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20th February

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1947: Mountbatten named last viceroy of India


Lord Louis Mountbatten, cousin of King George VI and a hero of World War II, is named the last British colonial administrator of India. As Britain had promised independence to India at the end of World War II, his appointment enraged many Indians. However, Mountbatten accelerated independence negotiations, and in pushing for the partition of the former Mogul Empire into India and Pakistan, he may have saved the Indian subcontinent from full-scale civil war.

 

On August 15, 1947, India and Pakistan were granted independence, but what Mahatma Gandhi called the noblest act of the British nation was soon marred by large-scale religious massacres. Mountbatten later served as Britain's military chief of staff and as the governor of England's Isle of Wight. In 1979, an Irish Republican Army terrorist bomb off the coast of Ireland blew up his fishing yacht; Mountbatten, his grandson, and two other royal relatives were killed in the explosion.



2006

Controversial British historian David Irving is sent to jail in Austria for denying the Holocaust.

2005

In America, influential writer and journalist, Hunter S. Thompson, a pioneer of 'gonzo journalism' commits suicide at his home in Colorado.

2005

In a national referendum Spain votes in favour of endorsing the European Union Constitution.

1998

American figure skater, Tara Lipinski, becomes the youngest gold-medallist at the Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan.

1989

In England, the IRA explodes two bombs at the army barracks in Tern Hill, Shropshire.

1986

The Soviet space station, Mir is launched.

1986

Britain and France announce plans to build a Channel Tunnel.

1983

In the Indian state of Assam, hundreds of people are killed as violence spreads in the run up to the general election.

1976

The Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) is disbanded.

1962

John Glenn becomes the first American astronaut to orbit the earth.

1958

In Britain, the Conservative government announces the closure of Sheerness Docks, one of the country's oldest naval dockyards.

1919

Habibullah Khan, the Amir of Afghanistan, is assassinated.

1872

The Metropolitan Museum of Art opens in New York City.

1816

The first performance of Gioachino Rossini’s The Barber of Seville takes place in Argentina.

1547

Edward VI is crowned King of England at Westminster Abbey.

1954

Heiress Patty Hearst.

1940

English international footballer Jimmy Greaves.

1927

American actor Sidney Poitier.

1912

Writer Pierre Boulle: author of 'Bridge On the River Kwai' and 'Planet of the Apes.

1960

British archaeologist Sir Leonard Woolley.

1437

James I, King of Scotland, assassinated by a group of dissident nobles led by Sir Robert Graham.