Births | ||
|---|---|---|
| * 1964 | Russell Crowe | New Zealand-born Australian actor. |
| * 1944 | Makoto (physicist) Kobayashi | Japanese physicist well-known for his work on CP-violation. |
| * 1944 | Gerhard Schroder | Chancellor of Germany from 1998 to 2005. |
| * 1944 | David D. Clark | American computer scientist. |
| * 1938 | Jerry Brown | Formerly Governor of California, ran for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination, was Mayor of Oakland, California, then Attorney General of California, and is again Governor. |
| * 1931 | Donald Barthelme | American author known for his postmodern short stories and novels. |
| * 1931 | Daniel Ellsberg | Former United States military analyst who, while employed by the RAND Corporation, precipitated a national political controversy in 1971 when he released the Pentagon Papers, a top-secret Pentagon study of US government decision-making about the Vietnam War, to The New York Times and other newspapers. |
| * 1928 | James Garner | American film and television actor. |
| * 1920 | Ravi (sitarist) Shankar | Indian composer and sitarist. |
| * 1915 | Henry Kuttner | American science fiction author. |
| * 1915 | Billie Holiday | Born Eleanora Fagan Goughy, was an American singer, generally considered one of the greatest jazz voices of all time; she was also known as Lady Day. |
| * 1897 | Walter Winchell | American newspaper and radio commentator, invented the gossip column at the New York Evening Graphic. |
| * 1895 | Jim Ede | Also known as 'Jim' Ede, was a British collector of art and friend to artists. |
| * 1894 | A. A. Thomson | English writer best known for his books on cricket. |
| * 1891 | David Low | New Zealand cartoonist who settled in England. |
| * 1883 | Gino Severini | Italian painter and a leading member of the Futurist movement and signed in 1910 the Manifesto of the Futurists together with his fellow Italians: Boccione, Carr? and Balla. |
| * 1881 | Daisy Ashford | During her childhood a writer of fiction, but abandoned her literary career as a teenager. |
| * 1873 | John McGraw | Considered to be one of the greatest managers in baseball history. |
| * 1871 | Epifanio de los Santos | Sometimes known as Don Pa?ong or Don Panyong, was a Filipino humanist historian, literary critic, art critic, jurist, prosecutor, antiquarian, scholar, painter, musician, musciologist, philosopher, philologist, archivist, journalist, chief-editor, bibliographer, paleographer, ethnographer, biographer, civil servant and patriot. |
| * 1786 | William R. King | U S Representative from North Carolina, a Senator from Alabama, and the thirteenth Vice President of the United States. |
| * 1780 | William Ellery (preacher) Channing | Foremost Unitarian theologian and preacher in the United States in the early nineteenth century. |
| * 1770 | William Wordsworth | Major English poet who, with Samuel Taylor Coleridge, launched the Romantic Age in English literature with the 1798 publication of Lyrical Ballads. |
| * 1726 | Charles Burney | English organist, travel writer and music historian. |
| * 1718 | Blair Hugh | Scottish author, considered one of the first great theorists of written discourse. |
| * 1648 | John Sheffield | English statesman and poet, was the son of Edmund Sheffield, 2nd Earl of Mulgrave, and succeeded to that title on his fathers death in 1658. |
Deaths | ||
| 1985 | Carl Schmitt | Weimar and Nazi jurist and critic of parliamentarism and liberalism. |
| 1955 | Theda Bara | Silent film actress popularly known as "The Vamp. |
| 1947 | Henry Ford | Founder of the Ford Motor Company. |
| 1945 | Princess Elizabeth Bibesco | English writer and poet, active between 1921 and 1940. |
| 1922 | A. V. Dicey | British jurist and constitutional theorist who wrote An Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution (1885). |
| 1891 | P. T. Barnum | American showman who is best remembered for his entertaining hoaxes and for founding the circus that eventually became Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus. |
| 1850 | William Lisle Bowles | English poet and critic. |
| 1836 | William Godwin | Leader of the English Jacobin movement, a political philosopher, educationalist, novelist, historian and biographer. |
| 1668 | William Davenant | Also spelled D'Avenant, was an English poet and playwright. |
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