Aryavratpedia:Selected anniversaries/May 16
Images Edit
Use only ONE image at a time
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F-104 Starfighter
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Theodore Maiman with his laser
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Flag of Sikkim, prior to its 1975 annexation with India
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Three-phase generator at the Lauffen power station
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Reenactment of a covered wagon on the Oregon Trail
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Animatronic Chuck E. Cheese
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Park Chung-hee (center)
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Triton Fountain
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Shield nickel
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Flag of Sikkim, prior to its 1975 annexation by India
Ineligible Edit
Blurb | Reason |
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Teachers' Day in Malaysia | refimprove |
1204 – Fourth Crusade: Count Baldwin IX of Flanders was crowned the first Latin Emperor in Constantinople. | refimprove |
1527 – The Medici were driven from Florence and a republic was re-established. | refimprove |
1532 – Sir Thomas More resigned as Lord Chancellor of England. | saved for July 6 |
1771 – The Battle of Alamance—the final battle of the War of the Regulation, a rebellion in colonial North Carolina over issues of taxation and local control—was fought. | unreferenced section |
1843 – The first major wagon train heading for the Pacific Northwest set out on the Oregon Trail with more than a hundred pioneers from Elm Grove, Missouri. | refimprove section |
1866 – Root beer was first prepared commercially by American pharmacist Charles Elmer Hires. | refimprove, date not in article |
1877 – French President Patrice de Mac-Mahon dismissed Jules Simon and installed Albert, Duc de Broglie as prime minister, triggering a political crisis in the French Third Republic. | refimprove |
1891 – The International Electrotechnical Exhibition opened in Frankfurt, Germany, featuring the world's first long distance transmission of three-phase electric power from the generator Template:Convert away at Lauffen am Neckar. | needs more footnotes |
1916 – The United Kingdom and France signed the Sykes–Picot Agreement, a secret agreement considered to have shaped the Middle East, defining the borders of Iraq and Syria. | refimprove sections |
1966 – Chinese leader Mao Zedong launched the Cultural Revolution officially as a campaign to rid China of its liberal bourgeois elements and to continue revolutionary class struggle. | lots of CN tags (11) |
1988 – A report by United States Surgeon General C. Everett Koop stated that the addictive properties of nicotine are similar to those of heroin and cocaine. | fact not in article; no article exists for the report |
2003 – In the deadliest terrorist attack in Morocco's history, a series of suicide bombings in Casablanca killed 33 civilians and 12 out of the 14 bombers. | refimprove |
Maria Gaetana Agnesi |b|1718| | Dtae not cited |
Eligible Edit
- 1811 – Peninsular War: Allied British, Spanish, and Portuguese forces clashed with French troops at the Battle of Albuera fought south of Badajoz, Spain.
- 1832 – Prospector Juan Godoy discovered a silver outcrop in Chañarcillo, sparking the Chilean silver rush.
- 1866 – The United States Congress authorized the minting of the Shield nickel (example pictured), the country's first five-cent piece to be made of a copper–nickel alloy.
- 1918 – The Sedition Act was passed in the United States, forbidding Americans from using "disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or abusive language" about the government, flag, or armed forces during the ongoing World War I.
- 1925 – The first modern performance of Claudio Monteverdi's opera Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria occurred in Paris.
- 1943 – Second World War: The Royal Air Force's "Dambusters" squadron embarked on an attack on German dams using bouncing bombs designed by Barnes Wallis.
- 1958 – The Lockheed F-104 Starfighter, a supersonic interceptor aircraft, set a world flight airspeed record of Template:Cvt.
- 1959 – The Tritons' Fountain in Valletta, one of Malta's most important Modernist landmarks, was turned on for the first time.
- 1961 – Led by Park Chung-hee, the Military Revolution Committee carried out a bloodless coup against the government of Yun Posun in Seoul, ending the Second Republic of Korea.
- 1975 – Based on the results of a referendum held about one month earlier, the Kingdom of Sikkim (flag pictured) abolished its monarchy and was annexed to become the 22nd state of India.
- 1977 – The first Chuck E. Cheese location, the first family restaurant to integrate food, animated entertainment (example pictured), and an indoor arcade, opened in San Jose, California.
- 2014 – At least 12 people were killed and 70 others injured when two bombs exploded in a market in Nairobi, Kenya.
- Born/died: | Liu Bowen |d|1375|
Andrew Bobola |d|1657|Pietro da Cortona |d|1669| William H. Seward |b|1801| Horace Hutchinson |b|1859|Margaret Fountaine |b|1862| Pierre Gilliard |b|1879| Henri-Edmond Cross |d|1910| Margaret Ursula Jones |b|1916| Nancy Roman |b|1925 Tucker Carlson |b|1969| Anna Costanza Baldry |b|1970| Amanda Asay |b|1988
Notes Edit
- Alison Hargreaves appears on May 14, so Junko Tabei should not appear in the same year
May 16: Global Accessibility Awareness Day (2024)
- 1426 – Mohnyin Thado captured Sagaing to become the king of Ava, in present-day Myanmar.
- 1605 – After a scuffle in which one cardinal received broken bones, a papal conclave convened in Rome elected Camillo Borghese as Pope Paul V.
- 1929 – The first Academy Awards ceremony was held at The Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel in Los Angeles, California.
- 1960 – American physicist Theodore Maiman operated the first working laser at Hughes Research Laboratories in Malibu.
- 1975 – Japanese climber Junko Tabei (pictured) became the first woman to reach the summit of Mount Everest.
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- John Komnenos Vatatzes (d. 1182)
- Margaret Ursula Jones (b. 1916)
- Janet Jackson (b. 1966)
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