law.
1940 World War II: After fierce fighting, the poorly trained and equipped Dutch troops surrender to Germany, marking the beginning of five years of occupation.
1934 Kārlis Ulmanis establishes an authoritarian government in Latvia.
1932 In an attempted coup d’état, the Prime Minister of Japan Inukai Tsuyoshi is murdered.
1925 Al-Insaniyyah, the first Arabic communist newspaper, is founded.
1919 Greek invasion of Smyrna. During the invasion, the Greek army kills or wounds 350 Turks. Those responsible are punished by the Greek Commander Aristides Stergiades.
1911 303 Chinese and 5 Japanese immigrants are killed in the Torreón massacre when the forces of the Mexican Revolution led by Francisco I. Madero‘s brother Emilio Madero take the city of Torreón from the Federales.
1904 Russo-Japanese War: The Russian minelayer Amur lays a minefield about 15 miles off Port Arthur and sinks Japan’s battleships Hatsuse, 15,000 tons, with 496 crew and Yashima.
1891 Pope Leo XIII defends workers’ rights and property rights in the encyclical Rerum novarum, the beginning of modern Catholic social teaching.
1869 Women’s suffrage: in New York, Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton form the National Woman Suffrage Association.
MAY 16
2013 Pope Francis calls for worldwide ‘financial reform along ethical lines’ which would curb the ‘tyranny’ of ‘markets and financial speculation’.
2005 Kuwait permits women’s suffrage in a 35-23 National Assembly vote.
2003 In Casablanca, Morocco, 33 civilians are killed and more than 100 people are injured in the Casablanca terrorist attacks.
1997 Mobutu Sese Seko, the President of Zaire, flees the country.
1988 A report by United States’ Surgeon General C. Everett Koop states that the addictive properties of nicotine are similar to those of heroin and cocaine.
- The Reports of the Surgeon General 1988
- Surgeon General’s Reports on Smoking and Tobacco Use
- Surgeon General report links more diseases, health problems to tobacco
1986 The Seville Statement on Violence is adopted by an international meeting of scientists, convened by the Spanish National Commission for UNESCO, in Seville, Spain.
1984 US performs nuclear Test at Nevada Test Site.
1983 Sudan People’s Liberation Army/Movement rebels against the Sudanese government.
1975 Junko Tabei becomes the first woman to reach the summit of Mount Everest.
1974 Josip Broz Tito is re-elected president of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. This time he is elected for life.
1969 USSR performs nuclear Test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk, USSR.
1969 US nuclear sub Guitarro sinks off SF.
1966 The Communist Party of China issues the “May 16 Notice“, marking the beginning of the Cultural Revolution.
1964 USSR performs nuclear Test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk, USSR.
1961 Park Chung-hee leads a coup d’état to overthrow the Second Republic of South Korea.
1960 Theodore Maiman operates the first optical laser (a ruby laser), at Hughes Research Laboratories in Malibu, California.
1943 The Holocaust: The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising ends.
- Warsaw Ghetto
- Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
- Holocaust Resistance: The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising (April 19 – May 19, 1943) [Note: Although the headline of this article indicates that the uprising ended on May 19, 1943 as shown above here, it is written in this article, “On May 16, Stroop announced the fighting was over.”]
1918 The Sedition Act of 1918 is passed by the U.S. Congress, making criticism of the government during wartime an imprisonable offense. It will be repealed less than two years later.
1888 Nikola Tesla delivers a lecture describing the equipment which will allow efficient generation and use of alternating currents to transmit electric power over long distances.
- Tesla Biography
- Tesla: Master of Lightninghttp://teslasociety.com/biography.htm
- Reference: Nikola Tesla: Biography, Inventions & Quotes
- Nikola Tesla, Biography, List of Inventions, Patents, and Tesla Quotes
1877 May 1877 political crisis in France.
1834 The Battle of Asseiceira is fought, the last and decisive engagement of the Liberal Wars in Portugal.
1822 Greek War of Independence: The Turks capture the Greek town of Souli.
MAY 17
2007 Trains from North and South Korea cross the 38th Parallel in a test-run agreed by both governments. This is the first time that trains have crossed the Demilitarized Zone since 1953.
2004 The first legal same-sex marriages in the U.S. are performed in the state of Massachusetts.
1997 Troops of Laurent Kabila march into Kinshasa. Zaire is officially renamed Democratic Republic of the Congo.
1994 Malawi holds its first multi-party elections.
1992 Three days of popular protests against the government of Prime Minister of Thailand Suchinda Kraprayoon begin in Bangkok, leading to a military crackdown that results in 52 officially confirmed deaths, many disappearances, hundreds of injuries, and over 3,500 arrests.
1990 The General Assembly of the World Health Organization (WHO) eliminates homosexuality from the list of psychiatric diseases.
1983 Lebanon, Israel, and the United States sign an agreement on Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon.
1983 The U.S. Department of Energy declassifies documents showing world’s largest mercury pollution event in Oak Ridge, Tennessee (ultimately found to be 4.2 million pounds), in response to the Appalachian Observer’s Freedom of Information Act request.
1980 On the eve of presidential elections, Maoist guerrilla group Shining Path attacks a polling location in the town of Chuschi, Ayacucho, starting the Internal conflict in Peru.
1980 General Chun Doo-hwan of South Korea seizes control of the government and declares martial law in order to suppress student demonstrations.
1974 The Troubles: Thirty-three civilians are killed and 300 injured when the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) detonates four car bombs in Dublin and Monaghan, Republic of Ireland. It is the deadliest attack of the Troubles and the deadliest terrorist attack in the Republic’s history. There are allegations that British state forces were involved.
1973 Watergate scandal: Televised hearings begin in the United States Senate.
1970 Thor Heyerdahl sets sail from Morocco on the papyrus boat Ra II to sail the Atlantic Ocean.
1967 Six-Day War: President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt demands dismantling of the peace-keeping UN Emergency Force in Egypt.
- Middle East – UNEF I Background
- The Six-Day War
- co.uk
- The Six-Day War: The Background & Overview
- Palestine Facts: Israel from 1948 through 1967
- Op-Ed: The Six Day War: Myths and Facts
1943 World War II: the Dambuster Raids by No. 617 Squadron RAF on German dams.
1940 World War II: the old city centre of the Dutch town of Middelburg is bombed by the German Luftwaffe, to force the surrender of the Dutch armies in Zeeland.
1940 World War II: Germany occupies Brussels, Belgium.
1914 The Protocol of Corfu is signed, recognising full autonomy to Northern Epirus under nominal Albanian sovereignty.
1902 Greek archaeologist Valerios Stais discovers the Antikythera mechanism, an ancient mechanical analog computer.
1900 Second Boer War: British troops relieve Mafeking.
1814 Occupation of Monaco changes from French to Austrian.
1808 Napoleon I of France orders the annexation of the Papal States to the French Empire.
_________________________________
Satoshi Ashikaga is a member of the TRANSCEND Network for Peace, Development and Environment originally from Japan.
(Sources and references: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/May_11 to 17; http://www.historyorb.com/events/may/11 to 17; http://www.brainyhistory.com/days/may_11.html to 17.html; and other pertinent websites and/or documents, mentioned above.) Note that the views expressed in the cited or quoted websites and/or documents in this article do not necessarily reflect those of the author-editor of this article. These websites and/or documents are cited or quoted for academic or educational purposes.
This article originally appeared on Transcend Media Service (TMS) on 11 May 2015.
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