April 26

April 27

336 entries in history

April 28
Events
44
Births
187
Deaths
87
Holidays
18

⭐ Featured

2012

Unknown perpetrators carried out a series of four bombings in Dnipropetrovsk, Ukraine.

2005

The Airbus A380, the world's largest passenger airliner, made its maiden flight from Toulouse, France.

1985

The black-ball final, one of the most famous snooker matches in history, began between Steve Davis and Dennis Taylor (pictured).

44 results

2018

The Panmunjom Declaration is signed between North and South Korea, officially declaring their intentions to end the Korean conflict.

2012

At least four explosions hit the Ukrainian city of Dnipropetrovsk with at least 27 people injured.

2011

The 2011 Super Outbreak devastates parts of the Southeastern United States, especially the states of Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, and Tennessee. Two hundred five tornadoes touched down on April 27 alone, killing more than 300 and injuring hundreds more.

2007

Estonian authorities remove the Bronze Soldier, a Soviet Red Army war memorial in Tallinn, amid political controversy with Russia.

2007

Israeli archaeologists discover the tomb of Herod the Great south of Jerusalem.

2006

Construction begins on the Freedom Tower (later renamed One World Trade Center) in New York City.

2005

Airbus A380 aircraft has its maiden test flight.

1994

South African general election: The first democratic general election in South Africa, in which black citizens could vote. The Interim Constitution comes into force.

1993

Most of the Zambia national football team lose their lives in a plane crash off Libreville, Gabon en route to Dakar, Senegal to play a 1994 FIFA World Cup qualifying match against Senegal.

1992

The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, comprising Serbia and Montenegro, is proclaimed.

1992

Betty Boothroyd becomes the first woman to be elected Speaker of the British House of Commons in its 700-year history.

1992

The Russian Federation and 12 other former Soviet republics become members of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.

1989

The April 27 demonstrations, student-led protests responding to the April 26 Editorial, during the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989.

1987

The U.S. Department of Justice bars Austrian President Kurt Waldheim (and his wife, Elisabeth, who had also been a Nazi) from entering the US, charging that he had aided in the deportations and executions of thousands of Jews and others as a German Army officer during World War II.

1986

The city of Pripyat and surrounding areas are evacuated due to the Chernobyl disaster.

1978

John Ehrlichman, a former aide to U.S. President Richard Nixon, is released from the Federal Correctional Institution, Safford, Arizona, after serving 18 months for Watergate-related crimes.

1978

The Saur Revolution begins in Afghanistan, ending the following morning with the murder of Afghan President Mohammed Daoud Khan and the establishment of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan.

1978

Willow Island disaster: In the deadliest construction accident in United States history, 51 construction workers are killed when a cooling tower under construction collapses at the Pleasants Power Station in Willow Island, West Virginia.

1976

Thirty-seven people are killed when American Airlines Flight 625 crashes at Cyril E. King Airport in Saint Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands.

1974

109 people are killed in a plane crash near Pulkovo Airport.

1967

Expo 67 officially opens in Montreal, Quebec, Canada with a large opening ceremony broadcast around the world. It opens to the public the next day.

1953

Operation Moolah offers $50,000 to any pilot who defects with a fully mission-capable Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-15 to South Korea. The first pilot was to receive $100,000.

1945

World War II: The last German formations withdraw from Finland to Norway. The Lapland War and thus, World War II in Finland, comes to an end and the Raising the Flag on the Three-Country Cairn photograph is taken.

1945

World War II: Benito Mussolini is arrested by Italian partisans in Dongo, while attempting escape disguised as a German soldier.

1941

World War II: German troops enter Athens.

1936

The United Auto Workers (UAW) gains autonomy from the American Federation of Labor.

1927

Carabineros de Chile (Chilean national police force and gendarmerie) are created.

1911

The Second Canton Uprising took place in Guangzhou, Qing China but was suppressed.

1909

Sultan of Ottoman Empire Abdul Hamid II is overthrown, and is succeeded by his brother, Mehmed V.

1906

The State Duma of the Russian Empire meets for the first time.

1861

American President Abraham Lincoln suspends the writ of habeas corpus.

1813

War of 1812: American troops capture York, the capital of Upper Canada, in the Battle of York.

1805

First Barbary War: United States Marines and Berbers attack the Tripolitan city of Derna (The "shores of Tripoli" in the Marines' Hymn).

1667

Blind and impoverished, John Milton sells Paradise Lost to a printer for £10, so that it could be entered into the Stationers' Register.

1650

The Battle of Carbisdale: A Royalist army from Orkney invades mainland Scotland but is defeated by a Covenanter army.

1595

The relics of Saint Sava are incinerated in Belgrade on the Vračar plateau by Ottoman Grand Vizier Sinan Pasha; the site of the incineration is now the location of the Church of Saint Sava, one of the largest Orthodox churches in the world

1565

Cebu is established becoming the first Spanish settlement in the Philippines.

1539

Official founding of the city of Bogotá, New Granada (nowadays Colombia), by Nikolaus Federmann and Sebastián de Belalcázar.

1521

Battle of Mactan: Explorer Ferdinand Magellan is killed by natives in the Philippines led by chief Lapulapu.

1509

Pope Julius II places the Italian state of Venice under interdict.

1296

First War of Scottish Independence: John Balliol's Scottish army is defeated by an English army commanded by John de Warenne, 6th Earl of Surrey at the Battle of Dunbar.

711

Islamic conquest of Hispania: Moorish troops led by Tariq ibn Ziyad land at Gibraltar to begin their invasion of the Iberian Peninsula (Al-Andalus).

395

Emperor Arcadius marries Aelia Eudoxia, daughter of the Frankish general Flavius Bauto. She becomes one of the more powerful Roman empresses of Late Antiquity.

247

Philip the Arab marks the millennium of Rome with a celebration of the ludi saeculares.