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Nicolas Fouquet
Nicolas Fouquet was born in Paris on 27 January 1615, the son of a royal administrator and shipowner. His family’s wealth enabled him to purchase several posts in the government of Louis XIV.
Fouquet was a supporter of Cardinal Mazarin and gained through him two posts that increased his wealth and
Continue reading 23 March 1680: Death of Nicolas Fouquet, French Minister
Nicholas John Turney Monsarrat was born on 22 March 1910 in Liverpool, England, the fourth child of Keith and Ada Monsarrat. His birth certificate records his surname as Montserrat as this was his mother’s preferred spelling of the name.
Monsarrat referred to his time at school, first at St Christopher’s School for Boys in
Continue reading 22 March 1910: Birth of Nicholas Monsarrat, British Novelist
On 21 March 1960 in the township of Sharpeville, South Africa, 69 black men, women and children were shot dead when police officers opened fire on unarmed demonstrators. The shootings shocked the world and were condemned by the United Nations, but none of the police officers involved have ever been convicted of an offence
Continue reading 21 March 1960: The Sharpeville Massacre
At noon on Easter Sunday, 29 March 1964, a new radio station started broadcasting from an old Danish ferry (renamed the MV Caroline) anchored in international waters three miles from the Suffolk coast. The first song played, Not Fade Away by the Rolling Stones, was dedicated to the station’s founder, Ronan O’Rahilly.
Several months
Continue reading 20 March 1980: The Sinking of Radio Caroline
Edgar Rice Burroughs
Edgar Rice Burroughs was born on 1 September 1875 in Chicago, Illinois, USA, the son of George and Mary Burroughs. He was educated at various schools, moving around to avoid outbreaks of disease.
In 1891, at the age of fifteen, Burroughs spent six months in Idaho on the cattle ranch
Continue reading 19 March 1950: Death of Edgar Rice Burroughs, American Novelist
When the Belgian people voted in a referendum on the return of their king in March 1950 he had been in exile in Switzerland for five years. The question of King Leopold III’s return to Belgium had remained unanswered since the end of the Second World War and a settlement of the matter was
Continue reading 18 March 1950: Collapse of the Belgian Government
Captain Lawrence Oates
Lawrence Edward Grace Oates was born on 17 March 1880 at Putney, London, one of the four children of William and Caroline Oates. He was privately educated after ill health cut short his attendance at Eton College after two years.
Oates joined the 3rd West Yorkshire (militia) regiment in 1898
Continue reading 17 March 1880: Birth of Lawrence Oates, British Explorer
On the night of 16 March 1190, the Jewish feast of Shabbat ha-Gadol, 150 men, women and children died at the royal castle at York, where Clifford’s Tower now stands. Many died following a mass-suicide and the rest at the hands of a mob waiting outside.
Jewish communities had been established in London in
Continue reading 16 March 1190: The Massacre of the Jews of York
The State of Maine
Prior to the American War of Independence the territory that comprises the present day state of Maine, USA, formed part of the county of Sunbury in the Province of Nova Scotia. Following the Peace of Paris at end of the war in 1783, Maine was confirmed as being part
Continue reading 15 March 1820: Maine Became the 23rd US State
The Battle of Ivry by Rubens
On 14 March 1590 the Protestant forces of the new French king, Henry IV, faced the armies of the Catholic League, led by the Duke of Mayenne, on the plain of Épieds near Ivry, Normandy. The end of the battle, which was one of many during the
Continue reading 14 March 1590: The Battle of Ivry
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