1899

1899 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1899
MDCCCXCIX
Ab urbe condita2652
Armenian calendar1348
ԹՎ ՌՅԽԸ
Assyrian calendar6649
Baháʼí calendar55–56
Balinese saka calendar1820–1821
Bengali calendar1305–1306
Berber calendar2849
British Regnal year62 Vict. 1 – 63 Vict. 1
Buddhist calendar2443
Burmese calendar1261
Byzantine calendar7407–7408
Chinese calendar戊戌年 (Earth Dog)
4596 or 4389
    — to —
己亥年 (Earth Pig)
4597 or 4390
Coptic calendar1615–1616
Discordian calendar3065
Ethiopian calendar1891–1892
Hebrew calendar5659–5660
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1955–1956
 - Shaka Samvat1820–1821
 - Kali Yuga4999–5000
Holocene calendar11899
Igbo calendar899–900
Iranian calendar1277–1278
Islamic calendar1316–1317
Japanese calendarMeiji 32
(明治32年)
Javanese calendar1828–1829
Julian calendarGregorian minus 12 days
Korean calendar4232
Minguo calendar13 before ROC
民前13年
Nanakshahi calendar431
Thai solar calendar2441–2442
Tibetan calendarས་ཕོ་ཁྱི་ལོ་
(male Earth-Dog)
2025 or 1644 or 872
    — to —
ས་མོ་ཕག་ལོ་
(female Earth-Boar)
2026 or 1645 or 873

1899 (MDCCCXCIX) was a common year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar and a common year starting on Friday of the Julian calendar, the 1899th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 899th year of the 2nd millennium, the 99th year of the 19th century, and the 10th and last year of the 1890s decade. As of the start of 1899, the Gregorian calendar was 12 days ahead of the Julian calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923.

Events

January

January 1: Cuba free.
January 21: Opel car.
  • January 22 – The leaders of six Australian colonies meet in Melbourne, to discuss the confederation of Australia as a whole.
  • January 23
  • January 24 – The Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine is founded.
  • January 26 – German inventor Karl Ferdinand Braun, who will later share the 1909 Nobel Prize in Physics with Guglielmo Marconi, receives a British patent for his wireless radio invention "Telegraphy without directly connected wire".[6]
  • January 27
    • Camille Jenatzy of France becomes the first man to drive an automobile more than 80 kilometers per hour, when he reaches a speed of 80.35 kph in his CGA Dogcart racecar. Jenatzy's speed is more than 20% faster than the previous record.
    • The Tsar Nicholas II of the Russian Empire decrees that all high officials in the Russian-administered Grand Duchy of Finland shall be required to be fluent in the Russian language.[5]
  • January 28
    • The League of Peja, organized by Haxhi Zeka to lobby for a Kosovar Albanian state within the Ottoman Empire, attracts 450 delegates to its first convention, held at the city of Peja.[7]
    • Konstantin Stoilov, Prime Minister of Bulgaria and his cabinet ministers resign in a disagreement over self-government for Macedonia.[5]
    • The premiers of the various states of Australia, along with the premier of Tasmania, meet in a conference at Melbourne to discuss the question of a federation of the states.[5]
  • January 29 – A gas eplosion kills 14 people in the Spanish city of Cartagena.[5]
  • January 30
    • A steamer arrives at Barcelona in Spain after having started out with 1,300 Spanish soldiers who had withdrawn from Cuba. Of the group, 350 are seriously ill and 56 died during the trip.[5]
    • Speaker Howard E. Wright of the California State Assembly resigns the speakership after surviving a motion of expulsion by the members. Only 10 had been in favor of expelling Wright because of charges of bribery, and 60 opposed.[5]
  • January 31
    • Dimitar Grekov forms a new government in Bulgaria.[5]
    • The French Senate passes the trade agreement with Italy by a vote of 248 to 40.[5]

February

March

March 6: Aspirin.
  • March 6 – In Berlin, Felix Hoffmann patents Aspirin and Bayer registers its name as a trademark.[19]
  • March 8 – The Frankfurter Fußball-Club Victoria von 1899 (predecessor of Eintracht Frankfurt) is founded.
  • March 9 – The Senate of the state of Utah adjourns its attempts to elect a new U.S. Senator, after having voted 149 times without a candidate reaching the necessary majority.[14] The term of Frank J. Cannon expired on March 3. Although Alfred W. McCone had come within two votes of getting the necessary 32 required for a majority, his support failed when state representative Albert A. Law claimed the McCone had offered him a bribe to change his vote.[20]
  • March 10 – At the Battle of Balantang, the U.S. Army sustains 400 casualties in an attack by Philippine troops.
  • March 11
  • March 13 – Germany, Great Britain and the United States reach an agreement on their jurisdiction in Samoa, following a conference in Washington DC.[14]
  • March 14
    • After a civil war breaks out in Samoa between Malietoa Tanumafili I (recognized by Germany, the U.K. and the U.S.) and rebels who recognize Mata'afa Iosefo as the island's king, the USS Philadelphia takes control of the capital at Apia.
    • Germany's Parliament votes, 209 to 141, to reject a proposal to increase the size of the nation's army.[14]
  • March 15 – The cabinet of Spain's Prime Minister Silvestri approves the ratification of the treaty to end the Spanish-American War. The Queen Regent of Spain signs the treaty two days later.[14]
  • March 16 – In the U.S. at Palmetto, Georgia, a lynch mob kills four African-American suspects who had been arrested on suspicion of arson.[14]
  • March 17 – A fire kills 86 people at the Windsor Hotel in New York City.[23]
  • March 18Phoebe, the ninth-known moon of the planet Saturn is discovered by U.S. astronomer William Pickering from analysis of photographic plates made by a Peruvian observatory, the first discovery of a satellite photographically.
  • March 19
    • One of the first labor unions for government employees is formed with the organization in Denmark of the Copenhagen Municipal Workers' Union
    • The Battle of Taguig takes place in the Philippines as the USS Laguna de Bay bombards the Katipunan stronghold.
    • A tornado outbreak in the southern U.S. kills multiple people.[14]
  • March 20 – At Sing Sing prison in Ossining, New York, Martha M. Place becomes the first woman to be executed in an electric chair.[24]
  • March 21
    • The Eden Theatre in La Ciotat, a commune in France near Marseille, lays a claim to being the first cinema as brothers Auguste Lumière and Louis Lumière present their short film, L'Arrivée d'un train en gare de La Ciotat ("The Arrival of a Train at La Ciotat Station") to 250 surprised spectators.[25]
    • The French Court of Cassation orders the submission of the file on the Dreyfus case.[24]
  • March 22 – Malietoa Tanus is crowned as King of Samoa.[26]
  • March 23 – Samoan villages held by Chief Mataafa are bombarded by USS Philadelphia and HMS Porpoise and HMS Royalist following the attack on Samoan natives in Apia.[26]
  • March 24 – The U.S. Ambassador to Argentina, acting as arbitrator of a boundary dispute between Argentina and Chile, awards the disputed territory to Chile.[26]
  • March 26 – In the first major action in the Malolos Campaign in the Philippine–American War, 90 Filipino soldiers are killed in the Battle of the Meycauayan bridge.
  • March 27
  • March 30 – The British steamer Stella sinks in the English Channel with the loss of 80 people after wrecking against Les Casquets.[24]
  • March 31

April

A timepiece created in Victoria Hong Kong on 25 April 1899
  • April 26Jean Sibelius conducts the world première of his Symphony No. 1 in Helsinki.[29]
  • April 27 – The Samoan chieftain Maataafa declares an armistice but Germany declines to agree to it.[28]
  • April 28 – The United Kingdom and the Russian Empire sign the Anglo-Russian Agreement formalizing their spheres of influence in China, essentially agreeing that Britain will not seek railway concessions north of the Great Wall of China, and Russia will avoid doing the same in the Yangtze River valley in southern China.[30]
  • April 29
    • Camille Jenatzy of Belgium becomes the first person to drive faster than 100 kilometers per hour, powering his electric racecar at 105.88 kilometres per hour (65.79 mph) at a track at Achères.
    • In the U.S., several hundred miners capture a railroad train at Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, arm themselves with guns and dynamite, and advance on the town of Wardner, Idaho, destroying property of mining ccompanies that employ non-unon labor.[28]

May

June

July

August

September

October

  • October 1 – Possession of the Mariana Islands is formally transferred from Spain to Germany, which purchased the archipelago (with the exception of Guam) from Spain for 837,500 German gold marks and become part of German New Guinea.[71]
  • October 3 – The boundary dispute between Venezuela and British Guiana is resolved by a binding award from the International Tribunal of Arbitration of five neutral jurists agreed upon by the United Kingdom and the United Venezuelan States.[72]
  • October 8 – The South African Republic telegraphs a three-day ultimatum to the U.K., demanding an arbitration of issues and a pullback of troops from the borders between the Republic and the adjoining Cape Colony, Natal and Bechuanaland by October 11.[73]
  • October 10 – The French Sudan is divided into two smaller administrative units, Middle Niger (which later becomes the nations of Niger and Gambia) and Upper Senegal (which becomes the nations of Senegal and Mali)
  • October 11 – In South Africa, the Second Boer War between the United Kingdom and the Boers of the Transvaal and Orange Free State begins as the Boers invade the British colony of Natal.
  • October 13 – The Second Boer War extends into the British Bechuanaland Protectorate (modern-day Botswana) as the siege of Mafeking begins.
  • October 14 – The Boer invasion of the Cape Colony begins with the siege of Kimberley.
  • October 15 – French Army officer Ferdinand de Béhagle is put to death by Sudanese warlord Rabih az-Zubayr, prompting a French expedition to be led against Rabih.
  • October 17 – The Thousand Days' War begins in Colombia as Colombian Liberal Party soldiers led by General Rafael Uribe Uribe, with support from Venezuela, begin a fight against the government of National Party president Manuel Antonio Sanclemente. The war will continue for 1,130 days.
  • October 18 – The Boxer Rebellion begins in China as the Battle of Senluo Temple is fought between more than 4,000 Imperial Chinese Army troops and at least 1,000 rebels from the Society of Righteous and Harmonious Fists.[74]
  • October 19
    • Robert H. Goddard receives his inspiration to develop the first rocket capable of reaching outer space, after viewing his yard from high in a tree and imagining "how wonderful it would be to make some device which had even the possibility of ascending to Mars, and how it would look on a small scale, if sent up from the meadow at my feet."[75]
    • Boer troops commanded by Johannes Kock capture the railway station in Elandslaagte and cut the telegraph line between the British Army headquarters at Ladysmith and its station at Dundee.
  • October 20 – In the first major clash of the Second Boer War, the Battle of Talana Hill, the British Army drives the Boers from a hilltop position, but with heavy casualties, including their commanding general Sir Penn Symons.
  • October 21 – The Battle of Elandslaagte is fought in Natal, as the British Army recaptures the railway station from Boers, then proceeds toward the fortress of Ladysmith. South African General Jan Kock is fatally wounded in the battle and dies 10 days later.[76]
  • October 24
    • The sinking of the ship Cisneros by the Colombian Navy warship Hércules drowns more than 200 Liberal rebels during the Battle of Magdalena River.[77]
    • President Steyn of the South African Republic proclaims the annexation of the northern portion of the Cape Colony above the Vaal River.[76]
  • October 26
    • Indirect fire is used for the first time in battle.[78] British gunners in the Second Boer War fire a cannon on a high trajectory toward the Boer Army, with the objective of having the shell come down on the enemy.
    • The foundering of the British steamer Zurich off of the coast of Norway kills 16 of the 17 crew aboard, with only the captain surviving.[76]
  • October 29 – The Battle of Kouno ends after two days in Chad, as French Army Captain Émile Gentil leads a force of 344 troops against a much larger force of Sudanese Arabs, led by the warlord Rabih az-Zubayr. Gentil routs the Sudanese.[79]
  • October 30 – The Battle of Ladysmith begins as British troops at the Ladysmith fort attempt to make a preemptive strike against a larger force of South African Republic and Orange Free State troops that is gradually surrounding the fort. After sustaining 400 casualties and having 800 men captured, the British retreat back to the fort where a 118-day siege begins on November 2.

November

Moscow Art Theatre production of Uncle Vanya

December

Date unknown

Births

Births
January · February · March · April · May · June · July · August · September · October · November · December

January

Antal Páger
Max Theiler

February

Café Filho
Ramon Novarro

March

Frederik IX of Denmark
Gloria Swanson
Lavrentiy Beria

April

Duke Ellington

May

Fred Astaire
Suzanne Lenglen

June

July

George Cukor
James Cagney
Ernest Hemingway

August

P. L. Travers
Sir Alfred Hitchcock

September

Sir Macfarlane Burnet
Jimmie Davis

October

November

Iskander Mirza
Abu al-Qasim al-Khoei

December

Sir Noël Coward
Humphrey Bogart

Date unknown

Deaths

Deaths
January · February · March · April · May · June · July · August · September · October · November · December

January–February

Alfred Sisley
Paul Reuter
Emma Hardinge Britten
Antonio Luna

March–April

May–June

July–August

Robert Bunsen
Gregorio del Pilar
Frances Laughton Mace

September–October

November–December

Garret Hobart

Date unknown

  • Ellen Morton Littlejohn, American quilter (b. c. 1826)

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