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2026.1.15 05:42:12 Old News Image TOP10 NEWS
| 기사출처 : | Wayne Blank |
|---|
01010919 This Day In History, September 19
335: Flavius Dalmatius was declared a "Caesar" by his uncle Constantine (see Constantine's Crusades In History And Prophecy and A History Of Jerusalem: Constantine and Muhammad).
634: The Siege of Damascus. The Rashidun Arabs under Khalid ibn al-Walid captured Damascus from the Byzantine Empire (see also The Prophet Daniel: Kings Of The North and South).
1356: During the Hundred Years War, the English under Prince Edward defeated French forces under John II at Poitiers. The French king was captured in the battle and released 4 years later.
1665: In London, England, the official death toll from the plague was reported to be 10,000 people per week.
1676: The colony of Jamestown was burned by the rebel forces of Nathaniel Bacon during Bacon's Rebellion.
1783: After their first-in-history unmanned balloon flight 3 months earlier, Joseph and Etienne Montgolfier of Versailles, France, launched the first balloon flight with "passengers" - a sheep, a rooster and a duck.
1870: During the Franco-Prussian War, the Prussians began their siege of Paris.
1881: U.S. President James Garfield died of a gunshot wound from his July 2 shooting.
1893: Women in New Zealand were given the right to vote.
1918: Near the end of the First World War, British General Edmund Allenby won a crucial battle over the Ottoman Turks at the Battle of Megiddo ("Armageddon") in what was then northern "Palestine" (see Israel In History and Prophecy: Balfour Declaration and A History Of Jerusalem: War And Peace).
1939: Adolf Hitler (see Presidential Quotes On War, Terrorism, Religion) decided to incorporate much of Poland into Germany, move 600,000 Jews from there (and those in Germany as well) into a Polish rump called the "General Government", and ghetto all Jews within it at convenient points along the railways. This brought into the coming holocaust the huge German railway system, the Reichsbahn.
1952: The U.S. barred English actor Charlie Chaplin from re-entering the country due to his political views. The comedian and Hollywood movie star later settled in Switzerland.
1957: The U.S. began conducting weapons of mass destruction tests at the underground nuclear bomb test facility in the Nevada desert.
1971: William F. Albright died at age 81. The history professor and archaeologist wrote extensively of many places of Bible history. He also conducted research digs at numerous locations including Bethel and Gibeah in Israel and Petra in Jordan.
1978: The Solomon Islands became a member of the United Nations.
1985: An earthquake killed thousands of people in Mexico City.
2006: Thai military forces staged a coup in Bangkok.
335: Flavius Dalmatius was declared a "Caesar" by his uncle Constantine (see Constantine's Crusades In History And Prophecy and A History Of Jerusalem: Constantine and Muhammad).
634: The Siege of Damascus. The Rashidun Arabs under Khalid ibn al-Walid captured Damascus from the Byzantine Empire (see also The Prophet Daniel: Kings Of The North and South).
1356: During the Hundred Years War, the English under Prince Edward defeated French forces under John II at Poitiers. The French king was captured in the battle and released 4 years later.
1665: In London, England, the official death toll from the plague was reported to be 10,000 people per week.
1676: The colony of Jamestown was burned by the rebel forces of Nathaniel Bacon during Bacon's Rebellion.
1783: After their first-in-history unmanned balloon flight 3 months earlier, Joseph and Etienne Montgolfier of Versailles, France, launched the first balloon flight with "passengers" - a sheep, a rooster and a duck.
1870: During the Franco-Prussian War, the Prussians began their siege of Paris.
1881: U.S. President James Garfield died of a gunshot wound from his July 2 shooting.
1893: Women in New Zealand were given the right to vote.
1918: Near the end of the First World War, British General Edmund Allenby won a crucial battle over the Ottoman Turks at the Battle of Megiddo ("Armageddon") in what was then northern "Palestine" (see Israel In History and Prophecy: Balfour Declaration and A History Of Jerusalem: War And Peace).
1939: Adolf Hitler (see Presidential Quotes On War, Terrorism, Religion) decided to incorporate much of Poland into Germany, move 600,000 Jews from there (and those in Germany as well) into a Polish rump called the "General Government", and ghetto all Jews within it at convenient points along the railways. This brought into the coming holocaust the huge German railway system, the Reichsbahn.
1952: The U.S. barred English actor Charlie Chaplin from re-entering the country due to his political views. The comedian and Hollywood movie star later settled in Switzerland.
1957: The U.S. began conducting weapons of mass destruction tests at the underground nuclear bomb test facility in the Nevada desert.
1971: William F. Albright died at age 81. The history professor and archaeologist wrote extensively of many places of Bible history. He also conducted research digs at numerous locations including Bethel and Gibeah in Israel and Petra in Jordan.
1978: The Solomon Islands became a member of the United Nations.
1985: An earthquake killed thousands of people in Mexico City.
2006: Thai military forces staged a coup in Bangkok.