Births | ||
|---|---|---|
| * 1974 | Alessandro Del Piero | Italian football player. |
| * 1953 | Bernard Membe | Minister for Foreign Affairs and International Co-operation of Tanzania. |
| * 1946 | Marina Warner | English novelist, short-story writer, mythographer and cultural historian. |
| * 1941 | Alan Kotok | American computer scientist at Digital Equipment Corporation, the World Wide Web Consortium and MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. |
| * 1937 | Roger McGough | English poet from Liverpool, and one of three poets in the best-selling anthology The Mersey Sound. |
| * 1934 | Carl Sagan | American astronomer and popular science writer. |
| * 1929 | Imre Kertesz‎ | Hungarian Jewish author, Holocaust concentration camp survivor, and winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2002. |
| * 1929 | Jona Senilagakali | Physician who was appointed the interim Prime Minister of Fiji during the 2006 coup. |
| * 1928 | Anne Sexton | Born Anne Gray Harvey, was an American poet and writer. |
| * 1918 | Spiro Agnew | Thirty-ninth Vice President of the United States, under President Richard Nixon; born Spiro Anagnostopoulos. |
| * 1913 | Hedy Lamarr | Austrian-born American actress. |
| * 1910 | Carroll Quigley | Noted American historian, polymath, and theorist of the evolution of civilizations, best known for his book Tragedy and Hope: A History of the World in Our Time (1966). |
| * 1904 | Viktor Brack | Organizer of the Euthanasia Programme, Operation T4, where the Nazi state systematically murdered German disabled people. |
| * 1888 | Jean Monnet | Regarded by many as a chief architect of European Unity. |
| * 1885 | Hermann Weyl | German mathematician. |
| * 1883 | Charles Demuth | Gay American Precisionist painter. |
| * 1877 | Muhammad Iqbal | Indian- and Urdu-language poet, philosopher and politician of the Indian subcontinent whose vision of an independent state for the Muslims of British India was to inspire the creation of Pakistan. |
| * 1871 | Florence R. Sabin | American medical scientist/spelunker. |
| * 1731 | Benjamin Banneker | Free African American mathematician, astronomer, surveyor, almanac author and farmer. |
| * 1721 | Mark Akenside | English poet and physician. |
Deaths | ||
| † 2006 | Ellen Willis | American essayist and critic. |
| † 2003 | Mario Merz | Italian artist. |
| † 1988 | John N. Mitchell | United States Attorney General under President Richard M Nixon. |
| † 1970 | Charles de Gaulle | In France commonly referred to as le général de Gaulle, was a French military leader and statesman. |
| † 1968 | Antonio Porchia | Argentinian writer and poet. |
| † 1953 | Dylan Thomas | Welsh poet and writer. |
| † 1952 | Philip Murray | Scottish born steelworker and an American labor leader. |
| † 1940 | Neville Chamberlain | British politician from a famous political dynasty. |
| † 1924 | Henry Cabot Lodge | Republican statesman and noted historian. |
| † 1918 | Guillaume Apollinaire | French writer of Italian birth and Polish descent, was hugely influential as a Modernist poet and as a spokesman for the Cubist painters. |
| † 1896 | Edward Hazen Parker | American physician and poet. |
| † 1865 | George Arnold | Author and poet. |
| † 1662 | William Lenthall | English politician during the period of the English Civil War, and Speaker of the House of Commons in the Long Parliament (1640–1653). |
| † 1596 | George Peele | English dramatist. |
| † 1520 | Bernardo Dovizi | Italian cardinal and comedy-writer, known best as Cardinal Bibbiena, for the town Bibbiena, where he was born. |
| † 1504 | Frederick IV of Naples | Last King of Naples of the House of Trastámara, ruling from 1496 to 1501. |
| † 0 | Gunter Schabowski | Günter Schabowski was the German Democratic Republic's Politbüro member who accidentally gave the order for the Inner German Border to be opened in Berlin. |
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