7 March – Shrigley abduction: Ellen Turner, a wealthy 15-year-old heiress from Cheshire, is abducted by Edward Gibbon Wakefield. On 14 May Wakefield, his brother and a servant are sentenced to three years' imprisonment for the crime. Wakefield later becomes a colonial politician.
7 April – John Walker begins selling his invention, the "Lucifer" friction match.[1]
6 July – Treaty of London between France, Britain and Russia to demand that the Turks agree to an armistice in Greece.
8 August – Prime Minister George Canning dies in office only 119 days after being appointed, making him the second shortest serving Prime Minister in British history.
20 October – Battle of Navarino (Greek War of Independence): British, French and Russian naval forces destroy the Turko-Egyptian fleet in Greece.[1] This is the last naval action to be fought under sail alone.
November – The term "socialist" is coined by Robert Owen in his London periodical, The Co-operative Magazine and Monthly Herald.[4][5][6]
Sir Walter Scott's stories Chronicles of the Canongate (published in Edinburgh 30 October anonymously, though Scott has publicly acknowledged his authorship of the Waverley Novels on 23 February).
Births
7 January – Sandford Fleming, Scottish-born civil engineer, "father of time zones" (died 1915 in Canada)
^Harrison, John (2009). Robert Owen and the Owenites in Britain and America: The Quest for the New Moral World. London: Routledge. p. 35. ISBN9780203092354.
^Billington, James H. (1999). Fire in the Minds of Men: Origins of the Revolutionary Faith. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers. p. 245. ISBN9780765804716.
^Williams, Raymond (2014). "Socialism". Keywords: A Vocabulary of Culture and Society. Oxford University Press. p. 224.
^Bright, Richard (1827). Reports of Medical Cases, Selected with a View of Illustrating the Symptoms and Cure of Diseases by a Reference to Morbid Anatomy. Vol. 1. London: Longmans.
^Tusan, Michelle Elizabeth (2005). Women Making News: Gender and Journalism in Modern Britain. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. p. 263. ISBN978-0-2520-3015-4.
^Liverpool, England, Quaker Registers, 1635-1958; England & Wales, Quaker Birth, Marriage, and Death Registers, 1578-1837