Today in History for May 14:
In 347, St. Pachomius, who was born in Egypt and founded the first monastery, died.
In 1565, German Protestant reform theologian Nicolaus von Amsdorf died.
In 1590, during the battle of Ivry, Protestant French King Henri IV defeated the Catholic League.
In 1610, King Henry IV of France was stabbed to death while riding in his carriage in Paris by a religious fanatic, Francois Ravaillac. In 1598 he enacted the "Edict of Nantes" which guaranteed religious liberties to the Protestants. One of the most popular French kings, he showed great care for the welfare of his subjects and displayed an unusual religious tolerance for the time.
In 1643, at the age of four, Louis XIV became King of France. Known as "Louis the Great" and also as the "Sun King," he didn't take personal control of the government until the death of his first minister in 1661. Louis ruled until he died in 1715.
In 1796, English physician Edward Jenner succeeded in inoculating eight-year-old James Phipps against smallpox by using cowpox matter.
In 1853, New York dairyman Gail Borden applied for a patent for the process of making condensed milk.
In 1878, petroleum jelly received its Vaseline trademark.
In 1904, the first Olympic Games to be held in North America opened in St. Louis.
In 1907, Anna Jarvis arranged for a special church service in Philadelphia to honour mothers, an idea that caught on and became Mother's Day.
In 1940, future Tory leader and prime minister John Diefenbaker first took his seat in the Canadian House of Commons.
In 1940, the Netherlands surrendered to invading German forces during the Second World War.
In 1948, British rule in Palestine ended and the independent state of Israel was declared. It was led by David Ben-Gurion. At the end of the Second World War, an independent state was suggested for the combined 1.5 million Palestinian Jews, European Jews and Jews in Arab countries. The United Nations proposed in 1947 to divide Palestine into Jewish and Arab states, with a small international zone to include Jerusalem. The Arabs rejected partition and attacked Israel as soon as it came into being. The ensuing war saw Israel greatly expand its boundaries from what the UN proposed.
In 1955, representatives from eight Communist bloc countries, including the Soviet Union, signed the Warsaw Pact in the Polish capital.
In 1956, the chaotic and contentious pipeline debate began in the House of Commons. The Liberal government caused an uproar by limiting each stage of debate on a bill loaning Trans-Canada Pipe Lines $80 million to build a natural gas pipeline from Alberta to Ontario. The controversy helped cause the Liberals' defeat in the 1957 federal election.
In 1973, the United States launched "Skylab I," its first manned space station.
In 1981, a Vatican spokesman reported that Pope John Paul was strong enough to recite prayers and impart blessings to his doctors and nurses. The pontiff had been shot the previous day.
In 1984, Jeanne Sauve was sworn in as Canada's first female governor general.
In 1986, a blizzard with 80 km/h winds and knee-deep snow surprised south-central Alberta.
In 1987, actress Rita Hayworth died at the age of 68.
In 1992, former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev addressed the U.S. Congress, urging it to approve aid to the people of the former Soviet Union.
In 2001, Canadian author Alistair Macleod's novel, "No Great Mischief," won the world's richest literary prize for a single work of fiction. The IMPAC Dublin award was worth $172,000.
In 2001, a slim majority of New Brunswickers voted to keep the province's video lottery terminals. It was Canada's first province-wide referendum on VLT's.
In 2003, the World Health Organization took Toronto off its list of places affected by SARS.
In 2007, private-equity firm Cerberus Capital Management became majority owner of Chrysler Corp. in a US$7.4 billion deal. In April, 2009, Cerberus secured the remaining 20 per cent in the company. Days later, Chrysler Corp. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection after announcing a new partnership with Fiat.
In 2008, the United States listed polar bears as a threatened species, marking the first time a U.S. species had been given legal protection because of the effects of global warming.
In 2009, the final vehicle rolled off the assembly line at the General Motors truck plant in Oshawa, Ont., marking the end of 44 years of production and the elimination of 2,600 jobs.
In 2010, MPs struck an eleventh-hour deal to avert a parliamentary showdown — and possible snap election — over how to handle sensitive Afghan detainee documents. The Conservative government and Opposition MPs agreed to establish a small, all-party committee sworn to secrecy ensuring genuine national security would remain protected.
In 2010, the space shuttle "Atlantis" blasted off for the 32nd and final time. Its first flight was in 1985.
In 2010, Prapharan Thambithurai became the first person sentenced under Canada's new law against fundraising for terrorist groups. He received six months in jail after pleading guilty to raising $600 for the Tamil Tigers and also collected pledges for another $2,000 from Sri Lankans in the Vancouver area.
In 2011, police boarded a Paris-bound flight from JFK airport and arrested International Monetary Fund chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn and charged him with sexual assault of a maid in his posh New York hotel room. He resigned on May 19. (He was released on bail and put under house arrest but later freed pending trial. In August, prosecutors dropped criminal charges. On May 1, 2012, a New York judge rebuffed Strauss-Kahn's diplomatic-immunity claim and ruled the maid's civil case would proceed to trial. The lawsuit was settled in December of that year.)
In 2013, the B.C. Liberals defied months of abysmal polling numbers to win their fourth consecutive provincial election. Premier Christy Clark led the party to an expanded majority but lost her Vancouver-area riding. She won a byelection in July.
In 2018, the relocated U.S. embassy opened in Jerusalem, the first official recognition as Israel's capital after 70 years, infuriating Palestinians. Israeli forces shot and killed more than 50 Palestinians and wounded more than 1,200 during mass protests along the Gaza border.
In 2018, Tom Wolfe, the white-suited wizard of "New Journalism" who exuberantly chronicled American culture from the Merry Pranksters through the space race before turning his satiric wit to such novels as "The Bonfire of the Vanities" and "A Man in Full," died at age 88.
In 2019, Tim Conway, the impish second banana to Carol Burnett who won four Emmy Awards on her TV variety show, starred aboard "McHale's Navy" and later voiced the role of Barnacle Boy for "Spongebob Squarepants" died at age 85. Conway died in a Los Angeles care facility after a long illness. His wife of 35 years, Charlene Fusco, and a daughter, Jackie, were at his side. A native of Ohio, Conway credited his Midwestern roots for putting him on the right path to laughs, with his deadpan expression and innocent, simple-minded demeanour. He joined "The Carol Burnett Show" in 1975 after years as a frequent guest. The show aired on CBS from 1967 to 1978 and had a short summer stint on ABC in 1979.
In 2020, the Canadian Armed Forces agreed to extend its support to Quebec for another 30 days as part of efforts to fight COVID-19. More than 1,000 members of Canada's military — including most of its medical personnel — had been deployed to long-term care homes in Quebec and Ontario.
In 2021, Manitoba dropped the minimum age for COVID-19 vaccines to 12 and up. Health Canada had approved the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for people that age earlier in the month.
In 2021, Maj.-Gen. Dany Fortin -- the man leading the charge with Canada's vaccine rollout -- stepped down. The move followed the announcement that he was the subject of a military probe, although there had been no information released about the nature of the investigation.
----
The Canadian Press