Births | ||
|---|---|---|
| * 1976 | Leslie Feist | Canadian singer-songwriter who performs as a solo artist under the name Feist and as a member of Broken Social Scene. |
| * 1974 | Robbie Williams | British songwriter, singer and performer. |
| * 1962 | Anibal Acevedo Vila | Eighth Governor of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. |
| * 1961 | Henry Rollins | American rock musician, writer and spoken word performer. |
| * 1952 | Lung Ying-tai | Celebrated essayist and cultural critic, with a total of 17 published titles to her credit in Chinese. |
| * 1950 | Peter Gabriel | English musician who first came to fame as the lead vocalist of the progressive rock group Genesis. |
| * 1945 | Simon Schama | British historian and art critic. |
| * 1944 | Jerry Springer | Former Democratic mayor of Cincinnati, Ohio, United States, who now hosts a television program bearing his name, The Jerry Springer Show. |
| * 1916 | John (actor) Reed | English actor, dancer and singer, known for his nimble performances in the comic leads of the Savoy Operas, particularly with the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company. |
| * 1915 | Aung San | Burmese revolutionary, soldier, and statesman who is widely considered to be responsible for Burmese independence, even though he was assassinated six months before it was achieved. |
| * 1910 | William Shockley | Physicist, and co-inventor of the transistor. |
| * 1903 | Georges Simenon | Belgian writer of crime novels, best known as the creator of Commissaire Maigret. |
| * 1892 | Robert H. Jackson | United States Attorney General (1940–1941) and an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court (1941–1954). |
| * 1881 | Eleanor Farjeon | English author of children's stories and plays, poetry, biography, history and satire. |
| * 1824 | George Jessel | British judge. |
| * 1766 | Thomas Malthus | English demographer and political economist best known for his pessimistic but highly influential views on population growth. |
| * 1743 | Joseph Banks | English naturalist and botanist. |
| * 1707 | Claude Prosper Jolyot de Crebillon | French novelist. |
Deaths | ||
| † 2010 | John (actor) Reed | English actor, dancer and singer, known for his nimble performances in the comic leads of the Savoy Operas, particularly with the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company. |
| † 2002 | Waylon Jennings | American country music singer, songwriter, and musician. |
| † 1989 | Hans Hellmut Kirst | German novelist from Osterode, East Prussia. |
| † 1958 | Georges Rouault | French Catholic painter associated with Fauvism and Expressionism. |
| † 1954 | Frederick Lewis Allen | Editor of Harper's Magazine and also notable as an American historian of the first half of the 20th century. |
| † 1950 | Rafael Sabatini | Italian/British author of romance and adventure novels. |
| † 1927 | Brooks Adams | Better known simply as Brooks Adams, was an American historian and a critic of capitalism. |
| † 1893 | Georgi Pulevski | Writer and revolutionary, known for expressing publicly the idea of a separate Macedonian nation distinct from Serbs and Bulgarians, as well as a separate Macedonian language. |
| † 1883 | Richard Wagner | Influential German composer, conductor, music theorist, and essayist, primarily known for his groundbreaking "music dramas", he led a life characterised, until his last decades, by political exile, turbulent love affairs, poverty and repeated flight from his creditors. |
| † 1859 | Eliza Acton | English poet and cook who produced one of the country's first cookbooks aimed at the domestic reader rather than the professional cook or chef, Modern Cookery for Private Families. |
| † 1818 | George Rogers Clark | American pioneer and military officer credited with winning the Northwest Territory during the American Revolution. |
| † 1789 | William Adams | Fellow and Master of Pembroke College, Oxford. |
| † 1787 | Roger Joseph Boscovich | Physicist, astronomer, mathematician, philosopher, diplomat, poet, and Jesuit. |
| † 1728 | Cotton Mather | A B 1678, A M 1681; honorary doctorate 1710, was a socially and politically influential New England Puritan minister, prolific author and pamphleteer. |
| † 1571 | Benvenuto Cellini | Florentine writer, goldsmith and sculptor. |
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