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Currently displaying records 101 through 125 of 269 records for the following search criteria:
year greater than or equals "1831"
year less than or equals "1837"

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RecID: 1515
1833  Schleiermacher, On the Worth of Socrates as a Philosopher (translated).  
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RecID: 1516
1833  Maria Jane Jewsbury dies of cholera in India.  
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RecID: 1517
1833  "Oxford movement" begins ("High Church" movement within the Church of England).  
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RecID: 1518
1833  Rise of the Disciplines: Coleridge, attending a meeting of the British Society for the Advancement of Science, prompts use of word "scientist" (Cambridge).  
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RecID: 1519
1833  Alfred Bunn gets control of both Drury Lane and Covent Gardens.  
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RecID: 1520
1833  Founding of the Manchester Statistical Society.  
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RecID: 1521
1833  Leitch Ritchie begins a Library of Romance series (Smith and Elder).  
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RecID: 1840
1833  Abolition: Mary Anne Rawson's anti-slavery anthology, The Bow in the Cloud. *Abolition  
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RecID: 1986
1833  Death of Arthur Henry Hallam.  
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RecID: 1990
1833  Edward Bulwer-Lytton, England and the English.  
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RecID: 1991
1833  William Carleton, Traits and Stories.  
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RecID: 1992
1833  Thomas Arnold, Principles of Church Reform.  
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RecID: 1993
1833  Mendelssohn, Italian Symphony.  
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RecID: 1994
1833  Establishment of the Committee on Open Spaces.  
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RecID: 1995
1833  Ireland: Irish Chruch Temporalities Act reorganizes the Church of Ireland. Irish Church Bill is introduced in Parliament--the bill would disestablish Irish churches. *Ireland  
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RecID: 2154
1833  Francis Goldsmid becomes first Jewish barrister. *Anglo-Jewish History  
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RecID: 58
July 10, 1833  Thomas Babington Macaulay, Speech Delivered in the House of Commons on the Government of India. *India  
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RecID: 1496
July 31, 1833  Abolition of Colonial Slavery: The British Emancipation Act prohibits slavery in British Colonies, with provision for a 6-year "apprenticeship"; 800,000 slaves freed; owners compensated with over 20 million pounds. The Bill took effect in 1834. Unfortunately, the Act included a clause requiring slaves to serve an apprenticeship to their former owners, a clause which was first abolished in various colonies and then revoked entirely in the Immediate Abolition Act of 1838. *Colonialism
*Abolition  
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RecID: 1507
Dec 1833  Charles Dickens, A Dinner at Poplar Walk in Monthly Magazine.  
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RecID: 1320
1834  Felicia Hemans, paper on Goethe's Tasso in New Monthly.  
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RecID: 1321
1834  Felicia Hemans, National Lyrics and Songs for Music, Scenes and Hymns of Life with Other Religious Poems (dedicated to W. Wordsworth), Hymns for Childhood. (See 1827.)  
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RecID: 1522
1834  New Poor Law argues that indiscriminate relief demoralizes beneficiaries, abolishes outdoor relief, and maintains workhouse inmates at salary level below lowest paid workers. *Poor Law
*Economics  
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RecID: 1523
1834  Height of the trade union struggles during good economic times.  
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RecID: 1524
1834  Reform Movement: Lord Lyndhurst declares Poor Man's Guardian not a newspaper and thus legal. *Parliamentary Reform
*Radicalism
*Poor Law  
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RecID: 1525
1834  Benjamin Disraeli defeated at High Wycombe by the election of a Tory.  

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