On this day in history,

Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 9:59 pm

Better get it out of the way now, since no one will pay attention on the day of. This is an American-centric list, so if you got others add them!

308 – At Carnuntum, Emperor emeritus Diocletian confers with Galerius, Augustus of the East, and Maximianus, the recently returned former Augustus of the West, in an attempt to restore order to the Roman Empire.

1215 – The Fourth Lateran Council meets, defining the doctrine of transubstantiation, the process by which bread and wine are, by that doctrine, said to transform into the body and blood of Christ.

1500 – Treaty of Granada – Louis XII of France and Ferdinand II of Aragon agree to divide the Kingdom of Naples between them.

1620 - The Mayflower Compact was signed by the 41 men on the Mayflower when they landed in what is now Provincetown Harbor near Cape Cod. The compact called for "just and equal laws.

1632 - Gustavus Adolphus was killed in the Battle of Lützen.

1634 – Following pressure from Anglican bishop John Atherton, the Irish House of Commons passes An Act for the Punishment for the Vice of Buggery.

1673 – Second Battle of Khotyn in Ukraine: Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth forces under the command of Jan Sobieski defeat the Ottoman army. In this battle, rockets made by Kazimierz Siemienowicz are successfully used.

1675 – Gottfried Leibniz demonstrates integral calculus for the first time to find the area under the graph of y = ?(x).

1724 – Joseph Blake, alias Blueskin, a highwayman known for attacking "Thief-Taker General" (and thief) Jonathan Wild at the Old Bailey, is hanged in London.

1750 – Riots brake out in Lhasa after the murder of the Tibetan regent.

1805 – Napoleonic Wars: Battle of Dürenstein – 8000 French troops attempt to slow the retreat of a vastly superior Russian and Austrian force.

1831 - Nat Turner, a slave and educated minister, was hanged in Jerusalem, VA, after inciting a violent slave uprising.

1851 - The telescope was patented by Alvan Clark.

1868 - The first indoor amateur track and field meet was held by the New York Athletic Club.

1869 – The Victorian Aboriginal Protection Act is enacted in Australia, giving the government control of indigenous people's wages, their terms of employment, where they could live, and of their children, effectively leading to the Stolen Generations.

1880 - Australian outlaw and bank robber Ned Kelly was hanged at the Melbourne jail at age 25.

1887 - Labor Activists were hanged in Illinois after being convicted of being connected to a bombing that killed eight police officers.

1889 - Washington became the 42nd state of the United States.

1918 - World War I came to an end when the Allies and Germany signed an armistice. This day became recognized as Veteran's Day in the United States (Remembrance Day in Canada).

1918 - Poland was reestablished shortly after the surrender of Germnay.

1920 - The body of an unknown British soldier was buried in Westminster Abbey. The service was recorded with the first electronic recording process developed by Lionel Guest and H.O. Merriman.

1921 - The Tomb of the Unknowns was dedicated at Arlington Cemetery in Virginia by U.S. President Harding.

1922 - Kurt Vonnegut, writer, born. Well known author of Slaughterhouse Five.

1938 - Kate Smith first sang Irving Berlin's "God Bless America" on network radio.

1940 - The Jeep made its debut.

1942 - During World War II, Germany completed its occupation of France.

1946 - The New York Knickerbockers (now the Knicks) played their first game at Madison Square Garden.

1952 - The first video recorder was demonstrated by John Mullin and Wayne Johnson in Beverly Hills, CA.

1965 - The government of Rhodesia declared its independence from Britain. The country later became known as Zimbabwe.

1965 - Walt Disney announced a project in Florida.

1966 - The U.S. launched Gemini 12 from Cape Kennedy, FL. The craft circled the Earth 59 times before returning.

1972 - The U.S. Army turned over its base at Long Bihn to the South Vietnamese army. The event symbolized the end of direct involvement in the Vietnam War by the U.S. military.

1975 - Civil war broke out when Angola gained independence from Portugal.

1981 - Stuntman Dan Goodwin scaled the outside of the 100-story John Hancock Center in Chicago in about six hours.

1981 - The U.S.S. Ohio was commissioned at the Electric Boat Division in Groton, CT. It was the first Trident class submarine.

1984 - The Reverend Martin Luther King Sr. died in Atlanta at age 84.

1984 - U.S. President Ronald Reagan accepted the Vietnam Veterans Memorial as a gift to the nation from the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund.

1986 - Sperry Rand and Burroughs merged to form "Unisys," becoming the second largest computer company.

1987 - Vincent Van Gogh's "Irises" was sold for a then record 53.9 million dollars in New York.

1988 - Police in Sacramento, CA, found the first of seven bodies buried on the grounds of a boardinghouse. Dorothea Puente was later charged in the deaths of nine people, convicted of three murders and sentenced to life in prison.

1990 - Stormie Jones, the world's first heart-liver transplant recipient, died at a Pittsburgh hospital at age 13.

1991 - The U.S. stationed its first diplomat in Cambodia in 16 years to help the nation arrange democratic elections.

1992 - Russian President Boris Yeltsin told U.S. senators in a letter that Americans had been held in prison camps after World War II. Some were "summarily executed," but others were still living in his country voluntarily.

1992 - The Church of England voted to ordain women as priests.

1993 - Walt Disney Co. announced plans to build a U.S. history theme park in a Virginia suburb of Washington. The plan was halted later due to local opposition.

1993 - In Washington, DC, the Vietnam Women's Memorial was dedicated to honor the more than 11,000 women who had served in the Vietnam War.

1994 - In Gaza, a suicide bomber detonated his explosives at an Israeli military checkpoint killing three soldiers.

1997 - The Eastman Kodak Company announced that they were laying off 10,000 employees.

1997 - Roger Clemens (Toronto Blue Jays) became the third major league player to win the Cy Young Award four times.

1998 - Jay Cochrane set a record for the longest blindfolded skywalk. He walked on a tightrope between the towers of the Flamingo Hilton in Las Vegas, NV. The towers are 600 feet apart.

1998 - Vincente Fernandez received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

1998 - Israel's Cabinet ratified a land-for-peace agreement with the Palestinians.

2000 – Kaprun disaster: 155 skiers and snowboarders die when a cable car catches fire in an alpine tunnel in Kaprun, Austria.

2001 – Journalists Pierre Billaud, Johanne Sutton and Volker Handloik are killed in Afghanistan during an attack on the convoy they are traveling in.

2002 - Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates pledged $100 million to fight AIDS in India

2004 – New Zealand Tomb of the Unknown Warrior is dedicated at the National War Memorial, Wellington.

2004 – The Palestine Liberation Organization confirms the death of Yasser Arafat from unidentified causes. Mahmoud Abbas is elected chairman of the PLO minutes later.

2006 – Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II unveils the New Zealand War Memorial in London, United Kingdom, commemorating the loss of soldiers from the New Zealand Army and the British Army.

2008 – RMS Queen Elizabeth 2 (QE2) sets sail on her final voyage to Dubai.

2011 - Bethesda Softworks releases their fifth installment in The Elder Scrolls video game series, "TESV: Skyrim".
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sam smith
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 4:33 pm

2011 - Bethesda Softworks releases their fifth installment in The Elder Scrolls video game series, "TESV: Skyrim".


The only notable one.
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lolli
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 3:57 pm

The only one that matters is 1918. Otherwise we would all be playing Die Alten Schriftrollen and have no say in whether our government invades another one's country..
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jesse villaneda
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 6:50 pm

The only notable one.

Right there shows your class.I see no humour in that at all. So this is more important that Rememberance Day (in Canada even though it's not a holdiay in some provinces but still marked)?

Shame on you right there. :shakehead:
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R.I.p MOmmy
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 10:07 am

Right there shows your class.I see no humour in that at all. So this is more important that Rememberance Day (in Canada even though it's not a holdiay in some provinces but still marked)?

Shame on you right there. :shakehead:

Why so serious? I think he was just kidding, course on these forums one can't be sure...
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No Name
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 8:46 am

November 11 is the "Day of the Supermarket" here in Brazil. :spotted owl:

It's alto the "Quality Day" and the "Memory Day (For the WWI)"
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Katharine Newton
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 1:16 pm

Please tell me there is a good story surrounding the "Day of the Supermarket"
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Unstoppable Judge
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 8:06 pm

Why so serious? I think he was just kidding, course on these forums one can't be sure...

I am sorry, when many people die, and this is serious to so many people, I just don't see the humour at all. Some things you just don't joke about. Like Ibiodesgaten said, we all could be playing a different game and not choosing our goverment.

I for one will be giving a moment of silence. We can do that much at least.

Lest us Never Forget.
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jaideep singh
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 9:09 am

I am sorry, when many people die, and this is serious to so many people, I just don't see the humour at all. Some things you just don't joke about. Like Ibiodesgaten said, we all could be playing a different game and not choosing our goverment.

I for one will be giving a moment of silence. We can do that much at least.

Lest us Never Forget.

Everything in the past is absolute no need to be worked up over something that will always be.
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Ally Chimienti
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 6:23 pm

Not worked up, just saying, that is all.
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T. tacks Rims
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 4:14 pm

Please tell me there is a good story surrounding the "Day of the Supermarket"


No, we just like to put random labels on random days. For real. We have the "Photographer's Day", "Librarian's Day", "Health and Nutrition's Day", "International Day of Children's Books", "Goalkeeper's Day", "Community's Day", "Europe's Day", "Zootechnist's Day", "Portuguese Language's Day", "United States Independence's Day", "Real State Agent's Day", "Bee's Day", "Orphan's Day", "Pan-American Health's Day", "Wheat's Day", "Creativity's Day", "National Livestock's Day", "Butcher's Day", "Lyons Club's Day", "Astronaut's Day", "Military Coup Anniversary's Day", "Lies's Day", http://www.arteducacao.pro.br/comemorativas.htm...

My favorite is six's Day on 6/9.
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Amy Gibson
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 6:40 am

On THIS day (November 6) in 1632 - Gustavus Adolphus was killed in the Battle of Lützen.
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REVLUTIN
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 7:47 pm

Actually every Veteran's Day, me and my friends always watch some war movies together (Hopefully it doesn't sound like we're 'armchair patriots' or anything). Got to fit Skyrim into my already busy schedule.
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luis dejesus
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 7:00 am

Bill Gates FTW. Not only did he fight his way to the top of the food chain, he then gave some money to fight AIDS in a foreign country.

Along with Veteran's Day, November 11th is awesome.
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Raymond J. Ramirez
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 5:55 am

Ok so everyday is a holiday somewhere then?
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Britney Lopez
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 6:04 am

Ok so everyday is a holiday somewhere then?


Actually no, just some of them are Holidays, the rest of them are just labels. Curiously, people don't work on the "Worker's Day".
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Jani Eayon
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 8:40 am

You see a list of some of the important historical events(needed more Nazi Germany), only for it to end with Skyrim. What a combo breaker.
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Chantel Hopkin
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 8:50 pm

Right there shows your class.I see no humour in that at all. So this is more important that Rememberance Day (in Canada even though it's not a holdiay in some provinces but still marked)?

Shame on you right there. :shakehead:
It's the internet, and you are doing it wrong.
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Stephanie I
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 11:40 am

Right there shows your class.I see no humour in that at all. So this is more important that Rememberance Day (in Canada even though it's not a holdiay in some provinces but still marked)?

Shame on you right there. :shakehead:

Seconded.
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Jack Bryan
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 9:27 am

The only one that matters is 1918. Otherwise we would all be playing Die Alten Schriftrollen and have no say in whether our government invades another one's country..


You have a say?
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Milad Hajipour
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 2:01 pm

You have a say?


QFT

Last time I checked, the few legit presidential candidates are either getting bashed by the media or the current congress, and most politics are brutal fights between two parties that don't know how to run the country.
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Kelli Wolfe
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 9:00 pm

You have a say?

Lol. He probably doesn't live in the US...
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Emma Pennington
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 5:45 pm

November 11th, 1922: The birth of Kurt Vonnegut.
He was a genius. Slaughterhouse Five is one of the greatest books I've ever read.
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Talitha Kukk
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 3:39 pm

I do like some Cat's Cradle. Adding Vonnegut!
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Alexis Acevedo
 
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Post » Thu Dec 08, 2011 7:07 am

Why so serious? I think he was just kidding, course on these forums one can't be sure...


Most likely because many people like to wear a sort of..."nerdbadge" and push past real life events or try to put entertainment software as more important than the outer world. Funny thing is many of these people are far from even following video games namely RPGs from their existence or from a notable area.

Which is a shame. Entertainment will always exist but should be indulged without over-excess just like everything else. People should take care of themselves in both body and mind(strive to be smarter, learn more, while keeping bodies healthy and strong) and also devote/have fun with their families/friends.

At the same time video games can also fit into your time slot. But you have to indulge in limits without compromising yourself.
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Jessie
 
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