20th June
1214 The University of Oxford received its Royal charter on this day in 1248. There is evidence of teaching at the university in 1096, making it the oldest university in the English-speaking world and the second oldest in the world.
1497 The consecration of St. Mary's Church, Fairford (Cotswolds), one of the finest 'wool churches' in England. Successful wool merchants lavished money on their parish churches and John Tame, a wealthy wool merchant, completely rebuilt the church at his own expense. Unusually, the churchyard includes a stone memorial to Tiddles, the church cat whoe 'guarded' the church and its precincts from 1963 to 1980.
1756 In India, the night of the infamous 'Black Hole of Calcutta', where more than 140 British soldiers and civilians were placed in a small prison cell - 18 feet by 14 feet - by the Nawab of Bengal. The following morning only 23 emerged alive.
1819 The U.S. vessel SS Savannah arrived at Liverpool. She was the first steam-propelled vessel to cross the Atlantic, although most of the journey was made under sail.
1837 On the death of William IV, Queen Victoria, aged 18, acceded to the throne.
1887 On Queen Victoria’s Golden Jubilee, Buffalo Bill Cody staged a Royal Command performance of his famous Wild West Show, and four European kings boarded the original Deadwood coach driven by Cody.
1976 Nearly 300 Westerners, mostly Americans and Britons, were moved from Beirut and taken to safety in Syria by the US military.An American navy ship rescued about 270 people, including 97 Britons, from the war-torn Lebanese city after attempts to move them by road were ruled out as too dangerous.Most of the refugees on the beach were Americans responding to their government's call to leave Beirut following the murder of the American ambassador Francis Meloy.