Wikipedia

1730s

The 1730s decade ran from January 1, 1730, to December 31, 1739.

Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
  • 1730
  • 1731
  • 1732
  • 1733
  • 1734
  • 1735
  • 1736
  • 1737
  • 1738
  • 1739
Categories:

Events

1730

January–March

April–June

July–September

  • July 8 – An earthquake with an estimated magnitude of 9.1 strikes Valparaiso, now part of Chile but at the time located in the Viceroyalty of Peru.
  • July 12 – The papal conclave selects Cardinal Lorenzo Corsini over Cardinal Pietro Marcellino Corradini as the successor to Pope Benedict XIII. Corsini becomes Pope Clement XII as the 246th pope.
  • August 4 – Maria Madlener becomes the last person to be executed after the Galgeninsel witch trials in Bavaria, and is beheaded by sword.
  • August 5Prince Frederick of Prussia, the eldest son of King Frederick William and a high-ranking officer, attempts to flee to England after deserting the Prussian Army and is captured along with his fellow officer Hans Hermann von Katte. Katte is executed, and Crown Prince Frederick is imprisoned at Küstrin (now Kostrzyn nad Odrą in Poland) for a year before being forgiven by his father. Prince Frederick later succeeds his father as King and is now remembered as Frederick the Great.[5]
  • August 12 – General Nader Khan of Persia captures Tabriz from the Ottoman Empire, bringing an end to the Western Persia Campaign, the first major action in the Ottoman–Persian War. Tabriz has been part of Iran ever since. Nader leaves Tabriz four days later to begin the Herat Campaign.
  • August 25 – French Protestant Marie Durand is imprisoned in the Tower of Constance at Aigues-Mortes for her defiance of the Roman Catholic government, and keeps her captive for the next 38 years. During her incarceration, she continues to resist converting to Catholicism as a condition of release. She is finally set free on April 14, 1768 and lives 8 more years.
  • September 1 – A volcano erupts on Lanzarote, the easternmost of the Canary Islands and threatens the Spanish inhabitants. On Gran Canaria, the regent of the islands reports to Madrid that the flames are visible even from 130 miles (210 km) away.[6]
  • September 17Mahmud I (1730–1754) succeeds Ahmed III (1703–1730), as Ottoman Emperor.

October–December

1731

January–March

April–June

  • April 1 – Battle of Dabhoi in India is fought between Sarsenapati Trimbakrao Dabhade and Bajirao Peshwa.
  • April 2 – The town of Raynham, Massachusetts in Bristol County is entered as a new town by the governor and court of Massachusetts, New England, America.
  • April 9 – British trader Robert Jenkins has his ear cut off after his ship, Rebecca is boarded by Spanish coast guards at Havana in Cuba. '[9] The incident becomes the casus belli for the War of Jenkins' Ear in 1739. [10]
  • April 28 – A fire at White's Chocolate House, near St. James's Palace, destroys the historic club and the paintings therein, but is kept from spreading by the fast response of firemen.[8]
  • May 10 – The Pacific Fleet of the Russian Navy is established by order of the Empress Anna of Russia, who directs Grigory Skonrnyakov-Pisarev to assume command over the new fleet and to develop Okhotsk as a major port. [11][12]
  • June 4 – The English market town of Blandford Forum is destroyed by fire, with the exception of 26 houses. About one-third of the uninsured losses are paid for by the collection of disaster relief money. [8]

July–September

October–December

  • October 23A fire at Ashburnham House in Westminster destroys 114 irreplaceable manuscripts (including a manuscript of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle) and damages 98 others (among them the manuscript of Beowulf). Dr. Richard Bentley, the King's librarian and the House's owner, saves the only copy of the Codex Alexandrinus, carrying it under one arm as he leaps from a window. Dr. Bentley's ten year labor in translating the Greek Testament is ruined by the blaze. The remaining 844 manuscripts later form the heart of the collections of the British Library. [14][8]
  • November 25
    • Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler announces his use of the irrational number e (approximately 2.71828) as the base for the concept of the natural logarithm, describing it in a letter to German mathematician Christian Goldbach.
    • Patrona Halil, an ethnic Albanian and a janissary who instigated a mass uprising in 1730 within the Ottoman Empire that brought Mahmud I to power as the new Sultan, is strangled to death in Mahmud's presence after the rebellion is finally suppressed.
  • December 21 – The Maharaja Chhatrasal, monarch of Bundelkhand in India (now part of the states of Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh) dies at the age of 82. His kingdom is divided into four parts, with one part going to Baji Rao I of the Marathas. The other three going to his three sons: Harde Sah gets the Panna State, Jagat Rai gets the Jaitpur State and Bharti Chand gets the Jaso State.
  • December 29Jacques Grimaldi, the husband of the reigning monarch of Monaco, Louise Hippolyte, succeeds to the throne after Louise's death from smallpox. Jacques I rules until his own death in 1751. The House of Grimaldi has ruled the European principality for almost three centuries. The current ruler, Prince Albert II, is the great-great-great-great-great-great-great-grandson of Jacques.

Date unknown

1732

January–March

April–June

July–September

  • July 2Spain completes the conquest of the Algerian cities of Oran and Mers El Kébir in the Oran Province, after a 17-day siege.
  • August 21 – Mikhail Gvozdev in the Sviatoi Gavriil makes the first known crossing of the Bering Strait, from Cape Dezhnev to Cape Prince of Wales in Alaska, marking the first time that Europeans have reached the northwest coast of North America. [19]
  • September 13 – The Treaty of the Three Black Eagles or the Treaty of Berlin, a secret treaty between the Austrian Empire, the Russian Empire and Prussia against Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.
  • September 16 – The magnitude 5.8 Montreal earthquake occurs in Quebec (New France).

October–December

  • October 7 – French Army Lieutenant General Florent-Jean de Vallière is tasked by King Louis XV to improve France's method of forging cannons.
  • October 16 – Russia approves the second Kamchatka expedition of Danish-born cartographer Vitus Bering, and the Admiralty orders him to sail east and try to claim uncharted lands in North America.
  • November 29 – The magnitude 6.6 Irpinia earthquake causes 1,940 deaths in the former Kingdom of Naples.
  • December 5 – 139 members of the Parliament of Paris, exiled by order of King Louis XV, secure their recall. [20]
  • December 7 – The original Theatre Royal, Covent Garden, London (the modern-day Royal Opera House) is opened.
  • December 19Benjamin Franklin, in the Pennsylvania Gazette, first advertises the publication of Poor Richard's Almanack, purportedly written by "Richard Saunders", a pen name used by Franklin. [21] The book goes on sale on December 28. [22] The annual publication will continue until 1758.

Date unknown

1733

January–March

April–June

July–September

October–December

1734

January– March

April–June

  • April 22 – Voting begins for the British House of Commons in some parliamentary constituencies. In that voting dates vary, the election continues until June 6.
  • April 25Easter occurs on the latest possible date (the next time is in 1886).
  • May 15 – Prince Charles of Spain (later King Charles III) becomes the new King of Naples and Sicily, five days after his arrival in Naples.
  • May 25 – Spanish forces under the command of José Carrillo de Albornoz, 1st Duke of Montemar, defeat the Austrian forces, completing the conquest of the Kingdom of Naples at the Battle of Bitonto.
  • May 27 – French and Swiss troops suppress the slave insurrection in the Danish West Indies on the island of Saint John (now part of the U.S. Virgin Islands) after six months and restore control of the plantations to the Danish owners. [35]
  • June 6 – With the conclusion of the British general election, the Whigs, led by Prime Minister Robert Walpole, lose 85 seats but retain their majority.
  • June 17 – French troops take Philippsburg, but Duke of Berwick is killed.
  • June 21 – In Montreal, New France, a black slave known by the French name of Marie-Joseph Angélique is tortured then hanged by the French authorities for allegedly setting a fire that des troyed part of the city.
  • June 30War of the Polish Succession: Russian troops take Gdańsk (German: Danzig), which had been besieged since February 1734, after the failure of a French expedition to relieve the city.

July–September

October–December

  • October 23Jamaica's Governor John Ayscough declares martial law to fight the slave rebellion that began in 1733, then drafts 600 men into the colonial army to march into the Blue Mountains. [36]
  • October 31 – Chief Tomochichi of the Yamacraw band of the Muscogee Nation ends a successful four and a half month visit to Great Britain, along with Georgia Governor James Oglethorpe and other Yamacraw Indians, after having signed the cession of the area of modern day Savannah, Georgia to the Georgia Company. On June 16, he and the Muscogee delegation (Senauki, Toonahowi, Hillispilli, Umpichi, Apokutchi, Santachi and Stimaletchi) had been welcomed as a guest of King George II. The group departs on HMS Aldborough after completing the visit by the largest delegation of Native Americans since 1616. [37]
  • November 5 – The Dzików Confederation is created in Poland.
  • December 24 – A fire destroys the Royal Alcázar of Madrid, the residence of the Spanish royal family, along with more than 400 valuable paintings, 100 sculptures and thousands of documents.

1735

January–March

April–June

July–September

October –December

Date unknown

1736

January–March

April–June

July–September

  • July 1 – Russo-Turkish War (1735–39): Russian forces under Peter Lacy storm the Ottoman fortress of Azov. [54]
  • August 12 – A fire in Saint Petersburg, capital of the Russian Empire, destroys 2,000 buildings, the city's post office, and several palaces.[55]
  • September 7 – An Edinburgh crowd drags John Porteous out of his cell in Tolbooth Prison, and lynches him.
  • September 29 – The Gin Act 1736 goes into effect, placing a steep tax on the sale of gin and license requirements for its sale, with the intent of reducing consumption of the liquor in Britain. Widely ignored, the Act is repealed in 1743. [56]

October–December

  • October 3 – French scientist Charles Marie de La Condamine and a team of surveyors begin the first measurements at the Equator to determine the exact meridian arc measurement of distance between points separated by one degree of longitude in order to make a precise calculation of the Earth's circumference. [57] The initial measurements, made in what is now Ecuador, last until November 3.
  • November 5 – King Theodore of Corsica flees the island after a reign of seven months and the kingdom reverts to French control. [49]
  • November 13 – Word of the discovery of silver, south of what is now the U.S.-Mexican border, reaches Sonora Governor Juan Bautista Anza and soon leads to prospectors coming to Nogales to find more silver. [58] Late in October, a Yaqui Indian prospector, Antonio Siraumea, had discovered large slabs of silver ("Las planchas de plata"), and at the Estancia Arizona, a ranch owned by Captain Bernardo de Urrea. The region, and later the U.S. territory, and state of Arizona are named for Urrea's ranch.
  • December 7Benjamin Franklin builds the first volunteer fire company in Philadelphia.
  • December 26Andrew Michael Ramsay gives an oration, in which he relates the heritage and internationalism of Freemasonry to that of the Crusades.

Date unknown

1737

January–March

April–June

  • April 5 – French Jesuit priest Jean-François Régis is canonized as Saint Regis by the Roman Catholic Church under the reign of Pope Clement XII.
  • April 22
    • In Afghanistan, Persian shah Nader Shah begins the 11-month Siege of Kandahar against the Pashtun Emir of Afghanistan, Hussain Hotak.[68] The surviving Afghanis surrender on March 24, 1738.
    • Lots are first advertised for sale in the new town of Richmond, Virginia, by the placement of a notice by William Byrd in the Virginia Gazette. According to the paper, "... on the North Side of James River, near the Uppermost Landing, and a little below the Falls, is lately laid off by Major Mayo, a Town, called Richmond, with Streets 65 Feet wide, in a pleasant and healthy Situation, and well supply'd with Springs of good Water. It lies near the Publick Warehouse at Shoccoe's, and in the midst of great Quantities of Grain, and all kind of Provisions. The Lots will be granted in Fee Simple, on Condition only of building a House in Three Years Time, of 24 by 16 Feet, fronting within 5 Feet of the Street. The Lots to be rated according to the Convenience of their Situation, and to be sold after this April General Court, by me, William Byrd." [69]
  • May 28 – The planet Venus passes in front of Mercury. The event is witnessed during the evening hours, by the amateur astronomer John Bevis, at the Royal Greenwich Observatory. As of 2006, it is still the only such planet/planet occultation that has been directly observed.
  • June 21 – In Britain, the Theatrical Licensing Act requires plays to be submitted to the Lord Chamberlain for censorship.
  • June 30 – Russo-Turkish War, 1735-1739: Russian forces under Field Marshal Munnich storm the Ottoman fortress of Ochakov, and take prisoner 4,000 Turks.

July–September

October–December

Date unknown

1738

January–March

April–June

July–September

  • July 1 – English metallurgist William Champion is granted a patent for his process of extracting zinc from other materials in a furnace.[83]
  • July 10 – Thomas Pellow of Cornwall finally escapes captivity, 23 years after having been captured by Barbary pirates and held as a slave in Morocco. He arrives in British territory when the ship he is on sails into Gibraltar Bay on July 21, and later recounts his story in the book The Adventures of Thomas Pellow, of Penryn, Mariner: Three and Twenty Years in Captivity Among the Moors.[84]
  • August 10 – Russo-Turkish War (1735–1739): The Russian army begins its attempt to cross the Dniester River and fails after three weeks; they are later decimated by plague.[85]
  • September 18Samuel Johnson composes his first solemn prayer (published 1785).

October–December

  • October 22 – The excavation of Herculaneum, a Roman city buried by Vesuvius in AD 79, begins near the Italian city of Resina on orders from King Charles VII of Spain to his engineer, Rocque Joaquin de Alcubierre.[86]
  • November 18 – The Treaty of Vienna is ratified, ending the War of the Polish Succession. Under the terms of the treaty, Stanisław Leszczyński receives Lorraine in exchange for renouncing the Polish throne.
  • December 27 – After setting off from Rotterdam in August with 240 immigrants to America, the British ship Princess Augusta is wrecked near Block Island off of the coast of the colony of Rhode Island.[87] During the voyage, 200 passengers and seven crew died from illness spread by contaminated water. Another 20 die after the crew leaves rows to shore. The wreck later becomes the subject of the legend of the "Palatine Light" ghost ship and of John Greenleaf Whittier's 1867 poem "The Palatine".

Date unknown

1739

January–March

April–June

July–September

October–December

  • October 3 – The Treaty of Niš is signed.
  • October 17 – The Foundling Hospital is created in London by royal charter.
  • October 23War of Jenkins' Ear: Great Britain declares war on Spain.
  • November 2022War of Jenkins' Ear – Battle of Porto Bello: British marine forces capture the Panamanian silver exporting town of Portobelo from the Spanish.
  • December 30– Months of unseasonably cold weather begin in Ireland, precipitating the Irish Famine of 1740, known as Bliain an Áir ("The Year of Slaughter"). A January 5 dispatch from Dublin to the Stamford Mercury says "Since last Wednesday we have had the most violent cold Weather that was ever known in this Kingdom; hard Frost began that evening, which has continued ever since with a very stormy Wind at South-East." [95] At least 13% of Ireland's population dies of starvation in the year that follows. [96]

Date unknown

Births

1730

  • January 3 – Velu Nachiyar, queen regnant of Sivaganga (d. 1796)
  • March 7 – Louis Auguste Le Tonnelier de Breteuil, last prime minister of the French monarchy (d. 1807)
Henry Clinton

1731

1732

George Washington

1733

1734

Daniel Boone

1735

1736

1737

1738

1739

Deaths

1730

1731

Bartolomeo Cristofori

1732

1733

1734

1735

1736

Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit

1737

1738

1739


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