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2
1792
(
place
)
by
Gorgonzola
Sat Nov 18 2000 at 5:17:39
Born in 1792:
Italian
composer
Gioacchino Rossini
.
English
poet
Percy Bysse Shelley
.
English
illustrator
George Cruikshank
.
French
physicist
and
mathematician
Gaspard Gustave de Coriolis
.
Mexican
revolutionary and statesman
Lucas Alamán
.
English astronomer
John Herschel
, son of
William Herschel
.
Scottish
geologist
Roderick Impey Murchison
.
American
"
evangelist
"
Charles Grandison Finney
.
Giovanni Maria Mastai-Ferretti, the future
Pope Pius IX
.
Died in 1792:
Swedish
composer
Joseph Martin Kraus
.
Mohegan
author, hymnist, and theologian
Samson Occum
.
Lord
Frederick North
,
Prime minister
of
Great Britain
during the
American Revolution
.
English painter
George Hayter
.
French chess celebrity M. de Kermur,
Sire de Légal
.
Italian composer
Antonio Rosetti
.
American naval pioneer
John Paul Jones
.
Austrian emperor
Leopold II
.
King
Gustav III
of
Sweden
, assassinated at a masquerade ball.
John Montagu
, fourth
Earl of Sandwich
, the one for which the
Sandwich Islands
were named.
(April 25)
Nicolas-Jacques Pelletier
, first victim of the
guillotine
.
Events of 1792:
Mary Wollstonecraft
publishes her treatise
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
.
The United States government announces a
competition for the design of a
Capitol
building in the new federal city
Washington, DC
, with a prize of $500.
Opponents of the
Federalist Party
, led by
Thomas Jefferson
, form a new political party. It is called the
Republican Party
(although it is the forerunner of today's
Democratic Party
).
George Washington
is re-elected
President of the United States
, winning all 15 states.
The
Maryland
State House
dome
is completed in
Annapolis
.
Welsh
bards
revive their ancient conclave, the
Eisteddfod
.
The British
Parliament
passes the
Libel Act
requiring a jury to decide libel where it only took a judge before. At the same time they restrict
freedom of the press
.
Some
Polish
noblemen "ask" Russia for help against the new government created by the Constitution adopted the previous year. Russia gladly obliges, and
Prussia
decides to join in as well.
(January 9) With the
Treaty of Jassy
,
Russia
and
Austria
relieve the
Ottoman Empire
of much of its territory, including
Hungary
. Turkey is officially the "
Sick man of Europe
."
Things begin to get downright ugly in
France
:
(March 1) Emperor
Franz II
succeeds
to the throne of
Austria
.
(April 20) King
Louis XVI
and the
Legislative Assembly
agree to declare
war on
Austria
and
Prussia
.
(April 24)
Claude-Joseph Rouget de Lisle
composes a song that would later be the national anthem for France,
La Marseillaise
.
(June 20) A mob of 15,000 marches on the
Tuilieries Palace
; the King dresses up like a revolutionary.
(June 28) Lafayette calls for the abolition of the
Jacobin
clubs.
(July 25) Most of the rest of Europe declares war on France (
Brunswick Manifesto
).
(August)
Prussia
n and
Austria
n armies invade
Northeastern France.
(August 10)
A mob of 30,000 storms the Tuileries
Palace looking for King Louis, who had been warned and fled. The mob takes its anger out on the people left behind: some
Swiss Guards
and all of the palace staff. There is a macabre scene of piles of mutilated dead bodies and children playing with human heads. Louis flees for protection to the
Legislative Assembly
, who hands him over.
(August 12) The royal family is put into prison.
(August 19)
Lafayette
flees to
Austria
where he is imprisoned.
(September 2-6) Following the fall of
Verdun
to the Prussians, thousands of political prisoners are killed in what is later termed the "
September Massacres
".
(September 3) The monarchy is abolished; the
First Republic
is proclaimed.
(September 13)
Thomas Paine
flees to France.
(september 20) The French army somehow defeats the Prussians at the
Battle of Valmy
, then push into
Holland
.
(October 22)
The French capture
Mainz
in Prussia's Rhine province.
(November 6) A different French army defeats
Austria
at the
Battle of Jemappes
.
(November 20)
John Reeves
founds the
Association for Preserving Liberty and Property
which begins harassing pro-reform writers and publishers in Britain, with charges of sedition and libel.
(December 10)
Louis is put on trial
after his letters are discovered.
(December 18)
Thomas Paine
is convicted of
sedition
in absentia and sentenced to hang.
1791
-
1792
-
1793
1793
1791
Thomas Paine
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
Mary Wollstonecraft
Lafayette
George Brydges Rodney, 1st Baron Rodney
Silver Eagle
masquerade ball
John Montagu, fourth Earl of Sandwich
Tofino
Lord John Russell
Rochambeau
William Herschel
Eisteddfod
1770
Prussia
Ottoman Empire
French Revolution
John Paul Jones
Capitals of the World
La Fenice
John Adams's 1799 State of the Union Address
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