1970 in Luxembourg
The following lists events that happened during 1970 in the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg.
Incumbents
Position | Incumbent |
---|---|
Grand Duke | Jean |
Prime Minister | Pierre Werner |
Deputy Prime Minister | Eugène Schaus |
President of the Chamber of Deputies | Pierre Grégoire |
President of the Council of State | Maurice Sevenig |
Mayor of Luxembourg City | Colette Flesch |
Events
January – March
- 1 January - Value added tax (TVA) is introduced at 8%, with a reduced rate of 4%.[1]
- 4 March – Cargolux is founded.
- 21 March – Representing Luxembourg, David Alexandre Winter finishes twelfth (and last) in the Eurovision Song Contest 1970 with the song Je Suis Tombé Du Ciel. It is the first and (so far) only occasion on which Luxembourg has scored 'nul points'.
April – June
- 20 May - Luxembourg and Portugal sign a treaty governing the growing population of Portuguese Luxembourgers.[1]
- 28 May - Luxembourg and Yugoslavia sign a treaty governing the migration of Yugoslavs to Luxembourg.[1]
July – September
October – December
- 11 November - Alfred Loesch is appointed to the Council of State.[2]
- 2 December – One of Cargolux's two CL-44's crashes in East Pakistan while conducting a humanitarian airlift, killing four crew members and four villagers.
- 9 December - Legislation sets the workweek at 40 hours.[3]
Births
- 16 August - Patrick Santer, politician[2]
Deaths
- 8 April – Felix of Bourbon-Parma, prince consort[2]
- 9 September – Ferdinand Gremling, writer
- 20 September – Josy Meyers Friob, artist
Footnotes
- Thewes (2006), p. 178
- "Membres depuis 1857" (in French). Council of State. Archived from the original on 2009-11-03. Retrieved 2009-04-05.
- Thewes (2006), p. 181
gollark: Ah, a *market* crash, or a *cave* crash?
gollark: Gold crash?
gollark: If it opened recently, that *does* explain the weird economic weirdness I've seen.
gollark: When did it open?
gollark: Hardly.
References
- Thewes, Guy (2006). Les gouvernements du Grand-Duché de Luxembourg depuis 1848 (PDF) (in French) (2006 ed.). Luxembourg City: Service Information et Presse. ISBN 978-2-87999-156-6. Retrieved 12 December 2009.
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