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1822 in the United Kingdom
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Events from the year 1822 in the United Kingdom.
Incumbents
- Monarch – George IV
- Prime Minister – Robert Jenkinson, 2nd Earl of Liverpool (Tory)
- Foreign Secretary – Robert Stewart, 2nd Marquess of Londonderry (until 18 August) George Canning (from 13 September)
- Home Secretary – Lord Sidmouth (until 17 January) Robert Peel (from 17 January)
- Secretary of War – Lord Bathurst
Events
- 3 January – Seaton Delaval Hall in Northumberland is gutted by fire.
- 15 January – HM Treasury directs that the Preventive Water Guard, Revenue cruisers and Riding officers should all be placed under the authority of the Board of Customs as HM Coast Guard.
- 6 May – The Royal Academy Exhibition of 1822 opens at Somerset House. The exhibition is noted for portraits by Thomas Lawrence and David Wilkie's Chelsea Pensioners Reading the Waterloo Dispatch
- 23 May – HMS Comet launched at Deptford Dockyard, the first steamboat commissioned by the Royal Navy.
- 18 June – The Wellington Monument is inaugurated close to the Duke's London residence Apsley House on the seventh anniversary of his victory at Waterloo.
- 3 July – Charles Babbage publishes a proposal for a "difference engine", a mechanical forerunner of the modern computer for calculating logarithms and trigonometric functions. Construction of an operational version will proceed under Government sponsorship 1823–32 but it will never be completed.
- 8 July – The Chippewa turn over a huge tract of land in Ontario to the British.
- 19 July – Percy Jocelyn, Anglican Bishop of Clogher, is caught in a compromising position with a young Grenadier Guardsman at a public house in London. He breaks bail and flees England. In October, an ecclesiastical court deprives him of office.
- 22 July – [[Cruel Treatment of Cattle Act 1822| An Act to Prevent the Cruel and Improper Treatment of Cattle]] ("Martin's Act"), one of the first pieces of animal rights legislation, is passed to regulate treatment of cows, horses and sheep.
- 31 July – Last public whipping in Edinburgh.
- 12 August
- The Foreign Secretary Lord Castlereagh cuts his own throat at his house in Kent.
- St David's College (the modern-day University of Wales, Lampeter) is founded by Thomas Burgess, Bishop of St David's.
- 15–29 August – Visit of King George IV to Scotland, first appearance of the monarch there since 1651.
- 22 August – English ship Orion lands at Yerba Buena, later named San Francisco, under the command of William A. Richardson
- 16 September – George Canning is appointed Foreign Secretary to replace Castlereagh.
- 21 September – HMS Confiance, a Royal Navy of 1813, is wrecked off Mizen Head in Ireland with the loss of all 100 aboard.
- 24 September – The Prime Minister, Lord Liverpool, marries, as his second wife, Mary Chester, at Hampton Court.
- 20 October
- The New Observer newspaper becomes The Sunday Times.
- The Duke of Wellington represents Britain at the Congress of Verona.
- 23–24 October – The Caledonian Canal, engineered by Thomas Telford, is opened throughout, linking the east and west coasts of Scotland through the Great Glen.
- 27 November – Outside Newgate Prison in London, William Reading becomes the last person to be hanged for shoplifting.
Undated
- Egyptian hieroglyphs are deciphered by Thomas Young and Jean-François Champollion using the Rosetta Stone.
- A fossil Iguanodon tooth is discovered by Gideon Mantell and his wife Mary in West Sussex; in 1825 it will be the first fossil to be recognised as that of a dinosaur.
- The Royal Academy of Music is founded in London. It opens in March 1823 before the Royal charter is granted in June 1830.
- Construction of the Royal Pavilion in Brighton is completed.
- Stonemason John Mowlem establishes the contracting firm Mowlem.
Publications
- Alexander Jamieson's A Celestial Atlas.
- John C. Loudon's The Encyclopædia of Gardening.
- Sir Walter Scott's novels The Pirate and The Fortunes of Nigel.
Births
- 10 February – Eliza Lynn Linton, English novelist and journalist (died 1898)
- 13 February – James B. Beck, Scottish-born United States Senator from Kentucky from 1877 to 1890 (died 1890 in the United States)
- 16 February – Sir Francis Galton, English explorer and biologist (died 1911)
- 8 April – Stillborn twin sons to the Duke of Clarence and Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen
- 19 April – Edward Oxford, English attempted assassin of Queen Victoria (died 1900)
- 18 July – Augusta of Cambridge, Hanoverian princess (died 1916)
- 1 November – Sir Sydney Waterlow, English businessman, politician and philanthropist (died 1906)
- 6 December – Mary Colton, Australian philanthropist and suffragist (died 1898)
- 24 December – Matthew Arnold, English poet (died 1888)
Deaths
- 15 January – John Aikin, physician and writer (born 1747)
- 24 February – Thomas Coutts, banker (born 1735)
- 8 March – Christopher Wyvill, cleric, landowner and political reformer (born 1740)
- 17 June – Marquess of Hertford, politician and courtier (born 1743)
- 8 July – Percy Bysshe Shelley, poet (born 1792)
- 23 July – Peter Durand, merchant (born 1766)
- 12 August – Robert Stewart, Viscount Castlereagh, Foreign Secretary (suicide) (born 1769)
- 25 August – William Herschel, astronomer (born 1738 in Hanover)
References
References
- Henderson, Tony. (2014-06-11). "Historical twist as nesting birds hold up Seaton Delaval Hall work". journallive.
- Lewis, Michael. (1965). "The Navy in Transition, 1814–1864: a social history". Hodder & Stoughton.
- Hyman, Anthony. (1982). "[[Charles Babbage: Pioneer of the Computer]]". [[Oxford University Press]].
- "Treaty Timeline".
- Geoghegan, Patrick M.. (October 2009). "Jocelyn, Percy". Royal Irish Academy.
- (1839). "The Rights of Persons, according to the text of Blackstone: incorporating the alterations down to the present time".
- Prebble, John. (1988). "The King's Jaunt: George IV in Scotland, August 1822 'One and Twenty Daft Days'". Collins.
- Gossett, William Patrick. (1986). "The Lost Ships of the Royal Navy, 1793–1900". Mansell.
- ''Bell's Weekly Messenger''. 30 September 1822. p. 7.
- "Concise History of the British Newspaper in the Nineteenth Century".
- Lindsay, Jean. (1968). "The Canals of Scotland". David & Charles.
- "Timeline of capital punishment in Britain".
- Dean, Dennis R.. (1999). "Gideon Mantell and the Discovery of Dinosaurs". Cambridge University Press.
- Ziegler, Philip. (1971). "King William IV". Collins.
- Jones, Helen. (2005). "Australian Dictionary of Biography". National Centre of Biography at the Australian National University.
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