November 2nd, 1760 was a Sunday.
October 24th, 1760 - November 22nd, 1760
Why not celebrate an alternative birthday? In 764 days, exactly on June 1st, 2026, people who were born on November 2nd, 1760 will be 97,000 days old!
Last Queen of France prior to the French Revolution
*November 2nd, 1755, Hofburg Palace †October 16th, 1793, place de la ConcordePresident of the United States from 1845 to 1849
*November 2nd, 1795, Pineville †June 15th, 1849, NashvilleEnglish mathematician, philosopher and logician (1815–1864)
*November 2nd, 1815, Lincoln †December 8th, 1864, BallintempleAmerican actor (1913–1994)
*November 2nd, 1913, New York City †October 20th, 1994, Los AngelesAmerican actress (1892–1939)
*November 2nd, 1892, New York City †October 28th, 1939, New York CityAmerican actor and comedian
*November 2nd, 1914, Laurel †January 1st, 2001, Beverly HillsMayor of Gdańsk (1998-2019)
*November 2nd, 1965, Gdańsk †January 14th, 2019, University Clinical Centre in GdańskPresident of the United States from 1921 to 1923
*November 2nd, 1865, Blooming Grove †August 2nd, 1923, San FranciscoSpanish association football player (1989-)
*November 2nd, 1989, Las Palmas de Gran CanariaGreek poet and art critic
*November 2nd, 1911, Heraklion †March 18th, 1996, AthensAmerican businessman
*November 2nd, 1815, Rockbridge County †September 27th, 1865, JacksonvilleItalian theatre, opera and cinema director (1906–1976)
*November 2nd, 1906, Milan †March 17th, 1976, RomeCzech nobleman and Austrian general (1766-1858)
*November 2nd, 1766, Třebnice †January 5th, 1858, MilanJapanese artist (1760-1849)
*October 31st, 1760, Honjo †May 10th, 1849, AsakusaPrussian general
*September 15th, 1760, Potsdam †February 20th, 1824, BerlinFrench political agitator and journalist (1760-1797)
*November 23rd, 1760, Saint-Quentin †May 27th, 1797, VendômeFrench early socialist theorist (1760-1825)
*October 17th, 1760, Paris †May 19th, 1825, ParisPope of the Catholic Church from 1823 to 1829
*August 2nd, 1760, Genga †February 10th, 1829, RomeFrench general; president of the National Constituent Assembly in 1791
*May 28th, 1760, Fort-de-France †July 23rd, 1794, ParisMinister, educator, writer (1760-1831)
*February 14th, 1760, Philadelphia †March 26th, 1831, PhiladelphiaAmerican politician (1760-1822)
*January 8th, 1760, Philadelphia †December 8th, 1822, PhiladelphiaGerman composer
*January 10th, 1760, Lauda-Königshofen †January 27th, 1802, StuttgartGerman botanist (1760-1846)
*December 15th, 1760, Bruchhausen-Vilsen †August 1st, 1846, RegensburgNorwegian priest, writer and politician (1760-1821)
*January 30th, 1760, Sunndal Municipality †November 21st, 1821, BergenEnglish painter and etcher (1760-1830)
*March 4th, 1760, London †January 1st, 1830, LondonUnited States federal judge; second U.S. Secretary of the Treasury (1760-1833)
*January 11th, 1760, Litchfield †June 1st, 1833, New York CitySpanish noble and general
*January 1st, 1760, Zafra †January 1st, 1838, MadridGerman bishop (1760-1818)
*June 22nd, 1760, Strasbourg †December 15th, 1818, MainzFrench army officer (1760-1836)
*May 10th, 1760, Lons-le-Saunier †June 26th, 1836, Choisy-le-RoiEnglish abolitionist (1760-1846)
*March 28th, 1760, Wisbech †September 26th, 1846, Playford HallBritish politician (1760-1842)
*June 20th, 1760, Meath †September 26th, 1842, Royal Borough of Kensington and ChelseaFixed holidays (Christian feast day) which are celebrated on November 2nd.
M = 1000 | D = 500 | C = 100 | L = 50 | X = 10 | I = 1 |
Yes: 1760 is a leap year, therefore has a 29th of February with an additional leap day and a total of 366 days (instead of the usual 365 days in a normal year).