Births | ||
|---|---|---|
| * 1974 | Joshua Fernandez | Malaysian film director / designer. |
| * 1970 | Luis Miguel | Mexican singer. |
| * 1961 | Peter Chung | Korean American animator. |
| * 1960 | Gregory Colbert | Canadian a film-maker and photographer best known as the creator of Ashes and Snow, a traveling exhibition of photographic artworks and films housed in the Nomadic Museum. |
| * 1957 | Afrika Bambaataa | DJ and community leader from the South Bronx, who was instrumental in the early development of Hip Hop throughout the 1970s. |
| * 1953 | Ruby Wax | American comedian who made a career in the United Kingdom as part of the alternative comedy scene in the 1980s. |
| * 1947 | Murray Perahia | American concert pianist and conductor. |
| * 1946 | Mark Haines | Former host of the CNBC show Squawk Box. |
| * 1943 | Bill Raftery | American basketball analyst, play-by-play announcer, and former college basketball coach. |
| * 1940 | Bernd Heinrich | Professor in the zoology department at the University of Vermont and is the author of a number of books about nature writing, zoology, ecology, and evolution. |
| * 1938 | Stanley Fish | American literary theorist and legal scholar. |
| * 1935 | Dudley Moore | British musician, actor and comedian. |
| * 1933 | Jayne Mansfield | Born Vera Jayne Palmer, was an American actress and sex symbol. |
| * 1931 | Fred Brooks | Software engineer and computer scientist, best-known for managing the development of OS/360, then later writing candidly about the process in his seminal book The Mythical Man-Month. |
| * 1912 | Glenn T. Seaborg | American scientist who won the 1951 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for "discoveries in the chemistry of the transuranium elements". |
| * 1834 | Joseph Roux | French Catholic parish priest, poet, and philologist. |
| * 1772 | David Ricardo | English political economist, often credited with systematizing economics, and was one of the most influential of the classical economists. |
| * 1758 | Fisher Ames | Representative in the United States Congress from Massachusetts. |
| * 1452 | Frederick IV of Naples | Last King of Naples of the House of Trastámara, ruling from 1496 to 1501. |
| * 0 | Benedict XVI (Pope) | Pope Benedict XVI, born Joseph Ratzinger, was the 265th Pope Pope of the Roman Catholic Church. |
Deaths | ||
| † 2009 | J. G. Ballard | British novelist and short story writer who was a prominent member of the New Wave in science fiction. |
| † 2004 | John Maynard Smith | British evolutionary biologist and geneticist. |
| † 1998 | Octavio Paz | Born Octavio Paz Lozano in Mexico City in the middle of the Mexican Revolution. |
| † 1997 | Eldon Hoke | American musician. |
| † 1992 | Frankie Howerd | Distinctive English comedian and comic actor whose career spanned six decades. |
| † 1979 | Wilhelm Bittrich | Obergruppenführer of the German SS and a Waffen-SS General during World War II He is perhaps now best remembered for his contribution to the defeat of the failed allied airborne offensive Operation Market Garden which took place in the Netherlands in September of 1944. |
| † 1967 | Konrad Adenauer | German statesman. |
| † 1963 | Alfred Whitney Griswold | American historian, and president of Yale University, 1950–1963. |
| † 1939 | Henry Stephens Salt | Influential English writer and campaigner for social reform in the fields of prisons, schools, economic institutions and the treatment of animals. |
| † 1938 | Henry Newbolt | Early 20th century English poet, best known for "Vitai Lampada". |
| † 1914 | Charles Sanders Peirce | American philosopher, chemist and polymath, who is now remembered as a pioneer of the field of semiotics and, with the formulation of the pragmatic maxim, the founder of the philosophies of Pragmatism and Pragmaticism. |
| † 1898 | George Parsons Lathrop | Poet, novelist and brother of Francis Lathrop. |
| † 1893 | John Addington Symonds | English poet and literary critic. |
| † 1882 | Charles Darwin | English naturalist who outlined the theory of evolution and proposed that evolution could be explained in part through natural and sexual selection. |
| † 1881 | Benjamin Disraeli | British politician, novelist, and essayist, serving twice as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. |
| † 1881 | Joseph Lane | American general during the Mexican-American War and a United States Senator from Oregon. |
| † 1824 | Lord Byron | Generally known as Lord Byron, was an Anglo-Scottish poet and leading figure in Romanticism. |
| † 1618 | Thomas Bastard | English clergyman famed for his published English language epigrams. |
| † 1608 | Thomas Sackville Dorset | English statesman, courtier, poet and playwright. |
| † 1588 | Paolo Veronese | Important Venetian Renaissance painter. |
| † 1578 | Uesugi Kenshin | Samurai warlord who ruled Echigo province in the Sengoku Period of Japan. |
| † 1560 | Philipp Melanchthon | Born Philipp Schwartzerdt, was a German reformer, collaborator with Martin Luther, the first systematic theologian of the Protestant Reformation, intellectual leader of the Lutheran Reformation, and an influential designer of educational systems. |
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