March 10th
Or "Mar10", which looks a little bit like "Mario", and so Nintendo has designated this Date "Mario Day" to honour the plumber hero of computer games. The Prophets of Capitalism.
Also, more traditionally, the Feast Day of St Himelin, an Eighth Century Celtic (Scottish or Irish) priest, who, the story goes, fell ill when returning home from a pilgrimage to Rome, and begged water from a girl in Vissenaken (in present-day Belgium). Initially she refused, telling him that there was bubonic plague in the village, but when he persisted, she gave him a cup, which miraculously turned into wine as soon as it touched his lips. Three days later he died of the plague, at which exact moment, the church bells began ringing of their own accord.
Also on this Date: the first Punic War is ended when the Romans sink the Carthaginian fleet (241BCE); the first National Census of England, Scotland, and Wales is carried out, revealing a total population of just under 11 million (1801); Napoleon sells French territories in America to the United States - the Louisiana Purchase entails over 800,000 miles of land, and raised 68 million francs (worth over £460billion today) to fund Napoleon's armies (1804); Prussian forces defea.t Napoleon at the Battle of Laon (1814); Abraham Lincoln applies to patent an invention: a device for lifting ships over shoal (1849); Amy Spain is executed for stealing - the last [legally-sanctioned] execution of a slave in the USA (1865); Karl Goldmark's The Queen of Sheba is premiered in Vienna (1875); Alexander Graham Bell makes his historic first successful telephone call "Mr Watson, come here, I want to see you" (1876); Alexander Borodin's Symphony #2 is premiered in St Petersberg (1877); Cesar Franck's Psyche is premiered in Paris (1888); the University of New Mexico State cancels its very first Graduate Ceremony: the only Graduate had been shot to death the night before (1893 - the unfortuante man is honoured instead by a road, Sam Steel Way, on campus); Europe's worst mining disaster, an explosion of coal dust at the Courrieres Mine in Northern France, claims nearly 1100 lives (1906 - on the same day in Lyon, Ravel's Sonatine is given its first complete public performance by Paule de Lestang, and the Baker Street and Waterloo Railway is opened in London); suffragist Mary Richardson [later a member of the British Union of Fascists] slashes Velasquez's "Rokeby Venus" seven times with a meat cleaver (1918); Mahatma Gandhi is arrested in India for sedition (1922); three months before elections in Cuba, General Fulgencio Batista, whose party was third in ppularity, stages a military coup and seizes power (1952); the complete version of Tennessee Williams' Sweet Bird of Youth is premiered on Braodway, and the Tibetan Uprising against the Chinese PLA begins (both 1959); the Philadelphian Phillies baseball team refuse to stay at the Jack Tar Harrison Hotel in Florida, bacause it refused to accommodate black and hispanic players (192); at the opening of his trial for the murder of Martin Luther King, James Earl Ray [whose 41st birthday it was] pleads guilty (1969); a ring system around Uranus [oh, give over!] first suggested by William Herschel in 1789, but not seen by anyone else in the intervening years, is confirmed by astronomers using the Kuiper Airborne Observatory [who hadn't been looking for any rings] (1977); Syzygy: all nine planets allign on the same side of the Sun (1982); Arvo Part's Hymn to a Great City is premiered in New York (1984); and Birtwistle's Machaut a ma Ma Maniere is premiered in Hamburg (1990).
Birthdays today include: Ferdinand II of Castile & Leon (1452); Lorenzo Da Ponte (1749); Joseph, Freiherr von Eichendorff (1788); Pablo de Sarasate (1844); Alexander III of Russia (1845); Tamara Karsavina (1885); Arthur Honegger (1892); Bix Beiderbecke (1903); Wally Stott, later Angela Morley (1924); Marcia Falkender (1932); Sepp Blatter (1936); Osama Bin Laden (1957); Michel van der Aa (1970); Mauro Lanza (1976); and Rafe Spall (1983);
Final Days for: Muzio Clementi (1832); Ignaz Moscheles (1870); Giuseppe Mazzini (1872); Carl Reinecke (1910); Harriet Tubman (1913); Mikhail Bulgakov (1940); Zelda Fitzgerald (1948); Frank O'Connor (1966); E Power Biggs (1977); Bill Hopkins (1981); William Brocklesby Wordsworth (1988); Giorgos Zampetas (1992); Lloyd Bridges (1998); Dave Allen (2005); Anna Moffo (2006); Jean Giraud (2012); and Keith Emerson and Anita Brookner (both 2016).
And the Radio 3 schedules for the morning of Friday, 10th March, 1989 were:
Morning Concert: Borodin Nocturne; Poulenc Piano Concerto; Boccherini Cello Concerto in B flat; Chopin Polonaise in A flat, Op 53; Dvorak Cypress #1; Enesco Romanian Rhapsody #1.
This Week's Composer: Musorgsky (excerpts from Khovanshchina; Song Cycle Sunless)
Song & Dance: Rebel Les Elemens (excerpts); Dowland Songs, including "A Shepherd in a Shade" and "Sweet, Stay Awhile"; Beethoven Ballet:"The Creatures of Prometheus", Op 43; Monteverdi Quel sguardo sdegnosetto; Eri gia tutta mia; Lasciatemi morire;
Virgil Thomson "Acadian Songs and Dances" (from "Louisiana Story"); Strauss "Dance of the Seven Veils" (from "Salome") [The Composer (piano)]; Mozart Ballet music from "Idomeneo"
Max Bruch: Symphony No 1 in E flat, Op 28; BBCCO (leader Martin Loveday) conducted by James Lockhart.
Or "Mar10", which looks a little bit like "Mario", and so Nintendo has designated this Date "Mario Day" to honour the plumber hero of computer games. The Prophets of Capitalism.
Also, more traditionally, the Feast Day of St Himelin, an Eighth Century Celtic (Scottish or Irish) priest, who, the story goes, fell ill when returning home from a pilgrimage to Rome, and begged water from a girl in Vissenaken (in present-day Belgium). Initially she refused, telling him that there was bubonic plague in the village, but when he persisted, she gave him a cup, which miraculously turned into wine as soon as it touched his lips. Three days later he died of the plague, at which exact moment, the church bells began ringing of their own accord.
Also on this Date: the first Punic War is ended when the Romans sink the Carthaginian fleet (241BCE); the first National Census of England, Scotland, and Wales is carried out, revealing a total population of just under 11 million (1801); Napoleon sells French territories in America to the United States - the Louisiana Purchase entails over 800,000 miles of land, and raised 68 million francs (worth over £460billion today) to fund Napoleon's armies (1804); Prussian forces defea.t Napoleon at the Battle of Laon (1814); Abraham Lincoln applies to patent an invention: a device for lifting ships over shoal (1849); Amy Spain is executed for stealing - the last [legally-sanctioned] execution of a slave in the USA (1865); Karl Goldmark's The Queen of Sheba is premiered in Vienna (1875); Alexander Graham Bell makes his historic first successful telephone call "Mr Watson, come here, I want to see you" (1876); Alexander Borodin's Symphony #2 is premiered in St Petersberg (1877); Cesar Franck's Psyche is premiered in Paris (1888); the University of New Mexico State cancels its very first Graduate Ceremony: the only Graduate had been shot to death the night before (1893 - the unfortuante man is honoured instead by a road, Sam Steel Way, on campus); Europe's worst mining disaster, an explosion of coal dust at the Courrieres Mine in Northern France, claims nearly 1100 lives (1906 - on the same day in Lyon, Ravel's Sonatine is given its first complete public performance by Paule de Lestang, and the Baker Street and Waterloo Railway is opened in London); suffragist Mary Richardson [later a member of the British Union of Fascists] slashes Velasquez's "Rokeby Venus" seven times with a meat cleaver (1918); Mahatma Gandhi is arrested in India for sedition (1922); three months before elections in Cuba, General Fulgencio Batista, whose party was third in ppularity, stages a military coup and seizes power (1952); the complete version of Tennessee Williams' Sweet Bird of Youth is premiered on Braodway, and the Tibetan Uprising against the Chinese PLA begins (both 1959); the Philadelphian Phillies baseball team refuse to stay at the Jack Tar Harrison Hotel in Florida, bacause it refused to accommodate black and hispanic players (192); at the opening of his trial for the murder of Martin Luther King, James Earl Ray [whose 41st birthday it was] pleads guilty (1969); a ring system around Uranus [oh, give over!] first suggested by William Herschel in 1789, but not seen by anyone else in the intervening years, is confirmed by astronomers using the Kuiper Airborne Observatory [who hadn't been looking for any rings] (1977); Syzygy: all nine planets allign on the same side of the Sun (1982); Arvo Part's Hymn to a Great City is premiered in New York (1984); and Birtwistle's Machaut a ma Ma Maniere is premiered in Hamburg (1990).
Birthdays today include: Ferdinand II of Castile & Leon (1452); Lorenzo Da Ponte (1749); Joseph, Freiherr von Eichendorff (1788); Pablo de Sarasate (1844); Alexander III of Russia (1845); Tamara Karsavina (1885); Arthur Honegger (1892); Bix Beiderbecke (1903); Wally Stott, later Angela Morley (1924); Marcia Falkender (1932); Sepp Blatter (1936); Osama Bin Laden (1957); Michel van der Aa (1970); Mauro Lanza (1976); and Rafe Spall (1983);
Final Days for: Muzio Clementi (1832); Ignaz Moscheles (1870); Giuseppe Mazzini (1872); Carl Reinecke (1910); Harriet Tubman (1913); Mikhail Bulgakov (1940); Zelda Fitzgerald (1948); Frank O'Connor (1966); E Power Biggs (1977); Bill Hopkins (1981); William Brocklesby Wordsworth (1988); Giorgos Zampetas (1992); Lloyd Bridges (1998); Dave Allen (2005); Anna Moffo (2006); Jean Giraud (2012); and Keith Emerson and Anita Brookner (both 2016).
And the Radio 3 schedules for the morning of Friday, 10th March, 1989 were:
Morning Concert: Borodin Nocturne; Poulenc Piano Concerto; Boccherini Cello Concerto in B flat; Chopin Polonaise in A flat, Op 53; Dvorak Cypress #1; Enesco Romanian Rhapsody #1.
This Week's Composer: Musorgsky (excerpts from Khovanshchina; Song Cycle Sunless)
Song & Dance: Rebel Les Elemens (excerpts); Dowland Songs, including "A Shepherd in a Shade" and "Sweet, Stay Awhile"; Beethoven Ballet:"The Creatures of Prometheus", Op 43; Monteverdi Quel sguardo sdegnosetto; Eri gia tutta mia; Lasciatemi morire;
Virgil Thomson "Acadian Songs and Dances" (from "Louisiana Story"); Strauss "Dance of the Seven Veils" (from "Salome") [The Composer (piano)]; Mozart Ballet music from "Idomeneo"
Max Bruch: Symphony No 1 in E flat, Op 28; BBCCO (leader Martin Loveday) conducted by James Lockhart.
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