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1825 in literature

List of years in literature (table)
In poetry
1822
1823
1824
1825
1826
1827
1828

This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1825.

Events

  • February 19Franz Grillparzer's König Ottokars Glück und Ende (The Fortune and Fall of King Ottokar, published 1823) is first performed, at the Burgtheater in Vienna, after Caroline Augusta, Empress of Austria, urges her husband Francis I of Austria to lift the censorship restrictions on it.
  • April – Charles Lamb retires from his clerical post with the East India Company in London on superannuation.
  • May 6June 15 – The two youngest Brontë sisters, Maria and Elizabeth, die at home at Haworth Parsonage aged 11 and 9, of consumption they have contracted at Cowan Bridge School.
  • May 6 – French bibliophile, translator, lawyer and politician Henri Boulard (born 1754) dies, leaving a library of over half a million books, one of the greatest private book collections in history.
  • December 17 – John Neal moves in with and becomes personal secretary of Jeremy Bentham, who recruits Neal to his utilitarian philosophy.[1]
  • unknown date – The first publication of Samuel Pepys' Diary (1660–1669) appears, edited by Lord Braybrooke from a transcription by Rev. John Smith.[2]

New books

Fiction

  • John and Michael BanimTales of the O'Hara Family
  • Lydia Maria Child – The Rebels
  • Sarah GreenParents and Wives
  • Wilhelm HauffDer Mann im Mond (The Man in the Moon)
  • Barbara Hofland – Moderation
  • John Neal – Brother Jonathan: or, the New Englanders[3]
  • Sir Walter Scott

Children

  • Maria Hack –English Stories. Third Series, Reformation under the Tudor Princes

Drama

  • Caroline Boaden – Quite Correct
  • Aleksander Griboyedov – Woe from Wit (part published)
  • James Sheridan KnowlesWilliam Tell
  • Harriet LeeThe Three Strangers
  • John Poole – Paul Pry
  • Alexander Pushkin – Boris Godunov (published 1831, but approved for the stage only in 1866)
  • William TennantJohn Balliol
  • Charles Walker – The Fall of Algiers

Poetry

Non-fiction

Births

Uncertain date

  • Annie French Hector (pseudonym Mrs Alexander), Irish-born novelist (died 1902)

Deaths

Awards

References

  1. ^ Richards, Irving T. (2018) [Originally published as in The New England Quarterly, vol. 7, no. 2, June 1834, pp. 335-355]. "Mary Gove Nichols and John Neal". In DiMercurio, Catherine C. (ed.). Nineteenth-Century Literature Criticism: Criticism of the Works of Novelists, Philosophers, and Other Creative Writers Who Dies between 1800 and 1899, from the First Published Critical Evaluations. 356. Farmington Hills, Michigan: Gale. p. 178n62. ISBN 978-1-4103-7851-4.
  2. ^ Samuel Taylor Coleridge (2003). A Book I Value: Selected Marginalia. Princeton University Press. p. 179. ISBN 0-691-11317-3.
  3. ^ Sears, Donald A. (1978). John Neal. Boston, Massachusetts: Twayne Publishers. p. 145. ISBN 080-5-7723-08.
  4. ^ "Supplement to the Local Gazetteer of Wu Prefecture". World Digital Library. 1134. Retrieved 2013-09-06.
  5. ^ Taiping Chang Knechtges (14 September 2017). A Dictionary of Chinese Literature. OUP Oxford. p. 54. ISBN 978-0-19-251393-9.
  6. ^ The Gentleman's Magazine. F. Jefferies. 1825. pp. 11–.
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