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This Day In History
Mary, Queen of Scots, beheaded: 8 February 1587 - This Day in History
Mary, Queen of Scots, rival of Queen Elizabeth I of England, was beheaded this day in 1587 at Fotheringhay Castle, her execution a chilling scene redeemed by the great personal dignity with which she met her fate.
More Events on this day:
1974: The use of Skylab, a U.S. space station, came to an end after 171 days.
1915: The landmark film The Birth of a Nation, by D.W. Griffith, made its premiere at Clune's Auditorium in Los Angeles.
1887: The United States passed the Dawes General Allotment Act, providing for the distribution of American Indian reservation land among individual tribesmen; the bill was sponsored by Sen. Henry L. Dawes.
1867: The Ausgleich (Compromise) established the Dual Monarchy of Austria-Hungary.
Il Guercino: Biography of the Day
Italian painter Il Guercino (The Squinting One), whose frescoes freshly exploited the illusionistic ceiling and made a profound impact on the evolution of 17th-century Roman High Baroque art, was born this day in 1591.
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