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2011

2011

2011 (MMXI) was a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar, the 2011th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 11th year of the 3rd millennium, the 11th year of the 21st century, and the 2nd year of the 2010s decade.

2011 was designated as:

  • International Year of Forests

  • International Year of Chemistry[1]

  • International Year for People of African Descent

2011 in various calendars
Millennium:3rd millennium
Centuries:
  • 20th century
  • 21st century
  • 22nd century
Decades:
  • 1990s
  • 2000s
  • 2010s
  • 2020s
  • 2030s
Years:
  • 2008
  • 2009
  • 2010
  • 2011
  • 2012
  • 2013
  • 2014
2011 by topic:
Arts
Architecture – Comics – Film – Home video – Literature (Poetry) – Music (Country, Rock, Metal, UK) – Radio – Photo – Television – Video gaming
Politics
Elections – International leaders – Sovereign states
Sovereign state leaders – Territorial governors
Science and technology
Archaeology – Aviation – Birding/Ornithology – Palaeontology – Rail transport – Spaceflight
Sports
Badminton – Baseball – Basketball – Volleyball
By place
Afghanistan – Albania – Algeria – Angola – Antarctica – Argentina – Armenia – Australia – Austria – Azerbaijan – Bangladesh – The Bahamas – Barbados – Belgium – Benin – Bhutan – Bosnia and Herzegovina – Brazil – Bulgaria – Burkina Faso – Burundi – Cambodia – Cameroon – Canada – Cape Verde – Central African Republic – Chad – Chile – China – Colombia – Costa Rica – Croatia – Cuba – Cyprus – Czechia – Denmark – Ecuador – Egypt – El Salvador – Estonia – Ethiopia – European Union – Finland – France – Gabon – Georgia – Germany – Ghana – Greece – Guatemala – Hong Kong – Hungary – Iceland – India – Indonesia – Iraq – Iran – Ireland – Israel – Italy – Ivory Coast – Japan – Kazakhstan – Kenya – Kuwait – Laos – Latvia - Lebanon – Libya – Lithuania – Luxembourg – Macau – Madagascar – Malawi – Malaysia – Mali – Mexico – Moldova – Montenegro – Morocco – Mozambique – Myanmar – Nepal – Netherlands – New Zealand – Niger – Nigeria – North Korea – Norway – Oman – Pakistan – Palestine – Peru – Philippines – Poland – Portugal – Romania – Russia – Rwanda – Saudi Arabia – Senegal – Serbia – Singapore – Slovakia – Slovenia – Somalia – South Africa – South Korea – South Sudan – Spain – Sri Lanka – Sudan – Sweden – Switzerland – Syria – Taiwan – Tanzania – Thailand – Tunisia – Turkey – Uganda – Ukraine – United Arab Emirates – United Kingdom – United States – Uruguay – Uzbekistan – Venezuela – Vietnam – Yemen – Zambia – Zimbabwe
Other topics
Religious leaders
Birth and death categories
Births – Deaths
Establishments and disestablishments categories
Establishments – Disestablishments
Works and introductions categories
Works – Introductions
Works entering the public domain
Gregorian calendar2011
MMXI
Ab urbe condita2764
Armenian calendar1460
ԹՎ ՌՆԿ
Assyrian calendar6761
Bahá'í calendar167–168
Balinese saka calendar1932–1933
Bengali calendar1418
Berber calendar2961
British Regnal year59 Eliz. 2 – 60 Eliz. 2
Buddhist calendar2555
Burmese calendar1373
Byzantine calendar7519–7520
Chinese calendar庚寅年 (Metal Tiger)
4707 or 4647
— to —
辛卯年 (Metal Rabbit)
4708 or 4648
Coptic calendar1727–1728
Discordian calendar3177
Ethiopian calendar2003–2004
Hebrew calendar5771–5772
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat2067–2068
 - Shaka Samvat1932–1933
 - Kali Yuga5111–5112
Holocene calendar12011
Igbo calendar1011–1012
Iranian calendar1389–1390
Islamic calendar1432–1433
Japanese calendarHeisei 23
(平成23年)
Javanese calendar1943–1945
Juche calendar100
Julian calendarGregorian minus 13 days
Korean calendar4344
Minguo calendarROC 100
民國100年
Nanakshahi calendar543
Thai solar calendar2554
Tibetan calendar阳金虎年
(male Iron-Tiger)
2137 or 1756 or 984
— to —
阴金兔年
(female Iron-Rabbit)
2138 or 1757 or 985
Unix time1293840000 – 1325375999

Events

January

  • January 1 Estonia officially adopts the Euro currency and becomes the 17th Eurozone country.[2] A bomb explodes as Coptic Christians in Alexandria, Egypt, leave a new year service, killing 23 people.

  • January 4 – Tunisian street vendor Mohamed Bouazizi dies after setting himself on fire a month earlier, sparking anti-government protests in Tunisia and later other Arab nations. These protests become known collectively as the Arab Spring.[3][4]

  • January 9 – Iran Air Flight 277 crashes near Orumiyeh in the northeast of the country, killing 77 people.

  • January 9–15 – Southern Sudan holds a referendum on independence. The Sudanese electorate votes in favour of independence, paving the way for the creation of the new state in July.[5][6]

  • January 14 – The Tunisian government falls after a month of increasingly violent protests; President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali flees to Saudi Arabia after 23 years in power.[7][8]

  • January 24 – 37 people are killed and more than 180 others wounded in a bombing at Domodedovo International Airport in Moscow, Russia.[9][10][11]

February

  • February 11 – Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak resigns after widespread protests calling for his departure, leaving control of Egypt in the hands of the military until a general election can be held.[12]

  • February 15 – The First Libyan Civil War starts.

  • February 22 – March 14 – Uncertainty over Libyan oil output causes crude oil prices to rise 20% over a two-week period following the Arab Spring,[13] causing the 2011 energy crisis.

  • February 22 – A 6.3 magnitude earthquake strikes Christchurch, New Zealand. Over 180 people were killed, many within the CTV Building, including a large number of foreign citizens. A large number of foreign search and rescue workers responded to the event.

March

  • March 6 – Civil uprising phase of the Syrian Civil War is triggered when 15 youths in Daraa are arrested for scrawling graffiti on their school wall denouncing the regime of President Bashar al-Assad.

  • March 11 – A 9.0-magnitude earthquake and subsequent tsunami hit the east of Japan, killing 15,840 and leaving another 3,926 missing. Tsunami warnings are issued in 50 countries and territories. Emergencies are declared at four nuclear power plants affected by the quake.[14]

  • March 15 Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, King of Bahrain, declares a three-month state of emergency as troops from the Gulf Co-operation Council are sent to quell the civil unrest.[15][16] Protests breakout across Syria demanding democratic reforms, resignation of President Bashar al-Assad, and release of those imprisoned for the March 6 Daraa protest.[17] The government responds by killing hundreds of protesters and laying siege to various cities, beginning the Syrian Civil War.[18]

  • March 17 – The United Nations Security Council votes 10–0 to create a no-fly zone over Libya in response to allegations of government aggression against civilians.[19]

  • March 19 – In light of continuing attacks on Libyan rebels by forces in support of leader Muammar Gaddafi,[20] military intervention authorized under UNSCR 1973 begins as French fighter jets make reconnaissance flights over Libya.[21]

April

  • April 2 – India wins the 2011 Cricket World Cup.

  • April 11 – Former Ivorian President Laurent Gbagbo is arrested in his home in Abidjan by supporters of elected President Alassane Ouattara, with support from French forces; this effectively ends the 2010–11 Ivorian crisis and civil war.[22]

  • April 15 – The Mexican town of Cherán is taken over by vigilantes in response to abuses from the local drug cartel. The new government is strongly focused on crime reduction and preserving the local environment.

  • April 25–28 – The 2011 Super Outbreak forms in the Southern, Midwest and Eastern United States with a tornado count of 362; killing 324 and injuring over 2,200.

  • April 29 – An estimated two billion people[23] watch the wedding of Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine Middleton at Westminster Abbey in London.

May

  • May 1 – U.S. President Barack Obama announces that Osama bin Laden, the founder and leader of the militant group Al-Qaeda, was killed on May 2, 2011 (PKT, UTC+05) during an American military operation in Pakistan.[24]

  • May 16 – The European Union agrees to a €78 billion rescue deal for Portugal. The bailout loan will be equally split between the European Financial Stabilisation Mechanism, the European Financial Stability Facility, and the International Monetary Fund.[25]

  • May 21 – Grímsvötn, Iceland's most active volcano, erupts and causes disruption to air travel in Northwestern Europe.[26]

  • May 22 – The 2011 Joplin tornado, an EF5 tornado, strikes Joplin, Missouri, killing 158 and injuring 1,150.

  • May 26 – Former Bosnian Serb Army commander Ratko Mladić, wanted for genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity, is arrested in Serbia.[27][28]

June

  • June 4 – Chile's Puyehue volcano erupts, causing air traffic cancellations across South America, New Zealand and Australia, and forcing over 3,000 people to evacuate.

  • June 26 – July 17 – The 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup takes place in Germany and is won by Japan.

  • June 28 – The Food and Agriculture Organization announces the eradication of the cattle plague rinderpest from the world.[29]

July

  • July 9 – South Sudan secedes from Sudan, per the result of the independence referendum held in January.[30]

  • July 12 – The planet Neptune completes its first orbit since it was discovered in 1846.[31]

  • July 14 – South Sudan joins the United Nations as the 193rd member.[32]

  • July 20 Goran Hadžić is detained in Serbia, becoming the last of 161 people indicted by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.[33] The United Nations declares a famine in southern Somalia, the first in over 30 years.[34]

  • July 21 – Space Shuttle Atlantis lands successfully at Kennedy Space Center after completing STS-135, concluding NASA's Space Shuttle program.[35]

  • July 22 – In Norway, Anders Behring Breivik kills 8 people in a bomb blast which targeted government buildings in central Oslo, then kills 69 at a massacre at a Workers' Youth League camp on the island of Utøya.[36]

  • July 31 – In Thailand over 12.8 million people are affected by severe flooding. The World Bank estimates damages at 1,440 billion baht (US$45 billion).[37] Some areas are still six feet under water, and many factory areas remain closed at the end of the year. 815[38] people are killed, with 58 of the country's 77 provinces affected.[39]

August

  • August – Stock exchanges worldwide suffer heavy losses due to the fears of contagion of the European sovereign debt crisis and the credit rating downgraded as a result of the debt-ceiling crisis of the United States.[40][41]

  • August 5 NASA announces that its Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter has captured photographic evidence of possible liquid water on Mars during warm seasons. Juno, the first solar-powered spacecraft on a mission to Jupiter, is launched from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.[42]

  • August 20–28 – Libyan rebels take control of the capital Tripoli, effectively overthrowing the government of Muammar Gaddafi.[43][44][45]

September

  • September 5 – India and Bangladesh sign a pact to end their 40-year border demarcation dispute.[46]

  • September 10 – The MV Spice Islander I, carrying at least 800 people, sinks off the coast of Zanzibar, killing 240 people.[47]

  • September 12 – Approximately 100 people die after a petrol pipeline explodes in Nairobi.[48]

  • September 17 – Occupy Wall Street protests begin in the United States. This develops into the Occupy movement which spreads to 82 countries by October.[49][50][51][52][53][54][55][56][57]

  • September 19 – With 434 dead, the United Nations launches a $357 million appeal for victims of the 2011 Sindh floods in Pakistan.[58]

October

  • October 4 – The death toll from the flooding of Cambodia's Mekong river and attendant flash floods reaches 207.[59]

  • October 18 – Gilad Shalit prisoner exchange: Israel and the Palestinian militant organization Hamas begin a major prisoner exchange, in which the captured Israeli Army soldier Gilad Shalit is released by Hamas in exchange for 1,027 Palestinian and Israeli-Arab prisoners held in Israel, including 280 prisoners serving life sentences for planning and perpetrating terror attacks.[60][61][62]

  • October 20 Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi is killed in Sirte, with National Transitional Council forces taking control of the city and ending the war.[63][64][65][66] Basque separatist militant organisation ETA declares an end to its 43-year campaign of political violence, which has killed over 800 people since 1968.[67]

  • October 23 – A magnitude 7.2 Mw earthquake jolts eastern Turkey near the city of Van, killing over 600 people and damaging about 2,200 buildings.[68]

  • October 27 – After an emergency meeting in Brussels, the European Union announces an agreement to tackle the European sovereign debt crisis which includes a writedown of 50% of Greek bonds, a recapitalisation of European banks and an increase of the bailout fund of the European Financial Stability Facility totaling to €1 trillion.[69][70]

  • October 31 Date selected by the UN as the symbolic date when global population reaches seven billion.[71] UNESCO admits Palestine as a member, following a vote which 107 member states support and 14 oppose.[72]

November

  • November 26 – The Mars Science Laboratory rover Curiosity, the most elaborate Martian exploration vehicle to date, is launched from the Kennedy Space Center. It lands on Mars on August 6, 2012.[73][74][75]

  • November 30 – The United Kingdom severs diplomatic relations with Iran and expels diplomats, less than 24 hours after protesters attacked the British embassy in Tehran.[76]

December

  • December 15 – The United States formally declares an end to the Iraq War. While this ends the insurgency, it begins another.[77][78][79][80][81]

  • December 16 – Tropical Storm Washi causes 1,268 flash flood fatalities in the Philippines, with 85 people officially listed as missing.[82]

  • December 29 – Samoa and Tokelau move from east to west of the International Date Line, thereby skipping December 30, in order to align their time zones better with their main trading partners.[83]

Births

  • January 8 – Prince Vincent and Princess Josephine of Denmark

Deaths

January

  • January 2 Pete Postlethwaite, English actor (b. 1946) Richard Winters, American paratrooper (b. 1918) Anne Francis, American actress (b. 1930)

  • January 4 Prince Ali-Reza Pahlavi of Iran (b. 1966) Gerry Rafferty, Scottish musician (b. 1947)

  • January 10 John Dye, American actor (b. 1963) Margaret Whiting, American country and pop musician (b. 1924)

  • January 11 – David Nelson, American actor, director and producer (b. 1936)

  • January 14 – Trish Keenan, English musician (b. 1968)

  • January 15 Nat Lofthouse, English footballer (b. 1925) Susannah York, English actress (b. 1939)

  • January 18 – Sargent Shriver, American diplomat, politician, and activist (b. 1915)

  • January 21 – Dennis Oppenheim, American artist (b. 1938)

  • January 27 – Charlie Callas, American comedian and actor (b. 1924)

  • January 29 – Milton Babbitt, American composer (b. 1916)

  • January 30 – John Barry, English composer (b. 1933)

February

  • February 2 – Daniela Castelo, Argentine journalist (b. 1968)

  • February 3 – Maria Schneider, French actress (b. 1952)

  • February 4 – Martial Célestin, 1st Prime Minister of Haiti (b. 1913)

  • February 5 – Brian Jacques, British author (b. 1939)

  • February 6 Josefa Iloilo, 2-Time President of Fiji (b. 1920) Gary Moore, British musician (b. 1952)

  • February 8 – Cesare Rubini, Italian basketball player and coach (b. 1923)

  • February 12 Peter Alexander, Austrian actor and singer (b. 1926) Betty Garrett, American actress and dancer (b. 1919) Kenneth Mars, American actor (b. 1935)

  • February 14 – George Shearing, British-American jazz pianist (b. 1919)

  • February 16 – Len Lesser, American actor (b. 1922)

  • February 17 – Michelle Monkhouse, Canadian fashion model (b. 1991)

  • February 23 – Shri Mataji Nirmala Srivastava, Indian founder of Sahaja Yoga (b. 1923)

  • February 27 Gary Winick, American filmmaker (b. 1961) Necmettin Erbakan, 25th Prime Minister of Turkey (b. 1926)

  • February 28 – Jane Russell, American actress (b. 1921)

March

  • March 2 – Allan Louisy, 2nd Prime Minister of Saint Lucia (b. 1916)

  • March 4 Krishna Prasad Bhattarai, 30th Prime Minister of Nepal (b. 1924) Simon van der Meer, Dutch Nobel physicist (b. 1925)

  • March 5 – Alberto Granado, Cuban writer and scientist (b. 1922)

  • March 6 – Ján Popluhár, Slovak footballer (b. 1935)

  • March 8 – Mike Starr, American musician (b. 1966)

  • March 15 – Nate Dogg, American rapper (b. 1969)

  • March 17 Michael Gough, British actor (b. 1916) Ferlin Husky, American country music singer (b. 1925)

  • March 18 – Warren Christopher, American diplomat (b. 1925)

  • March 21 Nikolai Andrianov, Soviet-Russian gymnast (b. 1952) Pinetop Perkins, American singer and pianist (b. 1913)

  • March 23 – Elizabeth Taylor, British-American actress (b. 1932)

  • March 26 Paul Baran, Polish-American computer engineer (b. 1926) Geraldine Ferraro, American politician (b. 1935) Diana Wynne Jones, British writer (b. 1934)

  • March 27 – Farley Granger, American actor (b. 1925)

  • March 29 – José Alencar, Brazilian politician, 23rd Vice President of Brazil (b. 1931)

April

  • April 4 Juliano Mer-Khamis, Israeli actor, director, filmmaker, and political activist (b. 1958) Scott Columbus, American drummer (b. 1956)

  • April 5 Baruch Samuel Blumberg, American physician (b. 1925) Ange-Félix Patassé, 5th President of the Central African Republic (b. 1937)

  • April 9 – Sidney Lumet, American film director (b. 1924)

  • April 14 – William Lipscomb, American chemist (b. 1919)

  • April 17 AJ Perez, Filipino actor (b. 1993) Michael Sarrazin, Canadian actor (b. 1940)

  • April 19 Elisabeth Sladen, English actress (b. 1946) Grete Waitz, Norwegian athlete (b. 1953)

  • April 21 – Tim Hetherington, British photojournalist (b. 1970)

  • April 24 – Sathya Sai Baba, Indian spiritual leader (b. 1926)

  • April 25 Joe Perry, American football player (b. 1927) Poly Styrene, British musician (b. 1957)

  • April 30 – Ernesto Sabato, Argentine writer (b. 1911)

May

  • May 1 – Henry Cooper, British heavyweight boxer (b. 1934)

  • May 2 – Osama bin Laden, Saudi-born leader of Al-Qaeda (b. 1957)

  • May 3 – Jackie Cooper, American actor (b. 1922)

  • May 4 – Sada Thompson, American actress (b. 1927)

  • May 5 Claude Choules, Anglo-Australian military serviceman (b. 1901) Dana Wynter, German-born British actress (b. 1931)

  • May 7 Seve Ballesteros, Spanish golfer (b. 1957) Willard Boyle, Canadian Nobel physicist (b. 1924)

  • May 9 – Lidia Gueiler Tejada, 67th President of Bolivia (b. 1921)

  • May 15 – Samuel Wanjiru, Kenyan athlete (b. 1986)

  • May 17 – Harmon Killebrew, American baseball player (b. 1936)

  • May 18 – Guy Razanamasy, 2-Time Prime Minister of Madagascar (b. 1928)

  • May 19 – Garret FitzGerald, 7th Taoiseach of Ireland (b. 1926)

  • May 20 – Randy Savage, American professional wrestler (b. 1952)

  • May 23 Nasser Hejazi, Iranian footballer (b. 1949) Xavier Tondo, Spanish professional racing cyclist (b. 1978)

  • May 27 Jeff Conaway, American actor (b. 1950) Gil Scott-Heron, American poet and musician (b. 1949)

  • May 29 Sergei Bagapsh, Georgian-born politician (b. 1949) Ferenc Mádl, 2nd President of Hungary (b. 1931)

  • May 30 – Rosalyn Sussman Yalow, American physicist (b. 1921)

  • May 31 – Pauline Betz, American tennis player (b. 1919)

June

  • June 3 James Arness, American actor (b. 1923) Andrew Gold, American singer-songwriter and musician (b. 1951) Jack Kevorkian, American euthanasia advocate (b. 1928)

  • June 4 Dimi Mint Abba, Mauritanian musician and singer (b. 1958) Lawrence Eagleburger, American diplomat (b. 1930)

  • June 5 – Ludo Martens, Belgian writer and political activist (b. 1946)

  • June 7 – Jorge Semprún, Spanish writer and politician (b. 1923)

  • June 9 M. F. Husain, Indian painter (b. 1915) Tomoko Kawakami, Japanese voice actress (b. 1970)

  • June 10 Patrick Leigh Fermor, British travel writer, scholar, and soldier (b. 1915) Brian Lenihan Jnr, Irish politician (b. 1959)

  • June 18 Frederick Chiluba, 2nd President of Zambia (b. 1943) Clarence Clemons, American musician and actor (b. 1942)

  • June 20 – Ryan Dunn, American television personality (b. 1977)

  • June 23 – Peter Falk, American actor (b. 1927)

  • June 29 – Bob Brunning, British musician (b. 1943)

July

  • July 2 – Itamar Franco, 37th President of Brazil (b. 1930)

  • July 4 – Archduke Otto of Austria, (b. 1912)

  • July 5 – Cy Twombly, American painter (b. 1928)

  • July 8 Roberts Blossom, American actor and poet (b. 1924) Betty Ford, American feminist, activist, philanthropist and First Lady of the United States (b. 1918)

  • July 9 – Facundo Cabral, Argentine singer (b. 1937)

  • July 10 – Roland Petit, French choreographer and dancer (b. 1924)

  • July 12 – Tom Gehrels, American astronomer (b. 1925)

  • July 15 – Friedrich Wilhelm Schnitzler, German landowner, politician, and businessman (b. 1928)

  • July 17 – Juan María Bordaberry, 36th President of Uruguay (b. 1928)

  • July 20 – Lucian Freud, German-born British painter (b. 1922)

  • July 23 Robert Ettinger, American academic (b. 1918) Nguyễn Cao Kỳ, 8th Prime Minister of the Republic of Vietnam (b. 1930) Amy Winehouse, English singer (b. 1983)

  • July 24 Hideki Irabu Japanese baseball player (b. 1969) Kaveinga Faʻanunu, Tongan politician (b. 1962) G. D. Spradlin, American actor (b. 1920)

  • July 25 – Mihalis Kakogiannis, Cypriot filmmaker (b. 1922)

  • July 26 – Joe Arroyo, Colombian salsa and tropical music singer (b. 1955)

  • July 28 – Abdul Fatah Younis, Libyan army commander (b. 1944)

  • July 29 – Gene McDaniels, American singer-songwriter (b. 1935)

  • July 30 – Mario Echandi Jiménez, 47th President of Costa Rica (b. 1915)

August

  • August 2 – Baruj Benacerraf, Venezuelan-born American Nobel immunologist (b. 1920)

  • August 3 – Bubba Smith, American football player and actor (b. 1945)

  • August 5 Francesco Quinn, Italian-American actor (b. 1963) Aziz Shavershian, Russian-Australian bodybuilder (b. 1989)

  • August 6 – John Wood, English actor (b. 1930)

  • August 7 Harri Holkeri, 36th Prime Minister of Finland (b. 1937) Nancy Wake, New Zealand-born French Resistance fighter (b. 1912)

  • August 12 – Ernie Johnson, American baseball player (b. 1924)

  • August 14 – Shammi Kapoor, Indian film actor and director (b. 1931)

  • August 16 – Andrej Bajuk, 3rd Prime Minister of the Republic of Slovenia (b. 1943)

  • August 19 – Raúl Ruiz, Chilean film director (b. 1941)

  • August 22 Abdul Aziz Abdul Ghani, Prime Minister of Northern Yemen (b. 1939) Jack Layton, Canadian politician (b. 1950) Vicco von Bülow, German actor, comedian, and film director (b. 1923)

  • August 26 – Sylvia Siddell, New Zealand artist (b. 1941)

  • August 31 – Valery Rozhdestvensky, Soviet-Russian cosmonaut (b. 1939)

September

  • September 4 – Dave Hoover, American comic book artist and animator (b. 1955)

  • September 8 – Võ Chí Công, 5th President of Vietnam (b. 1912)

  • September 10 – Cliff Robertson, American actor (b. 1923)

  • September 11 Andy Whitfield, Welsh actor and model (b. 1971) Christian Bakkerud, Danish race car driver (b. 1984)

  • September 12 – Alexander Galimov, Russian hockey player (b. 1985)

  • September 13 – Richard Hamilton, British painter and collage artist (b. 1922)

  • September 14 – Rudolf Mössbauer, German Nobel physicist (b. 1929)

  • September 15 – Frances Bay, Canadian-American character actress (b. 1919)

  • September 16 – Kara Kennedy, American television producer (b. 1960)

  • September 19 – George Cadle Price, 1st Prime Minister of Belize (b. 1919)

  • September 20 – Burhanuddin Rabbani, President of Afghanistan from 1992 to 1996 (b. 1940)

  • September 21 – Troy Davis, American murderer (b. 1968)

  • September 22 – Aristides Pereira, 1st President of Cape Verde (b. 1923)

  • September 25 – Wangari Maathai, Kenyan veterinary anatomist and Nobel Peace Prize laureate (b. 1940)

  • September 27 – Imre Makovecz, Hungarian architect (b. 1935)

  • September 30 Anwar al-Awlaki, American-born terrorist and Islamist militant (b. 1971) Ralph M. Steinman, Canadian Nobel immunologist and cell biologist (b. 1943)

October

  • October 1 – Sven Tumba, Swedish hockey player (b. 1931)

  • October 4 – Doris Belack, American actress (b. 1926)

  • October 5 Steve Jobs, American computer entrepreneur (b. 1955) Charles Napier, American actor (b. 1936) Fred Shuttlesworth, American civil rights activist (b. 1922)

  • October 6 – Diane Cilento, Australian actress and author (b. 1933)

  • October 7 – Ramiz Alia, 1st President of Albania (b. 1925)

  • October 8 – Mikey Welsh, American musician and artist (b. 1971)

  • October 10 – Jagjit Singh, Indian singer, composer and musician (b. 1941)

  • October 11 – Frank Kameny, American gay rights activist (b. 1925)

  • October 12 – Dennis Ritchie, American computer scientist (b. 1941)

  • October 16 – Dan Wheldon, English racing car driver (b. 1978)

  • October 18 – Norman Corwin, American radio writer, director and producer (b. 1910)

  • October 20 Muammar Gaddafi, Libyan dictator (b. 1942) Iztok Puc, Slovenian handball player (b. 1966)

  • October 22 – Sultan, Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia, (b. 1930)

  • October 23 Terry Moriarty, Australian rules footballer (b. 1925) Herbert A. Hauptman, American mathematician and Nobel laureate in chemistry (b. 1917) Bronislovas Lubys, 5th Prime Minister of Lithuania (b. 1938) Marco Simoncelli, Italian motorcycle road racer (b. 1987)

  • October 24 John McCarthy, American computer scientist (b. 1927) Kirtanananda Swami, American Hare Krishna leader and convicted felon (b. 1937)

  • October 26 – Jona Senilagakali, Prime Minister of Fiji (b. 1929)

  • October 29 – Jimmy Savile, English DJ, television presenter, media personality, and charity fundraiser (b. 1926)

  • October 31 Flórián Albert, Hungarian footballer (b. 1941) Liz Anderson, American country music singer-songwriter (b. 1930) Ali Saibou, 3rd President of Niger (b. 1940)

November

  • November 4 Alfonso Cano, Colombian militant leader (b. 1948) Norman Foster Ramsey Jr., American Nobel physicist (b. 1915)

  • November 7 – Joe Frazier, American boxer (b. 1944)

  • November 8 Heavy D, Jamaican-born American actor, rapper (b. 1967) Valentin Ivanov, Russian footballer (b. 1934)

  • November 9 – Har Gobind Khorana, Indian-born American Nobel biochemist (b. 1922)

  • November 11 – Francisco Blake Mora, Mexican politician (b. 1966)

  • November 19 – John Neville, English actor (b. 1925)

  • November 21 – Anne McCaffrey, American-born Irish writer (b. 1926)

  • November 22 Svetlana Alliluyeva, daughter of Joseph Stalin (b. 1926) Princess Elisabeth, Duchess of Hohenberg, Princess of Luxembourg (b. 1922) Danielle Mitterrand, First Lady of France (b. 1924) Paul Motian, American jazz drummer (b. 1931)

  • November 25 – Vasily Alekseyev, Soviet-Russian weightlifter (b. 1942)

  • November 27 Ken Russell, British film director (b. 1927) Gary Speed, Welsh footballer and coach (b. 1969)

  • November 28 Charles Thomas Kowal, American astronomer (b. 1940) Ante Marković, 9th Prime Minister of SFR Yugoslavia (b. 1924)

  • November 29 – Patrice O'Neal, American comedian and radio personality (b. 1969)

December

  • December 1 – Christa Wolf, German writer (b. 1929)

  • December 3 Dev Anand, Indian actor (b. 1923) Sam Loxton, Australian cricketer, footballer and politician (b. 1921)

  • December 4 – Sócrates, Brazilian footballer (b. 1954)

  • December 5 – Violetta Villas, Polish singer (b. 1938)

  • December 7 – Harry Morgan, American actor (b. 1915)

  • December 13 Russell Hoban, American-British writer (b. 1925) Park Tae-joon, South Korean politician (b. 1927)

  • December 14 Joe Simon, American comic book writer and artist (b. 1913) Billie Jo Spears, American country music singer (b. 1937)

  • December 15 – Christopher Hitchens, British-American writer (b. 1949)

  • December 16 – Robert Easton, American actor (b. 1930)

  • December 17 Cesária Évora, Cape Verdean singer (b. 1941) Kim Jong-il, Supreme Leader of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (b. 1941/42)

  • December 18 – Václav Havel, Czech playwright, 10th President of Czechoslovakia and 1st President of the Czech Republic (b. 1936)

  • December 22 – William Duell, American actor and singer (b. 1923)

  • December 24 – Johannes Heesters, Dutch actor and singer (b. 1903)

  • December 26 – Kennan Adeang, 3-Time President of Nauru (b. 1942)

  • December 27 – Helen Frankenthaler, American abstract expressionist painter (b. 1928)

Nobel Prizes

  • Chemistry – Dan Shechtman[84]

  • Economics – Christopher A. Sims and Thomas J. Sargent[85]

  • Literature – Tomas Tranströmer[86]

  • Peace – Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Leymah Gbowee and Tawakel Karman[87]

  • Physics – Saul Perlmutter, Adam G. Riess, and Brian P. Schmidt[88]

  • Physiology or Medicine – Bruce A. Beutler, Jules A. Hoffmann, and Ralph M. Steinman[89]

New English words

See also

References

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