On this day: Mikhail Gorbachev won Nobel Peace Prize

Events, birthdays and anniversaries for 15 October
On this day in 1990 Mikhail Gorbachev became the first communist leader to win the Nobel Peace Prize. Picture: GettyOn this day in 1990 Mikhail Gorbachev became the first communist leader to win the Nobel Peace Prize. Picture: Getty
On this day in 1990 Mikhail Gorbachev became the first communist leader to win the Nobel Peace Prize. Picture: Getty

1520: King Henry VIII order bowling alleys to be installed at the Palace of Whitehall.

1582: Many Catholic countries changed over to the Gregorian calendar and skipped ten days.

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1705: The British fleet, under the command of Lord Peterborough, occupied Barcelona.

1756: The Saxon army surrendered to Prussia.

1783: The first manned balloon ascent took place when Pilatre de Rozier rose 84ft in a hot-air craft before it reached the end of its tether.

1815: Napoleon Bonaparte arrived on the island of St Helena to begin his exile.

1827: Charles Darwin was admitted to Christ’s College, Cambridge.

1839: Queen Victoria and Prince Albert were betrothed. She proposed to him and confided to her diary: “It was a nervous thing to do, but Albert could not propose to the Queen of England. He would never have presumed to take such a liberty.”

1851: The Great Exhibition at Crystal Palace at London’s Hyde Park closed after five months.

1851: Gold was discovered in Melbourne, Australia.

1895: The first motor show in Britain was held at the Agricultural Showground, Tunbridge Wells.

1915: HMS Hawke was sunk off the east coast of Scotland by submarine action and more than 400 of her crew perished.

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1917: Spy Mata Hari was executed by firing squad in Paris, having been found guilty of espionage for the Germans.

1924: US president Calvin Coolidge declared the Statue of Liberty a national monument.

1928: German dirigible Graf Zeppelin made first commercial flight across Atlantic, landing at Lakehurst, New Jersey, US.

1928: The voting age for women was reduced from 30 to 21 in Britain, equal with men.

1940: A 500lb bomb hit Broadcasting House, London, killing seven people. Bruce Belfrage was reading the news at the time, and paused for only a second before continuing.

1940: The Great Dictator, a satirical movie starring charlie Chaplin, was released.

1945: Pierre Laval, French leader of Vichy government’s collaboration with the Germans, was executed for treason.

1962: King Olav V of Norway arrived in Edinburgh on first royal state visit to Scotland since the Union of the Crowns.

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1964: Nikita Khrushchev was replaced as First Secretary of Communist Party in Soviet Union.

1987: A hurricane killed 18, destroyed millions of trees and caused estimated £300 million of damage to buildings, mainly in south-east England.

1990: Mikhail Gorbachev was awarded Nobel Peace Prize.

1990: In France, a man’s foot was reattached to his leg after being stitched to his arm for seven months - a first in plastic surgery.

1993: Nelson Mandela and South African president FW de Klerk were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for their efforts to dismantle apartheid.

1995: There were fresh demands for boxing to be banned after Scottish bantamweight champion James Murray died in hospital from injuries he received in a British title fight in Glasgow two days earlier.

2012: Hilary Mantel won the Man Booker Prize for her novel Bring Up The Bodies.

BIRTHDAYS

Sarah, Duchess of York, 56; Chris de Burgh, singer, 67; Richard Carpenter, singer, 69; Stephen Tompkinson, actor, 50; Dominic West, actor, 46; Michael Caton-Jones, Broxburn-born film director, 58; Jacky Montgomery, Scottish golf professional, 50; Michael Lewis, author and financial journalist, 55; William David Trimble, Baron Trimble, first minister of Northern Ireland 1998-2002, 71; Dougie Vipond, Scottish broadcaster and drummer (Deacon Blue), 49; Bobby Joe Morrow, Olympic gold medal-winning athlete, 80; Stewart Stevenson, MSP 2001 to 2011, 69.

ANNIVERSARIES

Births: 70BC Virgil, poet; 1844 Friedrich Nietzsche, philosopher and composer; 1872 Edith Wilson, US first lady; 1880 Marie Stopes, Edinburgh-born scientist and sex education reformer; 1887

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Frederick Fleet, lookout on the Titanic who first spotted the iceberg.

Deaths: 1788 Samuel Greig, Scottish-born Russian admiral; 1917 Mata Hari, exotic dancer and spy; 1946 Hermann Goering, Nazi war criminal (suicide); 1964 Cole Porter, composer and lyricist; 1971 Sylvester Magee, last living former American slave; 2011 Betty Driver MBE, actress.