1471: The Yorkists defeated the Lancastrians at the Battle of Barnet in the War of the Roses.
1759: George Frederick Handel, German composer, died in London.
1828: Noah Webster published his American Dictionary of the English Language.
1865: Abraham Lincoln, America's 16th president, was shot in Ford's Theatre by John Wilkes Booth, dying the next day.
1917: Death of Dr Lazarus Ludwig Zamenhof, Polish physician who invented the international language Esperanto.
1929: The Monaco Grand Prix was first run - 78 laps round the narrow streets and harbour of Monte Carlo.
1931: The Ministry of Transport issued the first Highway Code.
1950: The comic strip hero Dan Dare appeared in the first edition of The Eagle.
1954: Soviet diplomat Vladimir Petrov asked for political asylum in Canberra, confirming that British diplomats Burgess and Maclean were Russian spies.
1983: The first cordless telephone, capable of operating up to 600ft from base, was introduced.
ON THIS DAY LAST YEAR: Allied forces reached the heart of Tikrit - the last stronghold of Saddam Hussein's devastated Iraqi regime.
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