Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte
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St Scholastica's Day - the early Sixth Century Italian saint, sister of St Benedict. She had a love of learning and intellectual dispute, especially with her brother - and the story has it that she was so dismayed that her brother had to leave during one of these discussions, that she prayed for - and was granted - a heavy storm that prevented his leaving. She is thus associated with both education and storms, and her followers would invoke her name to prevent or ease storms - curious, then, that today is also the feast day of St Paul's Shipwreck.
A storm of a different type was caused in Oxford on this day in 1354 - students, objecting to the low quality of wine that they were served in a local tavern, expressed their opinion by breaking a tankard over the landlord's head. Unfortunately, said landlord was also the town's mayor, and, in revenge, he assembled a posse of friiends and a fight ensued - that lasted for two (or three, or "several" - sources aren't agreed on this point) days, the townspeople emerging victorious, damaging University property and killing sixty-three of the students. Edward III was not pleased with the townsfolk: he withdrew privileges from the town, took legal authority on University matters from the town and gave it to the University itself, and ordered an annual church service of repentence very 10th February, and ordered an annual payment of 63 pence (a penny per student) - a situation that continued until 1825.
Also on this date, the Siege of Baghdad ends with Hulagu Khan's Mongol forces bringing to an end the Golden Age of Islam (1258); Robert I ("the Bruce") murders John Comyn, Edward I's appointee as Lord Guardian of Scotland, beginning the Second War of Scottish Independence (1306); Mary, Queen of Scots' second husband (and the father of her son, James VI/I) is strangled after an explosion at his home (1567 - three months later, Mary marries the man generally believed to have engineered the assassination); Queen Victoria and Prince Albert are married (1840); Tchaikovsky's Fourth Symphony is premiered in Moscow (1878); Offenbach's Tales of Hoffmann is premiered in Paris (1881); Krenek's Jonny Spielt Auf is premiered in Leipzig; Puss Gets the Boot, the first Tom & Jerry cartoon, is premiered (1940); Roy Lichtenstein has his first solo exhibition (1962); IBM computer Deep Blue beats Gary Kasparov in a game of chess (1996 - Kasparov easily wins the following table tennis match, however); and the first collision of two artificial satellites occurs, creating a huge amount of space debris (2009).
Birthdays include: Charles Lamb (1775); Samuel Plimsoll (1824); Adelina Patti (1843); Fanny Kaplan and Boris Pasternak (both 1890); Jimmy Durante (1893); Harold MacMillan (1894); Bertolt Brecht (1898); Lon Chaney jnr (1906); Larry Adler (1914); Leontyne Price (1927); Jerry Goldsmith (1929); Roberta Flack (1937); Barbara Kolb (1939); Michael Apted (1941); and Keeley Hawes (1976).
Last days for: William IX, "the Troubador" (1127); William Dugdale (1686); Montesquieu (1755); Alexander Pushkin (1837); Wilhelm Röntgen (923); Edgar Wallace (1932); Laura Ingalls Wilder (1957 - three days after her 90th birthday); Grace Williams (1977); Arthur Miller (2005); and Stuart McPhaill Hall (the sociologist, not ...) and Shirley Temple (both 2014).
And, on Monday, 10th February, 1969, the Radio 3 morning schedules were:
Overture (gramophone records)
Morning Concert (BBC Welsh Orch, conducted by John Carew)
This Week's Composer: Mozart (Symph #26, BPO/Böhm; Pno Conc 24, Curzon/LSO/Kertesz
The Master Pianists (7/14 programmes; Ernst Dohnanyi)
Music Making - BBC West of England Chorus
A storm of a different type was caused in Oxford on this day in 1354 - students, objecting to the low quality of wine that they were served in a local tavern, expressed their opinion by breaking a tankard over the landlord's head. Unfortunately, said landlord was also the town's mayor, and, in revenge, he assembled a posse of friiends and a fight ensued - that lasted for two (or three, or "several" - sources aren't agreed on this point) days, the townspeople emerging victorious, damaging University property and killing sixty-three of the students. Edward III was not pleased with the townsfolk: he withdrew privileges from the town, took legal authority on University matters from the town and gave it to the University itself, and ordered an annual church service of repentence very 10th February, and ordered an annual payment of 63 pence (a penny per student) - a situation that continued until 1825.
Also on this date, the Siege of Baghdad ends with Hulagu Khan's Mongol forces bringing to an end the Golden Age of Islam (1258); Robert I ("the Bruce") murders John Comyn, Edward I's appointee as Lord Guardian of Scotland, beginning the Second War of Scottish Independence (1306); Mary, Queen of Scots' second husband (and the father of her son, James VI/I) is strangled after an explosion at his home (1567 - three months later, Mary marries the man generally believed to have engineered the assassination); Queen Victoria and Prince Albert are married (1840); Tchaikovsky's Fourth Symphony is premiered in Moscow (1878); Offenbach's Tales of Hoffmann is premiered in Paris (1881); Krenek's Jonny Spielt Auf is premiered in Leipzig; Puss Gets the Boot, the first Tom & Jerry cartoon, is premiered (1940); Roy Lichtenstein has his first solo exhibition (1962); IBM computer Deep Blue beats Gary Kasparov in a game of chess (1996 - Kasparov easily wins the following table tennis match, however); and the first collision of two artificial satellites occurs, creating a huge amount of space debris (2009).
Birthdays include: Charles Lamb (1775); Samuel Plimsoll (1824); Adelina Patti (1843); Fanny Kaplan and Boris Pasternak (both 1890); Jimmy Durante (1893); Harold MacMillan (1894); Bertolt Brecht (1898); Lon Chaney jnr (1906); Larry Adler (1914); Leontyne Price (1927); Jerry Goldsmith (1929); Roberta Flack (1937); Barbara Kolb (1939); Michael Apted (1941); and Keeley Hawes (1976).
Last days for: William IX, "the Troubador" (1127); William Dugdale (1686); Montesquieu (1755); Alexander Pushkin (1837); Wilhelm Röntgen (923); Edgar Wallace (1932); Laura Ingalls Wilder (1957 - three days after her 90th birthday); Grace Williams (1977); Arthur Miller (2005); and Stuart McPhaill Hall (the sociologist, not ...) and Shirley Temple (both 2014).
And, on Monday, 10th February, 1969, the Radio 3 morning schedules were:
Overture (gramophone records)
Morning Concert (BBC Welsh Orch, conducted by John Carew)
This Week's Composer: Mozart (Symph #26, BPO/Böhm; Pno Conc 24, Curzon/LSO/Kertesz
The Master Pianists (7/14 programmes; Ernst Dohnanyi)
Music Making - BBC West of England Chorus
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