31st August
The Feast Day of Saint Aiden of Lindisfane, the 7th Century bishop who founded Lindisfarne Priory, and whose far-reaching evangelism made him the single most important figure in the spread of Anglo-Saxon Northumbrian Christianity. He died on this date in 651, and is a patron Saint of Firefighters.
Also on This Date: Henry V dies whilst on campaign in France, and is succeeded by his 9-month old son, Henry VI (1422); Irish Rebel leader John Moore, supported by 1,000 French revolutionary soldiers, is declared President of the Republic of Connaught in Western Ireland (1798); Ralph Waldo Emerson delivers his The American Scholar lecture, calling for greater independence from European cultural dominance by American writers and Artists (1837); the Battle of Jonesborough in the American Civil War begins (1864); 43-year-old Mary Ann Nichols is murdered and mutilated in Whitechapel, London - the first of the five acknowledged victims of Jack the Ripper (1888); Ferdinand von Zeppelin patents his airship design (1895); Thomas Edison patents his Kinetoscope which enables people to watch moving pictures (1897 - it does not project, so can only be veiwed by one person at a time); Australian troops cross the River Somme and break German lines at the beginning of the 4-day-long Battle of Mont Saint-Quentin (1918 - "the greatest military achievement of the war"); Brecht & Weill's Die Dreigroschenoper is premiered at the Schiffbauerdamm Theatre in Berlin, with sets by Casper Neher, conducted by Theo Mackeben, and with Lotte Lenya as Jenny (1928); the first US Neutrality Act bans sales of arms and cigarettes to beligerent countries (1935); Radio Prague begins broadcasting (1936); Gestapo sabateurs posing as Polish citizens take over the German radio station at Gleiwitz on the German/Poland border and begin broadcasting anti-German propaganda (1939 - one of a series of such incidents designed to justify the Nazi invasion of Poland; for extra conviction, they also murder by lethal injection a German national in the region who had been sympathetic to Poles, dress him up as a Polish sabateur and shot him several times, to make it look as if he has been shot whilst running away from the radio station); Yugoslav Royalist guerillas successfully attack a Nazi garrison at the Battle of Loznica (1941); Malaya gains Independence from Britain (1957); Trinidad & Tobago gain Independence from Britain (1962); Olga Korbut wins Gold Medals in Balance Beam and Floor Exercise events at the Munich Olympics, breaking the Laws of Physics as she does so (1972 - 45 years later, she is forced to sell the medals, raising £147,000 to help meet her debts - on the same day, Mark Spitz adds the 100m and 200m Butterfly race to his collection of a total of 7 Gold Medals at that year's Olympics); Uzbekistan & Kyrgyzstan both declare Independence from the Soviet Union (1991); Princess Diana is killed in a car crash in Paris, following pursuit by press photographers on motorbikes trying to get pictures of her with her partner, Dodi al-Fayed, who is also killed in the crash (1997); Norwegian Police recover the version of Munch's The Scream, stolen from he Munch museum in Oslo two years previously (2006); Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff is impeached and removed from office by the Senate (2016 - we can live in hope)
Birthdays Today include: Caligula (12); Jean-Paul-Égide Martini (1741); Hermann von Helmholtz (1821); Amilcare Ponchielli (1834 - his first words, "Hello mudda, Hello farder"); Maria Montessori (1870); Alma Schindler/Mahler/Gropius/Werfel (1879); DuBose Heyward (1885); Lily Laskine (1893); Frederic March (1897); Bernard Lovell (1913); Alan Jay Lerner (1918); Raymond Williams (1921); James Coburn (1928); Roy Castle (1932); Martin Bell (1938); Emmanuel Nunes (1941); Van Morrison & Itzhak Perlman (both 1945); Susan Gritton (1965); Kirstie Allsopp & Vadim Repin (both 1971); Holly Earl (1992).
Final Days for: Matthias Grunewald (1528); John Bunyan (1688); François-André Danican Philidor (1795); Louis Antoine de Bougainville (1811); Charles Baudelaire (1867); Marina Tsvetaeva (1941); Georges Braque (1963); Rocky Marciano (1969 - the day before his 45th birthday); John Ford (1973); Henry Moore (1986); Ken Campbell (2008); Max Bygraves (2012); David Frost (2013).
... and the Radio 3 Schedules for the Morning of Friday, 31st August, 1979 were:
Overture: Wagner Dawn & Siegfried's Journey; Bach Sinfonia (from Cantata 29); Mendelssohn Rondo brillante in Eb; Ravel Introduction and Allegro; Berlioz King Lear Ovt; Debussy Nocturnes; Williamson Seascape; Britten 4 Sea Interludes.
This Week's Composer: Martinu (The Epic of Gilgamesh)
The Burnell Piano Trio plays new works by British Composers (John Hall Pno 3o #2; Alfred Nieman Chamber Sonatas)
Edinburgh International Festival: Songs by Stenhammer, Strauss, Schubert, Ravel, Alfven, & Brahms (Hakan Hagegard & Thomas Schuback)
The Feast Day of Saint Aiden of Lindisfane, the 7th Century bishop who founded Lindisfarne Priory, and whose far-reaching evangelism made him the single most important figure in the spread of Anglo-Saxon Northumbrian Christianity. He died on this date in 651, and is a patron Saint of Firefighters.
Also on This Date: Henry V dies whilst on campaign in France, and is succeeded by his 9-month old son, Henry VI (1422); Irish Rebel leader John Moore, supported by 1,000 French revolutionary soldiers, is declared President of the Republic of Connaught in Western Ireland (1798); Ralph Waldo Emerson delivers his The American Scholar lecture, calling for greater independence from European cultural dominance by American writers and Artists (1837); the Battle of Jonesborough in the American Civil War begins (1864); 43-year-old Mary Ann Nichols is murdered and mutilated in Whitechapel, London - the first of the five acknowledged victims of Jack the Ripper (1888); Ferdinand von Zeppelin patents his airship design (1895); Thomas Edison patents his Kinetoscope which enables people to watch moving pictures (1897 - it does not project, so can only be veiwed by one person at a time); Australian troops cross the River Somme and break German lines at the beginning of the 4-day-long Battle of Mont Saint-Quentin (1918 - "the greatest military achievement of the war"); Brecht & Weill's Die Dreigroschenoper is premiered at the Schiffbauerdamm Theatre in Berlin, with sets by Casper Neher, conducted by Theo Mackeben, and with Lotte Lenya as Jenny (1928); the first US Neutrality Act bans sales of arms and cigarettes to beligerent countries (1935); Radio Prague begins broadcasting (1936); Gestapo sabateurs posing as Polish citizens take over the German radio station at Gleiwitz on the German/Poland border and begin broadcasting anti-German propaganda (1939 - one of a series of such incidents designed to justify the Nazi invasion of Poland; for extra conviction, they also murder by lethal injection a German national in the region who had been sympathetic to Poles, dress him up as a Polish sabateur and shot him several times, to make it look as if he has been shot whilst running away from the radio station); Yugoslav Royalist guerillas successfully attack a Nazi garrison at the Battle of Loznica (1941); Malaya gains Independence from Britain (1957); Trinidad & Tobago gain Independence from Britain (1962); Olga Korbut wins Gold Medals in Balance Beam and Floor Exercise events at the Munich Olympics, breaking the Laws of Physics as she does so (1972 - 45 years later, she is forced to sell the medals, raising £147,000 to help meet her debts - on the same day, Mark Spitz adds the 100m and 200m Butterfly race to his collection of a total of 7 Gold Medals at that year's Olympics); Uzbekistan & Kyrgyzstan both declare Independence from the Soviet Union (1991); Princess Diana is killed in a car crash in Paris, following pursuit by press photographers on motorbikes trying to get pictures of her with her partner, Dodi al-Fayed, who is also killed in the crash (1997); Norwegian Police recover the version of Munch's The Scream, stolen from he Munch museum in Oslo two years previously (2006); Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff is impeached and removed from office by the Senate (2016 - we can live in hope)
Birthdays Today include: Caligula (12); Jean-Paul-Égide Martini (1741); Hermann von Helmholtz (1821); Amilcare Ponchielli (1834 - his first words, "Hello mudda, Hello farder"); Maria Montessori (1870); Alma Schindler/Mahler/Gropius/Werfel (1879); DuBose Heyward (1885); Lily Laskine (1893); Frederic March (1897); Bernard Lovell (1913); Alan Jay Lerner (1918); Raymond Williams (1921); James Coburn (1928); Roy Castle (1932); Martin Bell (1938); Emmanuel Nunes (1941); Van Morrison & Itzhak Perlman (both 1945); Susan Gritton (1965); Kirstie Allsopp & Vadim Repin (both 1971); Holly Earl (1992).
Final Days for: Matthias Grunewald (1528); John Bunyan (1688); François-André Danican Philidor (1795); Louis Antoine de Bougainville (1811); Charles Baudelaire (1867); Marina Tsvetaeva (1941); Georges Braque (1963); Rocky Marciano (1969 - the day before his 45th birthday); John Ford (1973); Henry Moore (1986); Ken Campbell (2008); Max Bygraves (2012); David Frost (2013).
... and the Radio 3 Schedules for the Morning of Friday, 31st August, 1979 were:
Overture: Wagner Dawn & Siegfried's Journey; Bach Sinfonia (from Cantata 29); Mendelssohn Rondo brillante in Eb; Ravel Introduction and Allegro; Berlioz King Lear Ovt; Debussy Nocturnes; Williamson Seascape; Britten 4 Sea Interludes.
This Week's Composer: Martinu (The Epic of Gilgamesh)
The Burnell Piano Trio plays new works by British Composers (John Hall Pno 3o #2; Alfred Nieman Chamber Sonatas)
Edinburgh International Festival: Songs by Stenhammer, Strauss, Schubert, Ravel, Alfven, & Brahms (Hakan Hagegard & Thomas Schuback)
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