2005 (
MMV) was a
common year starting on
Saturday (link displays full calendar) of the
Gregorian calendar.
2005 was designated as:
The year 2005 was the end of the International Decade of the
World's Indigenous People (
1995–2005).
Events
January

- January 4 – Gunmen assassinate the
Governor of Baghdad, Ali Al-Haidri.
- January 6 – The
Graniteville train
disaster kills 9 and injures 250 in Graniteville,
South Carolina
.
- January 9 – The same
storm which pounded the U.S. earlier in the month hits England
, Scandinavia and the Baltic States, leaving 13 dead with widespread
flooding and power cuts.
- January 9 – Mahmoud Abbas is elected to succeed Yasser Arafat as Palestinian Authority President.
- January 12 –
Deep Impact is launched
from Cape
Canaveral
by a
Delta 2 rocket.
- January 13 – Armed
militants enter Israel
from Gaza
and open fire near the border, killing 6 people leaving 5
injured. Hamas and Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades claim
joint responsibility for the attack.
- January 14 – The Huygens probe lands on Titan, the largest moon of Saturn.
- January 16 – Adriana Iliescu gives birth at 66, becoming
the oldest woman in the world to give birth.
- January 16 – Armed
militants kill 1 and leaving 8 injured in the Gush Katif
settlement, Gaza Strip
. Hamas claims responsibility.
- January 20 – George W. Bush is
inaugurated in Washington,
D.C.
for his second term as the 43rd President of the United
States.
- January 20 –
Ireland
completes
metrication.
- January 21 – In
Belmopan
, Belize
, unrest over
the government's new taxes erupts into riots.
- January 25 – A
stampede at the Mandher Devi temple in
Mandhradevi during a religious pilgrimage in India
kills at
least 250.
- January 26 –
Glendale
train crash
: Two trains derail, killing 11 and injuring 200, in
Glendale,
California
.
- January 30 – The first free
Parliamentary elections in Iraq since 1958
take place.
- January 30 – A
Royal Air Force C-130 Hercules transport plane crashes in
Iraq
, killing 10 British servicemen. Iraqi insurgents release a video claiming
to have shot the aircraft down using a missile.
February
- February 1 – Sir
Ian Blair is appointed Metropolitan Police
Commissioner of London
.
- February 4 –
Yulia Tymoshenko becomes the 13th
prime-minister of Ukraine
.
- February 6 – Super Bowl XXXIX: The New England Patriots win their second
consecutive Super Bowl title, defeating
the Philadelphia Eagles
24–21.
- February 8 – Danish parliamentary
election, 2005: The center-right coalition led by Prime
Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen
and his Liberal Party are
re-elected for another term.
- February 9 – An
ETA car bomb injures at
least 40 people at a conference centre in Madrid
.
- February 10 –
North
Korea
announces that it possesses nuclear weapons as a protection against the
hostility it feels from the United States
.
- February 10 –
Saudi
Arabia
holds its first ever municipal elections, in which
only male citizens are allowed to vote.
- February 12 –
Fire devastates the Windsor Building
, a 32-story office block, in Madrid
.
- February 14 –
Former Prime Minister of
Lebanon Rafik Hariri is killed in
Beirut
after an
assassination attempt by suicide bombing, it also kills at least 16
other people and injures 120 others.
- February 14 – 59
people are killed and 200 injured after a fire breaks out in a
mosque in Tehran
, Iran
.
- February 14 – A
coal mine explosion at Liaoning
, China
kills at
least 200.
- February 15 – The Internet site
YouTube goes online.
- February 16 – The
Kyoto Protocol goes into effect,
without the support of the United States
and Australia.
- February 16 – The National Hockey League cancels its
2004–2005 season, becoming the first North American professional
league to cancel a season due to a labour dispute.
- February 19 –
Suicide bombers kill more than 30
people in Iraq
as Shia
Muslims mark Ashura, their holiest
day.
- February 20 – Spain holds a
referendum on the Constitution for Europe, passing it by a
substantial margin, but on a low turnout.
- February 20 –
Early legislative elections in Portugal
result in a landslide victory for José Sócrates and the Socialist Party.
- February 22 –
More than 500 people are killed and over 1,000 injured, after
entire villages are flattened in an earthquake (6.4 on the Richter scale)
in the Zarand
region of
Kerman
province in
southern Iran
.
- February 23 – A controversial
French law on colonialism,
requiring teachers to paint it in a positive light, is passed by
the national legislature.
- February 24 –
David Hernandez Arroyo goes on a shooting rampage at the Smith
County
Courthouse in Tyler, Texas
. He kills 2, including his ex-wife, and
injures 4 people, before being killed in a police chase.
- February 25 –
Wichita
, Kansas
police
apprehend the BTK serial killer Dennis
Rader, 31 years after his first murder.
- February 25 –
Terrorists kill 5 and wound 50 in Tel Aviv, Israel
; Islamic Jihad claims responsibility for the
attack.
- February 26 – Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak asks Parliament to amend
the constitution to allow
multi-candidate presidential elections before September 2005.
- February 27 – The
77th Academy Awards, hosted by
Chris Rock, are held at the Kodak Theatre
in Hollywood, California
, with Million
Dollar Baby winning Best Picture.
March

- March 1 – Roper v. Simmons: The Supreme
Court of the United States
rules the death
penalty unconstitutional for juveniles who committed their
crimes before age 18.
- March 3 – The
freighter M/V Karen
Danielsen crashes into the Great Belt Bridge
of Denmark
. All traffic across the bridge is closed,
effectively separating Denmark in two.
- March 3 – Millionaire Steve Fossett
breaks a world record by completing the first
non-stop, non-refueled, solo flight around
the world in the Virgin
Atlantic GlobalFlyer.
- March 3 – Four
Royal
Canadian Mounted Police
officers are gunned
down in Mayerthorpe
, Alberta
, Canada
. It
is deadliest day in Canadian law enforcement
in over 120 years.
- March 4 – The car of
released Italian
hostage Giuliana
Sgrena is fired on by U.S. soldiers in Iraq
, causing the
death of 1 passenger and injuring 2 more.
- March 4 – The United Nations warns that about 90 million
Africans could be infected with HIV in the future, without further action against the
spread of the virus.
- March 8 – The
Pakistan Army opens fire on insurgents
in Baluchistan
, in the first armed uprising since General Rahimuddin Khan's stabilization of the province in 1978.
- March 10 – Tung Chee Hwa, the Chief Executive of Hong Kong
, resigns.
- March 11 – In the
United
Kingdom
, the controversial Prevention of Terrorism Act
2005 is given Royal Assent after
one of the longest ever sittings by the House of Lords
.
- March 11 – Three
people, including a judge, are murdered in the Fulton
County
Courthouse in Atlanta
, Georgia
; the main suspect, Brian
Nichols, surrenders to police the next day.
- March 11 – Central African
Republic elections, 2005: The first round leads to a runoff
between top candidates Francois
Bozize and Martin Ziguele.
- March 14 – The
People's
Republic of China
ratifies an anti-secession
law, aimed at preventing Taiwan
from
declaring independence.
- March 14 – 800,000
people gather for an opposition rally in Beirut
, a month
after the death of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. It is the largest
rally in Lebanon
's history.
- March 16 – Ripudaman
Singh Malik
and Ajaib Singh Bagri
, accused of the bombing of Air India
Flight 182
in 1985, are found not guilty
on all counts.
- March 19 – A
suspected suicide bomber in Doha
, Qatar
kills 1
and injures 12 others.
- March 19 – A
time bomb explodes in a Muslim
shrine in Quetta
,
southwestern Pakistan
, killing at least 29 people and wounding
40.
- March 19 – A blast
occurs at the Xishui coal mine in
Shuozhou
, China
, and rocks
nearby Kangjiayao coal mine, killing up to 63 people.
- March 19 – Wales
beats
Ireland
32–20 to win their first Grand Slam since 1978 in
Rugby Union's Six Nations
tournament.
- March 20 – At least
700 people in Japan
are
injured and at least 1 killed, when a magnitude 7 earthquake
strikes west of Kyushu
Island
, just 9 km (5.5 miles) below the ocean
floor.
- March 21 – Ten are
killed in the Red Lake
High School massacre in Minnesota
, the worst school
shooting since the Columbine High School
massacre
.M
- March 23 – The United States' 11th Circuit Court of Appeals
refuses 2–1 to order the reinsertion of Terri Schiavo's feeding tube.
- March 24 – The
Tulip Revolution in Kyrgyzstan
reaches its climax with the overthrow of president
Askar Akayev.
- March 26 – The
Taiwanese government calls on 1 million Taiwanese
to demonstrate in Taipei
, in
opposition to the Anti-Secession
Law of the People's Republic of China. Between 200,000
and 300,000 attend the walk.
- March 28 – The
2005
Sumatran earthquake
strikes off Sumatra
, 3 months after the 2004 Indian
Ocean earthquake
. At a magnitude of 8.7 it is the second
largest earthquake since 1965.
April
.JPG/200px-Pope_Benedictus_XVI_january,20_2006_(20).JPG)
- April 2 – Pope John Paul II dies; over 4 million
people travel to the Vatican to mourn him.
- April 6 – The first 13th root calculation of a 200-digit number is
computed by Frenchman Alexis
Lemaire.
- April 6 – Rainier III, Prince of Monaco
dies; his son Albert II
succeeds him.
- April 7 – The
Head of government of the
Federal
District
, Andrés Manuel López
Obrador, faces an impeachment
process at the Mexican
Congress.
- April 7 – MG
Rover, the UK's sole remaining automotive mass-production
facility, goes into receivership after a planned alliance with
Chinese manufacturer, Shanghai Automotive
Industry Corporation, collapses.
- April 7 – A suicide
bomber blows himself up in Cairo
's Khan
el-Khalili
market,
killing 2 foreign tourists and wounding 18 others. A group
called "Islamic Pride Brigades" claims responsibility.
- April 8 – A
referendum is held in Curaçao
on independence vs. integration with the Netherlands
.
- April 9 – Tens of
thousands of demonstrators, many of them supporters of Shia cleric Moqtada Sadr,
march through Baghdad
denouncing the U.S. occupation of
Iraq, 2 years after the fall of Saddam Hussein, and rally in the square where
his statue was toppled in 2003.
- April 9 – The marriage of Prince Charles and Camilla Parker Bowles takes place,
after being briefly postponed following the Pope's death. Camilla
assumes the titles Her Royal
Highness and Duchess of
Cornwall.
- April 15 – A hotel
fire in central Paris
kills at
least 21 and injures around 50.
- April 15 – Shanghai Automotive rules
out any possibility of going back on its decision to pull out of a
venture with MG Rover. This results in the
largest independent British carmaker finishing production with the
loss of more than 6,000 jobs at its huge Longbridge
plant
in Birmingham
.
- April 16 – President
Lucio Gutierrez of Ecuador
declares a state of
emergency in the capital city and dissolves the Supreme
Court.
- April 17 – Twelve
holidaymakers are killed in southern Switzerland
when a bus carrying 27 people plunges 656 feet into
a ravine.
- April 18 – Five
people die in ethnic clashes in Iran
's south-west
Khuzestan
province.
- April 19 – Papal conclave, 2005: Pope Benedict XVI (Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger) succeeds Pope John Paul II, becoming the 265th
pope.
- April 20 – An earthquake (5.8 on the
Richter scale) hits Fukuoka and Kasuga,
Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan, injuring 56.
- April 20 – President
Lucio Gutiérrez of Ecuador
is said to have fled after Congress voted to sack
him amid growing protests.
- April 21 – A bus
crash in Vietnam
's Central
Highlands kills 30 Vietnamese war veterans.
- April 21 – A
gunfight on the edge of the Saudi city of Mecca
kills 2
militants and 2 members of the security forces.
- April 23 – Silvio Berlusconi, prime minister of
Italy
, re-forms the government after its dissolution 3
days earlier.
- April 25 – Amagasaki
rail crash
: A passenger train derails in
Amagasaki Hyōgo
Prefecture
, Japan, killing 104 people and injuring at least
another 450.
- April 26 – Facing
international pressure, Syria
withdraws
the last of its 14,000 troop military garrison in Lebanon
, ending its 29-year military domination of that
country.
- April 26 – The 2005 Pan-Blue visits to
mainland China occur.
- April 27 – The
Superjumbo jet aircraft Airbus A380 makes its first flight from Toulouse
.
- April 30 – Attacks
on tourists in the Egyptian capital Cairo
leave 3
militants dead and at least 10 people injured.
May
- May 1 – A suicide
attack targets a Kurdish funeral in the northern Iraqi
town of
Talafar
, near Mosul
, killing
at least 25 people and injuring more than 30 others. At
least 5 policemen and 4 civilians are also killed in 2 separate
attacks in Baghdad.
- May 2 – A blast at an
illegal munitions store in northern Afghanistan
kills 28 people and injures at least 13
others.
- May 3 – At least 32
people are killed and 9 others injured when 3 two-story buildings
in the eastern Pakistani
city of Lahore
collapse
after gas cylinders stored in one of
them explode.
- May 4 – In one of the
largest insurgent attacks in Iraq, at
least 60 people are killed and dozens wounded in a suicide bombing
at a Kurdish police recruitment center in Irbil
, northern
Iraq.
- May 5 – United Kingdom general
election, 2005: The Labour
Party is re-elected with a substantially reduced majority.
- May 7 – A plane crash in Lockhart River,
Australia kills 15 people.
- May 10 – A hand
grenade ostensibly thrown by Vladimir Arutinian lands about 100 feet
(30 m) from United States
President George W. Bush while he is giving a speech to a crowd
in Tbilisi
, Georgia
, but malfunctions and does not
detonate.
- May 12 – An election is held in the Cayman Islands
7 months later than originally scheduled, due
to Hurricane Ivan. It results
in a change of government, with the United Democratic Party giving 4
seats to the then-opposition People's Progressive Movement
in the 15 member Legislative
Assembly.
- May 13 – Serial killer Michael Bruce Ross becomes the first
person executed in Connecticut
in 45 years.
- May 13 – Uzbek
troops
kill up to 700 during protests in eastern Uzbekistan
over the trials of 23 accused Islamic
extremists. President Islom
Karimov defends the act.
- May 13 – The United
States Department of Defense
issues a list of bases to be closed as part of the
Base Realignment and
Closure process (BRAC 2005).
- May 15 – A passenger
ferry capsizes and sinks in strong winds in
the Bura
Gauranga River
in Bangladesh
, leaving 200 people missing.
- May 16 – George Galloway appears before a United States Senate committee, to
answer allegations of making money from the Iraqi Oil-for-Food Programme.
- May 17 – Kuwaiti
women are granted the right to
vote.
- May 19 – The Canadian House of Commons members narrowly pass two budget bills at a second
reading, allowing the minority Liberal government of Prime Minister Paul Martin to stay in power.
- May 21 – Elena Paparizou wins the Eurovision Song Contest 2005
for Greece
with the song My
Number One, in Kiev
, Ukraine
.
- May 25 – Liverpool F.C. wins the UEFA Champions League by defeating
AC Milan 3–2 in a penalty shootout in Istanbul
.
- May 25 – The Acting
Chief Executive of Hong Kong
, Donald Tsang, resigns
for participating in the Chief Executive Election last July.
As a result, Henry Tang and Michael Suen become the Acting Chief Executive
and Acting Chief
Secretary for Administration respectively.
- May 27 – Mark Hobson is sentenced to life imprisonment
for 4 murders committed in Yorkshire
the previous summer. The trial judge
recommends that Hobson, a 35-year-old former binman, should never
be released from prison.
- May 29 – A French referendum
on the European Constitution votes resoundingly to reject
it.
- May 31 – W.
Mark Felt is confirmed to be "Deep Throat."
June
- June 1 – The
Netherlands
votes to reject the Dutch referendum
on the European Constitution, the second country to do
so.
- June 1 – The most active Atlantic
hurricane season in recorded history begins.
- June 2 – The construction of Northrop Grumman X-47B, the world's
first unmanned surveillance attack aircraft that can operate from
both land bases and aircraft
carriers, begins.
- June 5 – Switzerland
votes to join the Schengen treaty and to allow same-sex partnerships.
- June 6 – Syrian
Vice President Abdul Halim Khaddam resigns.
- June 9 – 2005 Logan
Airport runway incursion
: Almost 400 people narrowly avoid disaster when 2
jet airliners nearly collide on the runway.
- June 17 – A 6.7
aftershock, which followed a 5.3 earthquake the previous day, hits California
, making it the 4th earthquake since June 12 in California
.
- June 17 – Because of
"quadruple-witching" options and
futures expiration, the New York
Stock Exchange
sees the heaviest first-hour trading on
record. 704 million shares are traded between 9:30–10:30
A.M. (1.92 billion shares for the day).
- June 19 – Preliminary
election results in the Autonomous
Community of Galicia
, Spain
show that
Manuel Fraga and the Partido Popular have lost control of
the autonomous parliament.
- June 21 – A Volna booster rocket carrying
the first light sail spacecraft (a joint
Russian
-United
States
project) fails 83 seconds after its launch,
destroying the spacecraft.
- June 28 – Queen Elizabeth II
conducts the International
Fleet Review of 167 international warships in the Solent
, as part of the Trafalgar
200 celebrations.
- June 30 – Spain
joins
Belgium
and the Netherlands in permitting same-sex marriage.
- June 30 – The Dominican Republic–Central
America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) is passed
by the United States.
July
- July 2 – Live 8, a
set of 10 simultaneous concerts, takes place throughout the world,
raising interest in the Make
Poverty History campaign.
- July 4 – NASA
's "Copper
bullet" from the Deep
Impact spacecraft hits Comet Tempel
1, creating a crater for
scientific studies.
- July 4 – Violent
anti-G8 demonstrations occur in Gleneagles, Scotland
.
- July 4 – The Italy-USA Foundation is established in
Rome
, Italy
.
- July 6 – The European
Parliament
rejects the
Directive on the patentability of computer-implemented
inventions in its second reading in the codecision procedure.
- July 6 – The International Olympic
Committee
awards the 2012
Summer Olympics to London
.
- July 7 – Four explosions (3 on the
London Underground and 1 on a
bus) rock the transport network in London, killing 56 and injuring
over 700.
- July 7 – Al-Qaeda admits to killing Egypt
's Ambassador, Ihab
al-Sherif.
- July 10 – A Luxembourgish
referendum on the European Constitution votes to accept
it.
- July 10 – Hurricane Dennis strikes near Navarre
Beach, Florida
as a Category 3 storm, killing 10 after having
killed over 50 in the Caribbean.
- July 12 – Terrorists
kill 5 people and wound 90 in a crowded mall in Netanya,
Israel
. Islamic Jihad claims
responsibility for attack.
- July 19 – U.S. president George W. Bush
nominates Appeals Court Judge John
G. Roberts,
Jr. to the United States Supreme Court
, following the retirement of Sandra Day O'Connor.
- July 20 – Canada
's Civil Marriage Act, legalizing same-sex
marriage, receives Royal
Assent.
- July 21 – A
terrorist attack on London
, similar to the July 7 attacks, includes 4
attempted bomb attacks on 3 underground trains and a London bus. The bombs fail to explode
properly, and only 1 injury is reported, later found to be
unconnected.
- July 22 – A Brazilian electrician,
Jean Charles de Menezes, is
shot dead at a London underground station by police who mistake him
for a suicide bomber.
- July 23 – A series of blasts hits
a resort town in Egypt
.
- July 24 – Lance Armstrong wins a record 7th straight
Tour de France before his scheduled
retirement.
- July 26 – STS-114: The Space Shuttle Discovery is launched on its
"Return To Flight" mission. This is the first space shuttle flight
in nearly 2 1/2 years since the breakup of Space Shuttle Columbia on
its return from mission STS-107.
- July 26 – Mumbai
and the Mumbai
Conurbation area is submerged in 5–7 ft. of water due to
heavy rains, making nearby dams release water causing a massive
flood, which virtually stops the financial capital of India
for 4–5 days
and kills about 900 people.
- July 28 – The Provisional IRA issues a statement formally
ordering an end to the armed campaign it has pursued since 1969, and ordering all its units to dump their
arms.
August
- August 1 – King Fahd of Saudi Arabia dies; his
half-brother Abdullah of Saudi
Arabia succeeds him.
- August 2 – Air
France Flight 358
bursts into flames after overshooting the runway at
Toronto Pearson International
Airport
; all aboard survive.
- August 2 – The
Dominican Republic–Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) is signed into law in the United
States
.
- August 6 – An
ATR-72 heading from Italy
to Tunisia
crashes into the Mediterranean Sea
, killing 16 of 39 on board.
- August 9 – Space
Shuttle Discovery
returns to Edwards Air Force Base
at 0814 EDT, completing STS-114, "Return to Flight."
- August 10 – A
passenger helicopter
en route to Helsinki
, Finland
crashes into the sea near Tallinn
, Estonia
, killing 14.
- August 12 – The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter is
launched.
- August 12 – Ronald Venetiaan is sworn into office as
President of Suriname.
- August 14 –
Helios
Airways Flight 522
crashes into a mountain in Greece
, killing 121.
- August 15 – A peace treaty ends the
Insurgency in Aceh.
- August 16 –
West Caribbean Airways
Flight 708 crashes into a mountain in Venezuela
, killing 152 passengers.
- August 16 – The XX World Youth Day begins in Cologne, Germany.
- August 17 – The first forced evacuation of settlers, as part of the Israel unilateral
disengagement plan, starts.
- August 17 –
Bangladesh
is hit by bomb explosions. [6209]
- August 17 – Sellapan Ramanathan gains victory in the
Singapore
Presidential elections, 2005.
- August 18 – BTK
killer Dennis Rader receives 10 consecutive life
sentences.
- August 18 –
Peace Mission 2005, the first
joint China
–Russia
military exercise,
begins its 8-day training on the Shandong peninsula
.
- August 22 – A
meteorite crashes into the Dotito area of
Zambezi Escarpment in Zimbabwe
, leaving a crater.
- August 23 –
Israel's unilateral
disengagement from 25 Jewish
settlements in the Gaza
Strip
and West
Bank
ends.
- August 23 – Hurricane Katrina formed over the
Bahamas.
- August 24 –
Hong
Kong
High Court
Judge Michael Hartmann rules that sodomy laws are unconstitutional.
- August 26 –
Jean Michel Jarre's "Space of
Freedom" concert is held in Gdańsk
, Poland
, commemorating the 25th anniversary of the
creation of Solidarność
("Solidarity" trade union).
- August 29 – At least 1,836 are killed,
and severe
damage is caused along the U.S.
Gulf Coast, as Hurricane Katrina strikes coastal areas
from Louisiana
to Alabama
, and travels up the entire state of
Mississippi (flooding coast 31 feet/10 m), affecting most of
eastern North America.
- August 30 – Hurricane Katrina dissipated leaving
thousands dead, and many without any homes.
- August 31 – A
crowd crush on the Al-Aaimmah
bridge in Baghdad
kills several hundred civilians (see Baghdad
bridge stampede
).
September

- September 23 –
Convicted bank thief and Boricua
Popular Army leader, Filiberto Ojeda Ríos, is killed in
his home in Hormigueros, Puerto Rico
when members of the FBI
attempt to serve an arrest warrant.
- September 24 – Hurricane Rita hits the U.S. Gulf Coast,
devastating areas near Beaumont, TX
and Lake Charles, LA
. The Ninth Ward of New Orleans
re-floods since Katrina, and
Mississippi
and Alabama
are also affected.
- September 24 –
Worldwide protests occur against the Iraq
War, with over 150,000 protestors in Washington DC
(see Opposition to the Iraq
War).
- September 24 – Polish parliamentary
election: Two center-right parties win the required majority of
seats.
- September 24 –
The Australian Rules
Football team Sydney Swans wins the
2005 Grand Final, to become the AFL Premiers, defeating the
West Coast Eagles at the MCG
to end a
72-year Premiership drought.
- September 26 – U.S. Army Reservist
Lynndie England is convicted by a
military jury on 6 of 7 counts, in
connection with the Abu Ghraib
prisoner abuse scandal.
- September 27 –
Michaëlle Jean, born in Haiti
, becomes the 27th Governor General of Canada, and
the first Black Canadian to hold that
position.
- September 28 – American politician
Tom DeLay is indicted on charges of
criminal conspiracy by a Texas
grand jury.
- September 29 – John G. Roberts, Jr. is confirmed and sworn in
as Chief Justice of
the United States.
- September 29 –
A High
Court
judge rules that Soham
murderer Ian Huntley must spend at least 40 years in
prison before being considered for parole; a ruling which
effectively rules out his release until at least 2042 and the age of 68.
- September 30 –
Controversial
drawings of Muhammad are printed in the Danish
newspaper Jyllands-Posten.
October
- October 1 – The 2005 Bali bombings kill 26 people and
injure more than 100.
- October 1 – The
world's largest bank, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial
Group, is formed by the merger of 2 Japanese
banking conglomerates.
- October 1 – An
Australian photojournalist in Afghanistan
, Stephen Dupont, films U.S. soldiers burning 2
dead Taliban militias' bodies.
- October 2 –
A shipwreck on Lake
George
kills 20 people.
- October 2 – The
first NFL game played out of the USA pits the
San Francisco 49ers against the
Arizona Cardinals at Estadio
Azteca
in Mexico City, Mexico
. The Cardinals win 31–14.
- October 3 –
St.
Tammany Parish
Schools reopen in Louisiana
, just over a month after Hurricane Katrina closed them.
- October 3 – U.S. President George W. Bush
nominates Harriet Miers for the
Supreme Court of the United
States
.
- October 4 –
Hurricane Stan hits Mexico
and Central America,
killing over 1,620 people.
- October 5 –
Flight Lieutenant Malcolm Kendall-Smith is charged with
refusing to serve in the Iraq
war.
- October 7 – UN
nuclear agency director Mohamed ElBaradei is awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
- October 8 – The 2005 Kashmir earthquake kills about
80,000 people.
- October 9 – Polish presidential
election: The 1st round results in a runoff between top
candidates Donald Tusk and Lech Kaczyński.
- October 12 – The
second Chinese
spacecraft,
Shenzhou 6, is launched,
carrying Fei Junlong and Nie Haisheng for 5 days in orbit.
- October 13 – Veselin Topalov wins the FIDE World Chess Championship
2005.
- October 15 – The referendum on the
new Proposed Iraqi
constitution is held.
- October 15 – A
riot occurs in Toledo,
Ohio
during a Neo-Nazi rally on racial issues; 114 are
arrested.
- October 15 – The Qinghai-Tibet Railway is
completed.
- October 16 –
U.S.
helicopters and warplanes bomb 2 villages near Ramadi
in western Iraq
, killing
about 70 people.
- October 17 – Jens Stoltenberg becomes Prime Minister of Norway for the
second time.
- October 18 – The UN
tightens the rules for its staff, following several claims of
financial impropriety and sexual
abuse.
- October 19 – The Trials of Saddam Hussein
begin.
- October 19 – Hurricane Wilma swells into a Category 5 storm.
- October 19 – The Houston Astros win their first National League Championship, to advance to
their first-ever World Series in
franchise history.
- October 20 –
Hurricane Wilma enters the Mexican
Caribbean, passing through Cozumel
and then the Yucatán Peninsula
, staying over Cancún
for over 60 hours.
- October 21 – The
200th Anniversary of the Battle of Trafalgar
is observed, with celebrations held around the
United
Kingdom
.
- October 22 – Tropical Storm Alpha forms, making the
2005 Atlantic hurricane
season the most active on record.
- October 22 –
Bellview Airlines Flight
210, a Boeing 737 airliner, crashes
in Nigeria
.
- October 23 – Polish presidential
election, 2nd round: Lech
Kaczyński is elected.
- October 23 – A
referendum is held on the merger of Kamchatka Oblast and Koryak
Autonomous Okrug
.
- October 23 –
Brazil
holds a referendum about a ban on the sale of
firearms and ammunition.
- October 24 – Hurricane Wilma makes landfall in
southwestern Florida as a category 3 hurricane.
- October 26 –
Iranian
president Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad calls for Israel
to be
"wiped off the
map" at the "World Without Zionism" conference in Tehran
, Iran, and condemns the peace process.
- October 26 – The
U.S. death toll in Iraq
reaches
2,000.
- October 26 – The Chicago White Sox beat the Houston Astros in 4 games to win their first
World Series since 1917.
- October 27 –
Harriet Miers withdraws her name from
consideration for the Supreme Court of the United
States
.
- October 27 – Two
teenagers accidentally electrocute
themselves in Seine-Saint-Denis
, Paris
, France
, leading to widespread rioting.
- October 28 – Vice presidential
adviser Lewis "Scooter" Libby resigns after
being charged with obstruction of
justice, perjury and making a false statement in the CIA leak investigation.
- October 29 – A
train in Andhra
Pradesh
, India
derails,
killing at least 77 people.
- October 29 – At
least 61 people are killed and many others wounded in 3 powerful
blasts in the Indian
capital, Delhi
(see 29 October 2005 Delhi
bombings).
- October 30 –
Hurricane Beta hits the coast of
Nicaragua
. It is the 13th hurricane of 2005,
breaking the 1969 record of 12 hurricanes.
- October 31 – U.S. President George W. Bush
nominates Federal Appeals Court Judge Samuel Alito to be an Associate Justice of the Supreme
Court of the United States
.
November
- November 1 – Charles, Prince of Wales and
Camilla, Duchess of
Cornwall arrive in the United States for a state visit, their
first overseas tour since their marriage.
- November 1 – Justice John Gomery releases the first part of the
Gomery Commission report on
corruption in the Liberal Party
of Canada and the sponsorship
scandal.
- November 1 – United States Senate
Minority Leader Harry Reid and his
fellow Democrats
force a closed session of the Senate over the Lewis Libby indictment.
- November 2 – The Spanish Congress of Deputies
approves the admission to formality of the new Catalan Statute of Autonomy with
the support of all the groups except the People's Party (PP), which the same
day files an objection of unconstitutionality.
- November
3–4 – Another severe aftershock
measuring 6.3 on the Richter
scale hits affected areas of Northern Pakistan
.
- November 4 – The U.S. and Uruguay
governments sign a Bilateral
Investment Treaty.
- November 4 –
Afghan police officers find Nadia
Anjuman's body in her home in the western city of Herat
; she had been beaten to death by her
husband.
- November 6 –
Evansville Tornado
of November 2005: A tornado hits western
Kentucky
and southwestern Indiana
, killing at least 22.
- November 6 – Azerbaijan parliamentary
election: Results are disputed between the New Azerbaijan Party and the Azadliq
Party opposition.
- November 8 –
French President
Jacques Chirac declares a state of
emergency on the 12th day of the French
civil unrest (see
2005 civil unrest in
France).
- November 8 – The Senate of Mexico adopts a decree amending
the Constitution of Mexico
banning the use of capital punishment.
- November 9 – At
least 50 people are killed and more than 120 injured in a series of
coordinated suicide bombings in
Amman
, Jordan
(See 2005 Amman
bombings).
- November 12 –
United Nations
Secretary General Kofi Annan makes
his first visit to Iraq
since the
Iraq War began, and urges Iraqis to embrace
a process aiming to reconcile all the country's ethnic and
religious groups.
- November 13 –
Andrew Stimpson, a 25-year old
British
man, is reported as the first person proven to have
been 'cured' of HIV.
- November 15 – Workers in Australia stage a massive protest against the
Coalition government's planned
Industrial Reform legislation.
- November 15 –
An earthquake hits near
Sanriku in Japan
, prompting
a tsunami warning to be issued.
- November 19 – Sri Lanka's Prime
Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa takes
office as President after the Presidential Election.
- November 20 – The Washington Post rebukes
journalist Bob Woodward over his
conduct in the CIA leak probe.
- November 21 – The Prime Minister of Israel, Ariel Sharon, announces his resignation from
Likud and his intention to form a new party
devoted to peace in the region, Kadima, and
asks the President of Israel to
call a general election.
- November 24 – The Licensing Act 2003 comes into force in
England and Wales, introducing
flexibility in the hours during which alcoholic beverages may be sold.
- November 25 –
The 20th
Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting opens in Valletta
, Malta
.
- November 27 –
Manila
, the Philippines
hosts the 23rd Southeast Asian Games, which
sees the largest number of participants in its history.
- November 27 – Manuel Zelaya is elected the new President of Honduras.
- November 27 –
The 20th
Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting closes in Valletta
, Malta
.
- November 28 –
The Liberal Party minority government in Canada
is toppled
by a non-confidence vote in the
House of Commons, tabled
by the Conservatives
and backed by the Bloc
Québécois and the New
Democratic Party, paving the way for a federal election on January 23, 2006.
- November 28 –
December 9 – The United Nations Climate
Change Conference is held in Montreal
, Quebec
.
- November 29 – Leo O'Connor and David
Keogh appear in court (see O'Connor - Keogh
official secrets trial).
- November 30 –
Surgeons in France
carry out the first human face transplant.
December

- December 1 – South Africa becomes the 5th country in the
world where same-sex marriages
are recognized.
- December 2 – The
£140m (US$240m) extension of the Docklands Light Railway in London
, linking Canning Town
to North Woolwich
and London City Airport
, opens.
- December 4 – The December 2005
protest for democracy in Hong Kong draws 250,000 people.
- December 6 – An
Iranian
C-130 Hercules
airplane crashes
into a ten-story building in a civilian area of Tehran
, the capital of Iran
, killing all
94 people aboard and 34 residents of the building (128
total).
- December 7 – A
U.S.
Federal Air Marshal fatally shoots
Rigoberto Alpizar on a jetway at Miami International Airport
in Florida
.
- December 7 – The European Union TLD .eu is launched, and replaces
.eu.int. Initially this will be only for business
purposes. From 7 April 2006 onwards, EU citizens can also register .eu
domains.
- December 8 –
Southwest Airlines Flight
1248
overshoots the runway at Chicago
Midway Airport
, killing a 6-year-old boy and injuring 11 other
people.
- December 8 –
Hurricane
Epsilon dies in the eastern Atlantic Ocean
. It becomes the longest-lived December
hurricane on record and ties for second-place, being the 2nd
strongest December hurricane.
- December 11 –
The 2005 Hertfordshire Oil Storage Terminal
fire
north of London
causes widespread damage, and is the largest
explosion ever to occur in peacetime Europe.
- December 11 –
The 2005
Cronulla riots
occur in Sydney
, Australia, involving
up to 5,000 youths.
- December 12 – Gebran Ghassan Tueni is assassinated by
a car bomb. He is buried at Saint Dimitrius Cemetery after a
funeral at Saint George Church in Beirut.
- December 12 – Scientists announce
that they have created mice with small amounts
of human brain cells in an effort to
make realistic models of neurological disorders.
- December 13 – A
6.7 magnitude earthquake
rocks South
Asia.
- December 14 –
Shakidor Dam fails in Pakistan
due to heavy rain.
- December 15 –
The first parliamentary
elections take place under Iraq
's new
federal constitution.
- December 16 – The 43rd Mersenne prime is found,
230,402,457 − 1. It was discovered with the GIMPS project by Dr.
Curtis Cooper and Dr. Steven
Boone, professors at Central Missouri State
University.
- December 18 – Evo Morales wins the Bolivian Presidential
Elections.
- December 18 – Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon is hospitalized after suffering a
minor stroke. He is released from the
hospital 2 days later.
- December 18 –
The World Trade
Organization 6th
ministerial conference concludes in Hong Kong
with a limited trade deal being
ratified.
- December 20 –
2005 New York City
transit strike: New
York City
's Transport Workers Union Local 100
goes on strike for 3 days, shutting
down all New York City Subway
and Bus services.
- December 22 – An
industrial action by bus drivers in Tehran
leads to the arrest of Mansour Osanlou and several other union
activists.
- December 23 –
Lech Kaczyński is sworn in as
President of Poland in Warsaw
.
- December 23 –
U.S.
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld announces the first in an
expected series of troop drawdowns following the Iraqi elections.
- December 23 –
Azerbaijan Airlines Flight 217
from Baku
, Azerbaijan
, to Aktau
, Kazakhstan
, crashes shortly after takeoff, killing 23
people.
- December 23 –
Chad
declares
a state of war
withSudan
, following a December
18 attack on Adre, which left
about 100 people dead.
- December 23 – In
Israel
, the trial
of Tali Fahima ends in a plea bargain.
- December 24 – Pope Benedict XVI leads his first Christmas Midnight Mass as
Pope, praying for peace in the Middle
East.
- December 31 – Another second is
added, 23:59:60, called a leap second,
to end the year 2005. The last time this occurred was on June 30, 1998.
Unknown dates
- Ten years after reaching the million mark, the U.S. prison
population reaches 1.5 million inmates.
- Based on estimates by NASA
's Goddard
Institute for Space Studies
, 2005 is the warmest year since reliable
widespread instrumental measurements became available in the late
1800s, beating the previous record set in 1998 by a few hundredths
of a degree Celsius. It will be replaced by 2007 as the
warmest year.
Other researchers place
1998 at the top of the
temperature record.
- Due
to a combination of the aftermath of the 2004
Indian Ocean earthquake
, and an overactive hurricane season and other
factors, 2005 is also the costliest year for natural disasters,
with world wide damages estimated at over $200 billion.
- Temperatures in the Lut desert
in Iran reach 70.7°C which is a temperature
record for earth.
World population
| World
population |
|
2005 |
2000 |
2010 |
World |
6,453,628,000 |
6,070,581,000 |
|
|
|
Africa |
887,964,000 |
795,671,000 |
|
|
|
Asia |
3,917,508,000 |
3,679,737,000 |
|
|
|
Europe |
724,722,000 |
727,986,000 |
|
|
|
Latin
America |
558,281,000 |
520,229,000 |
|
|
|
Northern
America |
332,156,000 |
315,915,000 |
|
|
|
Oceania |
32,998,000 |
31,043,000 |
|
|
|
Births
- January 30 – Prince Hashem bin Al Abdullah
II
- March 27 – Countess
Luana of Orange-Nassau, Jonkvrouwe van Amsberg
- April 8 – Leah Isadora Behn, granddaughter of King
Harald V of Norway
- April 29 – Prince Dipangkorn Rasmijoti, son of Crown
Prince Maha Vajiralongkorn,
grandson of King Bhumibol
Adulyadej of Thailand
- June 5 – Irene Urdangarin, granddaughter of King
Juan Carlos I of Spain
- July 27 – Princess Alexia of the
Netherlands, daughter of Willem-Alexander, Prince of
Orange
- October 4 – Prince Emmanuel of Belgium, son
of Crown Prince
Philippe of Belgium
- October 15 – Prince Christian of Denmark, son
of Frederik, Crown
Prince of Denmark and his wife Mary, Crown Princess of
Denmark
- October 31 – Infanta Leonor of Spain, daughter of
Felipe, Prince of
Asturias and his wife Letizia
- December 3 – Prince Sverre Magnus of
Norway, grandson of King Harald V
of Norway
- December 13 – Prince Nicolas of Belgium,
grandson of King Albert II of
Belgium
- December 13 – Prince Aymeric of Belgium,
grandson of King Albert II of
Belgium
Deaths
January
- January 1 – Shirley Chisholm, African-American
politician (b. 1924)
- January 1 – Eugene J. Martin, American artist (b. 1938)
- January 1 – Bob
Matsui, American politician (b. 1941)
- January 2 – John
Ziman, English-New Zealand physicist (b. 1925)
- January 4 – Alton Tobey, American artist (b. 1914)
- January 4 – Guy Davenport, American author, artist, and
scholar (b. 1927)
- January 4 – Robert Heilbroner, American writer (b.
1919)
- January 7 – Pierre Daninos, French writer and humorist
(b. 1913)
- January 10 – Joséphine-Charlotte,
Grand Duchess of Luxembourg (b. 1927)
- January 12 – Alessia di Matteo, Italian medical figure
(b. 2003)
- January 12 – Amrish Puri, Indian actor (b. 1932)
- January 15 – Victoria de los Ángeles,
Spanish Catalan soprano (b. 1923)
- January 15 – Deem Bristow, American voice actor (b. 1947)
- January 17 – Zhao Ziyang, Chinese premier
(b. 1919)
- January 18 – Lamont Bentley, American television and film
actor (b. 1973)
- January 19 –
Anita Kulcsár, Hungarian
handball player
(b. 1976)
- January 19 – Bill Andersen, New Zealand trade union leader
(b. 1924)
- January 20 – Per Borten, Prime Minister of Norway (b.
1913)
- January 21 – Don
Poier, American sports announcer (b. 1951)
- January 21 – Theun de Vries, Dutch writer (b. 1907)
- January 23 – Johnny Carson, American television host (b.
1925)
- January 25 – Philip Johnson, American architect (b.
1906)
February
- February 1 – John Vernon, Canadian Actor (b.1932)
- February 2 – Max Schmeling, German boxer (b.1905)
- February 3 – Zurab Zhvania, Prime Minister of Georgia (b.
1963)
- February 5 – Gnassingbe Eyadema, President of Togo (b. 1937)
- February 6 – Merle Kilgore, American singer and songwriter
(b. 1934)
- February 10 – Arthur Miller, American playwright (b.
1915)
- February 13 – Lucia dos Santos, Visionary to the Marian
apparitions at Fátima (b. 1907) a Discalced
Carmelite nun
- February 14 – Rafik Hariri, Prime Minister of Lebanon (b.
1944)
- February 17 – Nariman Sadeq, Queen of Egypt (b. 1934)
- February 20 – Sandra Dee, American actress (b. 1944)
- February 20 – Hunter S. Thompson, American journalist (b.
1937)
- February 22 – Lee Eun Joo, Korean actress (b. 1980)
- February 25 – Peter Benenson, lawyer and founder of
Amnesty International (b.
1921)
March
- March 3 – Rinus
Michels, Dutch soccer player and coach (b. 1928)
- March 6 – Teresa Wright, American actress (b. 1918)
- March 6 – Tommy
Vance, British radio disc jockey (b. 1941)
- March 9 – Jeanette Schmid, German-born professional
whistler (b. 1924)
- March 9 – Chris
LeDoux, American rodeo performer and singer (b. 1949)
- March 10 – Dave Allen, Irish comedian (b.
1936)
- March 19 – John Z. DeLorean, American car maker (b.1925)
- March 21 – Bobby
Short, American entertainer (b. 1924)
- March 22 – Clemente Domínguez y
Gómez, Spanish spiritual leader (b. 1946)
- March 25 – George F. Kennan, American diplomat and political
advisor (b. 1904)
- March 26 – James Callaghan, Prime Minister of the
United Kingdom (b. 1912)
- March 26 – Paul
Hester, Australian musician (b. 1959)
- March 27- Josh
McDowell, Race car driver (b. 1986)
- March 29 – Johnnie Cochran, American lawyer (b.
1937)
- March 29 – Mitch Hedberg, American comedian (b. 1968)
- March 30 – Fred Korematsu, American civil rights
activist (b. 1919)
- March 31 – Terri Schiavo, American right-to-die cause célèbre (b. 1963)
- March 31 – Justiniano Montano, Filipino politician
(b. 1905)
April
- April 1 – Paul
Bomani, Tanzanian politician and ambassador (b. 1925)
- April 2 – Pope John Paul II, Polish Roman Catholic Pope (b. 1920)
- April 5 – John
Sichel, British film and television director (b. 1937)
- April 5 – Saul
Bellow, American writer (b. 1915)
- April 6 – Rainier III, Prince of Monaco
(b. 1923)
- April 16 – Kim
Mu-saeng, South Korean actor (b. 1943)
- April 19 – Ruth
Hussey, American actress (b. 1911)
- April 20 – Zygfryd Blaut, Polish footballer (b. 1943)
- April 22 – Norman Bird, British actor (b. 1920)
- April 23 – John
Mills, English actor (b. 1908)
- April 24 – Ezer
Weizman, former President of
Israel (b. 1924)
- April 26 – Mason
Adams, American actor (b. 1919)
- April 28 – Chris Candido, American professional wrestler
(b. 1972)
May
- May 2 – Wee Kim
Wee, President of
Singapore (b. 1915)
- May 5 – Edgar
Ponce, Mexican actor and dancer (b. 1974)
- May 7 – Peter Wallace Rodino, American
politician (b. 1909)
- May 8 – Lloyd
Cutler, American attorney and Presidential advisor (b. 1917)
- May 13 – George
Dantzig, American mathematician (b. 1914)
- May 14 – Jimmy
Martin, American musician (b. 1927)
- May 18 – Frank
Gorshin, American actor (b. 1933)
- May 22 – Thurl Ravenscroft, American voice actor
(b. 1914)
- May 25 – Robert
Jankel, British coachbuilder (b. 1938)
- May 26 – Eddie
Albert, American actor (b. 1906)
- May 30 – Natalee Holloway, American teen,disappeared
in Aruba
. (b.1986)
June
July
- July 1 – Luther Vandross, American R&B singer (b.
1951)
- July 1 – Obie
Benson, Singer Of The Four Tops
(b. 1937)
- July 9 – Alex
Shibicky, Canadian ice hockey player (b. 1914)
- July 11 – Shinya Hashimoto, Japanese professional
wrestler (b. 1965)
- July 17 – Edward
Heath, Prime
Minister of the United Kingdom (b. 1916)
- July 18 – William Westmoreland, U.S. general (b.
1914)
- July 19 – John Tyndall, British activist (b.
1934)
- July 20 – James
Doohan, Canadian actor (b. 1920)
- July 21 – Long John Baldry, British musician (b.
1941)
- July 21 – Alfred Hayes, English wrestling
announcer (b. 1928)
- July 23 – Myron
Floren, American accordianist & musician (b. 1919)
- July 26 – Jack Hirshleifer, American economist (b.
1925)
- July 26 – Robert C. Turner, American potter (b. 1913)
- July 31 – Wim
Duisenberg, Dutch president of the European Central Bank (b.
1935)
August
- August 1 – King Fahd of Saudi Arabia (b. 1923)
- August 6 – Robin
Cook, British politician (b. 1946)
- August 6 – Carlo Little, British drummer (b.1938)
- August 7 – Peter Jennings, Canadian-American news anchor
(b. 1938)
- August 8 – Sheikh Ahmed Deedat, Indian author, lecturer, and
orator (b. 1918)
- August 8 – John H. Johnson, American businessman and publisher.
(b. 1918)
- August 12 –
Lakshman Kadirgamar, foreign
minister of Sri
Lanka
(assassinated) (b. 1932)
- August 13 – David Lange, Prime Minister of New Zealand
(b. 1942)
- August 15 – Bendapudi Venkata
Satyanarayana, Indian dermatologist (d. 1927)
- August 16 –
Frère Roger, Swiss founder of the
Taizé
Community
(b. 1915)
- August 16 – Joe
Ranft, American animator (b. 1960)
- August 19 – Mo
Mowlam, British politician (b. 1949)
- August 20 – Thomas Herrion, American football player (b.
1981)
- August 21 – István Cserháti, Hungarian
keyboardist (P.Box) (b. 1954)
- August 21 – Dahlia Ravikovitch, Israeli poet (b.
1936)
- August 26 – Robert Denning, American interior designer
(b. 1927)
September
- September 2 – Bob Denver, American actor (b. 1935)
- September 3 – William Rehnquist, Chief Justice of the United
States (b. 1924)
- September 10 – Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown, American musician (b.
1924)
- September 14 – Robert Wise, American film director (b. 1914)
- September 17 – Alfred Reed, American Composer and Conductor (b.
1921)
- September 18 – Michael Park, English Rally Co-
Driver of Markko Martin (b. 1966)
- September 20 – Simon Wiesenthal, Austrian Holocaust
survivor and Nazi hunter (b. 1908)
- September 23 – Roger Brierley, English actor (b. 1935)
- September 25 – Don Adams, American actor (b. 1923)
- September 26 – Jerry Juhl, American writer (b. 1938)
- September 26 – Shawntinice Polk, American basketball
player (b. 1983)
- September 27 – Brett Kebble, South African mining magnate (b.
1964)
October
- October 2 – Nipsey Russell, American actor and game show
personality (b. 1918)
- October 3 – Ronnie Barker, British comic actor (b.
1929)
- October 7 – Charles Rocket, American actor (b. 1949)
- October 9 – Louis
Nye, American actor (b. 1913)
- October 10 – Milton Obote, President of Uganda (b. 1925)
- October 13 – Vivian Malone Jones, American civil
rights activist (b. 1942)
- October 15 – Jason Collier, American basketball player (b.
1977)
- October 17 – Ba
Jin, Chinese writer (b. 1904)
- October 23 – William Hootkins, American actor (b.
1948)
- October 24 – Rosa Parks, American civil rights activist (b.
1913)
- October 24 – José Azcona del Hoyo, President of Honduras (b. 1926)
- October 24 – Robert Sloman, English writer (b. 1926)
- October 28 – Richard Smalley, American physicist (b.
1943)
November
- November 4 – Nadia Anjuman, Afghani poet and journalist (b.
1980)
- November 6 – Minako Honda, Japanese singer and actress (b.
1967)
- November 9 – K. R.
Narayanan, President of India (b. 1921)
- November 11 – Moustapha Akkad, Syrian-American film
producer (b. 1930)
- November 11 – Patrick Anson, 5th Earl of
Lichfield, British photographer (b. 1939)
- November 13 – Eddie Guerrero, Mexican-American professional
wrestler (b. 1967)
- November 18 – Sharon Beshenivsky, English police
constable (b. 1967)
- November 19 – Erik Balling, Danish television and film
director (b. 1924)
- November 20 – Chris Whitley, American musician (b. 1945)
- November 24 – Pat Morita, American actor (b. 1932)
- November 25 – George Best, Northern Irish footballer (b.
1946)
- November 25 – Richard Burns, English race car driver (b.
1971)
- November 28 – Eric Nance, American murderer (b. 1960)
December
- December 2 – Mohammed Amza Zubeidi, former prime
minister of Iraq (b. 1938)
- December 2 – Nguyen Tuong Van, Vietnamese-Australian
drug trafficker and capital
punishment cause célèbre (b. 1980)
- December 2 – Christine Pullein-Thompson,
British author (b. 1925)
- December 6 – Devan Nair, President of Singapore (b. 1923)
- December 10 – Richard Pryor, American comedian (b. 1940)
- December 12 – Ramanand Sagar, Indian film director (b.
1917)
- December 13 – Stanley Williams, American gang founder (b.
1953)
- December 16 – John Spencer, American actor (b.
1946)
- December 18 – Alan Voorhees, American engineer and urban
planner (b. 1922)
- December 21 – William C. Rodgers, American arsonist (b.
unknown)
- December 23 – Yao Wenyuan, Chinese politician (b. 1931)
- December 25 – Birgit Nilsson, Swedish soprano (b. 1918)
- December 25 – Charles Socarides, American psychiatrist
(b. 1922)
- December 26 – Kerry Packer, Australian media tycoon (b.
1937)
- December 26 – Vincent Schiavelli, American actor (b.
1948)
- December 28 – Patrick Cranshaw, American actor
(b.1919)
- December 29 – Gerda Boyesen, Norwegian-born body
psychotherapist (b. 1922)
Nobel Prizes
2005 in fiction
Film
Games
Ship events
References
External links