Abolishing slavery became sort of a thing in France. Louis X abolished slavery in France in 1315, but it nonetheless continued in parts of Provence and in some French Colonies. In 1658, Louie XIV officially articulated the conditions for slavery in the French Colonies. Then, on 4 February 1794, the first Assembly of the First Republic (under Robespierre) abolished slavery in all French colonies. OK, and well and good, but Bonaparte (Cue Randy Newman's "Short people") re-introduced slavery in France's sugarcane-growing colonies in 1802. Then, confusingly enough, wee Macron Napoleon abolished the slave trade, but not, mind you, slavery itself. Then, in 1818, Louis XVIII re-abolished the slave trade, presumably because he thought it didn't count unless a Louis did it (Cue "louie-louie??). Finally, in April 1848, the Second Republic abolished slavery once again and included the colonies. The decree proclaiming this had a deferred effective date, but, thanks to some uprisings and such, was brought forward for the above colonies to May 27, 1848.
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On this day in history:
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1703 -- Peter the Great founded Saint Petersburg.
1848 -- Slavery was abolished in Guadeloupe, Saint Bartholemy, and Saint Martin
1905 -- The Battle of Tsushima started **
1907 -- The first US Bubonic plague epidemic broke out in San Francisco.
1919 – The NC-4 aircraft arrived in Lisbon after completing the first transatlantic flight.
1933 -- The Federal Securities Act was signed
1937 -- The Golden Gate Bridge opened to pedestrian traffic
1962 -- The Centralia mine fire started
1965 -- US warships began shelling targets in South Vietnam.
1967 -- Australia passed a constitutional referendum allowing the government to make laws benefitting Indigenous Australians and to count them in the national census.
1980 – South Korean airborne and army troops took the city of Gwangju from militias, killing at least 207.
1999 – The first shuttle mission to dock with the International Space Station.
2016 -- Barack Obama visited Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park
** This has been said to have been the most important naval battle since Trafalgar and it the only significant one in which one fleet crossed the T on the other.
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Some people who were born on this day:
It will not do to say that it is out of woman’s sphere to assist in making laws, for if that were so, then it should be also out of her sphere to submit to them.”
~~ Amelia Bloomer
1774 – Francis Beaufort, hydrographer and naval officer
1818 -- Amelia Bloomer, activist and journalist
1819 -- Julia Ward Howe, poet, activist, abolitionist, and songwriter
1836 -- Jay Gould, swindler, robber baron
1837 -- Wild Bill Hickok, gambler and gunslinger
1871 -- Georges Rouault, painter and illustrator
1894 – Louis-Ferdinand Céline, physician, author, and anti-semite
1894 -- Dashiell Hammett, writer
1897 -- John Cockcroft, physicist
1907 -- Rachel Carson, biologist, environmentalist, and author
1912 -- John Cheever, novelist and short story writer
1915 -- Ester Sore', singer and songwriter
1915 -- Herman Wouk, novelist
1923 -- Henry Kissinger, war criminal
1925 – Tony Hillerman, journalist and author
1930 -- John Barth, author
1934 -- Harlan Ellison, author and screenwriter
1935 -- Ramsey Lewis, jazz pianist and composer
1939 -- Don Williams, country singer, songwriter and guitarist
1943 -- Cilla Black, singer and actress
1945 -- Bruce Cockburn, singer, songwriter and guitarist
1946 -- Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen, bassist and comoser
1948 – Pete Sears, bass player and keyboardist
1950 -- Dee Dee Bridgewater, singer, songwriter, and actress
1957 – Eddie Harsch, keyboard player and bass player
1957 -- Siouxsie Sioux, singer, songwriter and musician
1963 – Gonzalo Rubalcaba, pianist and composer
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Some people who died on this day:
The violin is my mistress, but the guitar is my master.
~~ Niccolo Paganini
1564 -- John Calvin, religionist
1610 – François Ravaillac, regicide
1707 -- Francoise-Athenais, marquise de Montespan, royal mistress
1831 – Jedediah Smith, hunter, explorer, and author
1840 – Niccolò Paganini, violinist and composer
1867 -- Thomas Bulfinch, mythologist
1910 -- Robert Koch, physician and microbiologist,
1949 -- Robert Ripley, cartoonist and publisher
1971 – Béla Juhos, philosopher from the Vienna Circle
1988 – Ernst Ruska, physicist and academic,
1992 -- Uncle Charlie Osborne, fiddler
2007 – Izumi Sakai, singer, songwriter, and producer
2011 -- Gil Scott-Heron, poet, activist, singer, songwriter, and musician, accused of inventing rap
2017 – Gregg Allman, musician, singer and songwriter
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Some Holidays, Holy Days, Festivals, Feast Days, Days of Recognition, and such:
Slavery Abolition Day (Guadeloupe, Saint Barthélemy, Saint Martin)
Navy Day (Japan)
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Today's Tunes
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Jay Gould
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Ester Sore'
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Henry Kissinger
Victor Jara's "Somos Cinco Mil" was blocked by you tube, Heh
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Ramsey Lewis
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Don Williams
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Cilla Black
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Bruce Cockburn
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Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen
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Pete Sears
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Dee Dee Bridgewater
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Eddie Harsch
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Siouxsie Sioux
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Niccolò Paganini
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Izumi Sakai
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Gil Scott-Heron
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Gregg Allman
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Will be on the road most of today
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Ok, it's an open thread, so it's up to you folks now. So what's on your mind?
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Cross posted from http://caucus99percent.com
Open thread, Amelia Bloomer, Julia Ward Howe, Tsushima, Ramsey Lewis, Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen, Dee Dee Bridgewater , Paganini, Gil-Scott Heron, Greg Allman