Difference between revisions of "February 10"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(→Events) |
(→Events) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
==Events== | ==Events== | ||
+ | *[[754]]: The [[Council of Hieria]] begins. | ||
*[[1891]]: [[Panellinios Gymnastic Club]] is founded by 27 distinguished members of [[Athens]]' high society, materialising an idea by Nikolaos Kotselopoulos. | *[[1891]]: [[Panellinios Gymnastic Club]] is founded by 27 distinguished members of [[Athens]]' high society, materialising an idea by Nikolaos Kotselopoulos. | ||
*[[1941]]: The Italian Airforce bombards [[Thessaloniki]] and [[Patra]]. | *[[1941]]: The Italian Airforce bombards [[Thessaloniki]] and [[Patra]]. |
Revision as of 15:25, October 20, 2010
Contents
Events
- 754: The Council of Hieria begins.
- 1891: Panellinios Gymnastic Club is founded by 27 distinguished members of Athens' high society, materialising an idea by Nikolaos Kotselopoulos.
- 1941: The Italian Airforce bombards Thessaloniki and Patra.
- 1947: The Treaty of Paris awards the Dodecanese Islands to Greece.
- 1947: The New Party is founded by economist Spyros Markezinis.
- 1981: Six Greek workers lose their lives in a ship that burned off Elefsina.
- 1991: Athens mayor Antonis Tritsis visits the bombed capital of Iraq, Baghdad
Sports
- 1999: Former Panathinaikos No12 basketball player Petros Panagiotarakos dies aged 56. On November 14, 1962 he made his debut with the national basketball team in a game against Yugoslavia (70-81). He was capped 54 times (404 points).
- 1998: Young PAOK midfielder Panagiotis Katsouris is killed in a car accident.
- 1891: Twenty seven distinguished members of athenian society found Panellinios, materializing an idea by Nicolaos Kotselopoulos
Births
- 1896: Sir John Harding, military governor of Cyprus.
- 1926: Kostas Mountakis, Cretan singer.
- 1936: Nadia Konstantopoulou, elafro singer.
- 1938: Giorgos Petridis, footballer.
- 1967: Giorgos Kasnaferis, international referee.
Deaths
- 1913: Kostas Tsiklitiras, Olympic Gold Medallist, during the First Balkan War, from meningitis.
- 1975: Nikos Kavvadias, poet
- 1999: Petros Panagiotarakos, aged 56, basketball player for Panathinaikos BC.