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This Week in History, June 8–14: Learn about Serena Williams first French Open singles win, the historic North Korean and South Korean leaders meet, and the first transport of prisoners at Auschwitz


This Week in History, June 8–14: Learn about Serena Williams first French Open singles win, the historic North Korean and South Korean leaders meet, and the first transport of prisoners at Auschwitz
This Week in History, June 8–14: Learn about Serena Williams first French Open singles win, the historic North Korean and South Korean leaders meet, and the first transport of prisoners at Auschwitz
Overview of the events of June 8–14.
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

Transcript


June 8 2002
Serena Williams wins her first French Open singles tennis title
She defeated her sister, Venus Williams, for the victory, and that same year she defeated Venus in the U.S. Open and Wimbledon tournaments.

June 10 1190
Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I drowns in the Saleph River
Known to history as Frederick Barbarossa, the emperor was traveling to the Holy Land as part of the Third Crusade when he drowned in his attempt to cross the river.

June 12 1991
A series of major explosions begins inside Mount Pinatubo
It was the first time in about 500 years that the volcano, located in western Luzon, Philippines, had erupted.

June 13 2000
Historic meeting between North Korean and South Korean leaders
South Korean President Kim Dae-Jung met North Korean leader Kim Jong Il at a summit that marked the first meeting between heads of the two countries.

June 14 1940
The first transport of political prisoners arrives at Auschwitz
Auschwitz would become Nazi Germany's largest concentration, extermination, and slave-labour camp, and more than one million people died there.