OCTOBER 15
70BC: Virgil, the greatest Roman poet, best-known for his epic Aeneid, which included the legend of the founding of Rome, was born.
1666: The first waistcoat was worn by King Charles II, according to Samuel Pepys.
1839: Queen Victoria and Prince Albert were betrothed. She proposed to him and confided to her diary: "It was a nervous thing to do, but Albert could not propose to the Queen of England. He would never presume to take such a liberty."
1881: Novelist PG Wodehouse - later Sir - creator of Jeeves and Wooster, was born in Guildford, Surrey.
1917: Mata Hari, legendary Dutch spy who danced in the nude, was executed by a firing squad in Paris.
1940: A 500lb bomb hit Broadcasting House, London, killing seven people. Bruce Belfrage was reading the news at the time and paused for only a second before continuing.
1976: Two men from the Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR) were jailed for 35 years in connection with the murders of members of the Miami Showband.
1987: The worst hurricane in Britain since records began hit during the night, devastating southern England and causing at least 17 deaths.
ON THIS DAY LAST YEAR: Ahead of his major series Blue Planet, Sir David Attenborough told journalists that immediate action's needed to tackle plastic pollution in the world's seas.
BIRTHDAYS: Chris de Burgh, singer, 70; Tito Jackson, musician, 65; Sarah Ferguson, Duchess of York, 59; Stephen Tompkinson, actor, 53; Dominic West, actor, 49; Andy Cole, former footballer and coach, 47; Paul Robinson, former footballer and England goalkeeper, 39; Vincent Martella, actor, 26.
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