<<
Feb 16| HISTORY
“4” “2”DAY |Feb
18 >> Events, deaths, births, of FEB 17 [For Feb 17 Julian go to Gregorian date: 1583~1699: Feb 27 1700s: Feb 28 1800s: Mar 01 1900~2099: Mar 02] |
On a February 17: |
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2001: Armenian Chuch's 1700 anniversary. Pope John Paul II, 80, pays homage to the Armenian church's history of martyrdom on its 1700th anniversary and says that the world should not forget the country's bloody history. "The whole Armenian culture and spirituality has been pervaded by boldness characterized by the supreme sign of giving one's life in martyrdom," he writes in an apostolic letter to mark the anniversary. The Pope specifically mentions "unheard-of violence" in 1915 the beginning of an eight-year period in which Armenia says 1.5 million people were killed by Ottoman Turkish armies. "It is a memory which must not be forgotten," the Pontiff writes, although he stops short of mentioning Turkey or using the word "genocide". Turkey denies the historical evidence of genocide and pretends that thousands of Armenians may have been victims of the Russo-Turkish war raging at the time. Armenia was the first organized state to adopt Christianity as a state religion, when King Trdat III proclaimed it a Christian country in 301, 36 years before the Roman emperor Constantine converted to Christianity. The Armenian Apostolic Church is one of the Ancient Churches of the East that split from Byzantine Christianity before the Great Schism of 1054, which divided the Eastern and Western Churches. Rome and the Armenian Church maintain good relations and the Pope has been invited to go to Armenia later this year by the church's leader Garegin II. |
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2000 From Chechnya there are more
reports about mass atrocities and sadistic tortures
in the Russian concentration camp Chernokozovo. Prisoners
escaped from the concentration camp report that the guards commit satanic
ritual murders of the prisoners. Eyewitness Ibragim Vakhayev from Urus-Martan
reports that raping of victims tormented to death is a common at Chernokozovo.
The rape of the corpses is practiced in full view of other prisoners. The
guards wear black masks. After these acts of necrophily the guards announce
to the prisoners who is going to be the next victim. Ibragim Vakhayev witnessed the murder of a 10 years old boy. The corpse was raped by five guards with black masks, cut to pieces afterwards and put into a plastic sack. The Attorney General of the Chechen Republic Ichkeria is directing investigations. After several unsuccessful attempts to move towards river Arzh-Akhk, the Russians are concentratung their forces around Elistanzhi and bringing more troops into the sector. Since yesterday positional fighting is taking place in this region. Chechen patrols report that the Russians are preparing an attack, supported by heavy tanks, on the Chechen positions. The Chechen mujahideen are carrying out a mobile defense and constantly attacking the enemy. In two such attacks during the last 24 hours. they killed 60 Russians and destroyed 2 armored vehicles. No reports on Chechen casualties. The Russians are moving towards the river Vashtar Valley, as they regroup and reinforce their units at the entrance to the Argun Valley. North of the river Vashtar, fighting has benn going on for three days. Russian units have occupied a dominating height and are shelling the valley intensively. Mobile mujahideen units are attacking the Russians uninterruptedly. Several mujahideen units have occupied one of the dominating heights. |
2000 A US House of representatives committee said in
a report that the program to inoculate all 2.4 million American military
personnel against anthrax was based on "a paucity of science" and should
be suspended. The Pentagon defended the program and insisted on continuing
the inoculations. 2000 Viktor Klima dimite de su cargo de jefe del Partido Socialdemócrata Austriaco (SPÖ) después de obtener el 03 octubre el peor resultado electoral desde el fin de la Segunda Guerra Mundial. 2000 La policía israelí detiene a dos responsables de la campaña electoral del primer ministro, Ehud Barak, por supuesta utilización ilegal de fondos durante los comicios del pasado mes de mayo. 2000 El presidente de Microsoft, Bill Gates, lanza el programa Windows 2000.
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1998 A surprise: Finland's Nokia selects Spyglass over
Microsoft and Netscape as the Web software provider for Europe's digital
television set-top boxes. Nokia's set-top boxes, slated for a fall 1998
release, allows users in Germany, Italy, Spain, and Scandinavia to surf
the Web through their television sets.
1995 Colin Ferguson ias convicted of six counts of murder for the December 1993 Long Island Rail Road shootings. He would be sentenced to a minimum of 200 years in prison.
1989 Concluye la segunda cumbre magrebí en Marrakech, con un pacto defensivo y el nacimiento de la Unión del Magreb Árabe. 1989 6-week study of Arctic atmosphere shows no ozone "hole" 1986 Libyan bombers attack N'djamena Airport in Chad. 1986 Técnicos de la compañía de aviación española Iberia descubren sabotajes en sus aviones.
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1985 US first class postage rises from 20¢ to 22¢ 1983 Netherlands adopts constitution. 1983 Se aprueban en España los Estatutos de Autonomía de Baleares, Castilla y León, Extremadura y Madrid. 1981 Chrysler Corp reports largest corporate losses in US history. 1981 El filólogo español Antonio Tovar Llorente es galardonado con el premio Goethe de la Fundación FVS, de Hamburgo. 1981 La organización Amnistía Internacional afirma que el gobierno de Guatemala es responsable de más de 30'000 muertos en los últimos 10 meses. 1979 China invades Vietnam 1976 Organic statute makes Macao autonomous 1976 Macau adopts constitution (Organic Law of Macau)
1972 British Parliament votes to join European Common Market 1969 Golda Meir sworn in as Israel's first female prime minister 1969 Russian-born, Milwaukee-raised
Golda Meir (n‚e Mabovitch [Myerson]), 70, was sworn in as Israel's first
female prime minister. (She would hold the office for five embattled
years.)
1968 Bishop John Joseph Carberry [31 Jul 1904 – 17 Jun 1998] is appointed Archbishop of Saint Louis MO. He would be made a cardinal on 28 April 1969.
1964 US Supreme court rules - 1 man 1 vote (Westberry v. Sanders): congressional districts within each state have to be roughly equal in population. 1958 Se concede la encomienda de Alfonso X el Sabio, Rey de Castilla y León, al dibujante Carlos Sáenz de Tejada. 1957 Suez Canal reopens. 1949 Chaim Weizman elected first President of Israel. |
1936 -58º F (-50º C), McIntosh SD (state record) 1936 Un pronunciamiento militar en Asunción (Paraguay) provoca la dimisión del presidente Eusebio Ayala y el nombramiento de Rafael Franco. 1935 El general Antonio Oscar de Fragoso Carmona es reelegido presidente de la República portuguesa. 1934 El canciller austríaco, Engelbert Dollfuss, escapa a un atentado nazi. 1933 US Senate accept Blaine Act ending prohibition. 1930 French government of Tardieu, falls. 1915 Edward Stone, first US combatant to die in WWI, is mortally wounded. 1913 first minimum wage law in US takes effect (Oregon) 1913 Thomas Alva Edison presenta en un teatro neoyorquino la primera prueba pública del cine sonoro, consistente en un fonógrafo situado detrás de la pantalla. |
1907 Tienen lugar manifestaciones anticlericales en
Italia con motivo del 307º aniversario de la muerte de Giordano Bruno. 1906 En una encíclica dirigida al clero y al pueblo francés, el papa Pío X denuncia la ley de separación de la iglesia y el estado.
1889 Billy Sunday, 27, baseball player-turned-preacher,
made his first appearance as an evangelist in Chicago. A strong fundamentalist,
Sunday preached temperance and opposed scientific evolution. Over 100
million are estimated to have heard Sunday preach before his death in
1935.
1870 Mississippi becomes 9th state re-admitted to US after Civil War 1867 Gyula Andressy becomes premier of Hungary 1867 first ship passes through Suez Canal 1865 Battle of Charleston SC forces its evacuation. 1865 Columbia, S.C., burns as the Confederates evacuate and Union forces move in. (It's not known which side set the blaze.) 1864 CSS "HL Hunley" becomes first submarine to sink an enemy ship 1864 Confederate sub "HL Hunley" sinks Union ship "Housatonic" 1854 British recognize independence of Orange Free State (South Africa) 1848 Toscane gets liberal Constitution 1836 HMS Beagle/Charles Darwin leaves Tasmania. 1831 Se aprueba en Bruselas la primera Constitución de Bélgica como país independiente.
1815 In deciding the legal case Terrett v. Taylor, the US Supreme Court declared unconstitutional an act of the Virginia Legislature which denied property rights to Protestant Episcopal churches in the state. The Court ruled that religious corporations, like other corporations, have rights to their property. 1810 Ve la luz un decreto de Napoléon Bonaparte en el que declara a Roma segunda capital del Imperio. 1806 Un décret décide que l'Arc de triomphe sera élevé sur la colline de Chaillot, tandis qu'un autre se dressera place du Carrousel pour célébrer la gloire des armées de Napoléon Bonaparte. Percier et Fontaine sont chargés de celui du Carrousel et Chalgrin construit celui de l'Etoile et cela à Paris bien entendu. |
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1801 Jefferson at last wins deadlocked presidential
election After one tie vote in the electoral college and thirty-five tie votes in the House of Representatives, Thomas Jefferson [13 Apr {02 Apr Julian} 1743– 04 Jul 1826] is elected the third president of the United States over his running mate, Aaron Burr [06 Feb 1756 – 14 Sep 1836]. In the presidential election of 1800, Thomas Jefferson, a member of the Republican Party (actually a forerunner of the Democratic Party), defeated the incumbent president and Federalist candidate John Adams. However, in the election, as the electoral college members made no distinction between the presidential candidate and vice presidential candidate, Jefferson and his running mate, Aaron Burr, both defeated Adams with seventy-three votes. As dictated by Article Two of the US Constitution, the election was sent to the House of Representatives. Beginning on 11 February 1801, the House took thirty-five ballots without breaking the tie, as the Federalists, defeated in the electoral college vote, rallied behind Burr. Finally, on 17 February barely two weeks before the new president was to be inaugurated, a small group of Federalists, reasoning that a peaceful transfer of power required that the majority party have its choice as president, voted in Jefferson’s favor. Jefferson’s triumph brought an end to a serious constitutional crisis, and on 04 March 1801, Jefferson was inaugurated as president of the United States. Three years later, the Twelfth Amendment to the US Constitution, providing for the separate election of presidents and vice presidents, was ratified and adopted. After one tie vote in the Electoral College and 35 indecisive ballot votes in the House of Representatives, Vice President Thomas Jefferson is elected the third president of the United States over his running mate, Aaron Burr. The confusing election, which ended just 15 days before a new president was to be inaugurated, exposed major problems in the presidential electoral process set forth by the framers of the US Constitution. As dictated by Article Two of the Constitution, presidents and vice presidents are elected by "electors," a group of voters chosen by each state in a manner specified by that state's legislature. The total number of electors from each state is equal to the number of senators and representatives that state is entitled to in Congress. In the first few presidential elections, these electors were chosen by popular vote, legislative appointment, or a combination of both (by the 1820s, almost all states adopted the practice of choosing electors by popular vote). Each elector voted for two people; at least one of who did not live in his state. The individual receiving the greatest number of votes would be elected president, and the next in line, vice president. A majority of electors was needed to win election, thus ensuring consensus across states. Because each elector voted twice, it was possible for as many as three candidates to tie with a majority in which case the House of Representatives was to vote a winner from among the tied candidates. If no majority was achieved in the initial electoral vote, the House was to decide the winner from the top five candidates. In both cases, representatives would not vote individually but by state groups. Each state, no matter what its number of representatives, would be entitled to just one vote, and a majority of these votes was needed to elect a candidate president. In the nation's first presidential election, in 1789, George Washington was unanimously elected, and John Adams [30 Oct {19 Oct Julian} 1735 – 04 Jul 1826] his unofficial running mate came in second in electoral votes, making him vice president. Both men were conservative and favored a strong federal government as established by the Constitution. To balance his Cabinet with a liberal, and thus maintain the widest possible support for the new US government, Washington chose Thomas Jefferson the idealistic drafter of the Declaration of Independence as secretary of state. During Washington's first administration, Jefferson often came into conflict with Alexander Hamilton, the secretary of the treasury. Jefferson objected to Hamilton's efforts to strengthen the national government at the expense of the states, and the two men also differed significantly on foreign policy, with Hamilton advocating improved relations with conservative England and Jefferson calling for closer ties with Revolutionary France. Although Washington detested the factional fighting, the disagreements gave rise to the nation's first political parties: Jefferson's Democratic-Republicans (the forerunner of the Democratic Party) and Hamilton's Federalists. In 1792, Washington was unanimously re-elected president, and Adams was re-elected vice president. Jefferson, his relations with Hamilton greatly deteriorated, resigned as secretary of state in 1793. In 1796, Jefferson ran for president as the candidate of the Democratic-Republicans, and Adams, as the Federalist candidate. When the results of the election were tallied, it became clear that the nation's forefathers had failed to properly anticipate the rise of political parties. Adams won the election with 71 votes, but his Federalist running mate, Thomas Pinckney [23 Oct 1750 – 02 Nov 1828], received only 59 votes, nine less than Thomas Jefferson, who was elected vice president. Jefferson's running mate, Senator Aaron Burr of New York, received only 30 votes. As vice president, Jefferson dedicated himself to his constitutional duty of presiding over the Senate and wrote the Manual of Parliamentary Practice, a book of congressional rules. He had little contact with the Adams administration. Meanwhile, tensions rose with France over US-British trade, leading Congress to pass the Alien and Sedition Act, which restricted US citizenship and prohibited public criticism of the president or the government of the United States. Jefferson viewed the acts as the confirmation of the kind of federal tyranny he feared and left Philadelphia for Monticello in 1798 to pen the Kentucky Resolutions in response. He soon returned to the US capital to carry on his duties in the Senate. In the election of 1800, Jefferson and Burr again took on Adams and Pinckney. By this time, America's political tide was sweeping away from the conservative Federalists to Jefferson's more democratic party. In addition, Adams was hampered in his re-election bid by Alexander Hamilton [11 Jan 1756 – 12 Jul 1804], who advocated the election of Pinckney as president and Adams as vice president. On 04 November the national election was held. When the electoral votes were counted, the Democratic-Federalists emerged with a decisive victory, with Jefferson and Burr each earning 73 votes to Adams' 65 votes and Pinckney's 64 votes. John Jay [12 Dec 1745 – 17 May 1829], the governor of New York, received 1 vote. Because Jefferson and Burr had tied, the election went to the House of Representatives, which began voting on the issue on 11 February 1801. What at first seemed but an electoral technicality handing Jefferson victory over his running mate developed into a major constitutional crisis when Federalists in the lame-duck Congress threw their support behind Burr. Jefferson needed a majority of nine states to win, but in the first ballot had only eight states, with Burr winning six states and Maryland and Virginia. Finally, on 17 February a small group of Federalists reason that the peaceful transfer of power requires that the majority party have its choice as president and votes in Jefferson's favor. The 35th ballot gives Jefferson victory with 10 votes. Burr received four votes and two states voted blank. Thomas Jefferson was inaugurated the third president of the United States on 04 March. Three years later, the 12th Amendment to the US Constitution, providing for the separate election of presidents and vice presidents, was ratified and adopted. Under Jefferson, the power of the federal government was reduced but never to such a degree that it threatened the unity of the United States. The crowning achievement of his two terms in office was the Louisiana Purchase, an unprecedented executive action in which Jefferson violated his own constitutional scruples in the name of doubling the size of the United States. Aaron Burr was denied renomination by his party for the office of vice president in February 1804, and George Clinton of New York was chosen in his place. Several months later, Burr challenged his long-time political antagonist Alexander Hamilton to a duel and shot him dead. In 1807, he was put on trial for treason after being accused of plotting to establish an independent republic in the American Southwest. He was acquitted and eventually resumed his law practice in New York. Thomas Jefferson and John Adams both died on 04 July 1826 the 50th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Adams' last words were "Thomas Jefferson still survives," though his old political adversary had died a few hours before. — PORTRAITS: Jefferson (B&W) by Savage — Jefferson by Stuart — Jefferson by Saint~Mémin — Jefferson by Rembrandt Peale — Jefferson by Durand — Jefferson Nickel (after a bust by Houdon) — Burr by Vanderlyn — Hamilton in 1792, in 1806 and an 1806 copy of the same (also on $10 bills), by Trumbull — Jay by Stuart — Adams in 1815, in 1821, in 1826, by Stuart — Adams (after Stuart) by Durand — Pinckney (B&W) |
1772 First partition of Poland-Russia and Prussia,
joined later by Austria 1714 Parliament of Paris accepts Pope Clemens XI's "Unigenitus" decree. 1676 Kings Charles II and Louis XIV sign secret treaty 1670 France and Bavaria sign military assistance treaty 1621 Miles Standish appointed first commander of Plymouth colony 1598 Boris Godunov chosen tsar of Russia. 1568 Holy Roman Emperor agrees to pay annual tribute to Sultan for peace. 1454 Le banquet du Faisant. Philippe le Bon organise dans son palais ducal à Lille un mémorable banquet pour raviver l'esprit de croisade. Il y prête le "vu du faisant" : Si le roi de France acceptait de combattre les Turcs, il le suivrait ainsi que ses chevaliers. De fabuleux spectacles ("entremets") figurant symboliquement la croisade y furent représentés entre les 48 mets servis. Ce fut le banquet le plus riche et le plus somptueux du moyen âge. La croisade n'eut jamais lieu. 1370 Battle of Rudau: Germany beats Lithuania. |
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Deaths
which occurred on a February 17: 2003 (Presidents' Day national holiday) Kevin Gayden, 24, Michael Wilson, 22, Charita Rhodes, 19, and 18 others trampled or crushed in stampede at a night club on Chicago's Near South Side (a mostly Black entertainment district, after 02:00 (08:00 UT) when security guards use mace or pepper spray to break up a fight started between three women, and fleeing patrons pile on top of each other in the staircase and behind the front door which jams shut; the other doors are locked or obstructed.. About 1500 persons were in the dance club, the E2, on the second floor of the Epitome restaurant building at 2347 South Michigan Avenue. It takes firefighters more than 30 minutes to smash open some doors and pull out the approximately 55 injured, including two firefighters, and the dead. 2003 Riyad Abu Zied, riddled with bullets by Israeli undercover agents, as he was in his car outside the Boureij refugee camp near Gaza City. He was a leader of Hamas' Izz-el-Deen al-Qassam military wing. 2002 Two Palestinians of the Al Aksa Martyrs Brigades, near Hadera, Israel. Israeli traffic policemen noticed a car whose front and back license plates did not match. Checking they found it was listed as stolen. The policemen gave chase and forced the car off the road. One of the Palestinians got out, threw two pipe bombs and was killed in an exchange of gunfice with the policemen. The other Palestinian drove off and soon died when his car exploded as pursuing policemen fired at it. Both the Palestinians had explosives strapped to their bodies. 2002 Eight Hindus (4 men and 4 women), just after midnight, in two adjacent homes in village Narala, 10-hours walk from the nearest highway, Rajouri district, 100 km northwest of Jammu, the winter capital of Jammu-Kashmir state, India. Suspected Islamic militants shot and killed eight Hindus in a midnight attack on a remote mountainous village in troubled Jammu-Kashmir state, police said Sunday. Another six Hindus are wounded. 2000 Muhammed Muhsin bin Al-Haj, 28, bombed at night by Russians, volunteer for the Chechens, from Medina, Arabia. 1998 Ernst Junger, filósofo alemán. 1997 Modesto Rico Pasarín, policía judicial de 33 años, asesinado por la banda terrorista ETA (Euskadi Ta Askatasuna) mediante una bomba colocada debajo del asiento de su coche. 1996 More than 100 people, by tidal waves in Indonesia. 1993 Some 800 to 2000 die as Haitian ferry boat capsizes in storm. 1991 Enrique Bermudez commandant (Contra) 1980 Graham Vivian Sutherland, etcher, lithographer, and painter, born in London on 24 August 1903. MORE ON SUTHERLAND AT ART 4 FEBRUARY LINKS Insect Devastation: East End Factory Ventilation Shaft 1968 US casualty rate in Vietnam reaches record high American officials in Saigon report an all-time high weekly rate of US casualties 543 killed in action and 2,547 wounded in the previous seven days. These losses were a result of the heavy fighting during the communist Tet Offensive. 1967 Ciro Alegría, escritor peruano. |
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1940 Day 80 of Winter War: USSR aggression against
Finland. More deaths due to Stalin's desire to grab Finnish territory. Heavy fighting continues on the Isthmus Heavy fighting continues on the Karelian Isthmus. The enemy manages to break the defensive line in Postilampi near Kämärä station. The outnumbered Finnish troops are fighting enemy tanks on the open snow without anti-tank guns. The Finns are forced to retreat. The Soviet attack grinds to a halt at the intermediary defensive positions. The Russians make strenuous efforts to take Suursaari island in Lake Muolaanjärvi. The attempt fails. Ladoga Karelia: in recognition of his prowess in the fighting on the River Kollaanjoki, Corporal Simo Häyhä is awarded a Sako target rifle donated by a Swedish sympathiser, Eugen Johansson. Häyhä has shot dead 219 enemy soldiers with his open-sight 'pystykorva' rifle, and approximately the same number again with a submachine gun and a rapid-fire rifle. His most successful tally for a single day has been 25 dead. Häyhä has previously been awarded the Medal of Liberty, a pocket watch and woollen gloves. Commander-in-Chief Mannerheim addresses an appeal to his officers: "The whole future of our people hangs in the balance. Only our loyalty and endurance can save the day. I am sure every officer will do his duty." Northern Finland: Soviet troops in Kuhmo launch a new assault on the Kuusijoki line in an effort to free the trapped 54th Division. Gulf of Bothnia: a road is opened across the frozen sea between Vaasa and Umeå in Sweden. Iisalmi suffers heavy enemy bombing. 41 people are killed in a direct hit on a bomb shelter. 130 enemy aircraft bomb Viipuri. 158 American Finnish volunteers arrive in Oulu. An exhibition of captured war materiel opens in Helsinki Exhibition Hall. Proceeds from the exhibition are to be used to help the needy relatives of soldiers fallen in the war. Visitors to the exhibition can keep abreast of the latest figures from the front. There are, for example, two boards presenting the numbers of enemy aircraft shot down and tanks destroyed since the start of the war. Today's figures are 387 aircraft and 1050 tanks. Abroad: the Swedish press strongly criticizes Prime Minister Hansson and the Swedish Government's decision not to help Finland. The Swedish Prime Minister's negative reply to Finland is received with satisfaction in Moscow. The Soviet leadership believes Finland's fate has now been finally sealed. The British and French press believe Sweden will come to regret the decision. In Geneva, Miss Sophie Mannerheim delivers a hugely popular lecture on her father and the war. ^ Ankarat taistelut jatkuvat Karjalan kannaksella Talvisodan 80. päivä, 17.helmikuuta.1940 Ankarat taistelut jatkuvat Karjalan kannaksella. Vihollinen saa murtuman puolustuslinjaan Postilammen maastossa Kämärän aseman lähellä. Suomalaiset taistelevat panssarivaunuilla operoivaa vihollisylivoimaa vastaan avomaastossa paljaalla hangella ilman panssarintorjuntatykkejä. Suomalaiset ovat pakotettuja perääntymään. Neuvostojoukkojen hyökkäykset torjutaan väliasemassa. Muolaanjärvellä venäläiset yrittävät voimakkaasti vallata Suursaarta. Vihollisen hyökkäykset torjutaan. Kollaanjoen taisteluissa kunnostautunut alikersantti Simo Häyhä palkitaan ruotsalaisen Eugen Johanssonin lahjoittamalla Sakon tarkkuuskiväärillä. Häyhä on ampunut pystykorva-kiväärillään 219 vihollista ja suurin piirtein saman verran konepistoolilla ja pikakiväärillä. Paras yhden päivän tulos: 25 hengiltä otettua vihollista. Aikaisemmin Häyhä on palkittu vapaudenmitalilla, taskukellolla ja villakäsineillä. Ylipäällikkö Mannerheim osoittaa vetoomuksensa puolustusvoimien upseereille:"Kansamme koko tulevaisuus on nyt vaakalaudalla. Vain meidän kestävyytemme ja uskollisuutemme voi sen pelastaa. Olen vakuutettu, että jokainen upseeri täyttää tehtävänsä." Neuvostojoukot aloittavat uuden hyökkäyksen Kuusijoki-linjaa vastaan Kuhmossa 54. Divisioonan pelastamiseksi. Jäätie Vaasan ja Uumajan välillä avataan. Vihollinen pommitttaa ankarasti Iisalmea, surmansa saa 41 henkilöä vihollisen pommin iskeytyessä väestösuojaan. Viipuria pommittaa 130 viholliskonetta. 158 amerikansuomalaista vapaaehtoista saapuu Ouluun. Helsingin Messuhallissa avataan sotasaalisnäyttely, jonka tulot käytetään rintamalla kaatuneiden vähävaraisten sotilaiden omaisten avustamiseen. Näyttelykävijä saa numerotietoja mm. kahdesta taulusta, joissa seurataan alasammuttujen viholliskoneiden ja tuhottujen hyökkäysvaunujen lukumäärää. Tänään luvut ovat 387 alas ammuttua viholliskonetta ja 1050 tuhottua hyökkäysvaunua. Ruotsissa Tukholmassa ilmestyvät sanomalehdet arvostelevat voimakkaasti pääministeri Hanssonin ja Ruotsin hallituksen kantaa olla auttamatta Suomea. Moskovassa Ruotsin pääministerin Suomelle kielteinen lausunto herättää tyytyväisyyttä ja Neuvostoliiton johtavissa piireissä ollaan sitä mieltä, että Suomen kohtalo on nyt lopullisesti ratkaistu. Englannin ja Ranskan sanomalehdistö arvelee Ruotsin vielä katuvan päätöstään. Neiti Sophie Mannerheim pitää Genevessä esitelmän "Sota ja isäni" ja saavuttaa myrskyisen menestyksen. ^ De häftiga striderna fortsätter på Karelska näset Vinterkrigets 80 dag, den 17 februari 1940 Häftiga strider fortsätter på Karelska näset. Fienden lyckas bryta in i försvarslinjen i terrängen kring Postilampi nära Kämärä station. Finnarna strider mot den fientliga övermaktens pansarvagnar i den öppna terrängens oskyddade drivor utan pansarvärnskanoner. Finnarna tvingas retirera. Sovjettruppernas attacker slås tillbaka vid mellanställningen. Vid Muolaanjärvi försöker ryssarna intensivt invadera ön Suursaari. Fiendens anfall avvärjs. Undersergeant Simo Häyhä som utmärkt sig i striderna vid Kollaanjoki belönas med ett Sako-prickskyttegävär donerat av svensken Eugen Johansson. Häyhä har med sitt armégevär skjutit 219 fiender och ungefär lika många med maskinpistol och snabbeldsgevär. Rekordet för en dag var när han tog livet av 25 ryska soldater. Tidigare har Häyhä belönats med en frihetsmedalj, en fickklocka och yllehandskar. Överbefälhavare Mannerheim riktar en vädjan till försvarsmaktens officerare:"Hela folkets framtid ligger nu i vågskålen. Endast vår uthållighet och vår lojalitet kan rädda den. Jag är övertygad om att varje officer utför sin uppgift." De ryska trupperna går till ny attack mot Kuusijokilinjen i Kuhmo för att rädda sin 54. Division. Isvägen mellan Vasa och Umeå öppnas. Fienden bombar häftigt Idensalmi. När ett befolkningsskydd träffas dödas 41 personer. Viborg bombas av 130 fientliga plan. 158 frivilliga amerikafinnar anländer till Uleåborg. I Helsingfors Mässhall öppnas en krigsutställning vars intäkter används för att stöda mindre bemedlade anhöriga till stupade soldater. Besökarna får sifferuppgifter bl.a. från två tavlor som visar antalet nedskjutna fientliga jaktplan och förintade stridsvagnar. Idag visar siffrorna 387 nedskjutna plan och 1050 förintade stridsvagnar. De svenska dagstidningarna som utkommer i Stockholm kritiserar skarpt statsminister Hanssons och den svenska regeringens beslut att inte hjälpa Finland. I Moskva väcker den svenska statsministerns negativa utlåtande till Finland belåtenhet och de ledande sovjetiska kretsarna anser att Finlands öde nu är slutligen avgjort. Den engelska och franska pressen menar att Sverige ännu kommer att ångra sitt beslut. Fröken Sophie Mannerheim håller ett föredrag "Kriget och min far" i Geneve och har en stormande framgång. |
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1934 Albert 1er, le Roi-Chevalier, 3ème roi des Belges.
Né en 1875, à Bruxelles, fils du comte de Flandre, il reçut un enseignement privé avant de rejoindre l'école militaire. Dans les années qui précédèrent son règne, il effectua, parallèlement à des études d'économie et de sciences politiques, plusieurs voyages à l'étranger, dont un aux États-Unis et une grande tournée au Congo belge. En 1900, il épousa Élisabeth de Bavière. Il devint roi de Belgique en 1909, après la mort de son oncle Léopold II, décédé sans laisser de fils. Les premières années de son règne furent perturbées par d'importants conflits sociaux et par le problème flamand. Il parvint cependant à se faire accepter du peuple belge par son tempérament modéré, son respect de la Constitution et son intervention énergique durant la Première Guerre mondiale. En effet, en 1914, n'étant pas parvenu par voie diplomatique à éviter l'occupation de son pays par les troupes de l'empereur d'Allemagne Guillaume II, en dépit du statut de neutralité de la Belgique, Albert Ier assuma le commandement des forces armées belges et combattit, quatre années durant, l'armée allemande. Son attitude courageuse et désintéressée lui valut le surnom de " Roi-Chevalier ". Après la guerre, devenu très populaire, il se lança dans la reconstruction de la Belgique et usa de son prestige pour apaiser les conflits sociaux, économiques et politiques. Partisan de la démocratie, Albert Ier apporta son soutien au projet de loi instituant le suffrage universel (décembre 1918). Son action diplomatique à l'étranger conduisit à l'abolition du traité de Londres, qui consacrait le statut de neutralité de la Belgique (1831), lors de la signature du traité de Versailles en 1919. Avec la reine, il se consacra également à l'épanouissement culturel de la Belgique, et encouragea les sciences en créant la Fondation du fonds national de la recherche scientifique. Alpiniste passionné, il mourut accidentellement en 1934, lors d'une escalade à Marche-les-Dames, des rochers à pic qui longent la Meuse namuroise. Il eut pour successeur son fils aîné, Léopold III. Sur le plan culturel, les Belges doivent à l’initiative personnelle du roi la fondation du Fonds national de la recherche scientifique. La reine Élisabeth et le roi patronnent le développement des arts et des lettres. Singulièrement non-conformiste de caractère, la reine Élisabeth survivra à son époux jusqu’en 1965. Violoniste dilettante (elle avait été l’élève d’Eugène Ysaye, lequel restera d’ailleurs son conseiller musical), elle fondera à Bruxelles, après la Seconde Guerre mondiale, le concours international qui porte son nom et dont les prix récompensent tour à tour des violonistes, des pianistes et des compositeurs. |
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1932 Johan Jonsen, the "Mad Trapper of Rat River" On 15 July 1904 young Johan Jonsen, 6, the future "Mad Trapper of Rat River," left Norway with his family and headed for the US. His Swedish father settled the family on a barren 320-acre homestead in North Dakota. At an early age, Jonsen became a skilled outdoorsman and hunter, and by the time he was in his teens was bored with the backbreaking life of a high plains farmer. He struck up a friendship with a local rustler and gunslinger named Bert Dekler who helped him refine his expertise with a pistol. In 1915, at the age of 17, Jonsen committed his first robbery, seizing $2800 from the Farmers' State Bank of Medicine Lake, Montana. He managed a successful escape, but was later apprehended in Wyoming for horse theft and returned to Montana. He served three years in the Montana State Penitentiary before being released and quickly returning to a life in crime. Because he used a variety of aliases, it is difficult to know exactly how many crimes Jonsen committed, but they were apparently abundant. Yet, as he grew older Jonsen began to retreat into the wilderness, where he increasingly became an antisocial hermit. By 1930, he was living in a cabin along the Rat River in an isolated far northeastern section of the Canadian Yukon. There he tolerated no visitors and survived by trapping beaver. He had not totally abandoned his larcenous ways, though other trappers complained that he pillaged their trap lines. In late December 1931, an officer for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and three other men arrived at Jonsen's cabin with a search warrant to investigate the claims that he was pilfering from other trappers' lines. When the Mountie knocked, Jonsen replied by shooting through the door, wounding the officer in the chest. The four men fled, but a larger force returned soon after and began a 15-hour attack with gunfire and dynamite that failed to force Jonsen's surrender. The following day, a blizzard swept in and Jonsen managed to sneak off obscured by the thick curtains of snow. A massive manhunt began that eventually involved scores of men aided by airplanes, dog teams, and skilled Indian guides. Yet, Jonsen-traveling on foot with almost no food-managed to avoid capture for more than month. On 17 February 1932, the posse found Jonsen and trapped him on the ice in the middle of a frozen river. Still Jonsen refused to surrender. He shot one of his pursuers before the posse killed him with a massive volley of bullets. Having survived 45 days traveling through some of the roughest country in the world with almost no food, the once robust "Mad Trapper of Rat River" was skin and bones. His corpse weighed less than 100 pounds. |
1915 Francisco Giner de los Ríos, pedagogo y escritor
español. 1908 Geronimo, 79, Apache chief.
1854 John Martin, British painter born on 19 July 1789. MORE ON MARTIN AT ART 4 FEBRUARY LINKS The Assuaging of the Waters Manfred and the Witch of the Alps The Great Day of His Wrath 53 prints at FAMSF The Bard _ The subject comes from Thomas Gray's poem The Bard |
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1827
Johann
Heinrich Pestalozzi, 81, Swiss educator C'est la mort à Bruq, du promoteur de l’Education active, le pédagogue Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi. Né en 1746, profondément influencé par le philosophe et moraliste Jean-Jacques Rousseau, il fonda, à Yverdon en 1805, un institut prioritairement destiné aux enfants pauvres et orienté vers l'enseignement agricole et la formation professionnelle. Cet institut, que fréquentaient des élèves venus de l'Europe entière, comprenait tous les degrés de l'enseignement jusqu'à l'université. Selon la méthode de Pestalozzi, l'enfant était guidé dans son apprentissage par des exercices pratiques, des travaux manuels, l'observation et la perception. Le rôle de l'éducateur était d'apprendre à développer l'individualité de l'enfant plutôt que d'essayer de lui transmettre des connaissances. Les idées et les méthodes de Pestalozzi influencèrent plusieurs systèmes d'enseignement primaire du monde occidental, notamment l'éducation nouvelle. PESTALOZZI ONLINE: Il est notamment l'auteur de Die Abendstunde eines Einsiedlers (1780), Über Gesetzgebung und Kindermord (1783), Meine Nachforschungen über der Gang der Natur (1797), Ausgewählte Fabeln (1797), Stanser Brief (1799), Wie Gertrud ihre Kinder lehrt (1801), Le Livre des mères (1803). Geb. 12.1.1746 Zürich; gest. 17.2.1827 Brugg/Kt. Aargau. Pestalozzi entstammte einer italienischen Kaufmannsfamilie, die seit Mitte des 16. Jahrhunderts in Zürich lebte. Er besuchte die Lateinschule am Fraumünster und am Großmünster in Zürich sowie das Collegium Carolinum, die philosophisch-theologische Hochschule. Unter Rousseauschem Einfluß verließ er das Carolinum vorzeitig und bereitete sich auf politisch-administrative Aufgaben vor; als diese Pläne scheiterten, entschloß er sich nach einjähriger Lehrzeit Bauer zu werden und auf das Birrfeld bei Brugg zu ziehen. Wegen einiger Fehlernten mußte er den Betrieb durch die Weiterverarbeitung von Baumwolle stützen; dazu zog er auch verarmte Kinder aus der Umgebung heran. 1774 wandelte er den Hof in eine Armenanstalt um, die er wegen finanzieller Probleme 1780 wieder aufgeben mußte. Als 1798 die Französische Revolution auch auf die Schweiz übergriff, wurde er durch die neue Zentralregierung beauftragt, in Stans zur Betreuung der Waisenkinder eine Armenanstalt einzurichten, die allerdings unter dem Druck des französisch-österreichischen Krieges nach sieben Monaten wieder geschlossen wurde. 1799 ermöglichte es ein Auftrag der Zentralregierung, in Burgdorf/Emme die in Stans entwickelten Unterrichtsmethoden weiter zu erproben. 1804/05 wurde das Institut nach Iferten verlegt und entwickelte sich dort für etwa zwei Jahrzehnte zu einem pädagogischen Zentrum Europas. 1825 löste er die Anstalt auf und zog sich auf seinen Hof im Birrfeld zurück. |
1788 Maurice Quentin de la Tour, French artist born
on 05 September 1704. MORE
ON DE LA TOUR AT ART 4 FEBRUARY
LINKS
Self-Portrait (1751) Self~Portrait
(1760) Maurice,
Comte de Saxe, Marshal of France Mlle
Ferrand Meditating on Newton 1781 Jean-Jacques Dumont le Romain, French artist born in 1701. |
MOLIERE ONLINE (in English translations): | ||
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1600 Giordano Bruno advocate of Copernican theory and
plurality of worlds, burned at stake by the Inquisition in Rome 0364 Flavius Claudus Jovianus, 32, Christian emperor of Rome (363-364) |
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Births which occurred on a February
17: 1952 Andrés Sánchez Robayna, escritor español. 1942 Huey P. Newton, US activist who co-founded the Black Panthers. He died on 22 August 1989. 1933 Newsweek magazine's first issue is published 1932 Un bárbaro en Asia, ensayo de Henri Michaux, se publica. 1929 Yasser Arafat PLO-leader (Achille Lauro, Nobel 1994) 1929 Chaim Potok (rabbi, doctor of philosophy, author: The Chosen, The Promise, My Name is Asher Lev) 1926 Manuel Millares Sall, Spanish painter who died in 1972 Cuadro 150 1924 Margaret Truman Daniel (Daughter of 33rd US President Harry S Truman; author) 1904 Hans J. Morgenthau, German-born US political scientist and historian who died on 19 July 1980. 1904 Luis Ferré, político puertorriqueño. 1897 National Congress of Mothers, forerunner of the National Parents and Teachers Association, is founded in Washington DC. 1892 Josyf Ivanovycè Slipyj, Ukrainian, ordained a Catholic priest on 30 September 1917; appointed Coadjutor Archbishop of Lviv on 25 November 1939, consecrated a bishop on 22 December 1939; succeeded as Archbishop of Lviv on 01 November 1944; imprisoned in Siberia from 1945, freed and sent to Rome on 06 February 1963; made a cardinal on 22 February 1965; died in Rome on 07 September 1984. 1889 Haroldson Lafayette Hunt, US oil tycoon who died on 29 November 1974. 1880 Alvaro Obregon General/President of Mexico (1920-24) 1877 André Maginot, French statesman for whom Maginot Line was named. He died on 07 January 1932. 1876 Eduardo Zamacois, escritor cubano.
1864 Andrew B. Paterson, Australian poet, journalist and songwriter who died on 05 February 1941. 1854 Friedrich A Krupp German arms manufacturer 1844 Aaron Montgomery Ward founded mail-order business (Montgomery Ward). He died on 07 December 1913. 1837 Pierre Auguste Cot, French artist who died on 02 August 1883. Born at Bédarieux (Hérault), February 17th 1837. A pupil of Duret and of Léon Cogniet. He painted mythological subjects, and also enjoyed a considerable reputatation for his portraits. LINKS 1836 Gustavo Adolfo Becquer, Spanish poet and author who died on 22 December 1870. 1817 Frederick Douglass, famous African-American. 1800 Ludovico Lipparini, Italian artist who died on 10 March 1856. 1781 René-Théophile-Hyacinthe Laënnec France, inventor (stethoscope) 1776 The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Volume I , by Edward Gibbon is published. (Volume II Volume III Volume IV Volume V Volume VI) 1774 Raphael Peale, US painter, specialized in Still Life and Trompe L'Oeil, who died on 25 March 1825, son of Charles Willson Peale, [15 Apr 1741 22 Feb 1827], brother of Rembrandt Peale [1778 04 Oct 1860], Rubens Peale [1784-1864], and Titian Peale [1799-1881], nephew of James Peale [1749 24 May 1831] LINKS Blackberries After the Bath [a hanging bath towel] 1745 Alessandro Giuseppe Volta, físico italiano. 1740 Horace B de Saussure Swiss physicist/geologist. 1675 Dirk Valkenburg (or Valkenborch) Theodor Gillis, Dutch artist who died in 1727. 1653 Arcangelo Corelli, Fusignano, Italy, violinist and composer (Concerto Grosso). He died on 08 January 1653. 1580 Historia de la Nueva España: Bernal Díaz del Castillo la termina de escribir. |