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Currently displaying records 101 through 125 of 194 records for the following search criteria:
year greater than or equals "1807"
year less than or equals "1814"

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RecID: 992
1811  Sir Walter Scott, The Vision of Don Roderick.  
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RecID: 993
1811  Jane Austen, Sense and Sensibility ("By a Lady"--i.e., published anonymously; first version written in 1796).  
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RecID: 994
1811  Mary Tighe, Psyche, or the Legend of Love (previously, in 1805, printed privately).  
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RecID: 995
1811  Anna Laetitia Barbauld, The Female Speaker.  
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RecID: 996
1811  Eliza Fenwick, Lessons for Children.  
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RecID: 997
1811  Elizabeth Inchbald, ed., Modern Theatre.  
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RecID: 998
1811  Blake's largest surviving painting: An Allegory of the Spiritual Condition of Man.  
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RecID: 999
1811  Birth of Thomas Watts.  
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RecID: 1796
1811  Janetta Philipps, Poems.  
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RecID: 1830
1811  Germaine de Stael flees France (from her estate Coppet) after the destruction of De L'Allegmagne by Napoleon. De Stael goes to England and Russia. *French Revolution
*Russia  
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RecID: 1868
1811  Philadelphia productions of Joanna Baillie's Basil: A Tragedy and The Election. Baillie's De Monfort is produced at the Chestnut Street Theatre, Philadelphia, while The Family Legend is produced at both Bath and Newcastle's Theatre Royal.  
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RecID: 1912
1811  Publication of Beethoven's Christus am Olberge, Op. 85 and Firth Piano Concerto in E flat major, Op. 73.  
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RecID: 1948
1811  Ludwig van Beethoven, Trio in B flat major, Op. 97.  
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RecID: 1001
Feb 1811  Percy Bysshe Shelley, perhaps abbetted by Thomas Jefferson Hogg, published The Necessity of Atheism; after sending it to all officials and professors at Oxford, he was expelled. *Religious Controversy  
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RecID: 1000
Feb 5, 1811  Prince of Wales (future George IV) made Regent after George III deemed insane. *House of Hanover  
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RecID: 1002
Apr 20, 1811  First Table Talk recorded by John Taylor Coleridge.  
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RecID: 990
Nov 1811 - 1815  Luddite uprisings (machine breaking) in the Midlands against the weaving frames: groups of workmen who rebelled against the increased mechanization of textile production by destroying the new machinery. The government fears a revolutionary conspiracy and makes damaging property or taking Luddite oaths capital offences. *Radicalism  
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RecID: 1003
1812  Abolition: A registry of slaves is begun in Trinidad. Sugar prices begin to rise. *Abolition
*Colonialism  
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RecID: 1004
1812  Reform: A bill against the Luddites prescribes capital punishment for frame-breaking; Byron's first speech in the House of Lords opposes the bill. *Parlimentary Reform
*Radicalism  
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RecID: 1005
1812  George Crabbe, Tales in Verse.  
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RecID: 1006
1812  Byron, Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Cantos I and II.  
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RecID: 1007
1812  Joanna Baillie, Plays on the Passions Vol. III. New York publication of The Beacon (from Plays on the Passion, Vol. III).  
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RecID: 1008
1812  Amelia Opie, Temper.  
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RecID: 1009
1812  Maria Edgeworth, The Absentee (the last volume in the series Tales of Fashionable Life, 1809).  
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RecID: 1010
1812  Coleridge, Remorse, published and performed.  

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