December 5
63
BC – Cicero gives
the fourth and final of the Catiline
Orations.
633 – Fourth Council of Toledo opens,
presided over by Isidore of Seville.
1033 –
The Jordan Rift Valley
earthquake destroys multiple
cities across the Levant,
triggers a tsunami and
kills many.
1082 – Ramon Berenguer II,
Count of Barcelona is assassinated, most likely by
his brother, Berenguer Ramon II.
1408 –
Seeking to resubjugate Muscovy,
Emir Edigu of
the Golden Horde reaches Moscow,
burning areas around the city but failing to take the city itself.
1456 –
The first of two earthquakes measuring
Mw 7.2 strikes Italy, causing extreme destruction and killing
upwards of 70,000 people.
1484 – Pope Innocent VIII issues
the Summis desiderantes affectibus,
a papal bull that
deputizes Heinrich Kramer and Jacob
Sprenger as inquisitors to
root out alleged witchcraft in Germany.
1496 –
King Manuel I of Portugal issues
a decree ordering the expulsion of Jews from the country.
1560 –
Thirteen-year-old Charles IX becomes
king of France, with Queen Mother Catherine de' Medici as
regent.
1578 –
Sir Francis Drake,
after sailing through Strait of Magellan,
raids Valparaiso.
1649 –
The town of Raahe (Swedish: Brahestad) is founded by
Count Per Brahe the Younger.
1757 – Seven
Years' War: Battle
of Leuthen: Frederick II of Prussia leads Prussian forces
to a decisive victory over Austrian forces under Prince Charles
Alexander of Lorraine.
1766 –
In London, auctioneer James Christie holds
his first sale.
1775 –
At Fort Ticonderoga, Henry
Knox begins
his historic transport of artillery to Cambridge, Massachusetts.
1776 – Phi
Beta Kappa, the oldest academic honor society in the U.S.,
holds its first meeting at the College of William & Mary.
1831 –
Former U.S. President John
Quincy Adams takes his seat in the House of
Representatives.
1847 – Jefferson
Davis is elected to the U.S. Senate.
1848 – California Gold Rush:
In a message to the United States Congress,
U.S. President James K. Polk confirms
that large amounts of gold had been discovered in California.
1865 – Chincha Islands War: Peru allies
with Chile against
Spain.
1895 – New Haven Symphony Orchestra of
Connecticut performs its first concert.
1914 –
The Imperial
Trans-Antarctic Expedition began in an attempt to make
the first land crossing of Antarctica.
1919 – Ukrainian War of Independence:
The Polonsky conspiracy is suppressed and its
participants are executed by the Kontrrazvedka.
1921 – The Football Association bans women's football in England from
league grounds, a ban that stays in place for 50 years.
1933 –
The Twenty-first
Amendment to the United States Constitution is
ratified.
1934 – Abyssinia
Crisis: Italian troops
attack Wal Wal in Abyssinia,
taking four days to capture the city.
1935 – Mary McLeod Bethune founds
the National Council of
Negro Women in New York City.
1936 –
The Soviet Union adopts a
new constitution and
the Kirghiz Soviet
Socialist Republic is established as a full Union Republic of
the USSR.
1941 – World
War II: In the Battle
of Moscow, Georgy
Zhukov launches a massive Soviet counter-attack against the German
army.
1941 – World War
II: Great Britain declares war on Finland, Hungary and Romania.
1943 –
World War II: Allied air forces begin attacking Germany's secret weapons bases
in Operation Crossbow.
1945 – Flight
19,
a group of TBF Avengers, disappears in the Bermuda Triangle.
1952 –
Beginning of the Great Smog in London. A cold
fog combines with air pollution and brings the city to a standstill for four days.
Later, a Ministry of Health report
estimates 4,000 fatalities as a result of it.
1955 –
The American Federation of Labor and
the Congress of Industrial
Organizations merge and form the AFL–CIO.
1955 – E.
D. Nixon and Rosa
Parks lead the Montgomery bus boycott.
1958 – Subscriber Trunk Dialling (STD) is
inaugurated in the United Kingdom by Queen Elizabeth
II when
she speaks to the Lord
Provost in a call from Bristol to Edinburgh.
1958 – The Preston
By-pass, the UK's first stretch of motorway,
opens to traffic for the first time. (It is now part of the M6 and M55 motorways.)
1964 – Vietnam
War:
For his heroism in battle earlier in the year, Captain Roger
Donlon is awarded the first Medal
of Honor of the war.
1964 – Lloyd
J. Old discovers the first linkage between the major
histocompatibility complex (MHC) and disease—mouse
leukemia—opening the way for the recognition of the importance of the MHC in
the immune response.
1971 – Battle
of Gazipur: Pakistani forces stand defeated as India
cedes Gazipur to Bangladesh.
1977 – Egypt breaks
diplomatic relations with Syria, Libya, Algeria, Iraq and South
Yemen. The move is in retaliation for the Declaration of
Tripoli against Egypt.
1983 –
Dissolution of the Military Junta in Argentina.
1991 – Leonid
Kravchuk is elected the first president of Ukraine.
1995 – Sri Lankan Civil War: Sri
Lanka's government announces the conquest of the Tamil stronghold
of Jaffna.
1995 – Azerbaijan Airlines Flight 56 crashes
near Nakhchivan International Airport in Nakhchivan, Azerbaijan,
killing 52 people.
2005 –
The Civil Partnership Act comes
into effect in the United Kingdom, and the first civil partnership is
registered there.
2005 –
The 6.8 Mw Lake Tanganyika
earthquake shakes the eastern provinces of the Democratic Republic of
the Congo with a maximum Mercalli intensity of X (Extreme),
killing six people.
2006 –
Commodore Frank Bainimarama overthrows
the government in Fiji.
2007 – Westroads Mall shooting: Nineteen-year-old
Robert A. Hawkins kills nine people, including himself, with a WASR-10 at
a Von
Maur department
store in Omaha, Nebraska.
2013 –
Militants attack a Defense
Ministry compound in Sana'a, Yemen,
killing at least 56 people and injuring 200 others.
2014 – Exploration Flight Test 1,
the first flight test of Orion, is launched.
2017 –
The International Olympic
Committee bans Russia from
competing at the 2018 Winter Olympics for
doping at the 2014 Winter Olympics.
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