On this day: Tommy Sheridan convicted of perjury

Events, birthdays and anniversaries for 23 December
On this day in 2010 Tommy Sheridan, pictured with his wife Gail, was convicted of perjury at the High Court in Glasgow. Picture: GettyOn this day in 2010 Tommy Sheridan, pictured with his wife Gail, was convicted of perjury at the High Court in Glasgow. Picture: Getty
On this day in 2010 Tommy Sheridan, pictured with his wife Gail, was convicted of perjury at the High Court in Glasgow. Picture: Getty

1728: Treaty of Berlin between Holy Roman Emperor Charles VI and Frederick William of Prussia.

1831: Outbreak of cholera in Scotland.

1834: Hansom cabs were patented by Joseph Hansom, who immediately sold his rights for £10,000 – but was never paid.

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1845: Britain’s longest railway tunnel, three miles and 13 yards long, was opened through the Pennines.

1888: Vincent Van Gogh, suffering severe depression, exacerbated by companion Paul Gauguin’s decision to leave their lodgings at Arles to escape winter, cut off his ear.

1890: More than 60 ships were lost in the North Atlantic during severe storms.

1913: The United States Federal Reserve Bank was founded.

1922: The BBC began regular daily news broadcasts.

1948: Tokyo’s former premier, Hideki Tojo, and six other Japanese war leaders were executed in Tokyo for war crimes.

1986: Voyager, piloted by American Dick Rutan and Jeana Yeager, landed in California’s Mojave Desert at end of the first non-stop flight round the world without refuelling.

1989: Hundreds died in fierce street fighting in Bucharest between the army and pro-Ceausescu Securitate. Nicolae Ceausescu and wife Elena fled by helicopter, but were later arrested. They were condemned to death in a two-hour trial and were executed two days later.

1990: Plebiscite in Yugoslavian republic of Slovenia showed 90 per cent majority in favour of independence.

1990: The propellers of the QE2 were given a super-shine, resulting in a fuel saving of £4,000 for every day the liner was at sea.

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1995: Sixteen members of a Swiss Doomsday cult were found dead in the Alps. Police said they were murdered.

2002: A MQ-1 Predator was shot down by an Iraqi MiG-25, making it the first time in history that an aircraft and an unmanned drone had engaged in combat.

2010: Former MSP Tommy Sheridan was convicted of perjury at the High Court in Glasgow.

BIRTHDAYS

Carol Smillie, Scottish broadcaster, 53; Carol Ann Duffy CBE, Glasgow-born poet laureate, 59; Akihito, emperor of Japan, 81; Graham Kelly, chief executive, Football Association 1989-98, 69; Belinda Lang, actress, 61; Dave Murray, guitarist (Iron Maiden), 58; Kenny Miller, Scottish footballer, 35; Eddie Vedder, singer (Pearl Jam), 50; Harry Judd, drummer (McFly), 29; Danny Macaskill, Scottish trials cyclist, 29; Carla Bruni, singer and model, married to French president Nicolas Sarkozy, 47; Matt Baker, TV presenter, 37; Anthony Phillips, musician (founding member of Genesis); Nick Moran, actor, producer, director, 45; Tara Palmer-Tomkinson, TV presenter and socialite, 43.

ANNIVERSARIES

Births: 1732 Sir Richard Arkwright, inventor of mechanical cotton spinning processes; 1777 Alexander I, tsar of Russia; 1812 Samuel Smiles, Haddington-born writer and moralist, author of Self Help (1859); 1888 J Arthur Rank, Lord Rank, film magnate; 1929 Chet Baker, jazz musician.

Deaths: 1761 Alastair Ruadh MacDonnell (“Red Alexander”), Scottish Jacobite spy; 1834 Thomas Robert Malthus, economist; 1972 Charles Atlas, bodybuilder; 1996 Ronnie Scott, jazz club owner and saxophonist; 1997 Donald Gunn Macrae, Glasgow-born professor of sociology at Oxford University.

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