May 30, or Gazette, Winds and Allergy Day
Zodiac Sign Gemini
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Gemini, May 30. The striving for freedom and independence is the leitmotif of those born on May 30.
These people find it difficult to keep within the routine; the thirst for sudden and radical changes dominates them.
Often those born on May 30 want to appear as responsible, reliable partners, but it is extremely difficult for them to play this role.
They achieve their greatest success in the field of free enterprise, when you can show individual initiative and express your own opinion.
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Gemini men born on May 30:
- have the following qualities:
- lively,
- curious,
- calm.
- The Gemini man is an innovator, revolutionary, fighter against dullness and predictability.
- He loves non-standard moves, unexpected solutions, fantastic surprises and vivid emotions.
Gemini women born on May 30:
- have the following features:
- flirtatious,
- logical,
- transforming.
- Gemini women adore mystery, riddle, and therefore there is always a veil of fog and understatement around them.
- At the same time, they do not withdraw into themselves, but are socially active and bright, while leaving the groundwork for the most unexpected interpretation of the image.
Main event
In France there was a newspaper called La Gazette, and soon the word "gazette" entered all European languages
May 30, 1631
May 30, 1631
The first issue of the official French newspaper La Gazette, after which the word "newspaper" came into use, remaining in many European languages to denote a periodical news publication.
Historians believe that the predecessors of newspapers appeared in the era of antiquity in ancient Rome. They were wooden planks, on which they copied the chronicle of events that occurred in the city and the world by hand. They were called "The Daily Affairs of the Roman People" and hung out in squares, and politicians and noble townspeople were delivered personally. These reports were of an informal nature, until Julius Caesar ordered the dissemination of reports on the work of the Senate, the reports of commanders and the like.
Throughout the following centuries, the format of news media changed little, even before the invention of a printed press in Germany in the 1450s, which allowed the reproduction of the text without resorting to the services of census-takers. But these publications in connection with the underdevelopment of printed technologies remained a very expensive attribute of the life of the aristocracy and wealthy merchants.
His modern look of the newspaper began to acquire in the early 17th century, but did not yet have this name. On May 30, 1631, the first issue of the official French newspaper La Gazette was published. Its publisher was the nobleman T.Renodo, who received a patent for the distribution of news on the territory of France, and the name itself came from the name of a small Italian coin (gazetta), which the Venetians paid in the 16th century for a handwritten news sheet. So, with the light hand of Renodo, the word "newspaper" came into use, remaining in many European languages to denote a periodical news publication.
The importance of "La Gazette" for the development of this type of media was especially great also because Renaudo invented an unusually important innovation - in the newspaper on a paid basis began to post a private ad, that is advertising.
Only in the 19th century did a real world newspaper boom take place. It was then that the center shifted the political and social life of many countries in Europe.
In the 20th century, newspapers continued to live and develop successfully, but gradually changed in connection with the emergence of new electronic media - radio, television and the Internet, inventing new forms of submitting materials and attracting readers and advertisers.
In the national calendar May 30 is the day of Evdokia-whistling.
In the old days they said: ''What on Evdokia day - summer like that''.
More signs: on Evdokia day, the winds whistle. If the moon was born in rainy Evdokia - for wet summer, and if the north wind still blows - for cold summer.
May 30 - World Asthma and Allergy Day. Established by the World Health Organization to attract public attention to the solution of important problems associated with allergenization of the population.
According to epidemiological studies, currently, more than 40% of the population has signs of allergies. We can already talk about a non-infectious pandemic: every third person is sick with allergic rhinitis and almost every tenth person has bronchial asthma.
1431 - in the distant Rouen, the national heroine of France, Jeanne d'Arc, was burned. The Catholic Church celebrates this day as St. Joan of Arc.
1593 - according to some sources, an English poet, Christopher Marlowe, died near London in a skirmish in a tavern. There is a version that in fact Marlo escaped death and detractors and continued to write poetry, but under the name of William Shakespeare.
1846 - Carl Peter Faberge (d. 1920), Russian jeweler, was born.
1853 - Vincent Van Gogh was born, a Dutch painter, draftsman, etcher and lithographer, one of the largest representatives of post-impressionism.
1896 - the first car accident in New York. Henry Wells's car from Springfield collided with Evelyn Thomas's bicycle. The cyclist has a broken leg.
1899 - was born Irving Talberg (died 1936), an American film producer, nicknamed the "wonder of Hollywood." for his ability to recognize successful scenarios and the star potential of actors. Since 1937, at the ''Oscars'' ceremony, the most talented producers receive the ''Irving Talberg Award''.
1900 - At the World Exhibition in Paris, the Danish engineer Valdemar Poulsen introduced the device he invented - the telegraphon. In fact, it was a tape for recording.
1908 - Mel Blanc was born (d. 1989), an American voice actor who gave voice to famous cartoon characters, such as Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig, Sylvester the Cat, Tweety Chick, Willy Coyote, Little Speedo Gonzalez and others. For his unusually diverse talent of the actor and voice, Blank received the nickname “Man of Thousand Voices”.
1917 - The first successful airship of the US Navy B-1 made by firm "Goodyear" complete its first flight from Chicago (Illinois) to Wingfoot, located near Akron (Ohio).
1934 - Aleksey Leonov was born, an astronaut who first came out into outer space.
1953 - An article by James Watson and Francis Crick was published in the journal ''Nature'', in which they proposed a structural DNA model - a double helix.
1958 - Michael Eladio Lopez-Alegria, American astronaut, was born.
1958 - Marie Fredriksson was born, singer from the Swedish duet “Roxette”.
1971 - launch of the ''Mariner-9'' AMC to Mars.
1979 - the most popular children's matinee took place in London - 160 thousand children took part in it.
2003 - IDC analytical company, which studies the markets for technological products, reported that according to the results of Q1, the computer company Hewlett-Packard took the first place in the global server market.
2011 - Rosalyn Yalow (b. 1921), American biophysicist, who developed the radioimmunological method for determining blood components, won the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine (1977), died.
Holidays
Winds Whistle Day
In the national calendar May 30 is the day of Evdokia-whistling.
In the old days they said: ''What on Evdokia day - summer like that''.
More signs: on Evdokia day, the winds whistle. If the moon was born in rainy Evdokia - for wet summer, and if the north wind still blows - for cold summer.
World Asthma and Allergy Day
According to epidemiological studies, currently, more than 40% of the population has signs of allergies. We can already talk about a non-infectious pandemic: every third person is sick with allergic rhinitis and almost every tenth person has bronchial asthma.
Also on May 30...
1593 - according to some sources, an English poet, Christopher Marlowe, died near London in a skirmish in a tavern. There is a version that in fact Marlo escaped death and detractors and continued to write poetry, but under the name of William Shakespeare.
1846 - Carl Peter Faberge (d. 1920), Russian jeweler, was born.
1853 - Vincent Van Gogh was born, a Dutch painter, draftsman, etcher and lithographer, one of the largest representatives of post-impressionism.
1896 - the first car accident in New York. Henry Wells's car from Springfield collided with Evelyn Thomas's bicycle. The cyclist has a broken leg.
1899 - was born Irving Talberg (died 1936), an American film producer, nicknamed the "wonder of Hollywood." for his ability to recognize successful scenarios and the star potential of actors. Since 1937, at the ''Oscars'' ceremony, the most talented producers receive the ''Irving Talberg Award''.
1900 - At the World Exhibition in Paris, the Danish engineer Valdemar Poulsen introduced the device he invented - the telegraphon. In fact, it was a tape for recording.
1908 - Mel Blanc was born (d. 1989), an American voice actor who gave voice to famous cartoon characters, such as Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig, Sylvester the Cat, Tweety Chick, Willy Coyote, Little Speedo Gonzalez and others. For his unusually diverse talent of the actor and voice, Blank received the nickname “Man of Thousand Voices”.
1917 - The first successful airship of the US Navy B-1 made by firm "Goodyear" complete its first flight from Chicago (Illinois) to Wingfoot, located near Akron (Ohio).
1934 - Aleksey Leonov was born, an astronaut who first came out into outer space.
1953 - An article by James Watson and Francis Crick was published in the journal ''Nature'', in which they proposed a structural DNA model - a double helix.
1958 - Michael Eladio Lopez-Alegria, American astronaut, was born.
1958 - Marie Fredriksson was born, singer from the Swedish duet “Roxette”.
1971 - launch of the ''Mariner-9'' AMC to Mars.
1979 - the most popular children's matinee took place in London - 160 thousand children took part in it.
2003 - IDC analytical company, which studies the markets for technological products, reported that according to the results of Q1, the computer company Hewlett-Packard took the first place in the global server market.
2011 - Rosalyn Yalow (b. 1921), American biophysicist, who developed the radioimmunological method for determining blood components, won the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine (1977), died.
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