Births | ||
---|---|---|
* 1972 | Jude Law | Academy Award-nominated English actor. |
* 1969 | George Corpsegrinder (musician) Fisher | Vocalist for the death metal band Cannibal Corpse. |
* 1959 | Paula Poundstone | American comedian. |
* 1959 | Ritsuko Okazaki | Japanese singer-songwriter and author, known for her contribution to various anime series such as Fruits Basket. |
* 1957 | Paul Rudnick | American playwright, novelist, screenwriter and essayist. |
* 1953 | Stanley Williams | Early leader of the Crips, a notorious American street gang which had its roots in South Central Los Angeles in 1969. |
* 1938 | Jon Voight | American film and television actor. |
* 1937 | Maumoon Abdul Gayoom | President of the Republic of Maldives from 1978 to 2008. |
* 1922 | Richard Davisson | American physicist. |
* 1910 | Ronald Coase | British economist and the Clifton R Musser Professor Emeritus of Economics at the University of Chicago Law School. |
* 1893 | Vera Brittain | English writer, feminist and pacifist, best remembered as the author of the best-selling 1933 memoir Testament of Youth, recounting her experiences during World War I and the growth of her ideology of pacifism. |
* 1876 | Pablo Casals | Born Pau Casals i Defillσ, was a Spanish cellist and conductor. |
* 1876 | Lionel Tertis | English violist and one of the first viola players to find international fame. |
* 1873 | H. Stanley Allen | Pioneer in early X-ray research, working under J J Thomson at the University of London and alongside Nobel laureate Charles Glover Barkla at the University of Edinburgh. |
* 1848 | John Vance Cheney | American poet. |
* 1833 | John James Ingalls | American politician. |
* 1814 | Edwin Hubbell Chapin | Universalist minister who became famed as an orator in the 1840s. |
* 1811 | Francisco Palau | Beatified Carmelite Spanish priest. |
* 1809 | Albert Pike | American attorney, soldier, writer, and Freemason, who is the only Confederate military officer or figure to be honored with an outdoor statue in Washington, D C. |
* 1809 | William Ewart Gladstone | British Liberal politician and Prime Minister (18681874, 18801885, 1886 and 18921894). |
* 1808 | Andrew Johnson | Seventeenth President of the United States (18651869), succeeding to the presidency upon the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. |
* 1721 | Madame de Pompadour | Born Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson, was a well-known French courtesan and mistress to King Louis XV. |
* 1579 | John Fletcher | Jacobean playwright. |
Deaths | ||
2003 | Bob Monkhouse | British comedian, actor and presenter. |
1986 | Andrei Tarkovsky | Soviet and Russian filmmaker, writer, film editor, film theorist and opera director. |
1986 | Harold Macmillan | British Conservative politician and publisher who served six years as Prime Minister (19571963). |
1971 | John Marshall Harlan | American jurist who served as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court from 1955 to 1971. |
1937 | Don Marquis | American humorist, journalist, novelist, poet, cartoonist, newspaper columnist, and playwright most famous for creating the characters "Archy" the cockroach, and "Mehitabel" the cat. |
1926 | Rainer Maria Rilke | Born Renι Karl Wilhelm Johann Josef Maria Rilke, is generally considered the German language's greatest poet of the 20th century. |
1919 | William Osler | Canadian physician. |
1894 | Christina Rossetti | English poet and the sister of artist Dante Gabriel Rossetti. |
1891 | Leopold Kronecker | Prussian mathematician and logician who argued that arithmetic and analysis must be founded on "whole numbers. |
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