March 24
1267 King
Louis IX of France (1215–1270)
called his knights to Paris in preparation for the Eighth
Crusade (his second) directed against Tunis in North Africa.
1603 Johann
Konrad Dannhauer, Lutheran theologian, was born (d.
7 November 1666). [German
Wikipedia article]
1603
Queen
Elizabeth I of England died (b. 7 September 1533). The
daughter of Henry VIII, Elizabeth took the final steps to
make the Anglican Church the state church of England.
1603 King James VI of Scotland acceded
to the English throne and was known thereafter as James
I of England (1566–1625). His descent from Henry VIII (through his
great-grandmother Mary Tudor and his mother Mary Queen of
Scots) made him the nearest heir to the English throne when
Queen Elizabeth I died. (The two kingdoms of England and
Scotland were not united until 1707.) At the 1604 Hampton
Court Conference James I authorized the translation project that became the 1611 King
James (authorized) Version of the Bible.
1653 Samuel
Scheidt, German Lutheran organist and composer,
died (b. 3 November 1587).
1661 William
Leddra became the last
Quaker to be executed in
Boston.
1812
Johann
Jakob Griesbach (b. 4 January 1745), German New Testament scholar,
died.
1820 Fanny
J. Crosby, popular American hymn writer, was born in
Putnam County, New York (d. 12 February 1915).
1821 Jeannette
Threlfall, hymnist, was born in Blackburn,
Lancashire (d. 30 November 1880).
1844
Albert
Bertel Thorvaldsen, Danish sculptor, died (b. 19
November 1770).
1880 Harold
Henry Rowley, English Old Testament scholar, was born at
Leicester (d. 4 October 1969). After serving as a pastor for five years, he
taught at Christian University in Shantung, China
(1924-1929), the University of Cardiff (1930-1934), the
University of Bangor (1935-1945) and Manchester University
(1945-1959). He authored and edited many valuable
contributions to biblical linguistics. Among his most highly
acclaimed writings are the The Aramaic of the Old
Testament (1929) and The Growth of the Old
Testament (1950).
1882 Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow, poet and hymnist, died (b. 27
February 1807).
1918 Roy
A. Suelflow was born in Germantown, Wisconsin (d.
2 February 1981).
1921
James
Cardinal Gibbons (b. 23 July 1834), Archbishop of Baltimore and
first chancellor of the Catholic University in Washington,
D.C., died.
1940 Samuel McCrea Cavert of the Federal
Council of Churches of Christ in America officiated at a
Protestant Easter service in New York City. This was the
first religious program broadcast on television. It was
televised over NBC affiliate station W2XBS in New York
City.
1980
Óscar Romero, archbishop of El Salvador, was
assassinated (b. 15 August 1917).