Births | ||
|---|---|---|
| * 1973 | Noel Fielding | English artist, comedian and actor. |
| * 1972 | The Notorious B.I.G. | Rapper. |
| * 1960 | Jeffrey Dahmer | Notorious American serial killer, necrophiliac and cannibal, who murdered 17 men and boys between 1978 and 1991. |
| * 1957 | Tony Hayward | Chief Executive of oil and energy company BP Group, taking over from John Browne, Baron Browne of Madingley on 1 May 2007. |
| * 1952 | Mr. T | Actor principally known for his roles in the 1980s television series The A-Team and as boxer James Clubber Lang in the 1982 film Rocky III. |
| * 1951 | Al Franken | Junior United States Senator from Minnesota. |
| * 1937 | Mengistu Haile Mariam | Communist leader of Ethiopia (1974-1991) during the Ethiopian Civil War, and the most prominent member of the Derg, the military junta responsible for the deposition of Haile Selassie. |
| * 1930 | Malcolm Fraser | Australian politician and 22nd Prime Minister of Australia, came to power in the circumstances of the dismissal of the Whitlam government. |
| * 1921 | Andrei Sakharov | Eminent Soviet-Russian nuclear physicist, dissident and human rights activist. |
| * 1832 | James Hudson Taylor | Christian missionary to China in the Methodist tradition, and founder of the China Inland Mission (renamed as Overseas Missionary Fellowship, OMF International in 1964). |
| * 1806 | Isaac McLellan | Author and poet, some of whose work has achieved notability by republication in anthologies. |
| * 1769 | John Hookham Frere | English diplomat and author. |
| * 1759 | Joseph Fouche | French statesman and Minister of Police under Napoleon Bonaparte. |
| * 1688 | Alexander Pope | Considered one of the greatest English poets of the eighteenth century. |
| * 1527 | Philip II of Spain | King of Spain. |
| * 1471 | Albrecht Durer | German painter and printmaker. |
Deaths | ||
| † 2000 | John Gielgud | English actor, director, and producer. |
| † 2000 | Barbara Cartland | English writer, and one of the most successful authors of romance novels of all time, specialising in historical love themes. |
| † 1983 | Eric Hoffer | American writer on social and political philosophies. |
| † 1983 | Kenneth Clark | English author, museum director, broadcaster and one of the most famous art historians of his generation. |
| † 1973 | Ivan Konev | Soviet military commander, who led Red Army forces on the Eastern Front during World War II, liberated much of Eastern Europe from occupation by the Axis Powers, and helped in the capture of Germany's capital, Berlin. |
| † 1949 | Klaus Mann | German writer, and the son of German writer Thomas Mann. |
| † 1947 | Flora Thompson | English author and poet, most well-known for her semi-autobiographical trilogy, Lark Rise to Candleford. |
| † 1944 | Rene Daumal | French writer, philosopher and poet. |
| † 1935 | Jane Addams | American social reformer. |
| † 1929 | Archibald Primrose Rosebery | British Liberal statesman and Prime Minister, also known as Archibald Primrose (1847–1851) and Lord Dalmeny (1851–1868). |
| † 1926 | Ronald Firbank | English novelist and playwright. |
| † 1894 | August Kundt | German physicist. |
| † 1790 | Thomas Warton | British Poet Laureate from 1785 until his death. |
| † 1771 | Christopher Smart | Otherwise known as "Kit Smart", "Kitty Smart", and "Jack Smart", was an English poet. |
| † 1650 | James Graham | Scottish nobleman and soldier, who initially joined the Covenanters in the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, but subsequently supported King Charles I as the English Civil War developed. |
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