1799
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This article is about the year 1799.
| Millennium: | 2nd millennium |
|---|---|
| Centuries: | 17th century – 18th century – 19th century |
| Decades: | 1760s 1770s 1780s – 1790s – 1800s 1810s 1820s |
| Years: | 1796 1797 1798 – 1799 – 1800 1801 1802 |
| 1799 by topic: |
| Arts and Sciences |
| Archaeology – Architecture – Art – Literature (Poetry) – Music – Science |
| Countries |
| Australia – Canada – Great Britain – United States |
| Lists of leaders |
| Colonial governors – State leaders |
| Birth and death categories |
| Births – Deaths |
| Establishments and disestablishments categories |
| Establishments – Disestablishments |
| Works category |
| Works |
| Gregorian calendar | 1799 MDCCXCIX |
| Ab urbe condita | 2552 |
| Armenian calendar | 1248 ԹՎ ՌՄԽԸ |
| Bahá'í calendar | -45 – -44 |
| Bengali calendar | 1206 |
| Berber calendar | 2749 |
| British Regnal year | 39 Geo. 3 – 40 Geo. 3 |
| Buddhist calendar | 2343 |
| Burmese calendar | 1161 |
| Byzantine calendar | 7307 – 7308 |
| Chinese calendar | 戊午年十一月廿六日 (4435/4495-11-26) — to —
己未年十二月初六日(4436/4496-12-6) |
| Coptic calendar | 1515 – 1516 |
| Ethiopian calendar | 1791 – 1792 |
| Hebrew calendar | 5559 – 5560 |
| Hindu calendars | |
| - Bikram Samwat | 1855 – 1856 |
| - Shaka Samvat | 1721 – 1722 |
| - Kali Yuga | 4900 – 4901 |
| Holocene calendar | 11799 |
| Iranian calendar | 1177 – 1178 |
| Islamic calendar | 1213 – 1214 |
| Japanese calendar | Kansei 11 (寛政11年) |
| Korean calendar | 4132 |
| Thai solar calendar | 2342 |
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: 1799 |
Year 1799 (MDCCXCIX) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Gregorian calendar and a common year starting on Saturday of the 11-day slower Julian calendar.
[edit] Events
[edit] January–June
- January 9 – British Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger introduces an income tax of two shillings to the pound to raise funds for Great Britain's war effort in the Napoleonic Wars.
- March 1 – Federalist James Ross becomes President Pro Tempore of the United States Senate.
- March 7 – Napoleon captures Jaffa in Palestine and his troops proceed to kill more than 2,000 Albanian captives.
- March 22 – Roddy McCorley is executed in the town of Toomebridge by the British for his part in the Irish Rebellion of 1798.
- March 29 – New York passes a law aimed at gradually abolishing slavery in the state.
- May 4 – Battle of Seringapatam: Tippu Sultan is defeated and killed by the British.
- May – Siege of Acre: Napoleon's attempt to widen his Middle Eastern campaign into Syria is frustrated by Ottoman forces, and he withdraws to Egypt.
[edit] July–December
The Rosetta Stone
- July 7 – Ranjit Singh's men take their positions outside Lahore.
- July 12 – Ranjit Singh the Great conquers Lahore and becomes ruler of the Punjab.
- July 15 – In the Egyptian port city of Rosetta, French Captain Pierre Bouchard finds the Rosetta Stone.
- July 25 – At Aboukir in Egypt, Napoleon Bonaparte defeats 10,000 Ottoman Mamluk troops under Mustafa Pasha.
- August 27 – The British and Russians send an expedition to the Batavian Republic (now the Netherlands).
- August 30 – British forces under Sir Ralph Abercromby and Admiral Sir Charles Mitchell capture the entire Dutch fleet.
- October 6 – Battle of Castricum: Franco-Dutch forces defeat the Russo-British expedition force.
- October 9 – The HMS Lutine (a famous treasure wreck) is sunk.
- October 18 – Anglo-Russian expedition forces surrender in Holland.
- November 9 – Napoleon overthrows the French Directory.
- December
- A new constitution is approved in a plebiscite in France.
- Napoleon becomes First Consul.
- December 14 – George Washington, the first President of the United States, dies in Mount Vernon, Virginia.
[edit] Date unknown
- The Place Royale in Paris is renamed Place des Vosges when the Department of Vosges becomes the first to pay new Revolutionary taxes.
- The American system of manufacturing is invented.
- The small town of Tignish, PE, Canada is founded.
- 12-year-old Conrad John Reed finds what he describes as a "heavy yellow rock" along Little Meadow Creek in Cabarrus County, North Carolina and makes it a doorstop in his home. Conrad's father John Reed learns that the rock is actually gold in 1802, initiating the first gold rush in the United States.
- The assassination of the 14th Tu'i Kanokupolu, Tukuʻaho, plunges Tonga into half a century of civil war.
- The Nawab (provincial governor) of Oudh in northern India sends to George III of England the Padshah Nama, an official history of the reign of Shah Jahan.
- William Cockerill begins building cotton-spinning equipment in Belgium.
- Dutch government takes over Dutch East India Company.
[edit] Births
- January 6 – Jedediah Smith, American fur trapper and explorer (d. 1831)
- January 31 – Rodolphe Töpffer, Swiss teacher, author, and artist (d. 1846)
- February 4 – Almeida Garrett, Portuguese writer (d. 1854)
- February 11 – Basil Moreau, founder of the Congregation of Holy Cross (d. 1873)
- February 14 – Walenty Wańkowicz, polish painter (d. 1842)
- March 8 – Simon Cameron, American politician (d. 1889)
- March 20 – Karl August Nicander, Swedish poet (d. 1839)
- March 28 – Karl Adolph von Basedow, a German physician, famous for reporting the symptoms of Graves-Basedow disease (d. 1854)
- March 29 – Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (d. 1869)
- April 12 – Henri Druey, Swiss Federal Councilor (d. 1855)
- April 17 – Eliza Acton, English poet and cookery writer (d. 1859)
- May 13 – Catherine Gore, English author (d. 1861)
- May 20 – Honoré de Balzac, French author (d. 1850)
- May 21 – Mary Anning, British paleontologist (d. 1847)
- May 25 – Alexei Lvov, Russian composer (d. 1870)
- June 6 – Aleksandr Pushkin, Russian author (d. 1837)
- June 18 – Prosper Ménière, French physician (d. 1862)
- July 4 – King Oscar I of Sweden and Norway (d. 1859)
- September 8 – James Bowman Lindsay, Scottish inventor (d. 1862)
- September 10 – George Willison Adams, American abolitionist (d. 1879)
- November 1 – Thomas Baldwin Marsh, American religious leader (d. 1866)
- November 29 – Amos Bronson Alcott, father of novelist Louisa May Alcott (d. 1888)
- December 30 – David Douglas, Scottish botanist (d. 1834)
- date unknown
- Patrick MacDowell, Irish sculptor (d. 1870)
- James Townsend Saward, English barrister and forger
- John Brown Russwurm, American abolitionist (d. 1851)
[edit] Deaths
- January 9 – Maria Gaetana Agnesi, Italian mathematician (b. 1718)
- January 22 – Horace-Bénédict de Saussure, Swiss aristocrat and alpinist (b. 1740)
- February 6 – Étienne-Louis Boullée, French architect (b. 1728)
- February 7 – Qianlong Emperor of China (b. 1711)
- February 12 – Lazzaro Spallanzani, Italian biologist and physiologist (b. 1729)
- February 16 – Charles Theodore, Elector of Bavaria (b. 1724)
- February 19 – Jean-Charles de Borda, French mathematician, physicist, political scientist, and sailor (b. 1733)
- February 22 – Heshen, Manchu official under Qianlong (b. 1750)
- February 24 – Georg Christoph Lichtenberg, German scientist, satirist and Anglophile (b. 1742)
- April 6 – Alexander Bezborodko, Grand Chancellor of Russia, architect of Catherine the Great's foreign policy (b. 1747)
- May 2 – Guemes Padilla Horcasitas, Viceroy of New Spain (b. 1740)
- May 4 – Tipu Sultan, Indian ruler (b. 1750)
- May 19 – Pierre Beaumarchais, French writer (b. 1732)
- May 26 – James Burnett, Lord Monboddo, Scottish judge (b. 1714)
- May 31 – Pierre Charles Le Monnier, French astronomer (b. 1715)
- June 6 – Patrick Henry, American revolutionary politician (b. 1736)
- June 10 – Chevalier de Saint-Georges, Guadeloupe-born French musician (b. 1745)
- June 30 – Francesco Caracciolo, Neapolitan admiral and revolutionist (b. 1752)
- July 7 – William Curtis, English botanist and entomologist (b. 1746)
- August 2 – Jacques Étienne Montgolfier, French inventor (b. 1744)
- August 4 – John Bacon, British sculptor (b. 1740)
- August 5 – Richard Howe, British admiral (b. 1726)
- August 15 – Barthélemy Catherine Joubert, French general (b. 1769)
- August 29 – Pope Pius VI (b. 1717)
- August 31 – Nicolas-Henri Jardin, French architect (b. 1720)
- September 7 – Jan Ingenhousz, Dutch physician, physiologist, biologist and chemist (b. 1730)
- October 6 – William Withering, British physician (b. 1741)
- October 9 – Pigneau de Behaine, French priest who helped to establish the Nguyen dynasty (b. 1741)
- October 24 – Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf, Austrian composer (b. 1739)
- December 6 – Joseph Black, Scottish physician, physicist, and chemist (b. 1728)
- December 14 – George Washington, 1st President of the United States (b. 1732)
- December 31 – Jean-François Marmontel, French historian and writer (b. 1723)

