1826
Calendar year
Calendar year
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1826 .
January 15: Le Figaro begins publication.
1826 (MDCCCXXVI ) was a common year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar and a common year starting on Friday of the Julian calendar , the 1826th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 826th year of the 2nd millennium , the 26th year of the 19th century , and the 7th year of the 1820s decade. As of the start of 1826, the Gregorian calendar was 12 days ahead of the Julian calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923.
Calendar year
Events
January–March
January 15 – The French newspaper Le Figaro begins publication in Paris, initially as a satirical weekly.
January 17 – The Ballantyne printing business in Edinburgh (Scotland) crashes, ruining novelist Sir Walter Scott as a principal investor. He undertakes to repay his creditors from his writings. His publisher, Archibald Constable , also fails.[ 1]
January 18 – The Siege of Bharatpur ends in British victory.
January 30 – The Menai Suspension Bridge , built by engineer Thomas Telford , is opened between the island of Anglesey and the mainland of Wales .
February 6 – First printing of James Fenimore Cooper 's novel The Last of the Mohicans , in Philadelphia .
February 8 – Unitarian Bernardino Rivadavia becomes the first President of Argentina .
February 11
February 13 – The American Temperance Society is founded.
February 23 – Russian mathematician Nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevsky develops non-Euclidean geometry (independently of Janos Bolyai ).
February 24 – The Treaty of Yandabo ends the First Anglo-Burmese War ; Britain gains Assam , Manipur, Rakhine and Tanintharyi .[ 2]
March 1 – Male Indian elephant Chunee , which was brought to London in 1811, is killed at a menagerie after running amok the week before, killing one of his keepers. After arsenic and shooting fail, the animal is stabbed to death.[ 3]
March 7 – Shrigley abduction : Ellen Turner, a wealthy 15-year-old heiress from Cheshire in England, is abducted by Edward Gibbon Wakefield . On May 14, Wakefield, his brother and a servant are sentenced to three years' imprisonment for the crime. Wakefield later becomes politically active in the colonisation of New Zealand.[ 4] [ 5]
March 10 – John VI (Dom João VI), King of Portugal and former Emperor of Brazil, dies after a short illness that had started six days earlier, after he had been served dinner while visiting Jerónimos Monastery . An investigative autopsy 174 years later will discover that he had been killed by arsenic poisoning. His son, Emperor Pedro I of Brazil , sails back to Portugal and briefly reigns as King Pedro IV, before turning over the Portuguese throne to his daughter, Maria .
March – Premiere of Ludwig van Beethoven 's String Quartet No. 13 in B♭ major, Op. 130 in its original form with his Grosse Fuge (later Op. 133) as the final movement, given by the Schuppanzigh Quartet .
April–June
July–September
July – Ludwig van Beethoven puts the finishing touches on the String Quartet No. 14 in C♯ minor, Op. 131 , the jewel in the crown of his late string quartets .
July 4 – Former U.S. Presidents Thomas Jefferson and John Adams both die on the 50th anniversary of the signing of the United States Declaration of Independence .
July 25 (O.S.: July 13) – Five leaders of the Decembrist revolt of 1825 in Russia (Pyotr Kakhovsky , Pavel Pestel , poet Kondraty Ryleyev , Sergey Muravyov-Apostol and Mikhail Bestuzhev-Ryumin ) are hanged in Senate Square, Saint Petersburg (where they had launched their attempted coup) and others begin their journey to exile in Siberia .
July 26 – Cayetano Ripoll becomes the last person to be executed by the Spanish Inquisition at its last auto-da-fé , held in Valencia .
August – The town of Crawford Notch , New Hampshire suffers a landslide; those killed include the Willey Family, after whom Mount Willey is named.
August 10 – The first Cowes Regatta is held on the Isle of Wight , in the U.K.[ 8]
August 18 – Scottish explorer Alexander Gordon Laing becomes the first European to reach Timbuktu [ 9] but is murdered there on September 26.
September 21 – Construction of the Rideau Canal begins in Canada.
September – William Morgan (anti-Mason) of Batavia, New York , disappears mysteriously. It is highly likely he was murdered by freemasons.
October–December
The oldest surviving photograph, by Nicéphore Niépce
Date unknown
Births
January–June
Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin
Charles XV of Sweden
January 1 – Mikhail Loris-Melikov , Russian statesman, general (d. 1888 )
January 12 – William Chapman Ralston , American banker, financier (d. 1875 )
January 15 – Marie Pasteur , French chemist (d. 1910 )
January 24 – William Daniel , American temperance movement leader (d. 1897 )
January 26 – Louis Favre , Swiss engineer (d. 1879 )
January 27
January 30 – Robert F. R. Lewis , American naval officer (d. 1881 )
February 3 – Walter Bagehot , English economist and journalist (d. 1877 )
February 7 – James Edward Jouett , American admiral (d. 1902 )
February 9 – John A. Logan , American soldier, political leader (d. 1886 )
February 15 – George Johnstone Stoney , Anglo-Irish physicist (d. 1911 )
February 16
March 3 – Joseph Wharton , American industrialist (d. 1909 )
March 4
March 24 – Matilda Joslyn Gage , American feminist (d. 1898 )
March 29 – Wilhelm Liebknecht , German journalist, politician (d. 1900 )
April 3
April 6 – Gustave Moreau , French painter (d. 1898 )
May 3 – King Charles XV of Sweden and Norway (d. 1872 )
May 4 – Frederic Edwin Church , American painter (d. 1900 )
May 7 – Varina Davis , First Lady of the Confederate States of America (d. 1906 )
May 8 – Miguel Ângelo Lupi , Portuguese painter (d. 1883 )
May 24 – Marie Goegg-Pouchoulin , Swiss international women's rights activist, pacifist (d. 1899 )
May 26 – Richard Christopher Carrington , English astronomer (d. 1875 )
May 28 – Benjamin Gratz Brown , American politician (d. 1885 )
June 24 – George Goyder , surveyor-general of South Australia (d. 1898 )
June 26 – Warren F. Daniell , American politician (d. 1913 )
June 30 – Ozra Amander Hadley , American politician (d. 1915 )
July–December
August Ahlqvist
Bernhard Riemann
Carlo Collodi
July 4
July 8 – Benjamin Grierson , American Civil War general (d. 1911 )
July 31 – William S. Clark , American chemist, 3rd President of the Massachusetts Agricultural College (d. 1886 )
August 7 – August Ahlqvist , Finnish professor, poet, scholar of the Finno-Ugric languages , author, and literary critic (d. 1889 )[ 17]
August 11 – Andrew Jackson Davis , American spiritualist (d. 1910 )
August 21 – Carl Gegenbaur , German anatomist, professor (d. 1903 )
September 8 – Sir James Corry, 1st Baronet , British politician (d. 1891 )
September 17 – Bernhard Riemann , German mathematician (d. 1866 )
October 8 – Emily Blackwell , American physician (d. 1910 )
October 24 – Léopold Victor Delisle , French medievalist and Administrator General of the Bibliotheque Nationale
November 10 – Jacob Hamburger , German rabbi and author (d. 1911 )[ 18]
November 24 – Carlo Collodi , Italian writer (d. 1890 )
November 27 – Jonathan Young , United States Navy commodore (d. 1885 )
December 3 – George B. McClellan , American general, politician (d. 1885 )
December 8 – John Brown , Scottish personal servant and favourite of Queen Victoria (d. 1883 )
Date unknown
Deaths
January–June
Carl Maria von Weber
Joseph von Fraunhofer
January 3
January 17 – Juan Crisóstomo Arriaga , Spanish composer (b. 1806 )
January 23 – Abraham Woodhull , Patriot spy during the American Revolutionary War (b. 1750 )
February 17 – John Manners-Sutton , British politician (b. 1752 )
March 10 – King John VI of Portugal (b. 1767 )
March 29 – Johann Heinrich Voss , German poet (b. 1751 )
April 11 – Anton Walter , Austrian piano maker (b. 1752 )
April 25 – Karl Ludwig von Phull , German military leader (b. 1757 )
May 4
May 7 – Sophie Hagman , Swedish ballerina, royal mistress (b. 1758 )
May 16
June 3 – Nikolay Karamzin , Russian language reformer (b. 1766 )
June 5 – Carl Maria von Weber , German composer (b. 1786 )
June 7 – Joseph von Fraunhofer , German optician (b. 1787 )
July–December
John Adams
Thomas Jefferson
July 4
July 5
July 8 – Luther Martin , delegate to the American Constitutional Convention (b. 1746 )
July 22 – Giuseppe Piazzi , Italian astronomer (b. 1746 )
July 25 – Sergey Muravyov-Apostol , Russian Army officer (b. 1796 )
July 26 – James Winchester , American general and politician (b. 1752 )
August 2 – George Finch, 9th Earl of Winchilsea , English cricketer (b. 1752 )
August 13 – René Laennec , French physician (b. 1781 )
August 15 – Hanne Tott , Danish circus artist, manager (b. 1771 )
August 28 – Józef Zajączek , Polish general, politician (b. 1752 )
September 7 – Robert Wright (politician) , American politician (b. 1752 )
September 12 – Eliphalet Pearson , American educator (b. 1752 )
October 8 – Marie-Guillemine Benoist , French painter (b. 1768 )
October 25 – Philippe Pinel , French physician (b. 1745 )
November 17 – Caroline Müller , Danish opera singer (b. 1755 )
November 23 – Johann Elert Bode , German astronomer (b. 1747 )
December 11 – Queen-Empress Maria Leopoldina , consort of Pedro IV of Portugal & I of Brazil (b. 1797 )
References
^ MacLeod, (Xavier) Donald (1852). Life of Sir Walter Scott . New York: Charles Scribner.
^ Kaushik Roy and Sourish Saha, Armed Forces and Insurgents in Modern Asia (Routledge, 2016)
^ Grigson, Caroline (2016). Menagerie: The History of Exotic Animals in England . Oxford University Press.
^ Cox, David J. (February 2010). A Certain Share of Low Cunning: A History of the Bow Street Runners, 1792-1839 . Routledge. p. 196. ISBN 978-1-317-43672-0 .
^ "Story: Wakefield, Edward Gibbon" . The Encyclopedia of New Zealand . Retrieved August 21, 2024 .
^ Carlson, Robert E. (1969). The Liverpool & Manchester Railway Project 1821–1831 . Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-4646-6 .
^ Palmer, Alan; Palmer, Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History . London: Century Ltd. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2 .
^ "Icons, a portrait of England 1820-1840" . Archived from the original on September 22, 2007. Retrieved September 12, 2007 .
^ Penguin Pocket On This Day . Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN 0-14-102715-0 .
^ Awdry, Christopher (1990). Encyclopaedia of British Railway Companies . Wellingborough: Patrick Stephens Ltd. ISBN 1-85260-049-7 .
^ "Granite Railway" . Britannica Online Encyclopedia . Retrieved May 19, 2008 .
^ "The First Railroad in America" . Catskill Archive . Granite City B.P.O.E. - Quincy Lodge No. 943. 1924. Retrieved May 19, 2008 .
^ Jacques Sirat, Braquenié: French Textiles and Interiors Since 1823 (Antique Collectors Club Limited, 1998) p16
^ "The Bourse", in Frank Leslie's New Family Magazine (July 1858) p42
^ Unverdorben, O. "Ueber das Verhalten der organischen Körper in höheren Temperaturen". Annalen der Physik und Chemie . 8 : 397–410.
^ Hughes, Derrick (1986). Bishop Sahib: A Life of Reginald Heber . Worthing , UK: Churchman Publishing. pp. 178–180. ISBN 978-1-85093-043-3 .
^ H. K. Riikonen. "Ahlqvist, August (1826-1889)" (in Finnish). kansallisbiografia. Retrieved July 6, 2021 .
^ Singer, Isidore ; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "HAMBURGER, JACOB" . The Jewish Encyclopedia . New York: Funk & Wagnalls.
^ "BBC - History - John Adams" . www.bbc.co.uk . Retrieved March 29, 2022 .