1931

From top to bottom, left to right: The catastrophic 1931 China floods submerge vast regions along the Yangtze, Huai, and Yellow Rivers, killing 1–4 million and becoming one of history’s deadliest natural disasters; the European banking crisis of 1931 begins with the collapse of Creditanstalt, spreading financial turmoil across Austria and Germany and deepening the Great Depression; the Mukden Incident in Manchuria sees a staged explosion by Japanese forces used to justify invasion, setting the stage for the Second Sino-Japanese War; the Hawke's Bay earthquake strikes New Zealand’s North Island, killing 256 and prompting a massive Art Deco rebuilding of Napier; the Ahmed Barzani revolt erupts in northern Iraq as Kurdish forces challenge the government, highlighting ethnic tensions; and the Empire State Building opens in New York City, becoming the world’s tallest skyscraper and a symbol of modern ambition.
1931 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1931
MCMXXXI
Ab urbe condita2684
Armenian calendar1380
ԹՎ ՌՅՁ
Assyrian calendar6681
Baháʼí calendar87–88
Balinese saka calendar1852–1853
Bengali calendar1337–1338
Berber calendar2881
British Regnal year21 Geo. 5 – 22 Geo. 5
Buddhist calendar2475
Burmese calendar1293
Byzantine calendar7439–7440
Chinese calendar庚午年 (Metal Horse)
4628 or 4421
    — to —
辛未年 (Metal Goat)
4629 or 4422
Coptic calendar1647–1648
Discordian calendar3097
Ethiopian calendar1923–1924
Hebrew calendar5691–5692
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1987–1988
 - Shaka Samvat1852–1853
 - Kali Yuga5031–5032
Holocene calendar11931
Igbo calendar931–932
Iranian calendar1309–1310
Islamic calendar1349–1350
Japanese calendarShōwa 6
(昭和6年)
Javanese calendar1861–1862
Juche calendar20
Julian calendarGregorian minus 13 days
Korean calendar4264
Minguo calendarROC 20
民國20年
Nanakshahi calendar463
Thai solar calendar2473–2474
Tibetan calendarལྕགས་ཕོ་རྟ་ལོ་
(male Iron-Horse)
2057 or 1676 or 904
    — to —
ལྕགས་མོ་ལུག་ལོ་
(female Iron-Sheep)
2058 or 1677 or 905

1931 (MCMXXXI) was a common year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar, the 1931st year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 931st year of the 2nd millennium, the 31st year of the 20th century, and the 2nd year of the 1930s decade.

Events

January

February

February 10: New Delhi becomes India's capital
February 21: Ford Trimotor hijacked
  • February 4 – Soviet leader Joseph Stalin gives a speech calling for rapid industrialization, arguing that only strong industrialized countries will win wars, while "weak" nations are "beaten". Stalin states: "We are fifty or a hundred years behind the advanced countries. We must make good this distance in ten years. Either we do it, or they will crush us." The first five-year plan in the Soviet Union is intensified, for the industrialization and collectivization of agriculture.
  • February 10 – Official inauguration ceremonies for New Delhi as the capital of India begin.[4]
  • February 16Pehr Evind Svinhufvud is elected president of Finland.
  • February 21Peruvian revolutionaries hijack a Ford Trimotor aeroplane, and demand that the pilot drop propaganda leaflets over Lima.

March

April

May

May 1: Empire State Building is completed.
  • May 1 – Construction of the Empire State Building is completed in New York City.[5]
  • May 4Kemal Atatürk is re-elected president of Turkey.
  • May 5İsmet İnönü forms a new government in Turkey (7th government).
  • May 11 – The Creditanstalt, Austria's largest bank, goes bankrupt, beginning the banking collapse in Central Europe that causes a worldwide financial meltdown.
  • May 13 – Paul Doumer is elected president of France.
  • May 14 – Ådalen shootings: Five people are killed in Ådalen, Sweden, when soldiers open fire on an unarmed trade union demonstration.
  • May 15
    • The Chinese Communists inflict a sharp defeat on the Kuomintang forces.
    • Pope Pius XI issues the encyclical Quadragesimo anno, on the "reconstruction of the social order".
  • May 31 – The Second Encirclement Campaign against Jiangxi Soviet ends in the defeat of the Kuomintang.

June

  • June–November – 1931 China flood: the Yangtze and Huai Rivers flood in a populous region, leaving an estimated 422,000 dead (150,000 drowned) with many more dying of consequential starvation and disease in the aftermath.[6]
  • June 5
    • German Chancellor Heinrich Brüning visits London, where he warns British Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald that the collapse of the Austrian banking system, caused by the bankruptcy of the Creditanstalt, has left the entire German banking system on the verge of collapse.
    • Anti-Chinese rioting occurs in Pyongyang. Approximately 127 Chinese people are killed, 393 wounded, and a considerable number of properties are destroyed by Korean residents.[7]
  • June 14 – Saint-Philibert disaster: The overloaded pleasure craft Saint-Philibert, carrying trippers home to Nantes from the Île de Noirmoutier, sinks at the mouth of the River Loire in France; over 450 drown.
  • June 19
    • In an attempt to stop the banking crisis in Central Europe from causing a worldwide financial meltdown, U.S. President Herbert Hoover issues the Hoover Moratorium.
    • The Geneva Convention (1929) relative to the treatment of prisoners of war enters into force.
  • June 23July 1 – Wiley Post and Harold Gatty accomplish the first round-the-world flight in a single-engine plane, flying eastabout from Roosevelt Field, New York, in 8 days, 15 hours, 51 minutes.[8]

July

  • July 1 – The rebuilt Milano Centrale railway station officially opens in Italy.
  • July 9 – Irish racing driver Kaye Don breaks the world water speed record at Lake Garda, Italy.[9]
  • July 10 – Norway issues a royal proclamation claiming the uninhabited part of eastern Greenland as Erik the Red's Land.
  • July 13 – Royal soldiers shoot and kill 22 people demonstrating against the Maharaja Hari Singh, of the Indian princely state of Kashmir and Jammu.[10]
  • July 16 – Emperor Haile Selassie signs the first Constitution of Ethiopia.
  • July 20 – A violent tornado strikes the city of Lublin, Poland.

August

  • August 2 – Murder of Paul Anlauf and Franz Lenck: Two Berlin police officers are killed by Communists.
  • August 9 – A referendum in Prussia for dissolving the Landtag ends with the "yes" side winning 37% of the vote, which is insufficient for calling the early elections. The elections are intended to remove the Social Democratic Party (SPD) government of Otto Braun. Supporting the "yes" side were the NSDAP, the DNVP and the Communist Party (KPD), while supporting the "no" side were the SPD and Zentrum.
  • August 24 – The Labour Government of Ramsay MacDonald resigns in Britain, replaced by a National Government of people drawn from all parties, also under MacDonald.

September

September 18: The Mukden Incident: Incident Museum in Shenyang

October

  • October 5 – American aviators Clyde Edward Pangborn and Hugh Herndon Jr., complete the first non-stop flight across the Pacific Ocean, flying their plane, Miss Veedol, from Misawa, Japan, to East Wenatchee, Washington, in 41½ hours.[13]
  • October 11 – A rally in Bad Harzburg, Germany leads to the Harzburg Front being founded, uniting the NSDAP, the DNVP, the Stahlhelm and various other right-wing factions.
  • October 24 – The George Washington Bridge across the Hudson River in the United States is dedicated; it opens to traffic the following day. At 3,500 feet (1,100 m), it nearly doubles the previous record for the longest main span in the world.
  • October 27 – The United Kingdom general election results in the victory of the National Government, and the defeat of Labour Party, in the country's greatest ever electoral landslide.

November

December

Births

Births
January · February · March · April · May · June · July · August · September · October · November · December

January

Robert Duvall
Caterina Valente
James Earl Jones
Sam Cooke

February

Boris Yeltsin
Dries van Agt
Isabel Perón
James Dean

March

Mikhail Gorbachev
Chun Doo-hwan
León Febres Cordero
Rupert Murdoch
William Shatner
Leonard Nimoy

April

  • April 1
    • Ita Ever, Estonian actress (d. 2023)
    • Rolf Hochhuth, German dramatist (d. 2020)[40]
    • Jean-Jacques Honorat, 3rd Prime Minister of Haiti (d. 2023)
  • April 2 – Joseph Joffo, French author (d. 2018)
  • April 4 – Catherine Tizard, 16th Governor-General of New Zealand (d. 2021)
  • April 5 – Héctor Olivera, Argentine film director, producer and screenwriter
  • April 6
    • Suchitra Sen, Bengali actress (d. 2014)
    • Radomil Eliška, Czech conductor (d. 2019)
  • April 7 – Daniel Ellsberg, American whistleblower (d. 2023)
  • April 8 – John Gavin, American actor and diplomat (d. 2018)
  • April 11
    • Luis Cabral, 1st President of Guinea-Bissau (d. 2009)
    • Mustafa Dağıstanlı, Turkish free-style wrestler (d. 2022)
    • Nelly Kaplan, Argentine-born French movie director and screenwriter (d. 2020)
  • April 13Dan Gurney, American race car driver (d. 2018)
  • April 15
    • Helen Maksagak, Canadian, first Inuk and woman to be Commissioner of both the Northwest Territories and Nunavut (d. 2009)
    • Tomas Tranströmer, Swedish poet, translator and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature (d. 2015)[41]
  • April 18 – Klas Lestander, Swedish biathlete and Olympic champion (d. 2023)
  • April 19 – Kobie Coetsee, South African politician (d. 2000)
  • April 26 – John Cain, Australian politician (d. 2019)
  • April 27 – Igor Oistrakh, Soviet and Russian violinist (d. 2021)[42]
  • April 29
    • Frank Auerbach, German-born painter (d. 2024)
    • Lonnie Donegan, Scottish musician (d. 2002)

May

Willie Mays
Carroll Baker
  • May 1 – Chaudhry Ghulam Rasool, Pakistani educationist (d. 1991)
  • May 3
    • Aldo Rossi, Italian architect and designer (d. 1997)
    • Hirokazu Kanazawa, Japanese karate practitioner and teacher (d. 2019)
  • May 6
    • Magda el-Sabahi, Egyptian actress (d. 2020)
    • Willie Mays, African-American baseball player (d. 2024)
  • May 7
    • Teresa Brewer, American pop, jazz singer (d. 2007)
    • Marta Terry González, Cuban librarian (d. 2018)
    • Gene Wolfe, American science fiction and fantasy writer (d. 2019)[43]
  • May 10 – M. Chidananda Murthy, Indian historian (d. 2020)
  • May 13
    • András Hajnal, Hungarian mathematician (d. 2016)
    • Jim Jones, American People's Temple cult leader (d. 1978)
    • Jiří Petr, Czech university president (d. 2014)
  • May 15 – James Fitz-Allen Mitchell, 2nd Prime Minister of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines (d. 2021)
  • May 16 – Magda Guzmán, Mexican actress (d. 2015)
  • May 18 – Victoria Quirino-Gonzalez, First Lady of the Philippines (d. 2006)
  • May 20 – George Vassiliou, 3rd President of Cyprus
  • May 21 – Bombolo, Italian character actor and comedian (d. 1987)
  • May 25 – Georgy Grechko, Russian cosmonaut (d. 2017)
  • May 27 – Faten Hamama, Egyptian actress (d. 2015)
  • May 28 – Carroll Baker, American actress
  • May 31

June

Raúl Castro
João Gilberto
Marla Gibbs
Fernando Henrique Cardoso
Olympia Dukakis

July

Leslie Caron
Seyni Kountché
  • July 1
    • Leslie Caron, French actress
    • Stanislav Grof, Czech psychiatrist
    • Seyni Kountché, former President of Niger (d. 1987)
  • July 4 – Stephen Boyd, Irish actor (Ben-Hur) (d. 1977)[51]
  • July 5 – Ismail Mahomed, South African, Namibian Chief Justice (d. 2000)
  • July 6
    • Antonella Lualdi, Italian actress and singer (d. 2023)
    • Della Reese, African-American actress, singer and evangelist (d. 2017)
  • July 10
    • Morris Chang, Chairman of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Ltd. (TSMC) in 1987
    • Jerry Herman, American composer, lyricist (d. 2019)
    • Alice Munro, Canadian writer, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature (d. 2024)[52]
  • July 14 – Robert Stephens, English actor (d. 1995)
  • July 15
    • Clive Cussler, American thriller writer and underwater explorer (d. 2020)[53]
    • Gene Louw, South African politician (d. 2015)
  • July 22 – Guido de Marco, Maltese politician, 6th President of Malta (d. 2010)
  • July 23
    • Te Arikinui Dame Te Atairangikaahu, Māori queen (d. 2006)
    • Arata Isozaki, Japanese architecter (d. 2022)[54]
    • David M. Walsh, American cinematographer [55]
  • July 25 – Paul Danblon, Belgian composer, opera director, administrator and journalist (d. 2018)
  • July 28 – Darryl Hickman, American actor, screenwriter, television executive, and acting coach (d. 2024)

August

Don King
Barbara Eden

September

Ian Holm
Barbara Bain
Larry Hagman

October

Desmond Tutu
A. P. J. Abdul Kalam

November

Mwai Kibaki
Adolfo Pérez Esquivel

December

Rita Moreno
  • December 1
    • Rajko Kuzmanović, 7th President of Republika Srpska
    • George Maxwell Richards, President of Trinidad and Tobago (d. 2018)
    • Muhammad Jamiruddin Sircar, Bangladeshi barrister and politician
  • December 2 – Wynton Kelly, Jamaican-American jazz pianist, composer (d. 1971)
  • December 3 – Elizabeth Ramsey, Filipina singer and actress (d. 2015)
  • December 5 – Jayant Ganpat Nadkarni, Indian Navy admiral (d. 2018)
  • December 6 – Aurora Cornu, Romanian writer and actress (d. 2021)
  • December 7 – Carmela Rey, Mexican singer, actress (d. 2018)
  • December 9 – Ladislav Smoljak, Czech film, theater director, actor and screenwriter (d. 2010)
  • December 11Rita Moreno, Puerto-Rican actress (West Side Story)
  • December 13 – Ida Vos, Dutch Jewish author of books for children and adults (d. 2006)[70]
  • December 15 – Klaus Rifbjerg, Danish writer (d. 2015)[71]
  • December 20 – Abdullah H. Abdur-Razzaq, African-American activist and Muslim (d. 2014)
  • December 21
    • Redha Malek, 8th Prime Minister of Algeria (d. 2017)
    • Georgi Naydenov, Bulgarian footballer and manager (d. 1970)
  • December 22 – Carlos Graça, 6th Prime Minister of São Tomé and Príncipe (d. 2013)
  • December 24
    • Walter Abish, Austrian-born American writer (d. 2022)[72]
    • Mauricio Kagel, Argentine composer (d. 2008)
  • December 26 – Roger Piantoni, French footballer (d. 2018)
  • December 27
    • John Charles, Welsh international footballer (d. 2004)
    • Scotty Moore, American guitarist (d. 2016)
    • Lê Khả Phiêu, Vietnamese politician (d. 2020)
  • December 30
    • Charles Bassett, American electrical engineer, astronaut (d. 1966)
    • Skeeter Davis, American singer (d. 2004)

Deaths

January

Louise, Princess Royal
Anna Pavlova
Otto Wallach
F. W. Murnau
Joe Masseria

February

March

April

May

Patriarch Damian I of Jerusalem
Hamaguchi Osachi

June

  • June 2 – Joseph W. Farnham, American screenwriter (b. 1884)
  • June 4 – Hussein bin Ali, Sharif of Mecca, Arab nationalist
  • June 8 – Virginia Frances Sterrett, American artist, illustrator (b. 1900)
  • June 13
    • Jesse Boot, 1st Baron Trent, British businessman (b. 1850)
    • Kitasato Shibasaburō, Japanese physician and bacteriologist (b. 1853)
  • June 21 – Pio del Pilar, Filipino activist (b. 1860)
  • June 22 – Armand Fallières, 9th President of France (b. 1841)

July

  • July 2 – Peter Kürten, German serial killer (executed) (b. 1883)
  • July 4
    • Buddie Petit, American jazz musician
    • Prince Emanuele Filiberto, 2nd Duke of Aosta, Italian general, Marshal of Italy (b. 1869)
  • July 9 – T. Adelaide Goodno, American social reformer (b. 1858)
  • July 11 – William Jasper Spillman, American economist (b. 1863)
  • July 12 – Nathan Söderblom, Swedish archbishop, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (b. 1866)

August

September

Archduke Leopold Salvator of Austria
Omar al-Mukhtar

October

Thomas Edison

November

December

Nobel Prizes

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