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The Tolpuddle Martyrs are sentenced to transportation to Australia 1834: Six agricultural labourer in the village of Tolpuddle in Dorset, England, are convicted of swearing a secret oath as members of a trade union, the Friendly Society of Agricultural Labourers. Trade union membership was largely outlawed in this period, though the Combinations of Workmen Act 1825 had allowed some, but severely restricted their activity. Dorset, a county in the south-west of England, had become synonymous with poorly paid agricultural labour. With large amounts of the population receiving poor relief, it was no surprise when the Swing Riots of 1930 affected the county harshly. Temporary wage increases were undone with law enforcement help, and in response, the six men founded the FSAL as a sort of co-operative group to protest the gradual lowering of agricultural wages. The group, led by a local Methodist preacher named George Loveless, and meeting in the house of Thomas Standfield, refused to work for less than 10 shillings a week. Local landowner and magistrate James Frampton used an obscure 1797 law - the Unlawful Oaths Act - to fit the Martyrs up for swearing an unlawful oath. They were tried and convicted before Judge Sir John Williams and sentenced to transportation to Australia. Five of the six arrived in Sydney on 17 August 1834, whilst Loveless was taken ill, and travelled later, reaching Hobart on 4 September, but all six were pardoned in 1836 after a massive public campaign in England that collected 800,000 signatures calling for their release, along with one of the first successful political marches in UK history. By 1839 all six had returned to England, settling first in Essex and later, five emigrated to Canada, settling in modern-day London, Ontario.
Phoebe is Discovered 1899: William Henry Pickering, American astrologist, uses photographic plates to identify Saturn's ninth moon, which is given the name Phoebe, after a Titaness in Greek Mythology associated with the moon. Pickering used photographic plates taken in August 1898 to identify the moon, which has a retrograde orbit, meaning that it orbits Saturn in the opposite direction to the planet's rotation. Continuing the Greek mythology theme, in 2005 the International Astronomical Union named 24 craters on the moon after characters in the Argonauts story, those being: Acastus, Admetus, Amphion, Butes, Calais, Canthus, Clytius, Erginus, Euphemus, Eurydamas, Eurytion, Eurytus, Hylas, Idmon, Iphitus, Jason, Mopsus, Nauplius, Oileus, Peleus, Phlias, Talaus, Telamon and Zetes. Phoebe's unique orbit also affects the next innermost moon, Iapetus, with debris from the surface having formed the Pheobe Ring around Saturn, which in turn has caused Iapetus's stunning two-tone colouration. It is also theorised that debris from the moon has caused the dark areas seen on another of Saturns moons, Hyperion. William Pickering, along with his older brother Edward Charles Pickering, would later have craters named after themselves on both the Moon and Mars.
The Evian Accords end the Algerian War 1962: In Évian-les-Bains, Louis Joxe of the French Republic and Krim Belkacem of the Provisional Government of Algeria sign the Evian Accords, ending the Algerian War and setting the stage for the formal independence of Algeria from France. The Accords covered cease-fire arrangements, prisoner releases, the recognition of full sovereignty and right to self-determination of Algeria, in addition to guarantees of protection, non-discrimination and property rights for all Algerian citizens. Alongside provisions that pledge no sanctions for any acts committed prior to the ceasefire, French military forces in Algeria would be drawn down over a period of two years, with the exception of the Mers El Kebir military base, where France did most of its nuclear testing. Whilst the European French community, almost a million strong, was guaranteed religious freedom and property rights as well as French citizenship and the option to choose between French and Algerian citizenship after three years, most left prior to independence, contributing to a lack of technically skilled workers after independence, though France did provide assistance in this regard. The provision against sanctions for military actions taken before the ceasefire proved controversial, as they appeared also to apply to the terrorist Organisation Armee Secrete, as well as the perpetrators of several massacres of Muslim harkis in the French Army, which continued even after the treaty had been signed. The accords were approved overwhelmingly in two referendums - one in France in April 1962, and another in Algeria in July, with Charles De Gaulle pronouncing Algeria an independent country on July 3 1962.
National Day: It is the feast day of Saint Cyril of Jerusalem
Important Births: Al-Zamakhshari 1075: Persian scholar and known as Jar Allah (God's neighbour), Al-Zamakhshari was one of the foremost jurists, theologies and authority on Arabic language philology of his day. He authored an important tafsir on the Qur'an, Al-Kasgsgaaf, which was a comprehensive - and controversial - philosophical linguistic analysis of Qur'anic verse. F.W. de Klerk: 1936 South African former State President and later Deputy President. An economic liberal, he led the National Party from 1989 to 1997, during which time he oversaw the dismantling of Apartheid, and the election of its first black President, Nelson Mandela.
Important Deaths: Robert Walpole 1745: English scholar and politician, Walpole served as the first Prime Minister of Great Britain, serving for more than 20 years, from 1721 to 1742. One of the greatest politicians in history, Walpole's tenure saw the establishment of a Whig supremacy in England, which ensured the Hanoverian succession and the endurance of the principles of the Glorious Revolution of 1688. George Tupou V 2012: The King of Tonga, George Tupou V succeeded his father, Taufa'ahau Tupou IV in 2006, reigning for six years. During this time, he oversaw the success transition of Tonga from an absolute to a more constitutional monarchy, giving up most of his power to the Prime Minister.