14th August
The Feast Day of Saint Maximilian Kolbe, a Polish Catholic monk who was murdered on this date in Auschwitz Extermination Camp in 1941, two weeks after he had elected to take the place of another prisoner [Polish Army sergeant Franciszek Gajowniczek, whom survives until 1995] as one of 12 inmates selected to die of starvation, following the escape of another prisoner. Kolbe is the last of the 12 to die, and he had acted as Priest to the dying men - his end was hastened by a lethal injection as the Nazis wanted to use the bunker for stotage. He was canonised by John Paul II 1982. He is the Patron Saint of prisoners, and of amateur radio operators.
Also on This Date: Donnchad mac Crinain [King Duncan] is killed in battle [not his sleep] by MacBeth (1040); Dusseldorf, a village on the banks of the river Dussel, is granted Town Privileges by the Count of Berg (1288); impressed by the healing properties of its spring waters, Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV establishes a spa near the town of Loket in Bohemia, which he calls "The Spa Town at Loket", conferring Town Privileges on it (1370 - it is subsequently named after him: Carlsbad); the Mainz Psalter, is published - the second book to be printed using Movable Type, and the first to feature a date of first publication, a printed colophon ["blurb" describing what the book is for], the first to use two different sizes of print [for main text and glossary], the first to use a printed illustrated initial letters, and the first to be printed in three different colours (1456 - the publishers, Fust & Schoeffer had been associates of Johannes Gutenberg, but had fallen out with him, and wanted to show that anything he could do, they could do better - now, if only they'd included the Music!); Christopher Marlowe's Tamburlaine the Great is entered in the Staioners' Register (1590 - the play is published later in the year by Richard Jones); explorer John Davis becomes the first European to set foot on the Falkland Islands, when his ship is blown off-course during a storm (1592 - there has been such a shortage of food that the sailors are forced to p-p-pick up and kill several Penguins to replenish stocks, so becoming the first people to discover that Penguin meat doesn't "keep"; small consolation, perhaps, to the 52 crew members who die of starvation before reaching home. The Falkland Islanders celebrate the date as Falklands Day); Rossini's opera Il Turco in Italia is premiered at La Scala, Milan, conducted by Alessandro Rolla (1814); Cologne Cathedral, work on which had been abandoned in 1473, is completed (1880 - so Schumann only knew the unfinished structure); Thomas Edison's Phonograph is first demonstrated in London (1888 - the recording used for the demonstration is an arrangement of Sullivan's The Lost Chord for cornet & piano - Sullivan himself hears the recording in October, and sends a recorded speech to Edison:
France becomes the first country in the world to introduce motor vehicle licensing (1893); a forest fire breaks out in Oregon (1933 - it is not put out for over 3 weeks, during which time an area of over 600 square miles of forest is destroyed); more than 20,000 people gather to watch the public hanging of rapist & murderer Rainey Bethea in Kentucky (1936 - the official in charge of the lever is drunk and cannot remember what to do; the executioner shouts his order at him with increasing urgency, until a fellow officer nudges the drunk into position. It is the first US execution ordered by a female Sherriff, and the last public execution in the US: many of the spectators later declare themselves to be "disappointed", having spent so much money to get to the place, and seen so little); the League for the Liberation of Vietnam [the Viet Minh] led by Ho Chi Minh launches a revolution against French colonial rule in Vietnam (1945); Pakistan becomes independent of British colonial rule, and joins the Commonwealth (1947); the Closing Ceremony of the London Olympics is held (1948); Strauss' opera Die Libe der Danae is given its public premiere at the Salzburg Festival, conducted by Clemens Krauss (1952 - the work had been finished over 12 years earlier, and had been taken to Dress Rehearsal in 1944, where the composer decided the time wasn't best fitted to the work); the Marine Broadcasting Offences Act comes into force, making "Pirate Radio" broadcasts illegal (1967); British Army Troops are deployed in Northern Ireland (1969 - they remain there for the next 38 years); workers at the Lenin Shipyard in Gdansk go on strike in protest at rising food prices (1980); Venezualan terrorist Ilich Ramírez Sánchez ["Carlos the Jackal"] is arrested after an operation in a hospital in Sudan (1994 - he'd gone in for a vasectomy); rival BritPop bands Oasis and Blur simultaneously release singles (Roll With It, and Country House - 1995); Canadian police investigating terrorist activities begin the arrests of 24 immigrant students, chosen from a diploma mill register of 400 students because they have "Muhammad" in their name (2003 - the suspicions are proven wrong in all cases, and the Police are condemned for an operation based on "flimsy evidence and stereotypes"); 3 teachers and 61 teenaged schoolgirls at a First-Aid training camp at the Sencholai children's home for orphans in Sri Lanka are killed, and over 150 others injured when 4 Sri Lankan air force jets drop 16 bombs on them, believing they are child soldiers attending military training (2006); 796 ethnic Kurds are killed and over 1,500 injured in co-ordinated suicide bomber attacks in the towns of al-Qahtaniyah and al-Jazirah in northern Iraq (2007); the Egyptian Army kills over a thousand supporters of President Morsi [who had been ousted in a military coup the previous month] and injure at least 4,000 others in Rabaa Square, Cairo (2013 - the protestors had been engaging in a six-week long peaceful sit-down protest, and this was the only way the Army could think of to disperse them); Andy Murray becomes the only Tennis player in history to win a second Olympic Gold medal at the Rio de Janeiro games (2016).
Birthdays Today include: Pieter Coecke van Aelst the Elder (1502); Giambattista Benedetti (1530); Meric Casuabon (1599); Leopold Hofmann (1738); Hans Christian Ørsted (1777); Samuel Sebastian Wesley (1810); Richard von Krafft-Ebing (1840); Doc Holliday (1851); John Galsworthy (1867); Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji (1892); Pierre Schaeffer & Willy Ronis (both 1910); Frank Oppenheimer (1912); Georges Prêtre (1924); René Goscinny (1926); Frederic Raphael (1931); David Crosby (1941); Steve Martin & Wim Wenders (both 1945); Maddy Prior (1947); Gary Larson (1950); James Horner (1953); Emmanuelle Béart (1963); Halle Berry (1966); ... and Nick Grimshaw is 35 today.
Final Days for: William Croft (1727); William Randolph Hearst (1951); Bertolt Brecht (1956); Clifford Odets (1963); Oscar levant (1972); Karl Böhm (1981); JB Priestley and Peter Wishart (both 1984); Vincent Persichetti (1987); Sergiu Celibidache (1996); Tikhon Khrennikov (2007).
And the Radio 3 Schedules for the morning of Thursday, 14th August, 1969 were:
Overture ("gramophone records")
This Week's Composers: Lassus & Victoria
Moura Lympany "introduces records of her own choice"
Mozart: Sonata in Eb K282, played by Lili Kraus
Music Making: Chamber Music played by Harold Clarke & Wilfred Smith (flutes), Denis Vigay (cello), Maria Korchinska (harp), Hubert Dawkes (piano and harmonium) with Wilfrid Parry (piano) [programme including Fauré's Fantasie for Flute & Piano]; and Lieder performed by Robert Tear & Viola Tunnard.
Midday Concert: BBCNSO conducted by Walter Susskind.
The Feast Day of Saint Maximilian Kolbe, a Polish Catholic monk who was murdered on this date in Auschwitz Extermination Camp in 1941, two weeks after he had elected to take the place of another prisoner [Polish Army sergeant Franciszek Gajowniczek, whom survives until 1995] as one of 12 inmates selected to die of starvation, following the escape of another prisoner. Kolbe is the last of the 12 to die, and he had acted as Priest to the dying men - his end was hastened by a lethal injection as the Nazis wanted to use the bunker for stotage. He was canonised by John Paul II 1982. He is the Patron Saint of prisoners, and of amateur radio operators.
Also on This Date: Donnchad mac Crinain [King Duncan] is killed in battle [not his sleep] by MacBeth (1040); Dusseldorf, a village on the banks of the river Dussel, is granted Town Privileges by the Count of Berg (1288); impressed by the healing properties of its spring waters, Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV establishes a spa near the town of Loket in Bohemia, which he calls "The Spa Town at Loket", conferring Town Privileges on it (1370 - it is subsequently named after him: Carlsbad); the Mainz Psalter, is published - the second book to be printed using Movable Type, and the first to feature a date of first publication, a printed colophon ["blurb" describing what the book is for], the first to use two different sizes of print [for main text and glossary], the first to use a printed illustrated initial letters, and the first to be printed in three different colours (1456 - the publishers, Fust & Schoeffer had been associates of Johannes Gutenberg, but had fallen out with him, and wanted to show that anything he could do, they could do better - now, if only they'd included the Music!); Christopher Marlowe's Tamburlaine the Great is entered in the Staioners' Register (1590 - the play is published later in the year by Richard Jones); explorer John Davis becomes the first European to set foot on the Falkland Islands, when his ship is blown off-course during a storm (1592 - there has been such a shortage of food that the sailors are forced to p-p-pick up and kill several Penguins to replenish stocks, so becoming the first people to discover that Penguin meat doesn't "keep"; small consolation, perhaps, to the 52 crew members who die of starvation before reaching home. The Falkland Islanders celebrate the date as Falklands Day); Rossini's opera Il Turco in Italia is premiered at La Scala, Milan, conducted by Alessandro Rolla (1814); Cologne Cathedral, work on which had been abandoned in 1473, is completed (1880 - so Schumann only knew the unfinished structure); Thomas Edison's Phonograph is first demonstrated in London (1888 - the recording used for the demonstration is an arrangement of Sullivan's The Lost Chord for cornet & piano - Sullivan himself hears the recording in October, and sends a recorded speech to Edison:
I can only say that I am astonished and somewhat terrified at the result of this evening's experiments: astonished at the wonderful power you have developed, and terrified at the thought that so much hideous and bad music may be put on record forever. But all the same I think it is the most wonderful thing that I have ever experienced, and I congratulate you with all my heart on this wonderful discovery
Birthdays Today include: Pieter Coecke van Aelst the Elder (1502); Giambattista Benedetti (1530); Meric Casuabon (1599); Leopold Hofmann (1738); Hans Christian Ørsted (1777); Samuel Sebastian Wesley (1810); Richard von Krafft-Ebing (1840); Doc Holliday (1851); John Galsworthy (1867); Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji (1892); Pierre Schaeffer & Willy Ronis (both 1910); Frank Oppenheimer (1912); Georges Prêtre (1924); René Goscinny (1926); Frederic Raphael (1931); David Crosby (1941); Steve Martin & Wim Wenders (both 1945); Maddy Prior (1947); Gary Larson (1950); James Horner (1953); Emmanuelle Béart (1963); Halle Berry (1966); ... and Nick Grimshaw is 35 today.
Final Days for: William Croft (1727); William Randolph Hearst (1951); Bertolt Brecht (1956); Clifford Odets (1963); Oscar levant (1972); Karl Böhm (1981); JB Priestley and Peter Wishart (both 1984); Vincent Persichetti (1987); Sergiu Celibidache (1996); Tikhon Khrennikov (2007).
And the Radio 3 Schedules for the morning of Thursday, 14th August, 1969 were:
Overture ("gramophone records")
This Week's Composers: Lassus & Victoria
Moura Lympany "introduces records of her own choice"
Mozart: Sonata in Eb K282, played by Lili Kraus
Music Making: Chamber Music played by Harold Clarke & Wilfred Smith (flutes), Denis Vigay (cello), Maria Korchinska (harp), Hubert Dawkes (piano and harmonium) with Wilfrid Parry (piano) [programme including Fauré's Fantasie for Flute & Piano]; and Lieder performed by Robert Tear & Viola Tunnard.
Midday Concert: BBCNSO conducted by Walter Susskind.
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