1731
Millennium: | 2nd millennium |
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1731 by topic |
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181 before ROC 民前181年 | |
Nanakshahi calendar | 263 |
Thai solar calendar | 2273–2274 |
Tibetan calendar | 阳金狗年 (male Iron-Dog) 1857 or 1476 or 704 — to — 阴金猪年 (female Iron-Pig) 1858 or 1477 or 705 |
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1731 (MDCCXXXI) was a common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar and a common year starting on Friday of the Julian calendar, the 1731st year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 731st year of the 2nd millennium, the 31st year of the 18th century, and the 2nd year of the 1730s decade. As of the start of 1731, the Gregorian calendar was 11 days ahead of the Julian calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923.
Events
January–March
- January 8 – An avalanche from the Skafjell mountain causes a massive wave in the Storfjorden fjord in Norway that sinks all boats that happen to be in the water at the time and kills people on both shores.[1]
- Coudenberg Palace, at this time the home of the ruling Austrian Duchess of Brabant, destroys the building, including the state records stored therein.[2]
- February 16 – In China, the Emperor Yongzheng orders grain to be shipped from Hubei and Guangdong to the famine-stricken Shangzhou region of Shaanxi province.
- tiny European principality, ascending upon the death of her father Prince Antonio. She reigns only nine months before dying of smallpoxon December 29.
- March 16 – The Treaty of Vienna is signed between the Holy Roman Empire, Great Britain, the Dutch Republic and Spain.
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.[3] The incident becomes the casus belli for the War of Jenkins' Ear in 1739.[4]
- April 28 – A fire at White's Chocolate House, near St. James's Palace in London, destroys the historic club and the paintings therein, but is kept from spreading by the fast response of firemen.[5]
- Empress Anna of Russia, who directs Grigory Skornyakov-Pisarev to assume command over the new fleet and to develop Okhotsk as a major port.[6][7]
- 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.[5]
July–September
- July 1 – Benjamin Franklin and fellow-subscribers start the Library Company of Philadelphia.
- Nine years later, having been politically rehabilitated, Prince Frederick succeeds his father as King and is later remembered as "Frederick the Great".
- August 23 – The oldest known sports score in history is recorded in the description of a cricket match at Richmond Green in England, when the team of Thomas Chambers of Middlesex defeats the Duke of Richmond's team by 119 to 79.
- September – The first successful appendectomy is performed by English surgeon William Cookesley.[9]
- September 30 – The village of Barnwell, Cambridgeshire, England, is "burned down entirely" by a fire.[5]
October–December
- Greek Testament is ruined by the blaze. The remaining 844 manuscripts later form the heart of the collections of the British Library.[10][5]
- 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 suppressed.
- Baji Rao I of the Marathas and 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 29 – Jacques 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.
Date unknown
- Royal Colony of North Carolina Governor George Burrington asks the North Carolina General Assembly to pass an act establishing a town on the Cape Fear River, in what is seen as a political move to shift the power away from the powerful Cape Fear plantation class. The town is laid out in 1733, and incorporated as Wilmington in 1740.
- Laura Bassi becomes the first official female university teacher, on being appointed professor of anatomy at the University of Bologna, at the age of 21.[11]
- English scientist John Bevis observes the Crab Nebula for the first time in the modern era.
- The octant is developed by English mathematician John Hadley (it will eventually be replaced as a means of determining latitude by the sextant).
- The Royal Theatre of Ferdinando Galli Bibiena.
- First deeds for The Queen Inn, Winchester. Hops are grown on the land.
Births
- January 3 – Angelo Emo, Venetian admiral and statesman (d. 1792)
- February – Charles Churchill, English poet (d. 1764)
- March 19 – Gabriela Silang, Filipino rebel leader and heroine (d. 1763)
- April 8 – William Williams, signer of the United States Declaration of Independence (d. 1811)
- May 8 – Beilby Porteus, Bishop of London and abolitionist (d. 1809)
- June 2 – Dorothea Biehl, Danish writer (d. 1788)
- July 16 – Samuel Huntington, Patriot in the American Revolution and politician (d. 1796)
- August – Henry Constantine Jennings, English gambler and collector (d. 1819)
- October 10 – Henry Cavendish, English scientist (d. 1810)
- African-American astronomer, surveyor of the District of Columbia (d. 1806)
- November 15 – William Cowper, English poet (d. 1800)
- December 8 – František Xaver Dušek, Czech composer (d. 1799)
- December 12 – Erasmus Darwin, English scientist and grandfather of Charles Darwin (d. 1802)
- December 28 – José de Viera y Clavijo, Spanish writer
- Nikephoros Theotokis, Greek scholar and theologian (d. 1800)
Deaths
- January 6 – Étienne François Geoffroy, French chemist (b. 1672)
- Antonio Farnese, Duke of Parma (b. 1679)
- January 23 – Anna Lohe, Swedish banker (b. 1654)
- January 27 – Bartolomeo Cristofori, Italian maker of musical instruments (b. 1655)
- February – Thomas Hancorne, Welsh clergyman and theologian (b. 1642)
- February 10 – George Carpenter, 1st Baron Carpenter, British Army general (b. 1657)
- February 15 – Mary of Jesus de León y Delgado, Spanish Dominican lay sister and mystic (b. 1643)
- February 22 – Frederik Ruysch, Dutch physician and anatomist (b. 1638)
- March 5 – Abd al-Ghani al-Nabulsi, Sufi academic (b. 1641)
- March 6 – Johann Melchior Dinglinger, German goldsmith (b. 1664)
- March 8 – Ferdinand Brokoff, Czech sculptor (b. 1688)
- March 9 – Frances Talbot, Countess of Tyrconnell, English-born courtier and vicereine of Ireland (b. c. 1649)
- March 12 – Ernest August, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Augustenburg (b. 1660)
- Augustus William, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg (b. 1662)
- April 24 – Daniel Defoe, English writer (b. c. 1660)
- April 28
- Johann Theodor Jablonski, German lexicographer (b. 1654)
- James Olmsted, Connecticut politician (b. 1645)
- May 1 – Johann Ludwig Bach, German composer (b. 1677)
- May 11 – Mary Astell, English feminist writer (b. 1666)
- May 17 – Samuel Bradford, English churchman, Whig politician (b. 1652)
- June 20 – Ned Ward, English writer, publican (b. 1667)
- July 18 – Sir Walter Yonge, 3rd Baronet, English politician (b. 1653)
- August 27 – Eudoxia Lopukhina, Russian Tsarina, divorced spouse of Peter the Great of Russia (b. 1669)
- December 17 – George Lockhart, Scottish writer, spy and politician, killed in duel (b. 1673)
- December 20 – Chhatrasal, Maharaja of Madhya Pradesh (b. 1649)
- December 26 – Antoine Houdar de la Motte, French writer (b. 1672)
- December 29 – Brook Taylor, English mathematician (b. 1685)
References
- ^ "The Skafjell Rock Avalanche in 1731", Fjords.com
- ^ "History of the palace". Coudenberg Palace. Retrieved May 7, 2023.
- ^ "List of British Merchant Ships, taken or plundered by the Spaniards", The Political State for the Month of April, 1738 of Great Britain (April 30, 1738) p322.
- ISBN 0-304-35730-8.
- ^ a b c d "Fires, Great", in The Insurance Cyclopeadia: Being an Historical Treasury of Events and Circumstances Connected with the Origin and Progress of Insurance, Cornelius Walford, ed. (C. and E. Layton, 1876) p49
- ^ Hubert Howe Bancroft, History of Alaska, 1730-1865 (A. L. Bancroft & Co., 1886) p45
- ^ Orcutt Frost, Bering: The Russian Discovery of America (Yale University Press, 2003) p67
- ^ Durant Will and Ariel (1965). The Story of Civilization, Volume IX: The Age of Voltaire. Simon & Schuster.
- S2CID 1708483.
- ^ "The Beowulf manuscript was damaged in a fire in Ashburnham House on October 23, 1731" Archived 2011-07-23 at the Wayback Machine. Cites The Gentleman's Magazine.
- ^ "The 18th Century Women Scientists of Bologna". ScienceWeek. 2004. Archived from the original on March 2, 2012. Retrieved April 26, 2011.