Births | ||
|---|---|---|
| * 1961 | Paul Begala | Political consultant, commentator and was an advisor to President Bill Clinton. |
| * 1947 | Michael Ignatieff | Noted Canadian scholar, novelist and former Liberal Member of Parliament in the Canadian House of Commons. |
| * 1946 | L. Neil Smith | Also known by his nickname El Neil, is a libertarian science fiction author and political activist, whose works include the novels Pallas, The Forge of the Elders, and The Probablity Broach, each of which won the Libertarian Futurist Society's annual Prometheus Award for best libertarian novel. |
| * 1937 | George Carlin | Grammy-winning American stand-up comedian, actor and author, noted especially for his irreverent attitude and his observations on politics, language, psychology and religion as well as some taboo subjects. |
| * 1933 | Andrey Voznesensky | One of the group of Russian poets who first came to notice during the Khrushchev era. |
| * 1928 | Burt Bacharach | American songwriter. |
| * 1926 | James Samuel Coleman | American sociologist. |
| * 1925 | Yogi Berra | Former American baseball player, manager and member of Major League Baseball's Hall of Fame. |
| * 1922 | Marco Denevi | Argentine award-winning author of novels and short stories, as well as a lawyer and journalist. |
| * 1921 | Joseph Beuys | German Conceptual artist who produced work in a number of forms including sculpture, performance art, video art and installations. |
| * 1915 | Roger Schutz | Baptised Roger Louis Schütz-Marsauche, was the founder and prior of the Taizé Community, an ecumenical monastic community. |
| * 1915 | Brother Roger | Baptised Roger Louis Schütz-Marsauche, was the founder and prior of the Taizé Community, an ecumenical monastic community. |
| * 1910 | Dorothy Hodgkin | Born Dorothy Mary Crowfoot, was a British chemist, credited with the discovery of protein crystallography. |
| * 1907 | Katharine Hepburn | American actress of film, television and stage. |
| * 1902 | Philip Wylie | U S author of social criticism, short stories, screenplays, and several science-fiction novels. |
| * 1895 | Jiddu Krishnamurti | Philosopher, public speaker, and writer, on psychological, sociological, and spiritual subjects. |
| * 1890 | Kurt Student | German Luftwaffe general who fought as a fighter pilot during the First World War and as the commander of German Fallschirmjäger troops during the Second World War. |
| * 1850 | Henry Cabot Lodge | Republican statesman and noted historian. |
| * 1828 | Dante Gabriel Rossetti | English poet, painter and translator. |
| * 1820 | Florence Nightingale | British nurse, a pioneer of modern nursing, and a noted statistician. |
| * 1812 | Edward Lear | English artist, illustrator and writer known for his nonsensical poetry and his limericks, a form which he popularised. |
| * 1809 | Robert Charles Winthrop | American philanthropist, congressman from Massachusetts and one-time Speaker of the United States House of Representatives. |
| * 1803 | Justus von Liebig | German chemist who made major contributions to agricultural and biological chemistry and worked on the organization of organic chemistry. |
| * 1738 | Jonathan Boucher | English schoolmaster, clergyman and philologist, who spent some years in America, leaving in 1775 because, despite being a close friend of George Washington, he consistently campaigned against the Revolution. |
Deaths | ||
| † 2008 | Irena Sendler | Social worker who during World War II was an activist in the Polish Underground and Polish anti-Holocaust resistance in Warsaw. |
| † 2008 | Robert Rauschenberg | American artist who came to prominence in the 1950s. |
| † 1994 | Erik Erikson | Danish-German-American developmental psychologist and psychoanalyst known for his theory on social development of human beings, and for coining the phrase identity crisis. |
| † 1994 | John (Labour Party leader) Smith | British politician. |
| † 1987 | James Jesus Angleton | Long-serving chief of the Central Intelligence Agency's counter-intelligence staff. |
| † 1985 | Jean Dubuffet | One of the most famous European painters and sculptors of the second half of the 20th century. |
| † 1985 | Josephine Miles | American poet and literary critic. |
| † 1968 | Ivan Agayants | Leading Soviet NKVD/KGB intelligence officer of Armenian origin. |
| † 1967 | John Masefield | English poet and writer; he was Poet Laureate from 1930 until his death. |
| † 1963 | Aiden Wilson Tozer | Also known as A W Tozer, was an American Protestant pastor, preacher, author, magazine editor, Bible conference speaker and spiritual mentor. |
| † 1944 | Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch | Cornish writer, who published under the pen name of Q. |
| † 1944 | Max Brand | American western fiction author. |
| † 1935 | Jozef Pilsudski | Polish revolutionary and statesman, marshal, first chief of state (1918–1922) and authoritarian leader (1926–1935) of renascent Poland, and founder of her armed forces. |
| † 1925 | Amy Lowell | American poet of the Imagist school who posthumously won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1926. |
| † 1916 | James Connolly | Scottish-born Irish socialist politician and fighter against British rule. |
| † 1903 | Richard Henry Stoddard | U S critic and poet, was born in Hingham, Massachusetts. |
| † 1895 | Julius Hawley Seelye | Missionary, author, United States Representative, and former president of Amherst College. |
| † 1700 | John Dryden | Influential English poet, literary critic, and playwright. |
| † 1634 | George Chapman | English dramatist, translator and poet. |
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