November 1st

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November 1 is the 305th (thirty-fifth) day of the year—the 306th (thirty-sixth) in leap years—in the Gregorian calendar. There are 60 days left to end the year.

Events

  • 365: in the territory of current Germany, the Germans cross the river Rhine and invade the Gaul. Emperor Valentiniano I moved to Paris to command the army and defend the gala cities.
  • 928: The emir of Cordoba Abderramán III founded the ceca of Cordoba for the coinage of gold coins, which they carried without casting on the Iberian peninsula since 744.
  • 996: Emperor Oton III writes to Gottschalk (Bishop of Freising); it is the oldest known document that uses the name Ostarrîchi (Austria in ancient German high).
  • 1170: In the Netherlands, the "Inundation of All Saints of 1170" occurs, where the North Sea enters the country by overcoming the dunes that formed a natural terraplén. According to Egmundane Annalesthe city of Utrecht (Netherlands) was flooded.
  • 1290: In England the edict of expulsion of the Jews signed by King Edward I enters into force.
  • 1304: On the German coast of the southwest of the Baltic Sea is the "Inundation of All Saints of 1304", a cyclical mare that floods the entire region of Western Pomerania. 271 people die.
  • 1348: In Spain, the Union of Valencia (anti-realist) attacks the Jews of Murviedro because they are subjects of the king of Valencia and therefore realistic.
  • 1436: In the Netherlands there is the "Inundation of All Saints of 1436", a cyclic mare that makes several towns disappear on the German Bay (in the North Sea).
  • 1466: In the church of St. Nicholas of the village of Villalpando (Zamora) the first vow is made to the Immaculate Conception.
  • 1512: In Rome, the vault of the Sistine Chapel, painted by Michelangelo, is exhibited for the first time.
  • 1520: Portuguese Fernando Magallanes first sails the strait that bears his name (passage of South America that unites the Pacific Ocean and the Atlantic).
  • 1549: In Colombia is founded the city of Pamplona, which two centuries later will be the first Colombian city to declare the secession of Spain.
  • 1569: in Panama is founded the Heroica Villa de Los Santos, cradle of Panamanian nationality.
Hans Moser's drawing in 1570 of flooding in the Netherlands.
  • 1570: In the Netherlands, the Inundation of All Saints takes place—possibly the highest cyclic mare in the history of that country—which kills some 20 000 people.
  • 1570: In Spain, the Moors of Granada, Valle de Lecrín, La Vega and other districts are gathered in the churches of each alcheria and forced to go to Cordoba, and from there distributed by Extremadura and Galicia.
  • 1592: In the battle of Busan, the Japanese Navy destroys the Korean.
  • 1604: In the Whitehall Palace of London, the work is represented for the first time OTHERWilliam Shakespeare.
  • 1606: In Bolivia the city of Oruro is founded.
  • 1611: In the Whitehall Palace of London, the romantic comedy of William Shakespeare is represented for the first time.
  • 1612: Kitai-gorod is captured by Russian troops under the command of Dmitri Mikhailovich Pozharski.
  • 1625: The combined fleet of England and the United Provinces led by Sir Edward Cecil, attacks the Spanish city of Cadiz with the intention of capturing the fleet of Indias. The bad organization and strategic mistakes, as well as the defenses coordinated by Fernando Girón and Manuel de Guzmán and Silva, were the total failure of the attack.
Defense of Cadiz against the English (1634-35), Zurbarán, Museo del Prado, Madrid. Fernando Girón (sented) giving orders to his subordinates (against him, the lieutenant of field master Diego Ruiz), while at the bottom the disembarkation of the Anglo-Dutch troops in front of the fort of El Puntal.
  • 1683: New York British colony is subdivided into 12 counties.
  • 1745: in Rome, Pope Benedict XIV publishes the encyclical Vix pervenitAbout usury.
  • 1755: In Portugal, at 10:16 (local time) an earthquake of magnitude 8.7-9.0 on the seismological scale of Richter completely destroys the city of Lisbon. The resulting tsunami drowns the survivors. They die between 70,000 and 100,000 people. The earthquake was felt in France and the United States. The tsunami also affected the Atlantic coast of the Iberian Peninsula and North Africa.
  • 1765: To pay for military operations in North America, the British parliament activates Stamp Act (‘Seal Law’) of the 13 colonies.
  • 1790: Edmund Burke publishes Reflections of the Revolution in Francein which he predicts that the French Revolution will end in disaster.
  • 1800: In the United States, President John Adams becomes the first president who lives in the Executive Mansion (later called the White House).
  • 1805: Napoleon Bonaparte invades the Austrian Empire during the Third Coalition War.
  • 1814: In Vienna, Austria, a congress is opened to redesign the political map of Europe after the defeat of Napoleon.
  • 1830: In Argentina, General Ricardo López Jordan is armed against the province of Entre Ríos.
  • 1848: In Boston (Massachusetts), the first medical school for women is opened, The Boston Female Medical School (which will later be absorbed by the School of Medicine at the University of Boston).
  • 1855: In Turin, Italy, the publishing house Claudiana was founded.
  • 1859: The lighthouse of Cape Lookout (North Carolina) is opened. Its Fresnel lenses can be seen from 30 kilometers.
  • 1861: In the U.S. Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln appointed George B. McClellan as commander of the unionist forces to replace the veteran General Winfield Scott.
  • 1870: In the United States, the Climate Office makes its first weather forecast.
  • 1870: In the city of Athens (Greece) the second edition of the Olympic Games of Zappas was inaugurated, the first attempt to resurrect the ancient Olympic games; in these games only Greek nationals participated.
  • 1876: The provincial government system is dissolved in New Zealand.
  • 1885: in Rome, Pope Leo XIII publishes the encyclical Misericors dei filiusabout the supernatural nature of the Church, the relations between ecclesiastical power and civil power, the “iniquity” of humanism and religious freedom, the modern tendency to marginalize the authority of the Church, and the “injustice” of libertarian conceptions.
  • 1891: Chile dissolves the Iquique Board of Government, after the Attack to Iquique.
  • 1894: In Russia, Nicholas II became the new tsar after the death of his father Alexander II.
  • 1896: In the United States the naked breasts of a woman are shown for the first time in a non-pornographic magazine (National Geographic).
  • 1897: in Turin, Italy, a group of students from the Classical Liceum "Massimo D'Azeglio" founded the football club Juventus.
  • 1901: In Richmond College, in Richmond (Virginia), the fraternity Sigma Phi Epsilon, the largest in the country, is founded.
  • 1908: In Buenos Aires, Argentina, the Huracán Atlético Club is founded.
  • 1910: In Spain is founded the anarcho-syndicalist CNT (National Confederation of Labour).
  • 1911: during a battle in the Iole-Turkish war, a bomb from an airplane is dropped for the first time.
  • 1912: In Buenos Aires (Argentina) the Atlético Temperley Club is founded.
  • 1914: During the First World War, Germany first beats the British Royal Navy in the battle of Colonel, west of the coast of Chile.
  • 1914: in Rome, Pope Benedict XV publishes the encyclical Adís beatsimi apostolorum principisabout the dire conditions that lead to war, the evils and mistakes of modern conceptions, the divisions between Catholics, the evils of modernism, and the excessive independence of priests.
  • 1918: Ukraine is independent of the Russian Empire.
  • 1922: in Turkey the last sultan, Mehmet VI. Thus the Ottoman Empire is officially dissolved.
  • 1923: The first stadium of the Godoy Cruz Antonio Tomba Sports Club is inaugurated.
  • 1929: in Spain, the cathedral of Granada is declared a National Monument.
  • 1939: the first rabbit born by artificial insemination is born.
  • 1943: In the Solomon Islands—as part of the Second World War—the 3rd U.S. Marine Division landed on the island of Bougainville and delivered the Battle of Empress Augusta Bay.
  • 1944: In the Netherlands, units of the British Army land in Walcheren, Second World War.
  • 1945: In North Korea, the official newspaper opened Rodong Sinmun (with the name of Chongro).
  • 1945: Australia joins the United Nations.
  • 1948: In the southeast of Manchuria, 6000 people die when they exploit a Chinese merchant ship.
  • 1950: In Blair House, Puerto Rican nationalists Griselio Torresola and Oscar Collazo are attacking U.S. President Harry S. Truman, after three days of nationalist uprising in Puerto Rico cities.
  • 1950: in the Vatican City, Pope Pius XII establishes papal infallibility when he formally defines as dogma the Assumption of Mary.
  • 1950: in the Vatican City, Pope Pius XII claims to have witnessed the same "miracle of the Sun" of Fatima (Portugal) but in the Vatican gardens.
During the explosion of the atomic bomb Dog About 6500 U.S. soldiers were mobilized to measure the effects of radiation on humans.
  • 1951: At the Nevada nuclear test site, the United States detonates the atomic bomb Dog21 kiloton, dropping it from a B-50 bomber. It is the fourth bomb of the Buster-Jangle operation (which will expose some 6,500 infantry soldiers to seven atomic explosions for training purposes in a non-voluntary way for a month) and the 21st of the 1127 that the United States detonated between 1945 and 1992.
  • 1952: 7:15 (local time)—or 19:15 on 31 October (world time)—in the atoll of Enewetak, Marshall Islands, the United States detonates Ivy Mike (the first hydrogen bomb).
  • 1954: In Algeria, the National Liberation Front begins to act in the Algerian War of Independence.
  • 1955: near Longmont (Colorado) explodes a Douglas DC-6B plane (United Airlines flight 629) for a bomb by Jack Gilbert Graham to kill his mother. Die this and the other 43 passengers and crew. Graham will be executed on January 11, 1957.
  • 1955: At the Nevada nuclear test site, the United States performs the first of the four Project 56 atomic tests, which does not generate a nuclear reaction because its purpose was to determine whether a nuclear head would explode if its explosive components detonated. These four tests will be contaminated with plutonium 3.62 km2 of land.
  • 1955: Vietnam War begins
  • 1956: In India the states of Andhra Pradesh (formerly called Nizam), Karnataka (formerly Mysore) and Kerala are formed.
  • 1957: On Lake Michigan, the Mackinac Strait Bridge (the longest hanging bridge in the world) is opened to traffic.
  • 1960: During the election campaign, U.S. President John F. Kennedy announced the idea of the Peace Corps.
  • 1962: The Soviet Union launched the Mars 1 probe to Mars, with which contact was lost when it was about 106 million kilometers from Earth.
  • 1962: In Italy comes the first issue of the comic Diabolik.
  • 1963: in Arecibo (Puerto Rico), the Arecibo observatory, the world's largest radio telescope, is inaugurated.
  • 1968: The "Wonderwall Music" by George Harrison, the first solo album by a member of The Beatles, published by Apple Records.
  • 1968: In the United States, The Motion Picture Association of America opens its film rating system (G, M, R and X).
  • 1969: in the United States, Elvis Presley publishes Suspicious mindsAfter seven years away from the stage.
  • 1970: In Saint-Laurent-du-Pont (France) a dance hall is set on fire. 144 people die.
  • 1973: In the United States, Leon Jaworski is appointed prosecutor of the case in the Watergate scandal.
  • 1973: In India, the state of Mysore changes its name by Karnataka.
  • 1977: in Covadonga, Spain the then Prince Philip VI of Spain is solemnly proclaimed Prince of Asturias.
  • 1979: in Bolivia there is a coup led by the Gral. Alberto Natusch Busch who defeats Wálter Guevara Arze with a balance of 100 dead in the city of Peace.
  • 1980: The English progressive rock group The Alan Parsons Project launches its fifth studio album The Turn of a Friendly Card.
  • 1981: Antigua and Barbuda are independent of the British empire.
  • 1982: in Marysville (Ohio), the Japanese company Honda opens a factory. It thus becomes the first foreign automotive company that produces cars in the United States. They produce the Honda Accord.
  • 1986: on Wakayama beach (west of Japan) seven women between 20 and 30 years old—known as the “girlfriends” of the Lord God—members of the Friends of Truth Church (1950) commit suicide by burning with kerosene near the house of their leader Kiyoharu Miyamoto, who died the day before for illness.
  • 1991: At the University of Iowa, the student Gang Lu kills 5 teachers by shooting.
  • 1993: the Maastricht Treaty enters into force, giving way to the creation of the European Union.
  • 1995: Dayton conference begins.
  • 1998: in Colombia the taking of Mitu occurs.
  • 1998: the European Court of Human Rights is instituted.
  • 2004: In the Pyrenees Cannelle is murdered, the last osa originating from the place. His puppy escaped the hunters, but his whereabouts are not known.
  • 2005: In Canada the first part of the Gomery reportwhich deals with political manipulation of money.
  • 2008: Switzerland founded the Democratic bourgeois party.
  • 2009: in Finland sail on its inaugural journey the largest cruise in the world, the Oasis of the Seas, 361 m long, with capacity for 6300 passengers.
  • 2016: Miroslav Klose, to date the highest scorer in the history of the World Cups, officially retires from football.

Births

  • 846: Louis the Tartamudo, French king (f. 879).
  • 1339: Rodolfo IV, Austrian aristocrat (f. 1365).
  • 1351: Leopoldo III of Austria, Austrian aristocrat (f. 1386).
  • 1526: Catherine Jagellón, a Finnish aristocrat, Queen of Sweden (f. 1583).
  • 1530: Étienne de La Boétie, judge, philosopher and French writer (f. 1563).
  • 1542: Tarquinia Molza, singer, poet, director, composer and Italian natural philosopher (f. 1617).
  • 1549: Anna of Austria, aristocrat of Spain, fourth wife of Philip II (f. 1580).
  • 1554: Prospero Farinacci, Italian jurist (f. 1618).
  • 1567: Diego Sarmiento de Acuña, Spanish diplomat (f. 1626).
  • 1585: Jan Brożek, mathematician, physicist and Polish astronomer (f. 1652).
  • 1596: Pietro da Cortona, Italian Baroque architect and painter (f. 1669).
  • 1636: Nicolas Boileau, French poet and critic (f. 1711).
  • 1667: Carlo Gaetano Stampa, Cardinal and Archbishop of Italy (f. 1742).
  • 1713: Antonio Genovesi, Italian writer and philosopher (f. 1769).
  • 1743: Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Herbst, a naturalist and German entomologist (f. 1807).
  • 1753: Felix Maria Calleja del Rey, a Spanish military officer (f. 1828).
  • 1757: Antonio Canova, Italian sculptor (f. 1822).
  • 1762: Spencer Perceval, British politician (f. 1812).
  • 1764: Josefa Dominga Catalá of Valeriola, aristocrat of Spain (f. 1814).
  • 1778: Gustavo IV Adolfo, Swedish king (f. 1837).
  • 1781: Joseph Karl Stieler, German painter (f. 1858).
  • 1782: Frederick John Robinson, British politician (f. 1859).
  • 1786: Mariquita Sánchez de Thompson, patriot and socialité argentina (f. 1868).
  • 1797: Santos Michelena, a Venezuelan politician and diplomat (f. 1848).
  • 1800: José María del Canto Marín de Poveda, Chilean military (f. 1877).
  • 1815: Crawford W. Long, American physician, first Western anesthesiologist (f. 1878).
  • 1847: Emma Albani, Canadian soprano (f. 1930).
  • 1849: Valentin Lamas Carvajal, Spanish poet and journalist (f. 1906).
  • 1850: Rosario de Acuña, writer, journalist and Spanish suffrageist (f. 1923).
  • 1857: Darío de Regoyos, a Spanish painter (f. 1913).
  • 1871: Stephen Crane, American writer (f. 1900).
  • 1871: Alexander Spendiaryan, director of Armenian orchestra and composer (f. 1928).
  • 1872: Maude Adams, American actress (f. 1953).
  • 1873: Santos González Roncal, a Spanish military and one of the last of the Philippines (f. 1936).
  • 1878: Carlos Saavedra Lamas, politician and Argentine jurist, Nobel Peace Prize in 1936 (f. 1959).
  • 1880: Sholem Asch, an American writer of Polish origin (f. 1957).
  • 1880: Alfred Wegener, German meteorologist and geophysicist (f. 1930).
  • 1881: Edward Van Sloan, American actor (f. 1964).
  • 1884: Annibale Bergonzoli, Italian general (f. 1973).
  • 1885: Guido Adler, Austrian musicologist and teacher (f. 1941).
  • 1886: Hermann Broch, writer, essayist, novelist, playwright and Austrian philosopher (f. 1951).
  • 1887: L. S. Lowry, British painter (f. 1976).
  • 1889: Philip J. Noel-Baker, athlete, politician and British diplomat, nobel Peace Prize in 1959 (f. 1982).
  • 1889: Hannah Höch, German painter and photographer (f. 1978).
  • 1892: Alexander Alekhine, Russian chessman (f. 1946).
  • 1898: Manuel Tello Baurraud, Mexican politician (f. 1971).
  • 1902: Eugen Jochum, director of orchestra and German musician (f. 1987).
  • 1903: Jean Tardieu, French artist and poet (f. 1995).
  • 1904: Manuel Cisneros Sánchez, a Peruvian journalist and politician (f. 1971).
  • 1904: Telesforo Monzón, writer, Spanish politician (f. 1981).
  • 1907: Homero Manzi, Argentinian litrist of tangos (f. 1951).
  • 1907: Wu Yonggang, Chinese filmmaker (f. 1982).
  • 1907: Theo Akkermann, German sculptor (f. 1982).
  • 1910: César Augusto Dávila Gavilanes priest and yogi ecuatoriano (f. 1999).
  • 1911: Henri Troyat, writer, historian and Russian-French biographer (f. 2007).
  • 1914: Petronio Álvarez, musician, poet and inspiring Colombian music from the Pacific. (f. 1966)
  • 1919: Hermann Bondi, mathematician and Austrian cosmologist (f. 2005).
  • 1920: George M. White, American architect (f. 2011).
  • 1921: María Cánepa, Chilean actress (f. 2006).
  • 1921: Mario Rigoni Stern, Italian writer (f. 2008).
  • 1922: Santos Colón, singer of boleros and salsa Puerto Rican (f. 1998).
  • 1922: José Manuel Pita Andrade, historian of Spanish art (f. 2007).
  • 1923: Carlos Páez Vilaró, Uruguayan plastic artist (f. 2014).
  • 1923: Victoria de los Angeles, soprano española (f. 2005).
  • 1924: Süleyman Demirel, Turkish President (f. 2015).
  • 1926: Lou Donaldson, American jazz saxophoneist.
  • 1927: Filippo Maria Pandolfi, Italian politician.
  • 1929: Betsy Palmer, American actress (f. 2015).
  • 1931: Shunsuke Kikuchi, Japanese musician and composer (f. 2021).
  • 1931: Manuel Ocampo, dancer, choreographer and Guatemalan teacher (f. 2009).
  • 1932: Joaquín Achúcarro, Spanish pianist.
  • 1932: Francis Arinze, Cardinal and Archbishop of Nigeria.
  • 1932: John Clark, British actor and director.
  • 1932: Alberto Salinas, Argentine cartoonist (f. 2004).
  • 1933: Oswal (Osvaldo Wálter Viola), Argentine writer, teacher and screenwriter (f. 2015).
  • 1934: Jackson Lago, Brazilian politician (f. 2011).
  • 1935: Gary Player, South African golfer.
  • 1935: Edward Said, Palestinian writer and activist (f. 2003).
  • 1936:
    • Alejandro Doria, Argentine filmmaker (f. 2009).
    • Alberto Mechoso Méndez, anarcosindicalista uruguayo (f. 1976).
    • Billy Cafaro, Argentinean singer (f. 2021).
  • 1939: Barbara Bosson, American actress.
  • 1939: Bernard Kouchner, French physician and politician.
  • 1941: Joe Caldwell, American basketball player.
  • 1941: Ralph Klein, Canadian politician (f. 2013).
  • 1942:
    • Larry Flynt, editor of the American pornographic industry (f. 2021).
    • Marcia Wallace, American voice actress (f. 2013).
    • Miguel Palmer, Mexican actor (f. 2021).
  • 1943: Salvatore Adamo, Belgian singer.
  • 1943: Alfio Basile, footballer and Argentine soccer coach.
  • 1944: Bobby "The Brain" Heenan, an American professional free struggle manager (f. 2017).
  • 1944: Oscar Temaru, Polynesian politician.
  • 1944: Sergio Markarián, Uruguayan football coach.
  • 1947: Adriana Lesgart, an Argentine guerrilla who was killed by the dictatorship of Videla (f. 1980).
  • 1947: Jim Steinman, American composer (f. 2021).
  • 1947: César Castellanos Madrid, a Honduran politician.
  • 1949: David Foster, musician and Canadian record producer.
  • 1949: Michael Griffin, American physicist and engineer, head of NASA.
  • 1950: Robert B. Laughlin, American physicist, Nobel Prize in Physics in 1998.
  • 1950: Dan Peek, American guitarist, from the American band (f. 2011).
  • 1951: Ronald Bell, American singer and saxophoneist, of the Kool & The Gang band.
  • 1951: Manuel Cacho Quesada, Spanish diplomat.
  • 1952: Ali Reza Askari, Iranian military (f. 2010).
  • 1952: Maguso, Colombian actress (f. 1997).
  • 1954: Maribel Martin, Spanish actress.
  • 1955: Antonio Romero Ruiz, Spanish politician.
  • 1955: Joe Arroyo, Colombian singer and composer (f. 2011).
  • 1956: Tomás Zamudio Briceño, a Peruvian politician.
  • 1957: Peter Ostrum, American actor.
  • 1957: Carlos Paião, Portuguese singer (f. 1988).
  • 1958: Rachel Ticotin, American actress.
  • 1959: Nancy Cartwright, American actress.
  • 1960: Fernando Valenzuela, Mexican baseball player.
  • 1961: Petr Pavel, Czech politician and military, elected president of the Czech Republic in 2023.
  • 1961: Calvin Johnson, American musician, of the Beat Happening band.
  • 1961: Gabriel Rolón, psychoanalyst, writer and Argentine musician.
  • 1962: Danilo Montero, Costa Rican Christian singer.
  • 1962: Magne Furuholmen, Norwegian musician of the A-ha band.
  • 1962: Anthony Kiedis, American rock singer, Red Hot Chili Peppers.
  • 1963: Francisco José Alcaraz, Spanish social activist.
  • 1963: Rick Allen, British drummer, of the Def Leppard band.
  • 1963: Mark Hughes, British footballer.
  • 1963: Monty Sopp, American professional fighter.
  • 1964: Jon Jauregi, Spanish politician.
  • 1964: Daran Norris, American actor.
  • 1965: Gemma Nierga, Spanish journalist.
  • 1966: Mary Hansen, Australian musician, Stereolab band (f. 2002).
  • 1967: Tina Arena, Australian singer and actress.
  • 1968: Alberto San Juan, Spanish actor.
  • 1970: Erik Spoelstra, American coach.
  • 1971: Antonio Sánchez, Mexican drummer.
  • 1972: Toni Collette, Australian actress.
  • 1972: Paul Dickov, British footballer.
  • 1972: Jenny McCarthy, American actress.
  • 1972: Alessandra Silvestri-Levy, writer, journalist, art curator, art historian and Brazilian activist.
  • 1973: Magdalena Aicega, Argentinian lawn hockey player.
  • 1973: Igor González de Galdeano, Spanish cyclist.
  • 1973: Aishwarya Rai, Indian actress.
  • 1975: Roberto Dueñas, Spanish basketball player.
  • 1976: Logan Marshall-Green, American actor.
  • 1976: Sebastián Peratta, Argentine footballer.
  • 1977: Carl Cort, British footballer.
  • 1977: Flora Martínez, actress colombo-canadiense.
  • 1978: Danny Koevermans, Dutch footballer.
  • 1979: David Cuéllar, Spanish footballer.
  • 1979: Luis Delgado, Angolan footballer.
  • 1979: Milan Dudić, Serbian footballer.
  • 1980: Matías Manrique, Argentine footballer.
  • 1980: Dani Rovira, Spanish actor.
  • 1981: Christian Brown Sansevero, Spanish politician.
  • 1982: Maria Chiara Augenti, Italian actress.
  • 1982: Moharram Navidkia, footballer and Iranian coach.
  • 1983: Pedro López Muñoz, Spanish footballer.
  • 1983: Václav Svěrkoš, Czech footballer.
  • 1984: Damiano Ferronetti, Italian footballer.
  • 1984: Natalia Tena, British actress.
  • 1984: Macnelly Torres, Colombian footballer.
  • 1986: Penn Badgley, American actor.
  • 1988: Masahiro Tanaka, Japanese baseball player.
  • 1990: Simone Giertz, inventor and youtuber Swedish.
  • 1993: Richard Ofori Antwi, Ghanaian footballer.
  • 1994: Rocky Lynch, American singer and guitarist.
  • 1994: Ardin Dallku, kosovar footballer.
  • 1995: Margarita Mamún, Russian Olympic gymnast.
  • 1996: Lil Peep, rapper and American singer (f. 2017).
  • 1997: Alex Wolff, actor, drummer, American singer and composer.
  • 1999: Buddy Handleson, American actor.
  • 2004: Jayden Bartels, American actress.

Deaths

  • 130: Genibera, a Christian saint (n. 119 or 120).
  • 955: Enrique I, Bavarian aristocrat (n. 921).
  • 1112: Henry of Burgundy, French aristocrat (n. 1066).
  • 1155: Fernando Pérez de Traba, noble of Galicia (n. 1100).
  • 1391: Amadeo VII de Saboya, aristocrat french (n. 1360).
  • 1399: John V, king Breton (n. 1339).
  • 1431: Nuno Álvares Pereira, aristocrat Portuguese, beatified by the Catholic Church (n. 1360).
  • 1492: Beltrán de la Cueva, noble, political and military Spanish (n. 1435).
  • 1546: Giulio Romano, Italian painter and architect (n. 1449).
  • 1588: Krisnadás Kavirash Gosuami, religious and Indian writer, author of Chaitania-charitámrita (n. 1496).
  • 1629: Hendrick ter Brugghen, Dutch painter (n. 1588).
  • 1642: Jean Nicolet, French explorer (n. 1598).
  • 1661: Philip the Prosper of Austria, the Spanish aristocrat, the son of King Philip IV (n. 1657).
  • 1676: Boecio (Gijsbert Voet), Dutch theologian (n. 1589).
  • 1700: Charles II "the Hechized", Spanish king (n. 1661).
  • 1804: Johann Friedrich Gmelin, a German naturalist and botanist (n. 1748).
  • 1830: José Alejandro de Treviño and Gutiérrez, lawyer, jurist and Mexican politician (n. 1759).
  • 1865: John Lindley, British botanist (n. 1799).
  • 1882: Alejandro Mon and Menéndez, Spanish politician (n. 1801).
  • 1883: Alexander Walker Scott, Australian entomologist (n. 1800).
  • 1888: Nikolái Przevalski, Russian explorer (n. 1839).
  • 1893: Jan Matejko, Polish painter (n. 1838).
  • 1894: Alexander III, Russian tsar between 1881 and 1894 (n. 1845).
  • 1895: Benito Sanz and Forés, Spanish cardinal (n. 1828).
  • 1903: Theodor Mommsen, jurist, philologist and German historian, nobel prize of literature in 1902 (n. 1817).
  • 1906: Juan de la Pezuela, writer, military and Spanish politician (n. 1809).
  • 1907: Alfred Jarrý, writer, playwright and French poet (n. 1873).
  • 1914: Christopher Cradock, British Admiral (n. 1862).
  • 1921: Francisco Pradilla, a Spanish painter (n. 1848).
  • 1922: Francisco Murguía, Mexican military and political (n. 1873).
  • 1942: Hugo Distler, German composer of anti-Nazi art, suicide (n. 1908).
  • 1944 Aleksandr Klubov, as of Soviet aviation (n. 1918)
  • 1947: Oscar Castro, a Chilean writer and poet (n. 1910).
  • 1950: Eloísa Díaz, first physician from Chile and South America (n. 1866).
  • 1955: Dale Carnegie (Dale Breckenridge), a self-help writer and an American businessman (n. 1888).
  • 1956: Pietro Badoglio, general and Italian politician (n. 1871).
  • 1956: Joaquim Sunyer, a Spanish painter (n. 1874).
  • 1962: Ricardo Rodríguez, Mexican Formula 1 pilot (n. 1942).
  • 1965: Angelo Rotta, Italian priest (n. 1872).
  • 1968: Yorgos Papandréu, Greek politician (n. 1888).
  • 1972: Ezra Pound, American poet (n. 1885).
  • 1975: Fernando Delapuente, Spanish painter (n. 1909).
  • 1977: Jake Voskuhl, American basketball player (n. 1977).
  • 1979: Mamie Eisenhower, American personality, wife of President Dwight Eisenhower (n. 1896).
  • 1982: King Vidor, American filmmaker (n. 1894).
  • 1982: James Broderick, American actor (n. 1927).
  • 1983: Anthony van Hoboken, Dutch musicologist (n. 1887).
  • 1984: Boris Souvarine, a French politician (n. 1895).
  • 1985: Phil Silvers, American actor (n. 1911).
  • 1985: Rick McGraw, WWF fighter (n. 1955).
  • 1987: Rene Levesque, Canadian journalist and politician, Prime Minister of Quebec (n. 1922).
  • 1987: Jesús Romero Flores, Mexican politician (n. 1885).
  • 1993: Severo Ochoa, Spanish biochemical, nobel prize for physiology or medicine in 1959 (n. 1905).
  • 1994: Noah Beery, Jr., American actor (n. 1913).
  • 1998: César Castellanos Madrid, Honduran politician, mayor of Tegucigalpa (n. 1947)
  • 1999: Walter Payton, American footballer (n. 1954).
  • 1999: Héctor Pellegrini, an Argentine actor (n. 1931).
  • 2000 Manuel David Crook, writer, teacher, activist and British communist spy (n. 1910).
  • 2001: Juan Bosch, intellectual, cuentist, essayist, novelist, Dominican historian and politician, president in 1963 (n. 1909).
  • 2002: Léster Morgan, Costa Rican archer (n. 1978).
  • 2004: Mac Dre (Andre Louis Hicks), American rapper (n. 1970).
  • 2006: William Styron, American writer (n. 1925).
  • 2006: Adrienne Shelly, American actress (n. 1966).
  • 2007: Paul Tibbets, an American aviation pilot, drove the Enola Gay, which dropped the atomic bomb on the civilian population of Hiroshima (n. 1915).
  • 2008: Yma Sumac, Peruvian soprano (n. 1922).
  • 2009: Claude Lévi-Strauss, an anthropologist and French philosopher (n. 1908).
  • 2009: Alda Merini, Italian writer and poet (n. 1931).
  • 2011: Jona Senilagakali, a Fijian politician (n. 1929).
  • 2011: Sergio Montiel, an Argentine politician (n. 1927).
  • 2011: Fanny Edelman, Argentine policy (n. 1911).
  • 2011: Héctor Rueda Hernández, arzobispo colombiano (n. 1920).
  • 2011: Mario Núñez Iordi, Uruguayan musician (n. 1929).
  • 2012: Mitch Lucker, American singer, of the Suicide Silence band (n. 1984).
  • 2012: Agustín García Calvo, Spanish philologist and anarchist (n. 1926).
  • 2014: Wayne Static, musician and singer, member and founder of the Static-X band (n. 1965).
  • 2016: Pocho La Pantera, Argentine singer (n. 1950).
  • 2017: Ramón Cabrero, footballer and Spanish-Argentine coach (n.1947).
  • 2017: Pablo Cedrón, an Argentine actor and writer (n.1959).
  • 2020: Lucy Tovar, Mexican actress (n. 1952).
  • 2020: Mario Pereyra locutor, Argentine journalist.
  • 2021: Aaron T. Beck, American psychiatrist and professor (n. 1921).
  • 2022: Takeoff, rapper, American singer and composer (n. 1994).

Celebrations

  • International Day of Conscientization on Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome
  • World Day of Ecology
  • World Day of Veganism
  • Observances related to the Day of All Saints:
    • Day of the Dead (Mexico)
    • All Saints (Hispanoamérica)
  • Chavang Kut (Banglades and Burma)
  • Antigua and BarbudaBandera de Antigua y BarbudaAntigua and Barbuda:
    • Independence Day
  • BulgariaBandera de BulgariaBulgaria:
    • National Day of Wake
  • El SalvadorFlag of El Salvador.svgEl Salvador:
    • Salvadoran Locutor Day
  • Bandera de Estados UnidosUnited States:
    • National Cepillo Day
  • Bandera de Islas Vírgenes de los Estados UnidosUnited States Virgin Islands:
    • Freedom Day
  • JapanBandera de JapónJapan:
    • Day of Commemoration of Self-Defense Forces

Catholic saints list

  • All Saints
  • San Cesareo de Tarracina, martyr
  • Saint Benign of Dihon, priest and martyr
  • Saint Avergne, Bishop
  • Saint John and James of Persia (f. 344)
  • Saint Marcelo de Paris (s. IV), bishop
  • Saint Rumulus of Bourges (s. V), priest and abbot
  • St. Severino of Tivoli (s. VI), monk
  • Saint Magnus of Milan (s. VI), bishop
  • San Vigor de Bayeux (f. 538), bishop
  • San Licinio de Anjou (f. 606), bishop
  • San Maturino de Larchant (s. VII), priest
  • Saint Audomarus of Thérouanne (f. 670), bishop
  • San Pedro del Barco (f. 1155), priest
  • Blessed Rainiero Aretino (f. 1304)
  • Blessed Nonio Álvarez Pereira (f. 1431),
  • Blessed Peter Paul Navarro, Dionisio Fujishima, Pedro Onizuka Sandayu and Clemente Kyuemon (f. 1622), martyrs
  • Santos Jerónimo Hermosilla, Valentín Berrio Ochoa and Pedro Almató Ribera (f. 1861), martyrs
  • Blessed Ruperto Mayer (f. 1945)
  • Beato Teodoro Jorge Romzsa (f. 1947), bishop and martyr

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