Hubbry Logo
March 19March 19Main
Open search
March 19
Community hub
March 19
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
March 19
March 19
from Wikipedia

<< March >>
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31  
2026
March 19 in recent years
  2025 (Wednesday)
  2024 (Tuesday)
  2023 (Sunday)
  2022 (Saturday)
  2021 (Friday)
  2020 (Thursday)
  2019 (Tuesday)
  2018 (Monday)
  2017 (Sunday)
  2016 (Saturday)

March 19 is the 78th day of the year (79th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar; 287 days remain until the end of the year.

Events

[edit]

Pre-1600

[edit]

1601–1900

[edit]

1901–present

[edit]

Births

[edit]

Pre-1600

[edit]

1601–1900

[edit]

1901–present

[edit]

Deaths

[edit]

Pre-1600

[edit]

1601–1900

[edit]

1901–present

[edit]

Holidays and observances

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
March 19 is the 78th day of the year (79th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar, with 287 days remaining until the year's end. This date holds significance for various historical events, religious observances, and national holidays across cultures. In the Catholic tradition, it marks the Feast of Saint Joseph, honoring the husband of the Virgin Mary as the patron saint of workers, fathers, and the universal Church, often celebrated with altars, processions, and communal meals in Italy, Spain, and Latin American countries. Several nations observe it as Father's Day, including Italy, Portugal, Spain, Honduras, and Bolivia, recognizing paternal roles through family gatherings and public acknowledgments. Key historical milestones on March 19 include the U.S. Congress establishing standard time zones and approving daylight saving time in 1918, standardizing national timekeeping to facilitate commerce and transportation. In 1931, Nevada legalized casino gambling, initiating the state's transformation into a major entertainment and gaming hub that reshaped its economy. The 1953 Academy Awards marked the first live television broadcast of the Oscars, expanding the event's reach and influencing Hollywood's awards culture. More recently, on March 19, 2003, U.S. President George W. Bush initiated military operations against Iraq with airstrikes on Baghdad, commencing the invasion aimed at removing Saddam Hussein's regime amid debates over weapons of mass destruction intelligence. These events underscore March 19's association with policy innovations, economic shifts, cultural broadcasts, and geopolitical conflicts.

Events

Pre-1600

  • 1077: Gundulf, a Norman monk, was consecrated as Bishop of Rochester, later contributing to the construction of Rochester Castle and the White Tower of the Tower of London under William the Conqueror.
  • 1227: Cardinal Ugolino di Conti of Segni was elected Pope Gregory IX, initiating a papacy marked by conflicts with Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II and the establishment of the Papal Inquisition.
  • 1277: The Byzantine Empire and the Republic of Venice concluded a treaty stipulating a two-year truce and renewing Venetian commercial privileges in Byzantine territories, amid ongoing tensions following the Fourth Crusade.
  • 1279: Mongol forces under Zhang Hongfan achieved victory in the naval Battle of Yamen against the Southern Song Dynasty, effectively ending over three centuries of Song rule in China and facilitating the rise of the Yuan Dynasty.
  • 1452: Frederick III of Habsburg was crowned Holy Roman Emperor by Pope Nicholas V in Rome, the last such coronation to occur in the city, symbolizing the enduring but strained alliance between imperial and papal authority.
  • 1524: Explorer Giovanni da Verrazzano, commissioned by King Francis I of France, made landfall near the site of present-day Charleston, South Carolina, during his voyage along the North American coast in search of a passage to Asia.
  • 1563: The Peace of Amboise was signed, granting limited religious freedoms to French Huguenots (Protestants) and temporarily halting the Wars of Religion by allowing them to worship in designated areas, though enforcement proved contentious.
  • 1571: Spanish forces under Miguel López de Legazpi occupied Manila, establishing it as the capital of the Spanish East Indies and initiating colonial administration over the Philippines, which lasted until 1898.

1601–1900

  • 1687 – René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, French explorer whose expeditions mapped significant portions of the Mississippi River and Great Lakes regions, enabling France's territorial claims in North America through empirical navigation and alliances with Native American tribes, though his ventures suffered from logistical failures and internal conflicts culminating in his murder by mutinous colonists near present-day Huntsville, Texas. His efforts demonstrated causal links between European exploration and colonial expansion but highlighted risks of overextension without adequate supply chains.
  • 1721 – Pope Clement XI, Italian pontiff whose reign addressed theological disputes like Jansenism via the bull Unigenitus (1713), which condemned certain doctrines on grace and predestination based on scriptural and patristic interpretations, while managing fiscal challenges through centralized papal administration amid criticisms of nepotism in appointments. His policies reflected causal tensions between doctrinal orthodoxy and political pragmatism in Counter-Reformation Europe, with empirical data from ecclesiastical records showing mixed success in suppressing heterodox movements.
  • 1893 – Karel Komzák I, Czech composer and bandmaster renowned for military marches such as Slavnostni Pochod, which empirically boosted troop morale and fostered nationalist sentiments in the Austro-Hungarian Empire through rhythmic structures suited to infantry drills, influencing later Czech musical traditions despite limited formal innovation beyond practical utility. His works prioritized functional composition over artistic experimentation, aligning with industrial-era demands for disciplined public performances.

1901–present

  • 1950 – Edgar Rice Burroughs, American novelist who created the enduring character Tarzan of the Apes in 1912, died of a heart attack at age 74 in Encino, California. His pulp adventure stories, including the Barsoom series, emphasized self-reliance and exploration, influencing popular fiction despite critical dismissal for formulaic plots; over 70 works under his name generated substantial commercial success through licensing and adaptations.
  • 1982 – Randy Rhoads, American guitarist who co-founded Quiet Riot and served as lead guitarist for Ozzy Osbourne from 1979 to 1981, died at age 25 in a plane crash near Leesburg, Florida, during a tour stunt gone wrong. Rhoads pioneered neoclassical metal techniques, blending classical influences like Bach with heavy rock on albums such as Blizzard of Ozz (1980), which featured technical solos on tracks like "Mr. Crowley," elevating Osbourne's post-Black Sabbath career through precise, innovative riffing and composition.
  • 1987 – Louis de Broglie, French physicist and 1929 Nobel laureate for proposing the wave nature of electrons in his 1924 doctoral thesis, died at age 94 in Louveciennes, France. His de Broglie hypothesis, positing that particles exhibit wave properties with wavelength λ = h/p (where h is Planck's constant and p momentum), bridged classical and quantum mechanics, experimentally verified by Davisson-Germer in 1927, foundational to wave mechanics and Schrödinger's equation without reliance on interpretive overreach.
  • 2008 – Arthur C. Clarke, English science fiction author and futurist, died at age 90 in Colombo, Sri Lanka, from respiratory failure linked to post-polio syndrome. Clarke's 1945 paper predicted geostationary communications satellites, enabling modern global broadcasting 20 years before their launch; his novel 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), co-developed into a film with Stanley Kubrick, explored human evolution and AI through rigorous extrapolation of physics and technology, eschewing mysticism for causal technological progress.
  • 2008 – Paul Scofield, English stage and film actor, died at age 86 near Brighton, England, from leukemia. Acclaimed for his restrained intensity, Scofield won the Academy Award for portraying Sir Thomas More in A Man for All Seasons (1966), embodying principled resistance to arbitrary power; his career spanned over 60 years, prioritizing theater like the Royal Shakespeare Company over Hollywood, with performances grounded in textual fidelity rather than sensationalism.
  • 2024, American character actor appearing in over 200 films and TV shows, died at age 88 from in St. Albans, . Known for embodying gritty, often menacing everymen in roles like the detective in (1982) and the sniper in (1979), Walsh's prolific output highlighted economical scene-stealing through physicality and dialect, sustaining a career via versatility in independent and mainstream projects without typecasting.

Births

Pre-1600

  • 1077: Gundulf, a Norman monk, was consecrated as Bishop of Rochester, later contributing to the construction of Rochester Castle and the White Tower of the Tower of London under William the Conqueror.
  • 1227: Cardinal Ugolino di Conti of Segni was elected Pope Gregory IX, initiating a papacy marked by conflicts with Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II and the establishment of the Papal Inquisition.
  • 1277: The Byzantine Empire and the Republic of Venice concluded a treaty stipulating a two-year truce and renewing Venetian commercial privileges in Byzantine territories, amid ongoing tensions following the Fourth Crusade.
  • 1279: Mongol forces under Zhang Hongfan achieved victory in the naval Battle of Yamen against the Southern Song Dynasty, effectively ending over three centuries of Song rule in China and facilitating the rise of the Yuan Dynasty.
  • 1452: Frederick III of Habsburg was crowned Holy Roman Emperor by Pope Nicholas V in Rome, the last such coronation to occur in the city, symbolizing the enduring but strained alliance between imperial and papal authority.
  • 1524: Explorer Giovanni da Verrazzano, commissioned by King Francis I of France, made landfall near the site of present-day Charleston, South Carolina, during his voyage along the North American coast in search of a passage to Asia.
  • 1563: The Peace of Amboise was signed, granting limited religious freedoms to French Huguenots (Protestants) and temporarily halting the Wars of Religion by allowing them to worship in designated areas, though enforcement proved contentious.
  • 1571: Spanish forces under Miguel López de Legazpi occupied Manila, establishing it as the capital of the Spanish East Indies and initiating colonial administration over the Philippines, which lasted until 1898.

1601–1900

  • 1687 – René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, French explorer whose expeditions mapped significant portions of the Mississippi River and Great Lakes regions, enabling France's territorial claims in North America through empirical navigation and alliances with Native American tribes, though his ventures suffered from logistical failures and internal conflicts culminating in his murder by mutinous colonists near present-day Huntsville, Texas. His efforts demonstrated causal links between European exploration and colonial expansion but highlighted risks of overextension without adequate supply chains.
  • 1721 – Pope Clement XI, Italian pontiff whose reign addressed theological disputes like Jansenism via the bull Unigenitus (1713), which condemned certain doctrines on grace and predestination based on scriptural and patristic interpretations, while managing fiscal challenges through centralized papal administration amid criticisms of nepotism in appointments. His policies reflected causal tensions between doctrinal orthodoxy and political pragmatism in Counter-Reformation Europe, with empirical data from ecclesiastical records showing mixed success in suppressing heterodox movements.
  • 1893 – Karel Komzák I, Czech composer and bandmaster renowned for military marches such as Slavnostni Pochod, which empirically boosted troop morale and fostered nationalist sentiments in the Austro-Hungarian Empire through rhythmic structures suited to infantry drills, influencing later Czech musical traditions despite limited formal innovation beyond practical utility. His works prioritized functional composition over artistic experimentation, aligning with industrial-era demands for disciplined public performances.

1901–present

  • 1950 – Edgar Rice Burroughs, American novelist who created the enduring character Tarzan of the Apes in 1912, died of a heart attack at age 74 in Encino, California. His pulp adventure stories, including the Barsoom series, emphasized self-reliance and exploration, influencing popular fiction despite critical dismissal for formulaic plots; over 70 works under his name generated substantial commercial success through licensing and adaptations.
  • 1982 – Randy Rhoads, American guitarist who co-founded Quiet Riot and served as lead guitarist for Ozzy Osbourne from 1979 to 1981, died at age 25 in a plane crash near Leesburg, Florida, during a tour stunt gone wrong. Rhoads pioneered neoclassical metal techniques, blending classical influences like Bach with heavy rock on albums such as Blizzard of Ozz (1980), which featured technical solos on tracks like "Mr. Crowley," elevating Osbourne's post-Black Sabbath career through precise, innovative riffing and composition.
  • 1987 – Louis de Broglie, French physicist and 1929 Nobel laureate for proposing the wave nature of electrons in his 1924 doctoral thesis, died at age 94 in Louveciennes, France. His de Broglie hypothesis, positing that particles exhibit wave properties with wavelength λ = h/p (where h is Planck's constant and p momentum), bridged classical and quantum mechanics, experimentally verified by Davisson-Germer in 1927, foundational to wave mechanics and Schrödinger's equation without reliance on interpretive overreach.
  • 2008 – Arthur C. Clarke, English science fiction author and futurist, died at age 90 in Colombo, Sri Lanka, from respiratory failure linked to post-polio syndrome. Clarke's 1945 paper predicted geostationary communications satellites, enabling modern global broadcasting 20 years before their launch; his novel 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), co-developed into a film with Stanley Kubrick, explored human evolution and AI through rigorous extrapolation of physics and technology, eschewing mysticism for causal technological progress.
  • 2008 – Paul Scofield, English stage and film actor, died at age 86 near Brighton, England, from leukemia. Acclaimed for his restrained intensity, Scofield won the Academy Award for portraying Sir Thomas More in A Man for All Seasons (1966), embodying principled resistance to arbitrary power; his career spanned over 60 years, prioritizing theater like the Royal Shakespeare Company over Hollywood, with performances grounded in textual fidelity rather than sensationalism.
  • 2024 – M. Emmet Walsh, American character actor appearing in over 200 films and TV shows, died at age 88 from cardiac arrest in St. Albans, Vermont. Known for embodying gritty, often menacing everymen in roles like the detective in Blade Runner (1982) and the sniper in The Jerk (1979), Walsh's prolific output highlighted economical scene-stealing through physicality and dialect, sustaining a career via versatility in independent and mainstream projects without typecasting.

Deaths

Pre-1600

  • 1077: Gundulf, a Norman monk, was consecrated as Bishop of Rochester, later contributing to the construction of Rochester Castle and the White Tower of the Tower of London under William the Conqueror.
  • 1227: Cardinal Ugolino di Conti of Segni was elected Pope Gregory IX, initiating a papacy marked by conflicts with Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II and the establishment of the Papal Inquisition.
  • 1277: The Byzantine Empire and the Republic of Venice concluded a treaty stipulating a two-year truce and renewing Venetian commercial privileges in Byzantine territories, amid ongoing tensions following the Fourth Crusade.
  • 1279: Mongol forces under Zhang Hongfan achieved victory in the naval Battle of Yamen against the Southern Song Dynasty, effectively ending over three centuries of Song rule in China and facilitating the rise of the Yuan Dynasty.
  • 1452: Frederick III of Habsburg was crowned Holy Roman Emperor by Pope Nicholas V in Rome, the last such coronation to occur in the city, symbolizing the enduring but strained alliance between imperial and papal authority.
  • 1524: Explorer Giovanni da Verrazzano, commissioned by King Francis I of France, made landfall near the site of present-day Charleston, South Carolina, during his voyage along the North American coast in search of a passage to Asia.
  • 1563: The Peace of Amboise was signed, granting limited religious freedoms to French Huguenots (Protestants) and temporarily halting the Wars of Religion by allowing them to worship in designated areas, though enforcement proved contentious.
  • 1571: Spanish forces under Miguel López de Legazpi occupied Manila, establishing it as the capital of the Spanish East Indies and initiating colonial administration over the Philippines, which lasted until 1898.

1601–1900

  • 1687 – René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, French explorer whose expeditions mapped significant portions of the Mississippi River and Great Lakes regions, enabling France's territorial claims in North America through empirical navigation and alliances with Native American tribes, though his ventures suffered from logistical failures and internal conflicts culminating in his murder by mutinous colonists near present-day Huntsville, Texas. His efforts demonstrated causal links between European exploration and colonial expansion but highlighted risks of overextension without adequate supply chains.
  • 1721 – Pope Clement XI, Italian pontiff whose reign addressed theological disputes like Jansenism via the bull Unigenitus (1713), which condemned certain doctrines on grace and predestination based on scriptural and patristic interpretations, while managing fiscal challenges through centralized papal administration amid criticisms of nepotism in appointments. His policies reflected causal tensions between doctrinal orthodoxy and political pragmatism in Counter-Reformation Europe, with empirical data from ecclesiastical records showing mixed success in suppressing heterodox movements.
  • 1893 – Karel Komzák I, Czech composer and bandmaster renowned for military marches such as Slavnostni Pochod, which empirically boosted troop morale and fostered nationalist sentiments in the Austro-Hungarian Empire through rhythmic structures suited to infantry drills, influencing later Czech musical traditions despite limited formal innovation beyond practical utility. His works prioritized functional composition over artistic experimentation, aligning with industrial-era demands for disciplined public performances.

1901–present

  • 1950 – Edgar Rice Burroughs, American novelist who created the enduring character Tarzan of the Apes in 1912, died of a heart attack at age 74 in Encino, California. His pulp adventure stories, including the Barsoom series, emphasized self-reliance and exploration, influencing popular fiction despite critical dismissal for formulaic plots; over 70 works under his name generated substantial commercial success through licensing and adaptations.
  • 1982 – Randy Rhoads, American guitarist who co-founded Quiet Riot and served as lead guitarist for Ozzy Osbourne from 1979 to 1981, died at age 25 in a plane crash near Leesburg, Florida, during a tour stunt gone wrong. Rhoads pioneered neoclassical metal techniques, blending classical influences like Bach with heavy rock on albums such as Blizzard of Ozz (1980), which featured technical solos on tracks like "Mr. Crowley," elevating Osbourne's post-Black Sabbath career through precise, innovative riffing and composition.
  • 1987 – Louis de Broglie, French physicist and 1929 Nobel laureate for proposing the wave nature of electrons in his 1924 doctoral thesis, died at age 94 in Louveciennes, France. His de Broglie hypothesis, positing that particles exhibit wave properties with wavelength λ = h/p (where h is Planck's constant and p momentum), bridged classical and quantum mechanics, experimentally verified by Davisson-Germer in 1927, foundational to wave mechanics and Schrödinger's equation without reliance on interpretive overreach.
  • 2008 – Arthur C. Clarke, English science fiction author and futurist, died at age 90 in Colombo, Sri Lanka, from respiratory failure linked to post-polio syndrome. Clarke's 1945 paper predicted geostationary communications satellites, enabling modern global broadcasting 20 years before their launch; his novel 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), co-developed into a film with Stanley Kubrick, explored human evolution and AI through rigorous extrapolation of physics and technology, eschewing mysticism for causal technological progress.
  • 2008 – Paul Scofield, English stage and film actor, died at age 86 near Brighton, England, from leukemia. Acclaimed for his restrained intensity, Scofield won the Academy Award for portraying Sir Thomas More in A Man for All Seasons (1966), embodying principled resistance to arbitrary power; his career spanned over 60 years, prioritizing theater like the Royal Shakespeare Company over Hollywood, with performances grounded in textual fidelity rather than sensationalism.
  • 2024 – M. Emmet Walsh, American character actor appearing in over 200 films and TV shows, died at age 88 from cardiac arrest in St. Albans, Vermont. Known for embodying gritty, often menacing everymen in roles like the detective in Blade Runner (1982) and the sniper in The Jerk (1979), Walsh's prolific output highlighted economical scene-stealing through physicality and dialect, sustaining a career via versatility in independent and mainstream projects without typecasting.

Holidays and observances

Religious observances

March 19 is the feast day of Saint Joseph, spouse of the Blessed Virgin Mary and foster father of Jesus, observed as a solemnity in the Latin Rite of the Catholic Church. This date commemorates Joseph's role as protector of the Holy Family, drawing from scriptural accounts in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke where he safeguards Mary and Jesus from Herod's massacre and provides for them during the flight to Egypt. The feast's placement on March 19 traces to medieval liturgical calendars, with formal papal approval in 1480 by Pope Sixtus IV and elevation to a holy day of obligation in 1621 by Pope Gregory XV, a status it retains in countries including Spain and Lebanon. Devotions emphasize Joseph's paternal virtues, positioning him as a model of silent obedience and providential care, as highlighted in Pope Pius IX's 1870 declaration of him as patron of the Universal Church. In Catholic-influenced cultures such as Italy and Spain, the day serves as a religious foundation for honoring fathers, directly tied to Joseph's archetype as legal father and guardian, with liturgical prayers invoking his intercession for family stability. Traditional practices include the erection of St. Joseph's altars, particularly in Sicilian-derived communities, featuring blessed breads, fava beans, and seafood arranged in tiers symbolizing the Holy Trinity and biblical manna, distributed to the needy in gratitude for Joseph's reputed intervention during medieval famines. These altars, often crowned with Joseph's statue and blessed by clergy, underscore themes of divine provision and charity, with participants crying "Viva San Giuseppe!" to invoke his aid. The observance excludes modern secular overlays, focusing instead on doctrinal rooted in Joseph's trade and dream-guided fidelity, as chronicled in early like St. Bernardine of Siena, who promoted the date's antiquity from the onward. In Eastern Orthodox traditions, Joseph's feast aligns differently due to the , but Western Catholics maintain March 19 as distinct from the May 1 feast of St. Joseph the Worker instituted by in 1955.

Secular, national, and cultural observances

National Poultry Day, observed annually on March 19 in the United States, highlights the poultry sector's role in efficient protein production and nutritional contributions to diets. Broiler chickens dominate U.S. output, accounting for 65% of the poultry industry's value in 2024, with production efficiencies driven by genetic selection and optimized feed conversion ratios enabling birds to reach market weight in approximately 47 days while consuming about 1.8-2.0 kg of feed per kg of live weight gained. Nutritionally, poultry meat supplies complete proteins with all essential amino acids, alongside bioavailable sources of B vitamins (niacin, B6, B12), selenium, phosphorus, and zinc, at low caloric densities (around 165 kcal per 100g for skinless breast), supporting muscle maintenance and immune function without excessive saturated fats when lean cuts are selected. Certified Nurses Day, designated for March 19, recognizes registered nurses holding voluntary specialty certifications, which empirical data link to enhanced clinical outcomes through standardized knowledge application. Research across hospitals shows that units with higher certification rates exhibit lower failure-to-rescue rates and complications, with one analysis finding every 10% increase in baccalaureate-prepared (often certified) nurses associated with a 6% reduction in 30-day mortality odds, attributable to superior assessment skills and protocol adherence reducing errors like falls or infections. However, certification processes face criticism for imposing high costs (often $300-500 per exam) and time demands that deter renewal, potentially creating credential barriers in under-resourced settings and prioritizing bureaucratic validation over on-the-job competence honed through direct patient care. International Read to Me Day, marked on March 19, promotes adults reading aloud to children to foster emergent literacy via direct interaction, grounded in causal evidence from longitudinal studies. Frequent shared reading correlates with gains in vocabulary size (up to 1.4 million words by school entry for high-exposure children) and comprehension, as parental narration models phonological awareness and syntax, outperforming passive media exposure in randomized trials. Children engaged in thrice-weekly sessions show 2-3 times higher odds of grade-level reading proficiency, with effects persisting into adolescence and mediating socioeconomic gaps through enriched home language environments rather than innate factors alone.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.