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Shakespeare has entertained readers and theatre patrons for centuries. The Guide to Shakespeare from Encyclopædia Britannica examines the Bard’s legacy from Elizabethan England to the present day, uncovering why few authors can match Shakespeare for broad appeal and sheer endurance.
 
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  Today in History
 


Alaska made a state of U.S.A
Jan. 3, 1959

Constituent state of the United States of America. It lies at the extreme northwest of the North American continent and is the largest peninsula in the Western Hemisphere. Its 591,004 square miles (1,530,700 square kilometres) include some 15,000 square miles of fjords and inlets, and its three faces to the sea have about 34,000 miles (54,400 kilometres) of indented tidal coastline and 6,600 total miles of coast fronting the open sea. It borders the Arctic Ocean on the north and northwest, the Bering Strait and the Bering Sea on the west, and the Pacific Ocean and Gulf of Alaska on the south. The land boundaries on the east cut across some 1,150 miles of high mountains to separate the state from the Canadian Yukon Territory and British Columbia province. Rimming the state on the south is one of the Earth's most active earthquake belts. In the Alaska Range north of Anchorage, Mount McKinley, at 20,320 feet (6,194 metres), is the highest peak in North America. The capital is Juneau, which lies in the southeast in the panhandle region.

When it became the 49th state on Jan. 3, 1959, Alaska increased the nation's size by nearly 20 percent. The new area included vast stretches of unexplored land and untapped resources. At the time Secretary of State William H. Seward negotiated its purchase from Russia in 1867, however, Alaska was known as Seward's Folly. Its settlement and exploitation have been hindered by its distance from the rest of the nation and by geographic and climatic impediments to travel and communications; Alaska continues to be the country's last frontier. More than half of the state's inhabitants live in the Greater Anchorage area.


 

Related websites

Alaska: The Great Land

Insight into this North American country. Provides a history, geographical overview with special features on earthquakes and glaciers, the midnight sun, and the Tongass national forest, profile of inhabitant animals, fishes and birds, and information on the native peoples. Includes a travel guide along with interactive maps, discussion forum, and an online store for related books and CD ROMs.

Alaska

Resource on this American state. Features a history, recipes, brief notes on state symbols, and a listing of cities, educational institutions, museums, golf courses, newspapers, and accommodation facilities. Also includes a section on native and famous Alaskan women.

 

 
 
 
  More Events on this Day
 
Martin Luther excommunicated
Jan. 3, 1521

On June 15, 1520, Pope Leo X issued a document condemning Luther of heresy on 41 accounts and ordered him to submit to the authority of Rome within 60 days or suffer excommunication. Luther openly defied the Pope. Thus, Leo was left no alternative but to issue a papal bull (Decet Romanum Pontificem) of excommunication on Jan. 3, 1521.

Clement Attlee born
Jan. 3, 1883



Born on Jan. 3, 1883, Clement Attlee was the British Labour Party leader (1935–55) and prime minister (1945–51). He presided over the establishment of the welfare state in Great Britain and the granting of independence to India, the most important step in the conversion of the British Empire into the Commonwealth of Nations.

Ngo Dinh Diem born
Jan. 3, 1901

This Vietnamese political leader who served as president, with dictatorial powers, of South Vietnam from 1955 until his assassination, is born on Jan. 3, 1901. Diem's imprisoning and killing of hundreds of Buddhists, who he alleged were abetting Communist insurgents, finally persuaded the United States to withdraw its support from him. Diem's generals assassinated him during a coup d'état.

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