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CHRONOLOGY; OR, THE Hiſtorian's Vade-Mecum.

WHEREIN EVERY REMARKABLE OCCURRENCE IN ENGLISH HISTORY, WITH THE Principal EVENTS of other HISTORIES, both Ancient and Modern, are alphabetically recorded, and the Dates affixed;

TOGETHER WITH A Chronological Liſt of the moſt EMINENT MEN in all Ages of the World.

By the Rev. Dr. JOHN TRUSLER.

This Work gives a more enlarged View of ENGLISH HISTORY than can be comprized in the ſmaller Edition; exhibits the Dates of Creation of all the PEERAGES; the Invention and Progreſs of the ſeveral ARTS; and alſo a Liſt of the KINGS of every Country. &c. and the STATE-OFFICERS, BISHOPS, &c. for many Years back.

VOL. II.

For the LIBRARY and the USE of SCHOOLS.

THE TENTH EDITION, With the Additions of Five Years cloſe reading.

LONDON: Printed for the AUTHOR, and ſold by R. BALDWIN, No. 47, Pater-noſter-Row; where may be had, Price 1s. 6d.

The Pocket Edition.

[Price of the Two Volumes [...]s. ſewed.]

THE HISTORIAN's VADE-MECUM.

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REMARKABLE OCCURRENCES, That could not be ſo well ranged Alphabetically.

Before Chriſt.

4004. ON the 4th day of the creation, at noon, according to Kennedy, the earth firſt received its diurnal motion.

3015. Univerſal corruption overſpread the world. Deſtruction of men reſolved on.

1921. The number of falſe divinities multiplying, gave occaſion to the vocation of Abraham.

604. By order of Necho, king of Egypt, ſome Phoenicians ſailed from the Red Sea round Africa, and returned by the Mediterranean.

331. A great many Roman ladies poiſoned their huſbands; 170 of them ſuffered death for it. This was the firſt example of ſuch a crime.

After Chriſt.

[2]

26. Nine hundred Roman ſoldiers taking ſhelter in a wood, having been cut to pieces, after a noble defence, by the Friſians, a people beyond the Rhine, it had ſuch an effect on the Roman army in general, that 400 other ſoldiers that had retreated within a houſe, fearing they ſhould be betrayed, killed each other to a man.

47. A new iſland appeared in the Aegean ſea.

48. On enquiry, there was found to be 1,544,000 citizens in Rome.

70. After Jeruſalem was taken, Fle [...] defended a ſtrong fortreſs with 960 of his moſt deſperate followers. When the battering ram had made a breach, they turned their ſwords againſt their wives and children, and then againſt their own breaſts. They died to the laſt man.

74. On examination, ſeveral perſons at Rome were found to be 100, 120, 130, 131, 1 [...]2, 138, and 140 years old, and two were advanced to 150.

195. About this time, Plautianus, the favourite miniſter of Severus, emperor of Rome, that his daughter, in her marriage with the oldeſt ſon of the emperor, might be attended with a train of eunuch [...], worthy of an Eaſtern queen, ordered 100 free Romans, ſome of them married and fathers of families, to be caſtrated.

200. About this period, it was the univerſal opinion both of the church and the heretics, that the fallen angels, or daemons, were the authors, the patrons, and the objects of idolatry.

291. There was a darkneſs at Rome at noon day.

389. At Rome, a pillar of fire was ſeen in the air during 30 days.

424. The Perſian army, fearing they ſhould be cut off by the Romans, threw themſelves into the Euphrates, where upwards of 100,000 periſhed.

770. Conſtantine IV. ſent for a great number of friars and nuns to Epheſus, ordered them to change their black habits for white, and to deſtroy their [3]images; and, on their refuſal, he commanded their eyes to be put out, baniſhed them, and ſold their monaſteries.

800. About this time, Charlemagne, emperor of Rome and Germany, inſtituted the ceremony at Eaſter, of a Chriſtian's giving a Jew a box on the ear, which was afterwards carried to that exceſs, as to deſtroy the Jew by the blow. This cuſtom, about the beginning of the 12th century, was changed into a tax, and appropriated to the canons of St. Sernin.

996. Otho III. emperor of Germany, having beheaded an Italian count, on a falſe accuſation of his empreſs, that he had made an attempt upon her honour, ordered her to be burnt alive, and condemned himſelf in a great fine, which he paid to the count's widow.

998. Kyrie-cle [...] and Paralipomenon were accounted two eminent ſaints of the church, and he who could read Greek paſſed for a ſorcerer.

1057. The cuſtom for the lord to lie the firſt night with the bride of his tenant, was very common in Scotland and the North of England; but it was abrogated by Malcolm III. at the inſtance of his queen, and a mark was paid to the lord in lieu of it. This cuſtom was called Marcheta. The maiden rents paid at Builth, in Radnorſhire, are of the ſame kind. It was common in France, 1280.

1113. The water of the river Medway failed ſo much, that the ſmalleſt boats could not float in the channel: alſo, the Thames was ſo low, between the Tower and the bridge, that women and children waded it over; owing to ſo great an ebb in the ocean, that laid the ſands bare ſeveral miles from the ſhore, which continued a whole day.

1114. During this year, ſeveral bridges in England, being then of timber, were broken down by the ice, when it thawed, after a ſevere froſt.

1120. One hundred and fifty nobles and the king's ſon loſt at ſea, in coming from Normandy.

[4]1140. In the civil wars in Germany, when the emperor Conrade had beſieged the town of Weinſberg, the wife of Guelpho, duke of Bavaria, ſolicited, as an article of capitulation, a ſafe conduct to her and the other women in the town; which being complied with, each woman took her huſband on her back, and ſo marched out of the place; the emperor was ſo pleaſed with the thought, that he entertained them ſplendidly about his tent.

1160. Thirty German heretics came to England, to propagate their opinions. They ſaid they were Chriſtians, but denied baptiſm, the Lord's ſupper, and matrimony; for which they were condemned by a council of biſhops at Oxford, and delivered over to the ſecular arm. Accordingly, they were marked in the forehead with a red-hot iron, whipped and thruſt out of doors naked, in the midſt of winter, where, none daring to relieve them, an order having been publiſhed to the contrary, they died of hunger and cold.

1179. At Chriſtmas, at a place called Oxen-hall, near Darlington, in the biſhopric of Durham, the earth raiſed itſelf up like a lofty tower, and remained ſeveral hours in that poſture; on a ſudden, it ſunk down again, with a horrid noiſe, and the earth ſo ſucked it in, that it made there a deep pit, which continues to this day. Mr. Camden ſuppoſes it to be the wells that are now called Hell-kettles.

1189. The emperor of Germany, the kings of England, France, and Flanders, and vaſt numbers of all ranks of people took the croſs, and ran in ſhoals to the Holy Land. Another expedition took place in 1204, under the comte de Montfort, when the utmoſt barbarities were practiſed: 30,000 heretics, inhabitants of Beziers, were put to the ſword; after the taking of Lavaur, the ſurvivors were thrown into the jakes of that city, the throats of 80 gentlemen were cut in cold blood, and 400 heretics were committed to the flames, while the clergy chaunted the hymn to the Holy Ghoſt.

[5]1201. The cuſtom of ringing a bell before the ſacrament, when carried to the ſick, that all who heard might bow themſelves, inſtituted.

1250. So great and ſo extravavant was the oſtentation of the French nobility about this time, that when Raymond V. count of Tholouſe, held a full court, in order to reconcile two contending powers; the environs of the caſtle were ploughed and ſewed with ſilver deniers, to the amount of 7500l. of the preſent ſterling money; victuals were dreſſed by wax lights, and Raymond de Venons cauſed 30 of his horſes to be burnt before the aſſembly.

1262. The two companies of goldſmiths and taylors of London fought, and ſeveral were killed on both ſides. The ſheriffs appeaſed the tumult, and thirteen of the moſt mutinous of them were hanged, as were thirty citizens of Norwich, for quarrelling and fighting with the monks of that city. See Juſts.

1267. The king's half brother killed a chief juſtice in Weſtminſter-hall.

1293. October 14. Baliol, king of Scotland, appeared in Weſtminſter-hall, in perſon, by ſummons, to anſwer a complaint againſt him, of the earl of Fife, where he pleaded his own cauſe.

1300. About this time, there was not an abſolute prince in Europe.

1309. Elizabeth, daughter and heireſs of the king of Bohemia, promiſed in marriage to the emperor of Germany's ſon, but whoſe marriage was delayed, owing to ſome ſuſpicion of her virginity, came to the Diet at Spire, and there preſented herſelf to the emperor, &c. undreſſed to her ſhift, and in a noble ſpeech, offered to undergo an examination by any midwives or matrons his majeſty ſhould appoint; inſiſting on having her innocence cleared. Such an examination took place; the report was, ſhe was innocent, and ſhe was immediately married in the preſence of the whole diet.

1315. Perpetual rains and cold weather having not only deſtroyed the harveſt, but produced a mortality [6]among the cattle, the parliament endeavoured to moderate the prices of proviſions. The rates eſtabliſhed were, of our preſent money, as follows: for the beſt ox not corn fed, 2l. 8s. corn fed, 3l. 12s. a fat hog two years old, 10s. a fat wether unſhorn, 5s. ſhorn, 3s. 6d. a fat gooſe, 7½d. fat capon, 6d. Hen, 3d. two chickens, 3d. four pidgeons, 3d. and twenty-four eggs, 3d.

1327. Raw ſkins of cattle, ſuſpended on ſtakes, were made uſe of, inſtead of kettles, to boil meat, in the North of England and in Scotland.

1330. The rains were ſo violent, that the harveſt did not begin till Michaelmas. At Chriſtmas, a weſterly wind overthrew ſeveral houſes and public edifices, tore up trees by the roots, and did a vaſt deal of miſchief.

1338. It rained almoſt continually, from the beginning of October to the beginning of December, and then came a froſt upon it, which laſted twelve weeks; yet, though the corn was deſtroyed by it in a great meaſure, the war with Scotland made money ſo ſcarce, that all ſorts of grain were ſold at a reaſonable rate.

1340. There were 30,000 ſtudents in the univerſity of Oxford.

Parliamentary grants to the king were in kind: this year 30,000 ſacks of wool were in the grant.

1348. It rained from Midſummer to Chriſtmas, ſo that there was not one day or night dry together. This wet ſeaſon cauſed great floods, and a peſtilence, which raged a whole year. The earth was at the ſame time barren, and even the ſea did not produce ſuch plenty of fiſh as formerly. The mortality was ſo great, that in the city of London two hundred bodies were buried every day in the Charter-houſe-yard, beſides thoſe interred in other common burying places: this laſted from Candlemas to Eaſter.

1351. The parliament joined the king in reſiſting papal encroachments, from motives of intereſt; thus ſecuring their own preſentations to benefices, when [7]they happened to be in lay hands. This ſewed the ſeeds of freedom and independency in the church, and prepared the mind for the Reformation.

1353, was remarkable for the ſcarcity of corn and proviſions in England and France, occaſioned by a great drought. It was called the dear ſummer; rye was brought out of Zealand to ſupport the poor, who otherwiſe muſt have periſhed for want of ſuſtenance.

1364. April 8, died at the Savoy, London, John, king of France.

1371. February 22, died at London, David, king of Scotland.

1380. About this time, in France there was a mode of emblazoning apparel. The women wore their huſbands' ſhields on the right ſide of their gowns, and their own on the left. This faſhion laſted near a century.

1381. When Richard IId's firſt wife came from Bohemia, ſhe had no ſooner ſet foot on ſhore, than ſuch a tempeſt immediately aroſe, as had not been ſeen in many years. Several ſhips were daſhed in pieces in the harbour, and the ſhip in which the queen came over, was ſhattered and broken; which was the more obſervable, becauſe his ſecond wife brought a ſtorm with her to the Engliſh coaſts, in which the king's baggage was loſt, and many ſhips of his fleet caſt away.

1392. A dolphin was taken near London-bridge ten feet long.

1407. Aſſaſſinations ſo much prevailed among the French and Scots, that the duke of Orleans, only brother of the king of France, was murdered publicly in the ſtreets of Paris, and an eminent lawyer was allowed to plead in behalf of it, before the peers of France, and maintain the lawfulneſs of aſſaſſination. See anno 1414 below; Orleans, Duke of.

1414. It required all the eloquence and authority of the famous Gerſon to prevail on the council of Conſtance to condemn this propoſition, ‘That there are ſome caſes, in which aſſaſſination is a virtue more meritorious in a knight than in an eſquire, [8]and more meritorious in a king than in a knight.’ See anno 1407 above.

1422. In the time of Henry VI. the king's palace was ſurrounded with little barber's ſhops, which were under the direction of the barber of the houſehold, and the clerk of the ewry. There being then no carriages, and the ſtreets being dirty, it is probable, that thoſe who went to court were firſt ſhaved and dreſſed in theſe ſtalls or ſhops. A conſiderable ſee is alſo given to this barber for ſhaving every knight of the bath, on his creation, as well as 40s. from every baron, 100s. from every earl, and 10l. from every duke on the like occaſion.

1446. There were two unuſual combats within liſts appointed. The firſt was by the prior of Kilmain, in Ireland, who impeached the earl of Ormond of high treaſon, and the place of trial was in Smithfield; but the quarrel was taken up by the king, and ſo decided without combat. The ſecond was by one John David, an armourer, who impeached his maſter, William Catur, of treaſon; but the latter being, with his neighbours, intoxicated with wine, before he came to fight, he was unhappily ſlain, without any juſt ſuſpicion of guilt; but the ſervant lived not long after him; for the next aſſize, he was hanged for felony.

1453. John Norman, mayor of London, the firſt that went to be ſworn at Weſtminſter-hall by water.

1456. There were taken at Erith, within 12 miles of London, four wonderful fiſhes, viz. two whales, one ſword-fiſh, and one called Mors Marina.

1467. The people had an extravagant way of adorning their feet. They wore the beaks or peaks of their ſhoes ſo long, that they incumbered themſelves in their walking, and were forced to tie them up to their knees; the fine gentlemen did theirs with chains of ſilver, or ſilver gilt, and others with laces. This ridiculous cuſtom was in vogue ever ſince the year 1382, but now it was prohibited, on the forfeiture of 20s. and the pain of curſing by the clergy.

The king concluded a league with the king of Caſtile, [9]by which he allowed certain Cotſwold ſheep to be tranſported into Spain, where the breed ſo increaſed, that their fine wool has ſince proved very detrimental to England.

1477. June 16. George Nevil, duke of Bedford, was degraded by act of parliament, and his titles taken from him, for not having ſufficient fortune to ſupport the dignity.

1479. Robert Byfield, one of the ſheriffs of London, was fined fifty pounds by the court of aldermen, for affronting the lord mayor, which it ſeems was only by kneeling too near him at prayers, at St. Paul's church.

1486. John Percival drank to by the lord mayor for ſheriff, the firſt time of this method of election.

1492. Pope Alexander VI. who began to reign this year, divided the whole undiſcovered world between the kings of Spain and Portugal.

1494. The body of one Alice Hackney, which had been buried 175 years, was accidentally dug up in the church of St. Mary Hill, London; the ſkin was whole, and the joints of the arms pliable. See anno 1772.

1505. Philip, king of Caſtile, in his voyage to Spain, was driven by a ſtorm on the coaſt of England, where he was detained till he had ſeer king Henry, which he did, at Windſor.

1508. Sir Thomas More oppoſed a ſubſidy, with ſucceſs, which is the firſt oppoſition of this kind in the Houſe of Commons.

About this time, it was cuſtomary to give the ſame title to clergymen not graduates, as we do now to knights, to diſtinguiſh them from ſuch as took a maſter's degree, and were called Maſter, or Mr. Batchelors of Arts, in the univerſity of Cambridge, have, at this time, the addition of "Sir" prefixed to their ſirnames, for the ſame reaſon. See Knighthood.

1515. Dec. 14. Francis I. of France, ſigned the memorable contract with the pope, by which he granted him the firſt year's income of the biſhopricks and other great benefices, and in conſequence of this, obtained the right of nomination to them.

[10]1521. Francis I. of France, being wounded in the head, by ſomething thrown from a window, was obliged to cut off his hair, which, till that time, was worn very long, and the beard cloſe ſhaven; however, willing to gain on one ſide what he loſt on the other, he ſuffered his beard to grow long; and from thence, it became a faſhion to wear the hair ſhort and the beard long, as may be obſerved in many of our old pictures.

1531. One Rooſe, for poiſoning 17 of the biſhop of Rocheſter's family, two of which died, was, by an act of parliament, made guilty of high treaſon, and put to death, by being thrown into boiling water.

1540. By the Roman law, perſons guilty of high treaſon might be tried even after death, to puniſh their heirs, and this practice was now adopted by the Scots; and as it was a maxim, that none could be tried if abſent, the corpſe or bones were preſented at the bar.

1541. The emperor Charles V. in an expedition againſt Algiers, having landed part of his men, a moſt dreadful tempeſt aroſe, and in leſs than an hour, 15 ſhips of war and 140 tranſports, with 8000 men periſhed.

1544. Read, alderman of London, was preſſed and ſent for a common ſoldier, for refuſing to pay an arbitrary benevolence, aſſeſſed on the city by Henry VIII; men being never preſſed at that time, unleſs obnoxious to law.

1546. One Foxley, of the mint, ſlept 14 days and 15 nights, and could not be waked.

1553. During the reign of queen Mary, a woman big with child was burnt at Guernſey, for hereſy; when, from the violence of the flames, the infant ſprang forth at the ſtake, and was preſerved by the bye-ſtanders; after ſome deliberation of the prieſts, who aſſiſted at the ſacrifice, they caſt it again into the fire as a "young heretic."

1558. By act of parliament, the citizens' wives of London, not being gentlewomen by deſcent, nor the wives of aldermen, were obliged to wear white knit [11]woollen three-cornered caps, with the peaks projecting three or four inches beyond their foreheads: aldermen's wives made theirs of velvet.

1567. There were found, on enquiry, to be 4851 ſtrangers of all nations in London, of whom 3838 were Flemings, and only 58 Scots.

1571. About this time, the poor encreaſed ſo faſt, owing to no civil wars of any conſequence for a century before, and no drain to the colonies, that a poor man was not ſuffered to marry till 30, nor a woman till 25 years of age.

1580. Queen Elizabeth iſſued a proclamation, prohibiting any new houſes to be built within three miles of the gates of the city of London.

1581. John Stubbs, of Lincoln's-inn, and one William Page, had their right hands cut off, for publiſhing a book againſt queen Elizabeth's marriage with the duke of Anjou.

1585. At this time, any peer might have as many proxies in the Houſe of Lords as he could procure; the earl of Leiceſter had ten at this time, and the duke of Buckingham, in Charles Iſt's time, had, in one parliament, twenty, which occaſioned a vote, that no peer ſhould have above two proxies.

1597. One Dominique de Gourges, a private gentleman of Gaſcony, in France (the Spaniards having maſſacred a colony of Frenchmen ſettled at Florida, and declaring, they did not put them to death "as Frenchmen, but Lutherans"), fitted out three ſhips at his own expence, made a deſcent at Florida, took three forts, and hung up 800 Spaniſh ſoldiers and officers on trees, with this inſcription, "not as Spaniards, but as traitors, robbers, and aſſaſſins." Queen Elizabeth offered this man the command of her fleet, but he died ſoon after.

1629. Claude Guillon, a poor gentleman, was beheaded at St. Claude, in Burgundy, for eating a morſel of horſe-fleſh on a fiſh day, not being able to buy fiſh or other meat.

1634. The gentlemen of the four inns of court preſented a maſque to their majeſties at Whitehall.

1649. April 16. The earl of Pembroke was returned [12]for knight of the ſhire for Bucks, prima impreſſionis, and his lordſhip was accordingly admitted into the houſe with great reſpect.

1649. A very hot ſummer, with much thunder and lightning, which did great miſchief in Guienne, Bourdeaux, and other provinces in France, firing hay ricks, granaries, &c. and deſtroying harveſts. Several members of the parliament of Aix were found dead in their beds, after a tempeſtuous night of lightning, and the next day, the roof of the houſe where they aſſembled fell down, and killed ſeveral. The people ſuppoſed it to be a judgment on thoſe provinces, for taking arms againſt their ſovereign.

1654. July 11. Don Pantaleon de Sa, one of the Portugueſe ambaſſadors, beheaded, for ſhooting Mr. Greenaway.

1660. Oct. 10. Ten of the regicides were tried, and executed ſoon after.

1661. Jan. The carcaſes of Oliver Cromwell, Ireton, and Bradſhaw, hanged at Tyburn, buried under the gallows, and their heads ſet on Weſtminſter hall.

Sept. 3. At a public entry of the Swediſh ambaſſador, happened a rencounter between the French and Spaniſh ambaſſadors, for precedency, and many of their retinue were killed on Tower-hill; but the Spaniſh ambaſſador's coach at length had the good fortune to get firſt.

1665. The clergy voluntarily gave up their right of taxing themſelves in convocation, which leſſened the conſequence of convocations.

1679. An act paſſed, for iſſuing new writs to elect members, in the room of ſuch as were preferred to any place under government.

About this time, the people had as large a portion of real liberty, as is conſiſtent with a ſtate of ſociety; and ſufficient power in their own hands to aſſert and preſerve that liberty, if invaded by the royal prerogative.

1682. Meſſrs. Pilkington and Shute, ſheriffs of London, ſent to the Tower, for continuing a poll after the lord mayor had adjourned it.

[13]1683. The lord mayor and ſheriffs arreſted, at the ſuit of two pretended ſheriffs, April 24.

1686. The biſhop of London ſuſpended, for refuſing to ſuſpend Dr. Sharp, of St. Giles's, afterwards archbiſhop of York, at the king's deſire.

1688. Maſs ordered to be celebrated on board the fleet, which occaſioned a tumult, and the prieſts narrowly eſcaped being thrown overboard.

1690. Nov. 7. Twelve thouſand Iriſh catholics tranſported themſelves to France.

1707. An iſland, five miles round, roſe in the Archipelago, from the bottom of the ſea.

1712. The doctrines of the Jacobite faction were chiefly favoured by thoſe in power.

1716. Aug. 5. Two ſoldiers were whipped almoſt to death, and turned out of the ſervice, for wearing boughs in their hats on the 29th of May.

1717. George I. at the requeſt of the univerſity of Cambridge, ſuppreſſed the ridiculous cuſtom of burning in effigy the pope, the pretender, the earl of Mar, the devil, and the duke of Ormond.

1719. This year gave birth to a very premature genius at Candiac, in France, John Lewis Candiac, who knew the letters at 13 months old; read latin, either in print or MS. at three years of age; tranſlated it, at four; and at ſix, read Greek and Hebrew, and was maſter of the principles of arithmetic, hiſtory, geography, heraldry, and the ſcience of medals, and had read the beſt authors in almoſt every branch of literature. He died at Paris of a complication of diſorders, 1726, aged ſeven.

1720. Major Johnſon, an officer on half pay at Dublin, went into his parlour, gave his two ſons (one ten years old, the other twelve) each a piſtol, loaded with ball, and ordered them to fire at each other, or he would run them through with his ſword; they ſhot each other dead upon the ſpot; their mother coming into the room, on the report of the piſtols, he ſtabbed her to the heart, and then himſelf.

1727. The common council of London entertained at St. James's palace, by George I.

1732. In April, Richard Smith, a bookbinder, [14]priſoner in the King's Bench, perſuaded his wife to follow his example, and make away with herſelf, after they had murdered their infant. They were found hanging in their chamber, and the infant dead in the cradle. They left a paper, intimating they did it to avoid the diſtreſſes of life.

Mariners of ſhips regiſtered in the ports of London were in number 21,797.

1734. Above 100 captives, redeemed from ſlavery in Morocco by the king's bounty, landed at Whitehall.

1746. The prizes taken from the French and Spaniards, in two years after the commencement of the war in 1744, were eſtimated at 9,483,000l.

1758. Jan. 31. The Turkiſh caravan was attacked by the Arabs, and 60,000 perſons were killed.

1760. Till this time, there was no ſuch thing as a privy in Madrid: it was cuſtomary to throw the ordure out of the window into the ſtreet at night, which was removed by ſcavengers the next day. On an order from the king, that every houſeholder ſhould build one, the people violently oppoſed it, as an arbitrary proceeding, and the phyſicians remonſtrated againſt it, alledging, that the filth imbibed the unwholeſome particles of the air, which otherwiſe would be taken into the human body; his majeſty, however, prevailed; but many of the citizens, to keep their food wholeſome, have erected their privies by the kitchen fire.

1764. At Aſhton, Glouceſterſhire, 16 acres of land, near 20 feet in depth, ſlipped from the ſide of Breedon-hill, and entirely covered ſeveral paſture grounds at the bottom.

1767. The grand jury of London found a bill againſt count Guerchy, the French ambaſſador, for endeavo [...]ring to perſuade M. de Vergy to aſſaſſinate the chevalier D'Eon, and though he tried to obtain a noli proſequi, the attorney and ſolicitor general over-ruled it. The chevalier was diſcovered afterwards to be a woman.

1771. March. The lord mayor and alderman Oliver [15]ſent to the Tower by the Houſe of Commons, for committing their meſſenger.

The Polly, Capt. Walſh, a Guineaman, ſtruck on the bar of Bonny, and was ſoon afterwards attacked by the negroes. The captain finding he could not ſave his ſhip, ſent his crew off, ſhut himſelf up in his cabin, and when the king of Bonny and all his people were got on board, to the number of 1500 and upwards, he ſet fire to the powder-room, and thus, Sampſon like, at his death, puniſhed the treachery of his aſſailants.

1772. February. Near Manheim, Germany, a mountain ſunk twenty feet below the ſurface of the ſurrounding land.

The body of Thomas Beaufort, duke of Exeter, uncle to Henry V. being found in the ruins of the abbey at St. Edmunds Bury, having been buried 345 years, the leaden coffin was opened, and the fleſh, hair, toe and hand nails were perfect and ſound, as though he had not been dead ſix hours. On an inciſion being made in the breaſt, the fleſh cut as firm as in a living ſubject, and there was even an appearance of blood. See anno 1494.

June. Trade had nearly received a fatal blow by the failure of ſeveral capital houſes.

1776. May 10. One Ellen Ellis, of Beaumaris, aged 72, was delivered of a child. She had not had one for 25 years before.

1777. Two clergymen of the church of England, Dr. Dodd and Mr. Ruſſen, were this year hanged at Tyburn: the former, for a forgery; the latter, for a rape. Another was hanged the year following, for murder. See Hackman, Dodd, Ruſſen.

October 1. The firſt attempt to deliver a woman of an obſtructed birth, by cutting the ſymphiſis, was made, with ſucceſs, by Monſ. Sigault, ſurgeon of Paris. This happy mode of delivery in difficult caſes being firſt diſcovered by him, Dec. 1, 1768.

October 15. General Burgoyne, with an army of 6000 men, being ſurrounded by 16,000 Americans, near Albany, were obliged to ſurrender priſoners of war.

[16]1780. The counties in general petitioned parliament, to make a reform in the expenditure of the public money; and eſtabliſhed aſſociations, or committees of correſpondence, to attempt at leſſening the power of the crown.

VULGAR HISTORICAL ERRORS, In which there is no TRUTH.

A CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF EMINENT PERSONS.

[]

[For ſuch perſons whoſe NAMES cannot be found here, look in VOLUME I.]

A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
F.
G.
H.
I.
J.
K.
L.
M.
N.
O.
P.
Q.
R.
S.
T.
U.
V.
W.
X.
Y.
Z.

A LIST of the KINGS of the SAXON HEPTARCHY.

[98]
I. KENT.
  Reigned years.
Pagans.1. Hengiſt31
2. Eſca24
3. Otta, or Octa20
4. Immeric29
Chriſtians.5. Ethelbert56
6. Eadbald.24
7. Ercombert24
8. Edgbert9
9. Lothair12
10. Edric7
11. Withred33
12. Edbert23
13. Edilbert11
14. Alric34
15. Edilbert3
16. Cuthred8
17. Baldred18

II. SOUTH-SAXONS, or SUSSEX.
Pagans.1. Ella32
2. Ciſſa75
 3. Ethelwolf25
 4. Berthune 
 5. Authune 

III. WEST SAXONY, or WESSEX.
Pagans.1. Cerdic16
2. Cynric26
3. Ceaulin31
4. Cebric6
5. Ceolwalf14
Chriſtians.6. Cinegils and Rinchelm31
7. Kenewall and Sexburge32
8. Eſciwin2
9. Kentwin9
Pagan.10. Cedwalla2
Chriſtians.11. Ina38
12. Ethelhard14
13. Cuthred14
14. Sigebert [...]
15. Kinewulf29
16. Brithric16
17. Edgbert37

IV. EAST SAXONY, or ESSEX. The time theſe kings reigned are not mentioned, becauſe there is nothing certain of them.
Pagans.1. Erkenwin.
2. Sleda.
Chriſtians.3. Sebert.
4. Sexred, Seward, and Sigebert, brothers.
5. Sigebert the Little.
6. Sigebert the Good.
7. Swithelm.
8. Sigher and Seba.
9. Sigheard and Senfred.
10. Offa.
11. Selred.
12. Swithred.

V. NORTHUMBERLAND.
Pagans.1. Ida12
2. Ella30
3. Edelric4
4. Edelfrid24
Chriſtians.5. Edwin17
6. Oſwald9
7. Oſwy28
8. Egfrid15
9. Alfrid19
10. Oſred11
11. Kenred2
12. Oſric11
13. Ceolwulf8
14. Egbert, alias Eaadbert20
15. Oſulf1
16. Ethelwald, alias Mollo6
17. Alured9
18. Ethelred, alias Ethelbert4
19. Alfwold11
20. Oſred; then Ethelbert again. 

After Ethelred was ſlain, there was an Interregnum of 33 years, during which time, the kingdom was in the poſſeſſion of Edgbert, king of the Weſt-Saxons.

VI. EAST-ANGLES.
Pagans.1. Uſſa7
2. Titiſt10
3. Redwald44
4. Eorpwald12
Chriſtians.5. Sigebert. 
6. Egric. 
7. Anna13
8. Ethelbert. 
9. Ethelwald9
10. Adulf19
11. Elfwald7
12. Beorna24
13. Ethelred52
14. Ethelbert5

When Ethelbert was ſlain by Offa, it was united to Mercia; yet St. Edmund reigned afterwards, and was murdered by the Danes, in 870.

[101]

VII. MERCIA.
  Reigned years.
Pagans.Cridda, Wibba, and Cheorl, petty kings. 
1. Penda, Ann. Dom. 625. 
Chriſtians.2. Peada and Oſwy, dukes3
3. Wulfer16
4. Ethelred, alias Aedired30
5. Kenred4
6. Ceolred8
7. Ethclbald41
8. Beornred1
9. Offa38
10. L [...]fer1
11. Kenulf2
12. Kenelm and Ceolulf1
13. Beornulf3
14. Ludecan2
15. Withlaf13
16. Bertulf13
17. Burrhed22
11. Ceolwulf. 

See Heptarchy, in the Alphabet, Vol. I.

KINGS of SCOTLAND, and the Time they reigned.

The firſt King, FERGUS I. began to reign 328 before Chriſt.

began to reign.names.
1003,Malcolm II the 84th monarch.
1033,Duncan, grandſon to Malcolm.
1040,Macbeth, Tyrant, grandſon to Malcolm II.
1057,Malcolm III. ſon of Duncan.
1093,Donald VII. brother to Malcolm.
1094,Duncan II. natural ſon to Malcolm III.
1096,Edgar, ſon of Malcolm III.
1106,Alexander, brother to Edgar.
1124,David, brother to Alexander.
1153,Malcolm.
1165,William, brother to Malcolm.
12 [...],Alexander II. ſon to William.
124 [...],Alexander III. ſon to Alexander.
1285.Interregnum.
1242,John Baliol, deſcendant of David I.
1 [...]26,Robert I. ditto.
1320,David II. (ſon to Robert) and Edward.
1370,Robert II. the firſt of the Stuarts, nephew to David.
1390,John Robert, ſon to Robert.
1423,James I. ſon to John.
1437,James II. ſon to James.
1400,James III. ſon to James.
1488,James IV. ſon to James.
1533,James V. ſon to James.
1542,Mary Stuart, daughter to James.
1567,James VI. ſon to Mary.

The ſucceſſors of James VI. became kings of England till 1707, when the two kingdoms were united.

A LIST of the KINGS of FRANCE ſince WILLIAM the CONQUEROR.

 died.
Henry I.1060
Philip I. ſon of Henry1108
Lewis VI. ſon of Philip1137
Lewis VII. ſon of Lewis1180
Philip II. the Auguſt, ſon of Lewis1223
Lewis VIII. ſon of Philip1226
Lewis IX. Saint, ſon of Lewis1270
Philip III. the Hardy, ſon of Lewis1285
Philip IV. the Fair, ſon of Philip,1314
Lewis X. ſon of Philip1316
Philip V. brother to Lewis1323
Charles IV. the Fair, brother to Philip1327
Edward of England crowned. 
Philip V. the Courtier, nephew to Charles IV.1350
John, died in London, ſon to Philip1364
Charles V. the Wiſe, ſon to John1380
Charles VI. the Well-beloved, ſon to Charles1422
Charles VII. the Victorious, ſon to Charles1462
Henry VI. of England proclaimed. 
Lewis XI. ſon to Charles1482
Charles VIII. ſon to Lewis1498
Lewis XII. couſin to Charles1515
Francis I.1524
Henry II. ſon to Francis1559
Francis II. ſon to Henry1560
Charles IX. brother to Francis1574
Henry III. brother to Charles1589
Henry IV. twenty-ſecond couſin to Henry III.1610
Lewis XIII. ſon to Henry1643
Lewis XIV. ſon to Lewis1715
Lewis XV. grandſon to Lewis1774
Lewis XVI. ditto to Lewis. 

KINGS of POLAND.

 began to reign.
Uladiſlaus I. the twentieth ſovereign, brother to the laſt king1082
Boleſlaus III. ſon of Uladiſlaus1102
Uladiſlaus II. ſon of Boleſlaus1140
Boleſlaus IV. ſon of Uladiſlaus1146
Mieceſlaus III. brother of Boleſlaus1173
Caſſimir II. brother of Mieceſlaus1178
Leſcus V. ſon of Caſſimir1194
Mieceſlaus III.1200
Uladiſlaus III. ſon of Mieceſlaus1203
Leſcus V. again1206
Boleſlaus V. ſon of Leſcus1228
Leſcus VI. nephew of Leſcus V.1279
Premiſlaus, duke of Great Poland1295
Uladiſlaus IV.1296
Wenceſlaus1300
Uladiſlaus IV. again1306
Gaſſimir III. ſon of Uladiſlaus1333
Lewis, king of Hungary, nephew to Caſſimir1370
Hedwigis, married in 1385 to1383
Uladiſlaus V. huſband of Hedwigis, and king of H [...]ngary1385
Uladiſlaus VI. ſon of Uladiſlaus and king of Hungary1434
Boleſlaus VI. duke of Maſſovia1444
Caſſimir IV. brother to Uladiſlaus VI.1447
John, ſon of Caſſimir1492
Mexander, brother to John1502
Sigiſmund I. brother of Alexander1507
Sigiſmund II. ſon of Sigiſmund1548
Henry, brother to Charles VI. of France1573
Stephen, king of Tranſilvania1576
Sigiſmund III. ſon of the king of Sweden1583
Uladiſlaus VII. ſon of Sigiſmund1632
John II.1648
Michael, a Ruſſian prince1669
John Sobieſki, grand marſhal of Poland1674
Frederick II. elector of Saxony1697
Staniſlaus I.1704
Frederick II. again1710
Frederick III. ſon of Frederick II.1733
Staniſlaus II. count Poniatowſky1764

KINGS of SWEDEN.

 began to reign.
Ingo, ſixth monarch1060
Halſtan, brother of Ingo1064
Philip, ſon of Halſtan1080
Ingo II. ſon of Philip1100
Ragwald1130
Magnus I. ſon of Nich. king of Denmark1133
Suercher II.1144
Eric X.1150
Charles VII. ſon of Suercher II.1162
Canute, ſon of Eric X.1168
Suercher III. ſon of Charles VII.1192
Eric XI. ſon of Canute1211
John I. ſon of Suercher III.1220
Eric XII. ſon of Eric XI.1223
Waldemar, nephew to Eric XII.1250
Magnus II. brother to Waldemar1279
Birgir II. ſon to Magnus1290
Magnus II. nephew to Birgir1320
Albert1365
Margaret, queen of Denmark and Norway1394
Eric XIII. nephew to Margaret1411
Chriſtopher, nephew to Eric1441
Charles VIII.1448
Chriſtian I. king of Denmark1458
Charles VIII. again1469
Chriſtian I. again1471
John II. ſon of Chriſtian1497
Chriſtian II. ſon of John.1520
Guſtavus I. Vaſa, grand nephew to Charles VIII.1528
Eric XIV. ſon of Guſtavus1556
John III. brother to Eric1569
Sigiſmund I. king of Poland, ſon to John1592
Charles IX. brother to John III.1606
Guſtavus II. ſon to Charles1611
Chriſtiana, daughter to Guſtavus1633
Charles X. couſin to Chriſtiana1654
Charles XI. ſon to Charles1660
Charles XII. ſon to Charles1699
Ulrique, ſiſter to Charles1718
Adolphus, duke of Holſtein1751
Guſtavus III. ſon of Adolphus1771

KINGS of DENMARK.

 began to reign.
Canute II. nineteenth monarch, king of Engl.1014
Hardicanute II. king of Engl. ſon of Canute1036
Magnus I. king of Norway, who united the two crowns1041
Suenon, nephew of Canute II.1048
Harold IV. natural ſon of Suenon1079
Canute III. brother to Harold1080
Olaus II. brother to Canute1086
Eric III. brother to Olaus1097
Nicholas, brother to Eric1106
Eric IV. nat. ſon of Eric III.1135
Eric V. nephew to Eric IV.1138
Suenon III. nat. ſon to Eric III.1147
The kingdom divided between him and Canute IV. 
Waldemar I.1157
Canute V. ſon of Waldemar1182
Waldemar II. ſon of Canute1202
Eric VI. ſon of Waldemar1240
Abel I. brother to Eric1250
Chriſtopher I. brother to Abel1252
Eric VII. ſon of Chriſtopher1259
Eric VIII. ſon of Eric1286
Chriſtopher II. brother to Eric He divided the kingdom with his ſon Eric IX.1319
Waldemar III.1340
Olaus III. grandſon to Waldemar1375
Margaret I. mother to Olaus1385
Eric X. nephew to Margaret1411
Chriſtopher III. nephew to Eric1439
Chriſtian I.1448
John, ſon to Chriſtian1481
Chriſtian II. ſon to John1513
Frederick I.1523
Chriſtian III. ſon of Frederic1534
Frederic II. ſon of Chriſtian1559
Chriſtian IV. ſon of Frederick1588
Frederick III. ſon of Chriſtian1648
Chriſtian V. ſon of Frederick1670
Frederick IV. ſon of Chriſtian1699
Chriſtian VI. ſon of Frederick1730
Frederick V. ſon of Chriſtian1746
Chriſtian VII. ſon of Frederick1766

KINGS of SPAIN ſince the UNION of CASTILE and ARRAGON.

[107]
 began to reign.
Ferdinand and Iſabella1492
Joan, daughter of Iſabella1504
Philip, huſband to Joan. 
Charles, afterwards Emperor of Germany1506
Philip II. ſon of Charles, married to Mary I. of England1556
Philip III. ſon of Philip1598
Philip IV. ſon of Philip1621
Charles II. ſon of Philip1665
Philip V. grandſon to Lewis XIV. of France1700
Lewis, ſon to Philip,1724
Ferdinand VI. ſon of Philip1746
Philip V. again1727
Charles III. half brother to Ferdinand1759

Navarre was a ſeparate kingdom till united to Spain in Philip III.

The kings of Spain were kings of Portugal from 1580 till the Revolution, under the duke of Braganza, in 1640.

KINGS of PORTUGAL ſince the REVOLUTION under BRAGANZA, 1640.

 began to reign.
John IV.1640
Alfonſo VI. ſon of John1646
Peter II. brother to Aifonſo1683
John V. ſon of Peter1706
Joſeph, ſon of John1750
Mary, Daughter of Joſeph1777

KINGS of PRUSSIA.

 began to reign.
Frederick I. firſt king1701
Frederick II. ſon to Frederick1713
Frederick III. ſon to Frederick II.1740

KINGS of HUNGARY and BOHEMIA.

[108]
 began to reign.
Solomon, ſeventh king1063
Geiza I. ſon of the laſt king but one1073
St. Ladiſlaus, brother to Geiza1076
Coloman, ſon of Geiza1095
Stephen II. ſon of Coloman1114
Bela II. ſon of Stephen's uncle1131
Geiza II. ſon of Bela1141
Stephen III. ſon of Geiza1161
Bela III. brother to Stephen1173
Emeric, ſon to Bela1191
Ladiſlaus II. ſon of Emeric1200
Andrew II. ſon of Bela III.1201
Bela IV. ſon of Andrew1235
Stephen IV. ſon of Bela IV.1275
Ladiſlaus III. ſon of Stephen1278
Andrew III1291
Wenceſlaus, ſon of the king of Bohemia1301
Otho, duke of Bavaria1304
Charles13 [...]9
Lewis I. ſon of Charles1342
Mary, daughter of Lewis1383
Mary, and Sigiſmund her huſband, emperor of Germany1389
Albert, ſon in law to Sigiſmund, and king of Bohemia1437
Ladiſlaus IV. king of Poland1440
Ladiſlaus V. poſthumus ſon of Albert1444
Matthias I.1458
Ladiſlaus VI. king of Bohemia, and ſon of the king of Poland1490
Lewis II. ſon of Ladiſlaus1516
John1526
Ferdinand I (brother in law to Lewis II.) king of Bohemia, and afterwards emperor of Germany1527
John again1534
John II. ſon of John1539
Maximilian, ſon of Ferdinand I. and emperor of Germany1561
Rodolphus, ſon of Maximilian and emperor of Germany1573
Matthias II. brother to Rodolphus, and emperor of Germany1609
Ferdinand II. brother to Matthias, and emperor1618
Ferdinand III. ſon of Ferdinand, and emperor of Germany1625
Ferdinand IV. ſon of Ferdinand III.1647
Leopold, brother to Ferdinand IV. and emperor of Germany1656
Joſeph, ſon to Leopold, and emperor1687
Charles VI. brother to Joſeph, and emperor1711
Maria, daughter of Charles, and married to Fran. I. emperor of Germany1740
Joſeph II. ſon of Maria, and emperor1780

EMPERORS of RUSSIA.

 began to reign.
John III. ſucceeded his father as Great Duke or Czar1462
Demetrius, grandſon of John1504
Baſile V. ſon of John III.1504
John IV. ſon of Baſile1534
Theodore I. ſon of John IV.1584
Boviſe, brother to Theodore's wife1598
Theodore II. ſon of Boviſe1605
Demetrius II.1605
Chouſki1606
Michael, a relation of the preceding Czar's1613
Alexis, ſon of Michael1645
Theodore III. ſon of Alexis1676
Peter I. brother of Theodore1682
Catherine I. wife of Peter I. crowned empreſs1725
Peter II. ſon of Alexis1727
Ann, niece to Peter I.1730
John V. ſon of Ann's niece, aged two months1740
Elizabeth, daughter of Peter I.1741
Peter III. nephew to Elizabeth1762
Catherine II. wife of Peter III.1763

EMPERORS of ROME, from the Foundation of ROME, 753 before Chriſt.

[110]
names.began to reign.
 Bef. Xt.
Romulus, firſt king753
Interregnum716
Numa Pompilius715
Tullus Hoſtilius672
Battle of the Horatii and Curatii669
Ancus Martius640
Tarquin, the elder616
Servius Tullius578
Tarquin, the proud534
Republic of Rome500
Auguſtus firſt Rom. Em.31
 Aft. Xt.
Tiberius14
Caligula37
Claudius41
Nero54
L. Clodius Macer. Tyran. 
Galba68
Otho69
Vitellius69
Veſpaſian69
Titus79
Domitian81
Nerva96
Trajan98
Adrian117
Antoninus Pius138
M. Aurelius161
L. Verus161
M. Aurel. alone170
Commodus180
Pertinax193
Didius Julianus193
Peſcenius Niger193
Clodius Albinus 
S. Severus193
M. A. Antoninus211
P. Sept. Geta211
M. Apel. Sev. Macrinus217
M. Aur. Ant. Elagabalus218
Alexander Severus222
Uranius Tyran. 
C. Jul. Verus Maximus235
M. Ant. Africanus, elder237
M. Ant. Africanus, younger,237
Pupienus and B [...]lbinus237
Gordian III.238
Philippus, father244
Philippus, ſon. 
T. Jul. Mar. Pacatianus. 
P. Sarvil. Marinus. 
Decius249
Herennius Etruſcus. 
Hoſtilianus251
L. Priſcus Tyran. 
Jul. Valens, Tyr. 
M. Aufidius Perpenna, Tyran. 
Trebonianus Gallus. 
Vibius Voluſianus. 
C. Jul. Aemilianus253
Licin. Valerianus, father253
Lic. Egnat. Gallienus, ſon of Valerianus alone253
Lic. Valerianus, ſon of Valer. 
Lic. Salonius, ſon of Gallien. 
Sulpicius Antoninus. 
M. Aur. Cl Gothicus268
Quintilius, brother of Claudius. 
Domet. Aurelianus270
Firmius, Tyrant, in Egypt. 
Tetricus, Tyrant among the Gauls. 
Athenodorus. 
Heroias Vabalathus. 
A. Septimius. 
Interregnum275
Tacitus275
Florianus276
Probus276
Saturnius, Proculus, Bonoſius. 
M. Aurel. Carus282
M. Aurel. Carinus. 
Numerianus. 
M. Aur. Julian. Sabrinus284
Diocleſian and Maxim. Hercules. 
Selvius Amandus, Pomponius, Aelianus, Carauſius, Allectus, Epideus Achilleus, Domitius Domitianus, Tyran. 
Conſt. Chlorus, & Galer. Val. Maximinus305
Flav. Val. Severus. 
C. Gal. Val. Maximinus. 
M. Aur. Val. Maxentius. 
Alexander, Tyran. 
P. Val. Lic. Lycinius Caeſar. 
Valerius Valens. 
Martinianus. 
Conſtantine, the Gr. 
Conſtantine, the younger, died in 340337
Conſtance337
Saturninus337
Conſtant337
Magnentius, Nepotianus, Vetranion and Sylvanus, Tyrants. 
Julian, the apoſtate361
Jovian363

After this time, the Roman Empire was divided into Weſtern and Eaſtern; Rome being the capital of the firſt, Conſtantino ple of the laſt. The Weſtern ended in 494; the Eaſtern in 1204.

WESTERN EMPIRE.
Seat,—ROME.

[112]
 began to reign.
Valentinian I.364
Gratian375
Valentian II.383
Honorius, ſon of Theodoſius the Great394
John423
Valentinian III.425
Maximus455
Avilus455
Majorianus457
Severus III.461
Anthemius466
Olybrius473
Glycerius474
Julius474
Oreſtes475
Romulus476

The next emperor took the title of king of Italy, whoſe ſucceſſors afterwards, in Charlemagne, became emperors of Germany, 800, and were crowned at Rome. See Emperors of Germany.

EASTERN EMPIRE.
Seat,—CONSTANTINOPLE.

 began to reign.
Valens364
Theodoſius the Great379
Arcadius, ſon of Theodoſius the Great395
Theodoſius II.408
Marcian450
Leo I.457
Leo II.474
Zeno474
Anaſtaſius491
Juſtin518
Juſtinian527
Juſtin II.565
Tiberius581
Mauritius586
Phocas602
Heraclius610
Conſtantine III.641
Conſtantine IV.641
Conſtans II.642
Metius668
Conſtantine V.668
Juſtinian II.685
Leo III.694
Abſimaris696
Juſtinian III.703
Philippicus711
Anaſtaſius II.713
Theodoſius III.714
Leo IV.716
Conſtantine VI.741
Leo V.775
Conſtantine VII.780
Irene797
Nicephorus802
Saturacius811
Michael811
Leo VI.813
Michael II.821
Theophilus829
Michael III.842
Baſilius867
Leo VII.886
Conſtantine IX.910
Romanus II.959
Nicephorus II.963
Zemiſees970
Baſilius II. and Conſtantine X.975
Romanus III.1028
Michael IV.1033
Michael V.1041
Conſtantine XI.1041
Theodora1054
Michael VI.1056
Iſaac1057
Conſtantine XII.1059
Michael VII.1067
Romanus IV.1068
Michael VIII.1071
Nicephorus III.1078
Alexius1080
John1118
Emanuel1142
Alexius II.1180
Andronicus1183
Iſaac II.1185
Alexius III.1195
Iſaac III.1203
Alexins IV.1204

After this, the empire was divided into thoſe of Adrianople and Conſtantinople, till they were united again by conqueſt under Mahomet II. emperor of Conſtantinople, May 29, 1448. See Emperors of Conſtantinople.

EMPERORS of CONSTANTINOPLE.

 began to reign.
Mahomet II. (Se Eaſtern Empire.)1451
Corcutus, grandſon to Mahomet1481
Zemin, father to Corcutus1481
Bajazet II. brother to Zemin1481
Selim, ſon to Bajazet1512
Solyman II. ſon to Selim1520
Selim II. ſon to Solyman1566
Amurath [...]. ſon to Selim1574
Maheme [...] III. ſon to Amurath1595
Athme [...] [...] ſon to Mahomet1604
Muſta [...] [...] brother to Achmet1617
Oſma [...] [...]nephew to Muſtapha1617
Muſtapha again1622
Amu [...] IV. grandſon to Muſtapha1623
[...]ham, brother to Amurath1640
M [...] IV. ſon to Ibraham1655
Soly [...] III. brother to Mahomet1687
A [...] [...] brother to Solyman1691
Mu [...] II. ſon to Mahomet IV.1695
Achm [...] III. brother to Muſtapha1703
Mahomet V.1730
Oſman III. brother to Mahomet1754
Muſtapha III. brother to Oſman1757
Achmet III. or Adulhamed, brother to Muſtapha1774

EMPERORS of GERMANY.

 began to reign.
Charlemagne, firſt emperor. (See Weſtern Empire.)800
Lewis I. ſon of Charlemagne814
Lotharius I. ſon of Lewis840
Lewis II. ſon of Lotharius845
Charles II. nephew to Lewis875
Lewis III. ſon of Charles878
Charles III [...] brother to Lewis III.880
Arnolph. baſtard brother to Charles888
Lewis IV. ſon of Arnolph900
Conrade I. duke of Heſſe, firſt elected emperor912
Henry, duke of Saxony920
Otho I. ſon of Henry936
Otho II. ſon of Otho I.974
Otho III. ſon of Otho II983
Henry II. duke of Bavaria, couſin german to Otho III.1002
Conrade II. duke of Franconia,1024
Henry III. ſon of Conrade1040
Henry IV. ſon of Henry III.1056
Henry V. ſon of Henry IV.1106
Lotharius II.1125
Conrade III. nephew to Henry V.1138
Frederick I. nephew to Conrade1152
Henry VI. ſon to Frederick1190
Philip, brother to Henry1197
Otho IV. ſon in law to Philip1208
Frederick II. ſon of Henry VI.1215
Henry VII.1245
William1246
Conrade IV. ſon of Frederick II.1250
Richard, brother to Henry III. of England1257

INTERREGNUM, 1259.

Rodolph I.1273
Adolph1292
Albert I. ſon of Rodolph1297
Henry VIII.1308
Lewis V. and Frederick III.1314
Lewis V. alone1322
Charles IV.1346
Wenceſlaus, ſon of Charles1378
Robert1400
Sigiſmund, king of Hungary1411
Albert II. king of Bohemia and ſon in law to Sigiſmund1437
Frederick III.1439
Maximilian I. ſon of Frederick1493
Charles V. king of Spain, grandſon to Maximillian1519
Ferdinand I. brother to Charles1558
Maximilian II. ſon to Ferdinand1564
Rodolph II. ſon of Maximilian1577
Matthias, brother to Rodolph1613
Ferdinand II. couſin to Matthias1620
Ferdinand III. ſon of Ferdinand II.1638
Leopold I. ſon of Ferdinand III.1658
Joſeph I. king of Hungary and Bohemia, ſon of Leopold1705
Charles VI. brother to Joſeph1711
Charles VII.1742
Francis I. married to the queen of Hungary and Bohemia, daughter of Charles VI.1745
Joſeph II. king of Hungary and Bohemia, ſon of Francis1765

See HUNGARY.

POPES.

 began to reign.
Alexander II. 164th pope1061
Gregory VII.1073
Vi [...]or III.1086
Urban II.1088
Paſchal II.1099
Gelaſius II.1118
Calixtus II.1119
Honorius II.1124
Innocent II.1130
Caeleſtine II.1143
Lucius IV.1144
Eugenius III.1145
Anaſtaſius IV.1153
Adrian IV.1153
Alexander III.1159
Lucius III.1181
Urban III.1185
Gregory VIII.1187
Clement III1187
Caeleſtine III.1191
Innocent III.1198
Honorius III.1216
Gregory IX.1227
Caeleſtine IV.1241
Innocent IV.1243
Alexander IV.1254
Urban IV.1261
Clement IV.1265
Gregory X.1271
Innocent V.1276
Adrian V.1276
Vicedominus1276
John XX. or XXI.1276
Nicholas III.1277
Honorius IV.1285
Nicholas IV. died, 12921288
See vacant 2 years and 3 months. 
Caeleſtine V.1294
Boniface VIII.1294
Benedict XI.1303
Clement V.1305
John XXI or XXII.1316
Benedict XII.1334
Clement VI.1342
Innocent VI.1352
Urban V.1362
Gregory XI.1370
Urban VI.1378
Clement VIII. antipope, died 1394. 
Boniface IX.1389
Benedict XIII. antipope. 
Innocent VII.1404
Gregory XII.1406
Alexander V.1409
John XXIII.1410
Martin V.1417
Eugenius IV.1431
Nicholas V.1447
Calixtus III.1455
Pius II.1458
Paul II.1464
Sextus IV.1476
Innocent VIII.1484
Alexander VI.1492
Pius III.1503
Julius II.1503
Leo X.1513
Adrian VI.1522
Clement VII.1523
Paul III.15 [...]4
Julius III.1550
Marcellus V.1555
Paul IV.1555
Pius IV.1559
Pius V.1566
Gregory XIII.1572
Sixtus V.1585
Urban VII.1590
Gregory XIV.1590
Innocent IX.1591
Clement VIII.1592
Le XI.1605
Paul V.1605
Gregory XV.1621
Urban VIII.1623
Innocent X.1644
Alexander VII.1655
Clement IX.1667
Clement X.1670
Innocent XI.1676
Alexander VIII.1689
Innocent XII.1691
Clement XI.1700
Innocent XIII.1721
Benedict XIII.1724
Clement XII.1730
Benedict XIV.1740
Clement XIII.1758
Clement XIV.1769
Pius VI.Feb 15, 1775

A LIST of the REGIMENTS, with their DATES and RANK.

Horſe Guards. 
1ſt and 2d Troop,1660
Horſe Grenadier Guards. 
1ſt Troop,1685
2d Troop,1702
Royal Horſe Guards. 
Blues,1661
Four Regiments of Horſe. 
1ſt, 2d, and 3d,1685
4th,1688
Three of Dragoon Guards. 
A [...]l.1685
Fourteen of Dragoons. 
1ſt,1680
2d,1681
3d and 4th,168 [...]
5th,1688
6th,1689
7th,1690
8th,1693
9th—14th,1715
Nine of Light Dragoons. 
1ſt, 2d, 3d, 4th,1759
5th, 6th, 7th, 8th,1779
9th,1781
Three of Foot Guards. 
All,1650
One Hundred and Five of Foot. 
1ſt Reg.1633
2d,1661
3d,1665
4th,1680
5th,1674
6th,1673
7th — 15th,1685
16th and 17th,1688
18th,1684
19th and 20th,1688
21ſt,1678
22d — 27th,1689
28th,1694
29th — 34th,1702
35th and 36th1701
37th — 39th1702
40th,1717
41ſt,1719
42d,1739
43d — 48th,1741
49th,1743
50th,1753
51ſt — 60th,1755
61ſt — 70th,1758
71ſt1775
72d — 74th1777
75th,1778
76th — 83d,1777
84th1775
85th — 92d,1779
93d — 100th,1780
101ſt — 105th,1781
African corps,1765
Jamaica corps,1766
52 independ. comp.1781
Artillery, Ireland,1670
Artillery, England,1705

The KINGS of each COUNTRY.

countries.began to reign.
Conſtantinople. Abdul HamedJan. 21, 1774
Denmark. Chriſtian VII. born, Jan. 29, 1749.1766
France. Lewis XVI. born, 1754.1774
Germany. Joſeph II. born, March 13, 1741.1765
Holland. William V. prince of Orange, born, March 5, 1748.1766
Hungary and Bohemia. Joſeph II. emperor of Germany. (See Germany.)1780
Modena. Francis Maria, duke of, born, July 2, 1698. 
Sicily. Ferdinand IV. born, Jan. 12, 1751.1759
Poland. Staniſlaus [...] born, Jan. 17, 1732.1764
Parma. Ferdinand, duke of, born, Jan. 20, 1752. 
Portugal. Maria, born, Dec. 17, 1734.1777
Pruſſia. Frederic III. born, Jan. 24, 1712.1740
Rome. Pius VI. born, Dec. 27, 1717.Feb. 22, 1775
Ruſſia. Catherine II. born, May 2, 1729.1762
Sardinia. Victor Amadeus Maria, born, June 26, 1726.1773
Spain. Charles III. born, Jan. 20, 1716.1759
Sweden. Guſtavus II. born, Jan. 24, 1746.1770
Tuſcany. Leopold, grand duke of, born, May 5, 1747. 
Venice. Brizio Guiſtiniano.June 14, 1775

A View of the RELIGION and CAPITAL CITIES of the chief Countries in EUR [...]PE.

Countries.Religion.Capital Cities.
Auſtrian Netherlands,Papiſts,Bruſſels.
Bohemia,ditto,Prague.
Denmark,Proteſtants,Copenhagen.
France,Papiſts,Paris,
Germany,Proteſtants and Papiſts,Vienna.
Hungary,Papiſts,Preſburg.
Italy,ditto,Rome.
Norway,Proteſtants,Bergen.
Poland,Papiſts,Warſaw.
Portugal,ditto,Liſbon.
Pruſſia,Protedants,Berlin.
Ruſſia,Greek Church,Peterſburg.
Sardinia,Papiſts,Turin.
Sicilies,ditto,Naples.
Spain,ditto,Madrid.
Sweden,Proteſtants,Stockholm.
Switzerland,ditto and Papiſts,Bern.
Turkey,Mahometans, Chriſtians & Jews,Conſtantinople.
United Provinces,Proteſtants,Amſterdam.
Venice,Papiſts, Greeks, and Jews,Venice.

Comparative View of the FORCES, REVENUE, and POPULATION of EUROPE, in 1776.

[120]
Countries.Soldiers.Ann. Revenue.No. People.
  £. 
Great Britain,40,00012,000,00010,000,000
Holland,40,0005,500,0002,500,000
France,200,00015,000,00024,000,000
Spain,100,0006,000,0006,000,000
Portugal,30,0004,500,0001,500,000
Sardinia,70,0002,500,0002,500,000
Naples,25,0002,700,0004,500,000
Reſt of Italy,85,0005,000,00013,000,000
Auſtria,240,0003,000,0005,500,000
Pruſſia,260,0003,000,0003,600,000
Germany,200,0007,500,00012,000,000
Denmark,60,0002,200,0002,000,000
Sweden,80,0003,000,0002,500,000
Ruſſia,350,0005,500,00020,000,000
Poland,3000300,0008,000,000
 1,783,00077,700,000117,600,000

The ROYAL FAMILY of ENGLAND.

BROTHERS and SISTERS to His MAJESTY.

[121]

LORD LIEUTENANTS of IRELAND ſince the UNION.

A LIST of the LORD CHANCELLORS ſince WILLIAM the CONQUEROR.
In theſe dates the Old Stile is preſerved, till the alteration.

[122]
 when made.
Maurice, afterwards biſhop of London, died, Sept. 26, 1107,1067
Oſmund, afterwards earl of Dorſet, bp. of Sarum. 
Arfaſt, biſhop of Helmſtadt, Germany,1073
Herman, biſhop of Sherborne. 
Rev. William Welſon. 
W. Giffard, bp. of Winton, died, July 21, 1128. 
Robert Bloet, afterwards biſhop of Lincoln, died, Jan. 10, 1122,1087
Roger, afterwards biſhop of Sarum, died, Dec. 4, 1139,after 1100
Geofrey Rufus, afterwards biſhop of Durham, 
Alexander, biſhop of Lincoln, died, Aug. 1147,after 1135
Pauper, natural ſon of Roger, biſhop of Sarum. 
Philip,1153
Thomas à Becket, archbiſhop of Canterbury, murdered, Dec. 29, 1171,1157
Rev. Geofrey Plantagenet, ſon of Henry II. by Rofamund, died, 1213,1181
Walter de Bidun. 
W. Longchamp, bp. of Ely, died, Jan. 29, 1197,1189
Hugh, afterward biſhop of Lincoln, died, Feb. 7, 1234,1204
Walter de Gray, afterwards archbiſhop of York, died, May, 1255,1206
Rich. de Mariſ [...], op. of Durham, died, 1226,1212
Ralph Neville, afterwards biſhop of Winton, died, Feb. 1, 1244,1223
Simon Norman,1238
Richard, afterwards biſhop of Cheſter,1239
Ralph Neville, again,1242
Ranulph Brito, 
Silveſter de Everton, biſhop of Carliſle,1246
John Lexington,Sept. 1247
John Manſel, chancellor of St. Paul's London,1248
Peter de Rievallis, and Rev. Will de Kilkenny,1250
Peter Chaſeport, and J. de Leſſington,May 1253
Will. de Kilkenny, afterwards biſhop of Ely,1253
Henry de Wengham, afterwards biſhop of London, died, July 13, 1261,1255
Nicholas, archdeacon of Ely,1259
Walter Merton, afterwards biſhop of Rocheſter, died, Oct. 27, 1278,1261
Nicholas, archdeacon of Ely, again, afterwards biſhop of Winton, died, 1280,1263
John de Chiſul, afterwards bp. of London, about1264
Thomas de Cantilupus, afterwards biſhop of Hereford, died, Aug. 25, 1282,1265
Walter Giffard, archbiſhop of York, died, April 25, 1279,1265
Godfrey Giffard, afterwards biſhop of Worceſter, died, 1302,1267
John Chiful, again,1269
Richard Middleton,1269
John Kirkby, afterwards bp. of Ely, died, Mar. 26, 1 [...]90,1272
Rob. Burnet, bp. of Bath and W [...]lls, died, 1292.1274
Walter Langton,1292
John Langton, afterwards biſhop of Chicheſter.1293
William Greenfield, archbiſhop of York, died, Sept. 13, 1315,1302
William Hamilton, dean of York.1305
Ralph Baldock, biſhop of London, died, July 24, 1313,1307
Walter Reynold, archbiſhop of Canterbury,1311
John Sandale, biſhop of Winton, died, 1320,1315
John Hotham, bp. of Ely, died, Jan. 25, 1336,1318
John Salmon, biſhop of Norwich, died, July 6, 1325,1320
W. Ayermin, biſhop of Norwich, died, Mar. 28, 1337,1323
Robert Baldock, biſhop of Norwich,1324
John Hotham, again,1324
Henry Cliff, keeper of the rolls, and William Herlaſton, Chancery-clerk,1329
Henry Burwaſh, biſhop of Lincoln, died, Dec. 1340,May 1329
John Stratford, afterwards archbiſhop of Canterbury, died, April 9, 1392,1331
Richard Bury, biſhop of Durham, died, April 24, 1345,1336
John Stratford, again,1336
Robert Stratford, brother to John.1338
Richard Bintworth, biſhop of London, died, Dec. 8. 1339,July, 1339
John de St. Paul, keeper of the rolls, Michael Worth, and Thomas Baumburg,1340
John de St. Paul, alone,Feb. 1341
John Stratford, again,1341
Robert Stratford, again,1341
Sir Robert Burgchiar,1342
Robert Parnyng,Oct. 1342
Robert Sadington,Sept. 1344
John Offord,Oct. 1346
John Thurſby, archbiſhop of York, died, November 6, 1373,July, 1347
Will. Edenton, bp. of Winton, died, 1366.Feb. 1357
Simon Langham, archbiſhop of Canterbury, died, July 22, 1367,Feb. 1363
William of Wickham, biſhop of Winton, died, 1402,Sept. 1368
Sir Robert de Thorp,Mar. 1372
John Knyvet,1373
Adam Houghton, biſhop of St. David's, died, April, 1389,Jan. 1377
Sir Richard de la Scrope,1379
Simon Sudbury, archbiſhop of Canterbury,1380
William Courtney, afterwards archbiſhop of Canterbury, died, July, 1396,1381
Sir Richard de la Scrope, again,1382
Robert Baybroke, biſhop of London, died, 1404,Sept. 1383
Michael de la Pool, earl of Suffolk,Mar. 1383
Thomas Arundel, biſhop of Ely,Oct. 1387
William of Wickam, again,May 1389
Thomas Arundel, again, then archbiſhop of Canterbury, died, Feb. 20, 1413,Sept. 1392
Edmund Stafford, biſhop of Exeter,Nov. 1397
Sir John Searle, keeper of the rolls,Nov. 1400
Pdmund Stafford, again, died, Sept. 1419,Mar. 1401
Henry Beaufort, biſhop of Winton, died, April 11, 1447,1404
Thomas Langley, bp. of Durham, died, 1437,1404
John Wakering, clerk, keeper of the rolls.Jan. 1410
Sir John Beaufort, d. of E [...]ter, died, 1425,Jan. 1410
Henry Beaufort, again,1412
Simon Garnſtede, clerk, maſter of the rolls. Sept.1417
Henry Beaufort, again,Oct. 1417
John Kemp, afterwards archbiſhop of Canterbury, died, Mar. 22, 1453,Mar. 1425
John Stafford, afterwards archbiſhop of Canterbury, died, July 6, 1452,Feb. 1432
John Kemp, again,Jan. 1450
Richard Neville, earl of Sarum, beheaded, 1461,Apr. 1454
Thomas Bourchier, archbiſhop of Canterbury, died, 1486,Mar. 1455
William Wykham, biſhop of Winton, died, Auguſt 11, 1486,Oct. 1457
George Neville, afterwards archbiſhop of York, died, 1476, aged 46,July, 1460
Robert Stillington, biſhop of Bath and Wells, died, a priſoner, in 1491,June, 1468
John Alcock, afterwards biſhop of Ely, died, Oct. 1, 1500,Sept. 1473
Laurence Booth, afterwards archbiſhop of York, died, 1483,June, 1474
Thomas Rotheram, afterwards archbiſhop of York, died, 1500, aged 76,1475
John Ruſſel, biſhop of Lincoln, died, July 30, 1490,Nov. 1484
John Morton, archbiſhop of Canterbury, died, Oct. 1521,Aug. 1487
H. Deane, afterwards archbiſhop of Canterbury,Oct. 1501
W. Warham, archbiſhop of Canterbury, died, 1522,Aug. 1502
Thomas Wolſey, archbiſhop of York,Dec. 1516
Sir Thomas More,Oct. 1530
Sir Thomas Audley, afterwards baron Audley, died, April 30, 1544,May, 1533
Lord Wriotheſley, afterwards earl of Southampton,1545
Lord Paulet, afterwards marquis of Wincheſter, died, 1571, aged 97,July, 1547
Lord Rich, died, 1566,Nov. 1547
Thomas Goodrick, biſhop of Ely,Jan. 1551
Stephen Gardiner, biſhop of Winton,Sept. 1553
Nicholas Heath, archbiſhop of York, died about 1566,Jan. 1555
Sir Nicholas Bacon, died, 1579,Dec. 1559
Sir Thomas Bromley, died, 1586,Apr. 1579
Sir Chriſtopher Hatton, died, 1591,Apr. 1587
Sir John Puckering,May, 1592
Sir Thomas Egerton, afterward viſcount Brackley, died, 1617,1596
Sir Francis Bacon, afterwards viſcount St. Albans,Mar. 1616
John Williams, afterwards archbiſhop of York, died, Mar. 25, 1650,July, 1620
Lord Coventry, died, 1639,Nov. 1625
Sir John Finch,Jan. 1639
Sir Edward Littleton, died, 1645, aged 56,Jan. 1640
Sir Richard Lane,Aug. 1645
Sir Edward Herbert, died, 1660,1653
Lord Clarendon,Dec. 1657
Sir Orlando Bridgman,Aug. 1667
Earl of Shaftſbury, died, Jan. 22, 1682, aged 61,Nov. 1672
Sir Heneage Finch, afterwards earl of Nottingham, died, Dec. 11, 1682, aged 60,1673
Lord Guilford, died, Sept. 5, 1685,Dec. 1682
Lord Jeffreys, died, April 18, 1689,Oct. 1685
Sir John Maynard, Anthony Kecke, and William Rawlinſon,Mar. 1689
Lord Somers, died, 1716, aged 63,Mar. 1692
Sir Nathan Wright,May, 1700
Lord Cowper, firſt chancellor of Great Britain,Oct. 1705
In commiſſion.Aug. 1710
Lord Harcourt,Apr. 1713
Lord Cowper, again,Sept. 1714
Lord Parker, afterwards earl of Macclesfield,May 1718
Lord King, died, 1734, aged 64,June, 1725
Lord Talbot, died, Feb. 14, 1737, aged 52,Nov. 1733
Philip York, earl of Hardwicke,1737
Lord Henley, afterwards earl of Northington,Jan. 1761
Charles Pratt, Lord Camden,July, 1766
Charles York,Jan. 1770
In commiſſion, viz. Sir Sidney Stafford Smythe, knt. Hon. Henry Bathurſt, and Sir Richard Aſton, knt.Jan. 1770
Hen. Bathurſt, lord Apſley, now earl Bathurſt,Jan. 1771
Lord Thurlow,June 2, 1778

CHANCELLORS of the Univerſity of OXFORD.

CHANCELLORS of the UNIVERSITY of CAMBRIDGE.

[129]
A Liſt of the ARCHBISHOPS of CANTERBURY, ſince the eſtabliſhment of that SEE; with the dates of their Tranſlations.☞ This mark * implies, of honourable houſes.
names.tran.
1, St. Auſtin,Years 569
2, St. Laurentius,611
3, St. Mellitus,619
4, St. Juſtus,624
5, St. Honorius,636
6, St. Deus-dedit, the firſt Engliſhman, Vacant four Years.654
7, St. Theodorus, a Grecian,668
8, St. Brithwaldus,692
9, St. Tatwinus,731
10, Nothelmus,736
11, Cuthbert,742
12, Bregwinus,759
13, Lambert,764
14, Ethelardus,793
15, Ulfredus,807
16, Theogildus,832
17, Celnothus, 
18, Ethelradus,871
19, Pleimundus,889
20, Athelmus,915
21, Wulſelmus, Lord chancellor,924
22, St. Odo, or Otho,934
23, St. Dunſtan, Lord Treaſurer,961
24, Ethelgarus,988
25, Siricius,989
26, Goſricus,993
27, St. Elphegus,1006
28, Livingus,1013
29, St. Angelnothus, *1020
30, St. Eadlinus,1038
31, Robert,1050
32, Stigand,1052
33, Lanfranc, an Italian,1070
34, St. Anſelm,1093
35, Randulph,1114
36, William Curbail,1122
37, Theobald,1138
38, St. Thomas à Becket, lord chancellor,1162
39, Richard,1171
40, Baldwin,1184
41, Reginald,1191
42, Hubert Walter, lord chancellor and lord chief juſtice,1193
43, Stephen Langton, cardinal,1209
44, Richard Wetherſhed,1229
45, St. Edmund, chancellor of Oxford,1234
46, Boniface,*1244
47, Robert Kilwarby, cardinal,1272
48, John Peckham,1278
49, Robert Winchelſey, chancellor of Oxford,1294
50, Walter Reynolds, lord chancellor and lord treaſurer,1313
51, Simon Mepham,1327
52, John Stratford, lord chancellor,1333
53, Thomas Bradwardin,1348
54, Simon Iſlip,1349
55, Simon Langham, cardinal and lord chanc.1366
56, William Witleſey,1367
57, Simon Sudbury, lord chancellor, beheaded by the rebels of Wat Tyler,1379
58, William Courtney, chancellor of Oxford,*1381
59, Thomas Arundel, lord chancellor,*1396
60, Henry Chichely, cardinal,*1414
61, John Stafford, cardinal, lord chancellor and lord treaſurer,1443
62, John Kemp, cardinal, lord chancellor twice,1452
63, Thomas Bouchier, cardinal, lord chancellor and chancellor of Oxford,*1454
64, John Morton, the like,1486
65, Henry Dean,1502
66, William Warham, lord chancellor and chancellor of Oxford,1504
67, Thomas Cranmer,1533
68, Reginald Pole, cardinal and chancellor of Oxford,*1555
69, Matthew Parker,1559
70, Edmund Grindal,1575
71, John Whitgift,1583
72, Richard Bancroft, chancellor of Oxford,1604
73, George Abbot,1610
74, William Laud, chancellor of Oxford, beheaded,1644
See vacant ſixteen years. 
75, William Juxton, once lord treaſurer,Sept. 1660
76, Gilbert Sheldon,July, 1663
77, William Sancroft, deprived, Feb. 1, 1691,Jan. 1677
78, John Tillotſon,Apr. 1691
79, Thomas Tenniſon,Dec. 1694
80, William Wake,Dec. 1715
81, John Potter,Mar. 1737
82, Thomas Herring,Dec. 1747
83, Matthew Hutton,May, 1757
84, Thomas Secker,May, 1758
85, Frederick Cornwallis,*Oct. 1768

N. B. The figures before the names refer to the number of biſhops ſince the eſtabliſhment of the ſee.

Such biſhops as follow Canterbury, are ſubject to Canterbury; ſuch as follow York, to York.

Biſhops of St. ASAPH, ſince the Reſtoration. 37.
BANGOR. 47.
BATH and WELLS. 55.
BRISTOL. 13.
CHICHESTER. 72.
ST. DAVIDS. 92.
ELY. 39.
EXETER. 41.
GLOCESTER. 11.
HEREFORD. 77.
LANDAFF. 71.
LICHFIELD and COVENTRY. 74.
LINCOLN. 64.
LONDON. 88.
NORWICH. 68.
OXFORD. 7.
PETERBOROUGH. 9.
ROCHESTER. 81.
SALISBURY. 70.
WINCHESTER. 70.
WORCESTER. 84.
YORK. 70.
CARLISLE. 40.
CHESTER. 11.
DURHAM. 68.
A LIST of IRISH BISHOPS.
 ARCHBISHOPS.Promoted
Armagh,Lord Rokeby, *1765
Dublin,Robert Fowler,1779
Caſhel,Charles Agar, *1779
TuamJemmet Browne,1775
 BISHOPS. 
Meath,Henry Maxwell, *1766
Kildare,Charles Jackſon,1772
Waterfor [...],William Newcome,1779
Clogher,John Hotham,1782
Limerick,William Gore,1772
Killala,William Cecil Pery,1781
Raphoe,James Hawkins,1780
Elphin,Charles Dodgſon,1775
Down,James Trail,1765
Oſſory,William Beresford,1782
Derry,Frederick Hervey, *1768
Cloyne,Richard Woodward,1781
Killaloe,Thomas Barnard,1780
Corke,Iſaac Mann,1772
Clonfert,Walter Cope,1772
Leighlin,Joſeph Dean Bourke,1772
Kilmore,George Lewis Jones,1774
Dromore,Thomas Percy,1782
BISHOP of SODOR and MAN.
The LORD MAYORS of LONDON, ſince the UNION.
A LIST of SECOND TITLES, ſhewing to whom they belong. D. Duke, M. Marquis E. Earl, V. Viſcount.
[149]
A LIST of the SIR-NAMES of the NOBILITY, to ſhew what Family, Honourable Perſons are of. D Duke — M Marq. — E Earl — V Viſ.

LORD CHAMBERLAINS, from the preſent KING's ACCESSION. *⁎* The DATES mark the APPOINTMENT.

[159]
VICE CHAMBERLAINS.
GROOMS of the STOLE.
LORD STEWARDS.
COMPTROLLERS.
TREASURERS.
COFFERERS.
MASTERS of the HOUSEHOLD.
MASTERS of the HORSE.
CAPTAINS of the BAND of GENTLEMEN PENSIONERS.
KEEPERS of the GREAT WARDROBE.
MASTERS of the JEWEL OFFICE.
QUEEN'S HOUSEHOLD. LORD CHAMBERLAINS.
VICE CHAMBERLAINS.
MASTERS of the HORSE.
TREASURERS.
SECRETARIES.
COMPTROLLERS.
TREASURERS of the CHAMBER.
LORD PRESIDENTS.
LORD WARDENS of the STANNARIES.
CHANCELLORS of the DUCHY of LANCASTER.
LORDS PRIVY SEAL.
ATTORNEYS and SOLICITORS GENERAL, ATTORNEYS.
SOLICITORS.
FIRST LORDS of the TREASURY.
CHANCELLORS of the EXCHEQUER.
SECRETARIES to the FIRST LORD.
SECRETARIES of STATE. SOUTHERN DEPARTMENT.
NORTHERN DEPARTMENT.
FOR THE COLONIES.
FIRST LORDS of TRADE.
PAYMASTERS GENERAL of the FORCES.
JOINT POSTMASTERS.
SECRETARIES at WAR.
FIRST LORDS of the ADMIRALTY.
TREASURERS of the NAVY.
VICE ADMIRALS of GREAT BRITAIN.
REAR ADMIRALS of GREAT BRITAIN.
VICE ADMIRALS of SCOTLAND.
MASTERS of GREENWICH HOSPITAL.
MASTER GENERALS of the ORDNANCE.
LIEUTENANT GENERALS of the ORDNANCE.
COMMANDER in CHIEF.
ORDER of PRECEDENCY.

Iriſh Peers rank after Peers of equal Titles with themſelves. Thus Iriſh Dukes rank immediately after Engliſh Dukes, Iriſh Marquiſſes after Engliſh Marquiſſes, and ſo on.

Married Women and Widows are entitled to the ſame Rank among each other, as their Huſbands would have reſpectively borne between themſelves, except ſuch Rank is merely proſeſſional or official; and unmarried Women to the ſame Rank as their eldeſt Brothers would have among Men, during the Lives of their Fathers.

Maids of Honour rank next after Barons Daughters.

An Alphabetical LIST of the preſent BARONETS of ENGLAND, their moſt uſual Places of Abode, with the Time when they, or their Anceſtors, were ſo honoured.
The DATES are according to the preſent Method of beginning the Year the Firſt of January.

[171]

N. B. Where we have not been able to come at the Chriſtan Name of the preſent BARONET, we have put that of the laſt deceaſed.

BARONETS of NOVA SCOTIA, RESIDENT in ENGLAND.

[177]

Beſides the above, there are ſeveral to whom the Dignity of Baronet has been granted, but neither they nor their Suſſceſſors have taken out their Patents, as Sir Robert Cornwall (who was created in Hanover by K. George II.), and Sir James Bunce, &c.

A Correct LIST of the BARONETS of IRELAND, with the Dates of their Creations, from the firſt Inſtitution of that Order in Ireland (by the Letters Patent of King JAMES I. dated Sept. 30, 1619), to the preſent Time.

Authentic LIST of the BARONETS of SCOTLAND.

1625.
1626.
1627.
1628.
1629.
1630.
1631.
1633.
1634.
1635.
1636.
1637.
1638.
1641.
1646.
1661.
1662.
1663.
1664.
1665.
1666.
1667.
1668.
1670.
1671.
1672.
1673.
1677.
1678.
1679.
1680.
1681.
1682.
1683.
1685.
1686.
1687.
1688.
1689.
1690.
1692.
1694.
1695.
1697.
1698.
1700.
1701.
1702.
1703.
1704.
1705.
FINIS.

Appendix A INDEX to VOLUME II.

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Appendix B The following uſeful and new Books may be had of the Publiſher of this Volume, and all Bookſellers. To the Trade who take Twelve of any of the following Books, a Thirteenth will be given gratis.

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