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  Today in History
 


Post-Don Pacifico Affair, Lord Palmerston wins support
June 29, 1850

David Pacifico (known as Don Pacifico) was a Portuguese Jew who, having been born in Gibraltar in 1784, was a British subject. After serving as Portuguese consul in Morocco (1835-37) and then as consul-general in Greece, he settled in Athens as a merchant. In 1847 his house was burned down in an anti-Semitic riot, the police standing quietly by. Pacifico demanded compensation from the Greek government and was supported by Britain's foreign secretary, Lord Palmerston. Palmerston sent a naval squadron to blockade the Greek coast (January 1850) and force the Greeks to meet Pacifico's demands. This brought protests from the French and the Russians, with whom Britain shared a protectorate of Greece. Nevertheless, the Greeks acceded to the payment of £4,000, though, because of the loss of some papers, a commission awarded Pacifico only £150. He moved to London, where he died on April 12, 1854.

The incident had its greatest effect in British internal politics. Palmerston's policy was censured by the House of Lords (June 18, 1850), but he won the support of the Commons on June 29. During his speech before the vote, he made his famous comparison between the British and Roman empires, saying that, just as a Roman could claim his rights anywhere in the world with the words "Civis Romanus sum" ("I am a Roman citizen"), "so also a British subject, in whatever land he may be, shall feel confident that the watchful eye and the strong arm of England will protect him against injustice and wrong."


 

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  More Events on this Day
 
Prussia invades Hanover
June 29, 1866

After George V, the last king of Hanover acceded to the throne, in November 1851, he was constantly disputing with the diet, contrary to whose wishes he refused Prussia's demand for the unarmed neutrality of Hanover during the Austro-Prussian War of 1866. This led to an immediate Prussian invasion, the surrender of George's army on June 29, 1866, and Prussia's formal annexation of Hanover in September.

Primo Carnera becomes world champion
June 29, 1933

Italian heavyweight boxing champion of the world from June 29, 1933, when he knocked out Jack Sharkey in six rounds in New York City, until June 14, 1934, when he was knocked out by Max Baer in 11 rounds, also in New York City. Weighing about 260 pounds, Carnera was the heaviest of all world champions and one of the tallest, at a height of 6 feet 5.75 inches.

Yevgeny Abramovich Baratynsky dies
June 29, 1844



Foremost Russian philosophical poet contemporary with Aleksandr Pushkin. In his poetry he combined an elegant, precise style with spiritual melancholy in dealing with abstract idealistic concepts. His early romantic lyrics are strongly personal, dreamy, and disenchanted. His narrative poems Eda (1826), Bal (1828; "The Ball"), and Nalozhnitsa (1831; "The Concubine"; rewritten as Tsyganka, "The Gypsy Girl," 1842) treat the emotions analytically. Tsyganka was attacked by critics of the time as "base" and "coarse." The poem Na smert Gyote (1832; "On the Death of Goethe") is one of his masterpieces. Tragic pessimism dominates his later poetry.

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