18TH CENTURY

(Redirected from Eighteenth century)

The '18th century' lasted from 1701 through 1800 in the Gregorian calendar.
Historians sometimes specifically define the 18th century otherwise for the purposes of their work. For example the "short" 18th century may be defined as 1715-1789, denoting the period of time between the death of Louis XIV of France and the start of the French Revolution,[1][2] while the "long" eighteenth century may run from the Glorious Revolution of 1689 to the battle of Waterloo in 1815[3] or even later.[4]
The storming of the Bastille, July 14, 1789, an iconic event of the French Revolution.


Contents
Events
Significant people
Inventions, discoveries, introductions
References
Decades and years

Events


===1700s===
Union flag of The Kingdom of Great Britain


1700-21: Russia supplants Sweden as the dominant Baltic power after the Great Northern War.

1701-1714: War of the Spanish Succession

1703: Saint Petersburg founded by Peter the Great. Russian capital until 1918.

1707: Act of Union passed merging the Scottish and the English Parliaments, thus establishing The Kingdom of Great Britain.

1707: After Aurangzeb's death, the Mughal Empire enters a long decline.
===1710s===

1715: First Jacobite Rebellion breaks out

1715: Louis XIV died leaving France deep in debt.

1718: City of New Orleans founded by the French in North America
===1720s===

1720: The South Sea Bubble

1721: Robert Walpole became the first Prime Minister of Great Britain (de facto).

1721: Treaty of Nystad signed, ending the Great Northern War.

1722-23: Russo-Persian War

1722: Afghans conquered Iran, ending the Safavid dynasty.

1722: Kangxi Emperor of China died.

1726: The enormous Chinese encyclopedia ''Gujin Tushu Jicheng'' of over 100 million written Chinese characters in over 800,000 pages is printed in 60 different copies using copper-based Chinese movable type printing.
===1730s===


1733-38: War of the Polish Succession

1735-39: Russo-Turkish War

1735-99: The Qianlong Emperor of China oversaw a huge expansion in territory.

1736: Nadir Shah assumed title of Shah of Persia and founded the Afsharid dynasty. Ruled until his death in 1747.

1736: Qing Dynasty Chinese court painters recreate Zhang Zeduan's classic panoramic painting, ''Along the River During Qingming Festival''.

1739: Nadir Shah defeated the Mughals and sacked Delhi.
===1740s===

1740: Frederick the Great comes to power in Prussia.

1740-48: War of the Austrian Succession

1741: Russians began settling the Aleutian Islands.

1745: Second Jacobite Rebellion began in Scotland.

1747: Ahmed Shah Durrani founded the Durrani Empire in modern day Afghanistan.
===1750s===

1750: Peak of the Little Ice Age

1755: The Lisbon earthquake

1756-63: Seven Years' War fought among European powers in various theaters around the world.

1757: Battle of Plassey signaled the beginning of British rule in India.
===1760s===
Frederick II the Great, King of Prussia


1760: George III became King of Britain.

1762-96: Reign of Catherine the Great of Russia.

1766-99: Anglo-Mysore Wars

1767: Burmese conquered the Ayutthaya kingdom.

1768: Gurkhas conquered Nepal.

1768-1774: Russo-Turkish War

1769: Spanish missionaries established the first of 21 missions in California.

1769-73: The Bengal famine of 1770 killed one third of the Indian population.
===1770s===

1772-1795: The Partitions of Poland ended the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and erased Poland from the map for 123 years.

1772 Gustav III of Sweden stages a coup d'état and takes big political power, becoming almost an absolute monarch.

1775-1782: First Anglo-Maratha War

1775-1783: American Revolutionary War

1779-1879: Xhosa Wars between British and Boer settlers and the Xhosas in South Africa

1779-1780: Drew Johnson jo's for and entire year
===1780s===

1785-95: Northwest Indian War between the United States and Native Americans

1787: Freed slaves from London founded Freetown in present-day Sierra Leone.

1788: First European settlement established in Australia at Sydney.

1789: George Washington elected President of the United States. Served until 1797.

1789-99: The French Revolution
===1790s===
The Haitian Revolution


1791-1804: The Haitian Revolution

1792-1815: The Great French War started as the French Revolutionary Wars which lead into the Napoleonic Wars.

1792: New York Stock & Exchange Board founded.

1793: Upper Canada bans slavery.

1795: Pinckney's Treaty between the United States and Spain granted the Mississippi Territory to the US.

1796: British ejected Dutch from Ceylon.

1797: Napoleon's invasion and partition of the Republic of Venice ended over 1,000 years of independence for the Serene Republic.

1798-1800: Quasi-War between the United States and France.

1799: Napoleon staged a coup d'état and became dictator of France.

1799: Dutch East India Company is dissolved.

Significant people




Maria Gaetana Agnesi, Italian mathematician[5]

Ahmad Shah Abdali, Afghan King

Ueda Akinari, Japanese writer

Jean le Rond d'Alembert, French mathematician, physicist and encyclopedist

Queen Anne, British monarch

Aurangzeb, Mughal Emperor

Johann Sebastian Bach, German composer

Laura Bassi, Italian scientist, the first European female college teacher5

George Berkeley, Irish empiricist philosopher

Pierre Beaumarchais, French writer

Jeremy Bentham, English philosopher and reformer

Daniel Bernoulli, Swiss mathematician and physicist

William Blake, English artist and poet

François Boucher, French painter

Edmund Burke, British statesman and philosopher

Robert Burns, Scottish poet

Giacomo Casanova, Venetian adventurer, writer and womanizer

Catherine the Great, Russian Tsaritsa

Cao Xueqin, Chinese writer

Alexis Clairault, French mathematician

James Cook, British navigator

François Couperin, French composer

Denis Diderot, French writer and philosopher

Eugenio Espejo, Ecuadorian scientist

Leonhard Euler, Swiss mathematician

Jean-Honoré Fragonard, French painter

Benjamin Franklin, American scientist and statesman

Frederick the Great, Prussian monarch

Thomas Gainsborough, English painter

Carl Friedrich Gauss, German mathematician, physicist and astronomer

King George III, British monarch

Christoph Willibald Gluck, German composer

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, German writer

Francesco Geminiani, Italian violinist, composer, and music theorist.

George Frideric Handel, German-English composer

Alexander Hamilton, American statesman

Joseph Haydn, Austrian composer

Eliza Haywood, English writer


William Hogarth, English painter and engraver

David Hume, Scottish philosopher

Thomas Jefferson, American statesman

Edward Jenner, English inventor of vaccination

Jiang Tingxi, Chinese artist and scholar

Samuel Johnson, British writer and literary critic

Joseph II, Austrian Emperor

Kangxi Emperor, China

Immanuel Kant, German philosopher

Pierre Choderlos de Laclos, French writer

Joseph Louis Lagrange, Italian-French mathematician and physicist

Pierre Simon Laplace, French physicist and mathematician

John Law, Scottish economist

Mikhail Lomonosov, Russian scientist

Antoine Lavoisier, French chemist

Adrien-Marie Legendre, French mathematician

Alphonsus Liguori, Italian bishop, founder of Redemptorists, Saint

Carolus Linnaeus (''Carl von Linné''), Swedish biologist


Louis XV of France, French monarch

Louis XVI of France, French monarch

James Madison, American statesman

Maria Theresa of Austria, Austrian Empress

Marie Antoinette, Austrian-born Queen of France

Michikinikwa, Miami tribe chief and war leader

Honoré Mirabeau French writer and politician

Charles de Secondat, baron de Montesquieu, French thinker

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Austrian composer

Nadir Shah, Persian King

Thomas Paine, British intellectual

Peter I of Russia (''Peter the Great''), Russian Tsar

Pius VI, Roman Pope

François-André Danican Philidor, French composer and chess master


Marquis of Pombal, Portuguese Prime Minister

Alexander Pope, British poet

Qianlong Emperor, China

Francis II Rákóczi, prince of Hungary and Transylvania, Revolutionary leader

Jean-Philippe Rameau, French composer

Bartolomeo Rastrelli, Italian-born Russian architect

Sir Joshua Reynolds, British painter

Maximilien Robespierre, French revolutionary leader

Jean-Jacques Rousseau, French writer and philosopher

Marquis de Sade, French writer and philosopher

Domenico Scarlatti, Italian composer.

Friedrich Schiller, German writer

John Small, English cricketer

Adam Smith, Scottish economist and philosopher

Laurence Sterne, British writer

Edward "Lumpy" Stevens, English cricketer


Alexander Suvorov, Russian military leader

Emanuel Swedenborg, Swedish scientist, thinker and mystic

Jonathan Swift, Anglo-Irish satirist

Toussaint L'Ouverture, Haitian revolutionary leader

Túpac Amaru II, Peruvian revolutionary

Kitagawa Utamaro, Japanese printmaker and painter

Antonio Vivaldi, Italian composer

Voltaire, French writer and philosopher

Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab, Arab islamic theologian and founder of Wahhabism

Robert Walpole, British Prime Minister

George Washington, American general and first President of USA

James Watt, Scottish scientist and inventor

Antoine Watteau, French painter

John Wesley, British churchman, founder of Methodism

Mary Wollstonecraft, British writer and feminist

William Pitt, British Prime Minister

Yuan Mei, Chinese poet, scholar and artist

Nikolaus Ludwig von Zinzendorf, German religious writer and bishop

Antonio Stradivari, violin maker in Cremona, Italy
See Founding Fathers of the United States

Inventions, discoveries, introductions


Main articles: Timeline of invention#18th century, Timeline_of_scientific_discoveries#18th_century



1709: The first piano was built by Bartolomeo Cristofori

1712: Steam Engine invented by Thomas Newcomen.

1717: The diving bell was successfully tested by Edmond Halley, sustainable to a depth of 55 ft.

★ c. 1730: The sextant navigational tool was developed by John Hadley in England, and Thomas Godfrey in America

1736: Europeans discovered rubber - the discovery was made by Charles-Marie de la Condamine while on expedition in South America. It was named in 1770 by Joseph Priestly

★ c. 1740: Modern steel was developed by Benjamin Huntsman

1741: Vitus Bering discovered Alaska

1745: The Leyden jar invented by Ewald von Kleist was the first electrical capacitor

1751 - 1785: The French Encyclopédie

1755: The English Dictionary by Samuel Johnson

1755: The tallest ''wooden'' Bodhisattva statue in the world is erected at Puning Temple, Chengde, China.

1764: The Spinning Jenny created by James Hargreaves brought on the Industrial Revolution

1765: James Watt enhances Newcomen's steam engine, allowing new steel technologies

1761: The problem of Longitude was finally resolved by the fouth chronometer of John Harrison

17681779: James Cook mapped the boundaries of the Pacific Ocean and discovered many Pacific Islands

1771: The enormous Putuo Zongcheng Temple complex of Chengde, China is completed

17731782: The Qing Dynasty huge literary compilation Siku Quanshu

1776: The Wealth of Nations, foundation of the modern theory of economy, was published by Adam Smith

1779: Photosynthesis was first discovered by Jan Ingenhousz of the Netherlands

1798: Edward Jenner publishes a treatise about smallpox vaccination

1799: Rosetta stone discovered by Napoleon's troops

★ Over the period 1700 to 1750 tea establishes itself as the British national drink.

References


The Chinese Putuo Zongcheng Temple of Chengde, completed in 1771, during the reign of the Qianlong Emperor.

1. Historians and the Eighteenth-Century Europe, 1715–1789, Anderson, M. S., , , Oxford University Press, 1979, ISBN 0198225482
2. Dress in Eighteenth-Century Europe 1715-1789 (revised edition), Ribeiro, Aileen, , , Yale University Press, 2002, ISBN 0300091516
3. The Oxford History of the British Empire: Volume II: The Eighteenth Century (Oxford History of the British Empire), Marshall, P. J. (Editor), , , Oxford University Press, USA, 2001, ISBN 0199246777 , "Introduction" by P. J. Marshall, page 1
4. The Long Eighteenth Century: British Political and Social History 1688-1832 (The Arnold History of Britain Series), O'Gorman, Frank, , , A Hodder Arnold Publication, 1997, ISBN 0340567511
5. The Cambridge History of Science, Volume 4: The Eighteenth Century (The Cambridge History of Science), Porter, Roy (Editor), , , Cambridge University Press, 2003, ISBN 0521572436 , "The Philosopher's Beard: Women and Gender in Science" by Londra Schiebinger, pages 184-210

Decades and years



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