1738

1738 (MDCCXXXVIII) was a common year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar and a common year starting on Sunday of the Julian calendar, the 1738th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 738th year of the 2nd millennium, the 38th year of the 18th century, and the 9th year of the 1730s decade. As of the start of 1738, the Gregorian calendar was 11 days ahead of the Julian calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923.

Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
1738 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1738
MDCCXXXVIII
Ab urbe condita2491
Armenian calendar1187
ԹՎ ՌՃՁԷ
Assyrian calendar6488
Balinese saka calendar1659–1660
Bengali calendar1145
Berber calendar2688
British Regnal year11 Geo. 2  12 Geo. 2
Buddhist calendar2282
Burmese calendar1100
Byzantine calendar7246–7247
Chinese calendar丁巳年 (Fire Snake)
4434 or 4374
     to 
戊午年 (Earth Horse)
4435 or 4375
Coptic calendar1454–1455
Discordian calendar2904
Ethiopian calendar1730–1731
Hebrew calendar5498–5499
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1794–1795
 - Shaka Samvat1659–1660
 - Kali Yuga4838–4839
Holocene calendar11738
Igbo calendar738–739
Iranian calendar1116–1117
Islamic calendar1150–1151
Japanese calendarGenbun 3
(元文3年)
Javanese calendar1662–1663
Julian calendarGregorian minus 11 days
Korean calendar4071
Minguo calendar174 before ROC
民前174年
Nanakshahi calendar270
Thai solar calendar2280–2281
Tibetan calendar阴火蛇年
(female Fire-Snake)
1864 or 1483 or 711
     to 
阳土马年
(male Earth-Horse)
1865 or 1484 or 712
February 4: Joseph Süß Oppenheimer is executed in Württemberg.

Events

JanuaryMarch

  • January 1 At least 664 African slaves drown, when the Dutch West Indies Company slave ship Leusden capsizes and sinks in the Maroni River, during its arrival in Surinam. The Dutch crew escapes, and leaves the slaves locked below decks to die.[1]
  • January 3 George Frideric Handel's opera Faramondo is given its first performance.[2]
  • January 7 After the Maratha Empire of India wins the Battle of Bhopal over the Jaipur State, Jaipur cedes the Malwa territory to the Maratha in a treaty signed at Doraha.[3]
  • February 4 Court Jew Joseph Süß Oppenheimer is executed in Württemberg.
  • February 11 Jacques de Vaucanson stages the first demonstration of an early automaton, The Flute Player at the Hotel de Longueville in Paris, and continues to display it until March 30.[4]
  • February 20 Swedish Levant Company founded.
  • March 28 Mariner Robert Jenkins presents a pickled ear, which he claims was cut off by a Spanish captain in the Caribbean in 1731, to the Parliament of Great Britain, which votes, 257 to 209, for war against Spain, leading to the War of Jenkins' Ear the following year.[5]
  • March/April Battle of the Dindar River: Emperor Iyasu II of Ethiopia is defeated by the Funj people.

AprilJune

JulySeptember

  • July 1 English metallurgist William Champion is granted a patent for his process of extracting zinc from other materials in a furnace.[10]
  • July 10 Thomas Pellow of Cornwall finally escapes captivity, 23 years after having been captured by Barbary pirates and held as a slave in Morocco. He arrives in British territory when the ship he is on sails into Gibraltar Bay on July 21, and later recounts his story in the book The Adventures of Thomas Pellow, of Penryn, Mariner: Three and Twenty Years in Captivity Among the Moors.[11]
  • August 10 Russo-Turkish War (1735–1739): The Russian army begins its attempt to cross the Dniester River and fails after three weeks; they are later decimated by plague.[12]
  • September 18 Samuel Johnson composes his first solemn prayer (published 1785).

OctoberDecember

  • October 22 The excavation of Herculaneum, a Roman city buried by Vesuvius in AD 79, begins near the Italian city of Resina on orders from King Charles III of Spain to his engineer, Rocque Joaquin de Alcubierre.[13]
  • November 18 The Treaty of Vienna is ratified, ending the War of the Polish Succession. Under the terms of the treaty, Stanisław Leszczyński receives Lorraine in exchange for renouncing the Polish throne.
  • December 27 After setting off from Rotterdam in August with 240 immigrants to America, the British ship Princess Augusta is wrecked near Block Island off of the coast of the colony of Rhode Island.[14] During the voyage, 200 passengers and seven crew died from illness spread by contaminated water. Another 20 die after the crew leaves rows to shore. The wreck later becomes the subject of the legend of the "Palatine Light" ghost ship and of John Greenleaf Whittier's 1867 poem "The Palatine".

Date unknown

  • China's Qing government announces that all western businessmen have to use the Cohong in Guangzhou to trade.
  • Pierre Louis Maupertuis publishes Sur la figure de la terre, which confirms Newton's view that the earth is an oblate spheroid, slightly flattened at the poles.
  • Black Forest clockmaker Franz Ketterer produces one of the earliest cuckoo clocks.
  • Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, having completed a law degree, is hired as a court musician by Crown Prince Frederick of Prussia, the future Frederick the Great (Bach will remain in Frederick's service until 1768).
  • Holy Royal Arch is founded.
  • Rémy Martin is granted exclusive permission by King Louis XV of France to plant new vineyards, for impressing him with the quality of his cognac.[15]

Births

Deaths

  • January 6 Franz Xaver Murschhauser, German composer and theorist (b. 1663)
  • January 24 Samuel Andrew, American Congregational clergyman, educator (b. 1656)
  • January 27 Marie Wulf, Danish pietist leader (b. 1685)
  • January 30 Benoît de Maillet, French diplomat and natural historian (b. 1656)
  • February 9 Béatrice Hiéronyme de Lorraine, Abbess of Remiremont (b. 1662)
  • February 15 Matthias Braun, Czech sculptor (b. 1684)
  • February 27 Henry Grove, English nonconformist minister (b. 1684)
  • March 16 George Bähr, German architect (b. 1666)
  • March 25 Turlough O'Carolan, Irish harper and composer (b. 1670)
  • April 9 Sir Charles Blois, 1st Baronet, English politician (b. 1657)
  • May 1 Charles Howard, 3rd Earl of Carlisle, English statesman (b. c. 1669)
  • May 15 Sir John Chesshyre, English lawyer (b. 1662)
  • June 5 Isaac de Beausobre, French Protestant pastor (b. 1659)
  • June 21 Charles Townshend, 2nd Viscount Townshend, English politician (b. 1674)
  • July 8 Jean-Pierre Nicéron, French encyclopedist (b. 1685)
  • July 28 Heinrich, Duke of Saxe-Merseburg (b. 1661)
Herman Boerhaave

References

  1. Johannes Postma, The Dutch in the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1600-1815 (Cambridge University Press, 2008) p242
  2. "Faramondo", The Handel House Trust Ltd.
  3. S.R. Bakshi and O.P. Ralhan, Madhya Pradesh Through the Ages (Sarup & Sons, 2007) p. 384
  4. Kara Reilly, Automata and Mimesis on the Stage of Theatre History (Springer, 2011) pp83-84
  5. Williams, Basil (1913). The Life of Wiliam Pitt Earl of Chatham. London: Longmans, Green, and Co.; repr. Routledge, 2018.
  6. Richard L. Kagan, Clio and the Crown: The Politics of History in Medieval and Early Modern Spain (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2010) p. 279
  7. "Subscribing to the Building of a Masonic Temple", in The American Ecclesiastical Review (May 1914) p.606
  8. Corfield, Justin. "Paul, Lewis". The Encyclopedia of the Industrial Revolution in World History. p. 710.
  9. Francisco A. Eissa-Barroso, The Spanish Monarchy and the Creation of the Viceroyalty of New Granada (1717-1739) (Brill, 2016) p232
  10. Bennet Woodcroft, Titles of Patents of Invention, Chronologically Arranged, From March 2, 1617 (14 James I.) to October 1, 1852 (16 Victoriae). 1617-1823 (The Queen's Printing Office, 1854) p104-105
  11. Thomas Pellow, The Adventures of Thomas Pellow, of Penryn, Mariner (reprinted by T. Fisher Unwin, 1890) pp. 813-816
  12. C. H. von Manstein, Memoirs of Russia, Historical, Political and Military, from the Year 1727 to 1744 (Beckett & DeHondt, 1770) pp203-210
  13. Pedar Foss and John J. Dobbins, The World of Pompeii (Routledge, 2009) p29
  14. Jill Farinelli, The Palatine Wreck: The Legend of the New England Ghost Ship (University Press of New England, 2017) pp. 101-105
  15. "Rémy Martin". www.remymartin.com. Retrieved March 24, 2016.
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