1774
1774 (MDCCLXXIV) was a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar and a common year starting on Wednesday of the Julian calendar, the 1774th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 774th year of the 2nd millennium, the 74th year of the 18th century, and the 5th year of the 1770s decade. As of the start of 1774, the Gregorian calendar was 11 days ahead of the Julian calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923.
Millennium: | 2nd millennium |
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Centuries: | |
Decades: | |
Years: |
1774 by topic |
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Arts and science |
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Countries |
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Lists of leaders |
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Birth and death categories |
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Establishments and disestablishments categories |
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Works category |
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Gregorian calendar | 1774 MDCCLXXIV |
Ab urbe condita | 2527 |
Armenian calendar | 1223 ԹՎ ՌՄԻԳ |
Assyrian calendar | 6524 |
Balinese saka calendar | 1695–1696 |
Bengali calendar | 1181 |
Berber calendar | 2724 |
British Regnal year | 14 Geo. 3 – 15 Geo. 3 |
Buddhist calendar | 2318 |
Burmese calendar | 1136 |
Byzantine calendar | 7282–7283 |
Chinese calendar | 癸巳年 (Water Snake) 4470 or 4410 — to — 甲午年 (Wood Horse) 4471 or 4411 |
Coptic calendar | 1490–1491 |
Discordian calendar | 2940 |
Ethiopian calendar | 1766–1767 |
Hebrew calendar | 5534–5535 |
Hindu calendars | |
- Vikram Samvat | 1830–1831 |
- Shaka Samvat | 1695–1696 |
- Kali Yuga | 4874–4875 |
Holocene calendar | 11774 |
Igbo calendar | 774–775 |
Iranian calendar | 1152–1153 |
Islamic calendar | 1187–1188 |
Japanese calendar | An'ei 3 (安永3年) |
Javanese calendar | 1699–1700 |
Julian calendar | Gregorian minus 11 days |
Korean calendar | 4107 |
Minguo calendar | 138 before ROC 民前138年 |
Nanakshahi calendar | 306 |
Thai solar calendar | 2316–2317 |
Tibetan calendar | 阴水蛇年 (female Water-Snake) 1900 or 1519 or 747 — to — 阳木马年 (male Wood-Horse) 1901 or 1520 or 748 |

Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1774.
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December 9: Start of the two month long Siege of Melilla
Events

Chesma Column in Tsarskoe Selo, commemorating the end of the Russo-Turkish War.
January–March
- January 21 – Mustafa III, Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, dies and is succeeded by his brother Abdul Hamid I.[1]
- January 27
- An angry crowd in Boston, Massachusetts seizes, tars, and feathers British customs collector and Loyalist John Malcolm, for striking a boy and a shoemaker, George Hewes, with his cane.
- British industrialist John Wilkinson patents a method for boring cannon from the solid, subsequently utilised for accurate boring of steam engine cylinders.[2]
- February 3 – The Privy Council of Great Britain, as advisors to King George III, votes for the King's abolition of free land grants of North American lands. Henceforward, land is to be sold at auction to the highest bidder.[3]
- February 6 – France's Parliament votes a sentence of civil degradation, depriving Pierre Beaumarchais of all rights and duties of citizenship.[4]
- February 7 – The volunteer fire company of Trenton, New Jersey, predecessor to the paid Trenton Fire Department created in 1892, is founded. In 1905, at 131 years, it claims to be the oldest continuously serving department in the U.S.[5]
- February 24 – The Province of Massachusetts Bay House of Representatives votes, 92 to 8, to impeach Superior Court Chief Justice Peter Oliver, but Provincial Governor Thomas Hutchinson refuses to allow the trial to proceed.[6]
- March 10 – The Boston Journal makes the first reference to the "Stars and Stripes" flag to symbolize the American colonies, reporting that "The American ensign now sparkles a door which shall shortly flame from the skies."[7]
- March 31 – Intolerable Acts: The British Parliament passes the Boston Port Act, closing the port of Boston, Massachusetts, as punishment for the Boston Tea Party.[7]
April–June
- April 17 – The first avowedly Unitarian congregation, Essex Street Chapel, is founded in London by Theophilus Lindsey.
- April 19 – The premiere of Iphigénie en Aulide by Christoph Willibald Gluck sparked a huge controversy, almost a war, such as has not been seen in Paris since the Querelle des Bouffons.
- May 10 – Louis XVI becomes King of France, following the death of his grandfather, Louis XV.[8]
- May 17 – The colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations issues the first call for an "Intercolonial Congress" that eventually is set up as the Continental Congress.[7]
- May 19 – Shakers Ann Lee and eight followers sail from Liverpool, England for colonial America.
- June 2 – Intolerable Acts: A new Quartering Act, requiring American colonists to provide better housing for British soldiers upon demand, is passed.[7]
- June 16–17 – English explorer James Cook becomes the first European to sight (and name) Palmerston Island in the South Pacific Ocean.
- June 20 (June 9 O.S.) – Russo-Turkish War (1768–1774): Battle of Kozludzha – The Imperial Russian Army, led by Alexander Suvorov, routs numerically superior Ottoman Empire forces.
- June 22 – The Parliament of Great Britain passes the Quebec Act, setting out rules of governance for the colony of Quebec in British North America, enlarging its territory as far south as Ohio[7] and granting freedom of religion for Roman Catholics.
July–September
- July 21 – Russia and the Ottoman Empire sign the Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca with Russian victory, ending six years of war. The treaty gives Russia the right to intervene in Ottoman politics, to protect its Christian subjects.
- August 1 – The element oxygen is discovered for the third (and last, so far) time – the second quantitatively, following the somewhat earlier work of Carl Wilhelm Scheele (1771–1772) by Joseph Priestley, who publishes the fact in 1775, and so names the element (and usually gets all the credit, because his work was published first).
- August 6 – Ann Lee and the Shakers arrive in America and settle in New York.[7]
- September 1 – Powder Alarm: Thomas Gage, royal governor of the Province of Massachusetts Bay, orders British soldiers to remove gunpowder from a magazine, causing Patriots to prepare for war.
- September 4 – English explorer James Cook becomes the first European to sight (and name) the island of New Caledonia in Melanesia.
- September 5 – The First Continental Congress assembles in Philadelphia.[7]
- September 15 – Yemelyan Pugachev, leader of Pugachev's Rebellion against Russia by the Yaik Cossacks, is betrayed by his own men after returning to Yaitsk (now Oral, Kazakhstan).[9]
- September 21 – George Mason and George Washington found the Fairfax County Militia Association, a military unit independent of British control.
- September 29 – Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's semi-autobiographical epistolary novel The Sorrows of Young Werther (Die Leiden des jungen Werthers) (written January–March) is published anonymously in Leipzig, Germany; it is influential in the Sturm und Drang movement and Romanticism.
October–December
- October 10
- Dunmore's War – Battle of Point Pleasant: Cornstalk is forced to make peace with Dunmore at the Treaty of Camp Charlotte, ceding Shawnee land claims south of the Ohio (modern Kentucky) to Virginia.
- English explorer James Cook becomes the first European to sight (and name) Norfolk Island in the Pacific Ocean, uninhabited at this date.
- October 14 – The Continental Congress in America adopts the Declaration of Rights and Resolves, with 10 principles.[7]
- October 20 – The First Continental Congress passed the Continental Association, a colony-wide boycotting of British goods. Theater performances in the American colonies were also halted on the Congresses recommendation that the member colonies "discountenance and discourage all horse racing and all kinds of gaming, cock fighting, exhibitions of shows, plays, and other expensive diversions and entertainments."[7]
- October 21 – The word Liberty is first displayed on a flag raised by colonists in Taunton, Massachusetts, in defiance of British rule in Colonial America.
- October 25 – The Edenton Tea Party takes place in North Carolina, marking the first major gathering of women in support of the American cause.
- October 26 – The first Continental Congress adjourns in Philadelphia.
- November 4 – The Maryland Jockey Club follows a recommendation of the Continental Congress and cancels its race schedule. The decision sets a precedent for other jockey clubs in the colonies, and no major races are held until the end of the American Revolution.[10]
- November 10 – 1774 British general election: Voting for the House of Commons concludes in Great Britain, and Lord North retains the office of Prime Minister as his Tory coalition wins 343 of the 558 seats. Henry Seymour Conway's Whig Party wins the other 215 seats.
- November 15 – The government of the Republic of Venice allows adventurer and ladies' man Giacomo Casanova to return home after a 17-year absence.[11]
- November 20 – Daniel Boone retires from the Virginia colonial militia in order to devote his full time to establishing a settlement in Kentucky.[12]
- November 25 – Salawat Yulayev, the leader of the Bashkirs rebellion against the Russian government, is captured, bringing an end to the insurrection.[13]
- November 26 – English chemist Joseph Priestley becomes the first person to discover and identify sulfur dioxide.[14]
- November 27 – Spanish Navy Captain Domingo de Bonechea arrives at Tahiti in the ship Aguila and tries unsuccessfully to claim it for Spain and to convert the Tahitians to the Roman Catholic faith.[15]
- November 30
- Parliament adjourns in Great Britain, but declines to authorize any action against the rebellious American colonies, despite an address the day before by King George III and Prime Minister North.[16]
- Thomas Paine, a native of England, arrives in America at the age 37 and soon becomes an influential advocate for the colonies' independence.[17]
- December 1 – A boycott called by the Continental Congress goes into effect, as participating merchants and supporters cease the importation or consumption of products from Great Britain, Ireland or the British West Indies.[18]
- December 6 – Archduchess Maria Theresa, the ruler of Austria, Hungary and Croatia, signs the General School Ordinance providing for education for both males and females and setting compulsory education for children aged six through 12.[19]
- December 9 – The two month long Siege of Melilla begins as armies led by the Sultan of Morocco, Mohammed ben Abdallah, attack the North African Spanish colony of Melilla (which remains a part of Spain into the 21st century).[20]
- December 23 – King Louis XVI of France issues a declaration that, for the first time, protects "the free commerce of meat during Lent" to support the needs of "the poor whose infirmity requires them to eat meat."[21]
Date unknown
- To avoid severe flooding, Martinsborough, North Carolina is moved to higher ground 3 miles (4.8 km) west. The North Carolina General Assembly incorporates Martinsborough as the new seat of Pitt County, 3 years after its founding.
- German cobbler Johann Birkenstock creates the first Birkenstock sandals.
- A revision of the laws of cricket introduces a leg before wicket rule.
Births

André Marie Constant Duméril born 1 January

Pietro Giordani born 1 January
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Anna Bunina born 7 January
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William Stewart born 10 January

Tryphosa Jane Wallis born 11 January

Marie-Thérèse Figueur born 17 January

William Blake (economist) born 31 January

Thomas Veazey born 31 January

Edward Cross (zoo proprietor) born 3 February

Valentin Stanič born 12 February

Roswell Weston born 24 February

William Farquhar born 26 February

Magdalene of Canossa born 1 March

David Semyonovich Abamelik born 10 March

Johann Caspar Horner born 12 March

Rose Fortune born 13 March

Matthew Flinders born 16 March

Sophie Thalbitzer born 15 April

Franz Hegi born 16 April
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Madhavrao II born 18 April

Jean-Baptiste Biot born 21 April

Anna Gottlieb born 29 April

Samuel Owen (engineer) born 12 May

Friederike von Reden born 12 May

Joseph Bouchette born 14 May

Johann Nepomuk von Fuchs born 15 May
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Francis Beaufort born 27 May

Robert Tannahill born 3 June

Henry Philip Hope born 8 June

Carl Haller von Hallerstein born 10 June
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Pavel Alexandrovich Stroganov born 18 June

Princess Amalie of Hesse-Homburg born 29 June

Marcia Arbuthnot born 9 July

Robert Jameson born 11 July

Axel Otto Mörner born 11 July

Charles de Graimberg born 30 July

Diodata Saluzzo Roero born 31 July

Robert Southey born 12 August
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Ludvig Frederik Brock born 20 August

Anton Ludwig Ernst Horn born 24 August

Elizabeth Ann Seton born 28 August

Anne Catherine Emmerich born 8 September

Adolf Müllner born 18 October

Sarah Thompson, Countess Rumford born 18 October
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Ignaz Heinrich von Wessenberg born 4 November

Charles Bell born 12 November

Wilhelmine of Prussia, Queen of the Netherlands born 18 November

Vasile Moga born 19 November

Elisabeth Canori Mora born 21 November
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Peter Frederik Wulff born 26 November

Princess Maria Antonia of Parma born 28 November

William Henry (chemist) born 12 December
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Eline Heger born 13 December

Claudine Thévenet born 30 March
January
- January 1
- January 2 – Thomas Lynn, British soldier (d. 1847)
- January 3 – Juan Aldama, Jugador de Beisbole (d. 1811)
- January 4
- January 5 – George Chinnery, British artist (d. 1852)
- January 6
- January 7
- January 8 – John Gibbons, English amateur cricketer (d. 1844)
- January 10
- January 11
- January 12 – William Cahoon, American politician (d. 1833)
- January 14 – Benjamin Aislabie, cricketer (d. 1842)
- January 16 – Daniel Evans, Welsh Independent minister (d. 1835)
- January 17
- January 18
- January 19 – Samuel Campbell Rowley, naval officer and politician (d. 1846)
- January 20 – Charles George Beauclerk, British Member of Parliament (d. 1845)
- January 21 – William Kenrick, English lawyer and politician (d. 1829)
- January 22 – Francesco Fuoco, Italian philologist, economist and Catholic priest (d. 1841)
- January 23 – Richard Southgate, American politician (d. 1857)
- January 24
- January 25 – Jules-Paul Pasquier, French jurist (d. 1858)
- January 29
- January 30 – Samuel Butler, English classical scholar and schoolmaster (d. 1839)
- January 31
February
- February 1
- February 2 – Susan Montagu, Duchess of Manchester, British noble (d. 1828)
- February 3
- February 4 – Frederick Traugott Pursh, German-American botanist (d. 1820)
- February 6 – Henry Bates Grubb, American ironmaster and businessman (d. 1823)
- February 7 – Frederik Christian Kielsen, Danish naturalist (d. 1850)
- February 8
- February 9
- February 11
- February 12 – Valentin Stanič, Austrian teacher (d. 1847)
- February 13
- February 15 – Prince Frederick of Orange-Nassau, Dutch prince (d. 1799)
- February 16
- February 17
- February 18 – William Clark, farmer, jurist, and politician from Dauphin, Pennsylvania (d. 1851)
- February 24
- Prince Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge, British and Hanoverian Royal (d. 1850)
- Archibald Constable, Scottish printer and publisher (d. 1827)
- Perley Keyes, American politician (d. 1834)
- Robert S. Rose, American politician (d. 1835)
- Alexander Wilmot Schomberg, British Royal Navy admiral (d. 1850)
- Roswell Weston, American lawyer and politician (d. 1861)
- February 25 – George Gore, Anglican priest in Ireland (d. 1844)
- February 26
- February 27 – Thomas Vasse, sea explorer (d. 1801)
- February 28
March
- March 1
- March 2
- March 4 – Joseph Hamilton Daveiss, American politician (d. 1811)
- March 5 – Christoph Ernst Friedrich Weyse, Danish composer (d. 1842)
- March 7 – Daniel Arnoldi, German Canadian physician (d. 1849)
- March 9
- Mayhew Folger, American whaler, captain of Topaz, rediscovered Pitcairn Islands in 1808 (d. 1828)
- Louis Auguste Say, French economist (d. 1840)
- March 10 – David Semyonovich Abamelik, principal (d. 1833)
- March 12
- March 13
- March 14
- March 15
- March 16
- Captain Matthew Flinders, English navigator and cartographer (d. 1814)
- Jethro Wood, inventor of a cast-iron moldboard plow with replaceable parts (d. 1834)
- March 19 – Franz von Gruithuisen, Bavarian physician and astronomer (d. 1852)
- March 20 – Alexandra Petrovna Golitsyna, maid of honour and historian (d. 1842)
- March 21 – George Scovell, British Army general (d. 1861)
- March 24 – Jean-Louis-Auguste Loiseleur-Deslongchamps, French botanist (d. 1849)
- March 25
- March 30 – Nathaniel Peabody, Boston (d. 1855)
- March 31
April
- April 1
- April 5 – Thomas Potter, British politician (d. 1845)
- April 6
- April 7
- April 8
- April 9 – John Stanly, American politician (d. 1834)
- April 11
- April 12
- April 13 – John W. Mulligan, attorney, U.S. Consul in Athens, Greece (d. 1862)
- April 15 – Sophie Thalbitzer, Danish writer (d. 1851)
- April 16
- April 17
- April 18
- April 19 – Friedrich Wilhelm Riemer, German writer (d. 1845)
- April 21
- April 23 – Francis Austen, British Royal Navy officer (d. 1865)
- April 24 – Jean Marc Gaspard Itard, French physician (d. 1838)
- April 25 – Friedrich Wilhelm von Lepel, Prussian major general and adjutant to Prince Henry of Prussia (d. 1840)
- April 26
- April 28
- April 29
- April 30 – John Yelloly, English doctor (d. 1842)
May
- May 1
- May 2
- May 4
- May 5
- May 6
- May 7
- May 11 – James Townley, English Wesleyan minister and author (d. 1833)
- May 12
- May 14
- May 15 – Johann Nepomuk von Fuchs, German chemist and mineralogist (d. 1856)
- May 16 – Johann Baptist von Keller, Roman Catholic bishop (d. 1845)
- May 18 – Gaetano Rossi, Italian librettist (d. 1855)
- May 21
- May 22
- May 24
- May 25
- May 26 – Jean-Nicolas Curély, French cavalry officer (d. 1827)
- May 27 – Francis Beaufort, Irish hydrographer and naval officer (d. 1857)
- May 28 – Edward Charles Howard, British chemist (d. 1816)
June
- June 1
- June 2 – William Lawson, English-born Australian explorer and politician (d. 1850)
- June 3
- June 5
- June 6
- June 8 – Henry Philip Hope, Anglo-Dutch art and gem collector (d. 1839)
- June 9
- June 10
- June 11
- June 13 – Jacob Lindley, Founder of Ohio University (d. 1857)
- June 14
- June 17 – Asahel Stearns, American politician (d. 1839)
- June 18
- June 19
- June 21
- James Patton Preston, American politician (d. 1843)
- Daniel D. Tompkins, 6th Vice President of the United States (d. 1825)
- June 23
- June 24
- Antonio González de Balcarce, Argentine general (d. 1819)
- John Cole, American music publisher (d. 1855)
- Princess Caroline of Gloucester, British princess (d. 1775)
- François-Nicolas-Benoît Haxo, French general (d. 1838)
- Claude Charles Marie du Campe de Rosamel, French naval minister (d. 1848)
- Azariah Shadrach, Welsh minister (d. 1844)
- Edward Taylor, British politician (d. 1843)
- June 25 – James Gage, Canadian businessman (d. 1854)
- June 29 – Princess Amalie of Hesse-Homburg, Consort of Frederick, Hereditary Prince of Anhalt-Dessau (d. 1846)
July
- July 5
- July 7 – Louis Auguste Marchand Plauzonne, French general (d. 1812)
- July 9 – Marcia Arbuthnot, lady-in-waiting (d. 1806)
- July 10 – Isaac Bullard, American politician (d. 1808)
- July 11
- July 12
- July 14
- July 17 – John Wilbur, American Quaker minister (d. 1856)
- July 20
- Edward Pelham Brenton, British Royal Navy officer & historian (d. 1839)
- Auguste de Marmont, French General, nobleman and Marshal of France (d. 1852)
- July 24 – Franz von Klebelsberg zu Thumburg, Czech nobleman (d. 1857)
- July 26 – Ernst Ludwig von Tippelskirch, Prussian army officer (d. 1840)
- July 28
- July 29 – Edward Wakefield, English statistician (d. 1854)
- July 30 – Charles de Graimberg, French art collector and painter (d. 1864)
- July 31
August
- August 1
- August 2 – Ole Clausen Mørch, Norwegian politician (d. 1829)
- August 5
- August 6 – Asa Wells, pioneer farmer and surveyor from Pompey (d. 1859)
- August 7
- August 9
- August 11
- August 12
- Jean François Boissonade de Fontarabie, historian from France (d. 1857)
- Hannah Kilham, Methodist missionary (d. 1832)
- Stephen Peter Rigaud, English mathematical historian and astronomer (d. 1839)
- Robert Southey, English romantic poet (d. 1843)
- August 13
- August 15 – François-Joseph-Marie Fayolle, French musicologist, man of letters and mathematician (d. 1852)
- August 17
- August 18
- Gaspard Laurent Bayle, French physician (d. 1816)
- Meriwether Lewis, American explorer, soldier and public administrator (d. 1809)
- August 19 – Denis-Benjamin Viger, Lower Canadian politician (d. 1861)
- August 20
- August 22
- August 23
- August 24 – Anton Ludwig Ernst Horn, German physician (d. 1848)
- August 25 – Samuel William Manthey, Norwegian politician (d. 1815)
- August 26 – Sir John Lubbock, 2nd Baronet, English banker, politician (d. 1840)
- August 28 – Elizabeth Ann Seton, co-founder of Mount St. Mary's University in the United States, founder of the Sisters of Charity (d. 1821)
- August 30 – Henri Van Assche, painter (d. 1841)
- August 31 – Charles Turner, English engraver (d. 1857)
September
- September 1
- September 5
- Enos Collins, Canadian businessman (d. 1871)
- Caspar David Friedrich, German painter (d. 1840)
- September 7
- September 8
- September 9 – Salomon Mayer von Rothschild, Austrian banker and businessman (d. 1855)
- September 14
- September 15
- September 17
- September 19
- September 21 – John Peter Grant, Scottish politician (d. 1848)
- September 24
- September 25
- September 26 – Johnny Appleseed, (John Chapman), American nurseryman and Swedenborgian missionary, plants apple tree nurseries in Ohio, Indiana and Illinois (d. 1845)
- September 27
- September 28
- September 30
October
- October 2 – Johannes Spitler, American painter of furniture (d. 1837)
- October 4
- October 7
- October 8
- October 10 – Peter Nourse, American clergyman (d. 1840)
- October 12
- October 13
- October 15 – John Boit, one of the first Americans involved in the maritime fur trade (d. 1829)
- October 18
- October 19 – Charles Cornwallis, 2nd Marquess Cornwallis, British noble (d. 1823)
- October 21 – Archibald Campbell, British Army officer (d. 1838)
- October 23
- October 26 – Albert Gregorius, Belgian painter (d. 1853)
- October 27 – Alexander Baring, 1st Baron Ashburton, British politician (d. 1848)
- October 28
- October 29 – Augustin Joseph Caron, French military officer (d. 1822)
- October 30
November
- November 1
- November 2 – Georges-Simon Serullas, French pharmacist (d. 1832)
- November 3 – Jakov Jakšić, Serbian postmaster (d. 1848)
- November 4
- November 5
- November 6
- November 7
- November 8
- November 9
- November 10 – John Miller, New York politician (d. 1862)
- November 11 – Marcin Dunin, Roman catholic archbishop of Gnesen and Posen (d. 1842)
- November 12
- November 14 – Gaspare Spontini, Italian composer and conductor (d. 1851)
- November 17 – Pierre-Alexandre Le Camus, French politician (d. 1824)
- November 18
- November 19 – Vasile Moga, romanian orthodox bishop of Sibiu (d. 1845)
- November 20
- November 21
- November 24 – Thomas Dick, British astronomer (d. 1857)
- November 25 – Francisco de Paula Marín, A Spaniard influential in the early Kingdom of Hawaii; confidant of Hawaiian King Kamehameha I (d. 1837)
- November 26
- November 27 – John Howard Kyan, British inventor (d. 1850)
- November 28
- November 29
December
- December 1 – Alexander Leith, British Army officer, died 1859 (d. 1859)
- December 2
- December 3 – Giuseppe Federico Palombini, military general (d. 1850)
- December 4 – John Weyland, British writer and politician; (d. 1854)
- December 5 – Johann Wilhelm Andreas Pfaff, German mathematician (d. 1835)
- December 10 – Nicolas Morice, French navy officer (d. 1848)
- December 11 – David Bowen, Felinfoel, Welsh Baptist minister from Felinfoel (d. 1853)
- December 12 – William Henry, English chemist (d. 1836)
- December 13
- December 15 – Michel Ange Lancret, Engineer with the French Corps of Bridges and Roads (d. 1807)
- December 16 – Caroline Campbell, Duchess of Argyll, British noble (d. 1835)
- December 17
- December 20
- December 21
- December 23 – Ludwig von Vincke, politician, writer and jurist (d. 1844)
- December 26 – Ferdinand Oechsle, German inventor (d. 1852)
- December 27
- December 28
- December 29 – Maurice FitzGerald, 18th Knight of Kerry, British politician (d. 1849)
- December 31 – John Pringle, British Army officer (d. 1861)
- date unknown – Sergey Glinka, Russian author, brother of Fyodor Glinka (d. 1847)
Deaths

Mustafa III died 21 January

Countess Palatine Caroline of Zweibrücken died 30 March

Oliver Goldsmith died 4 April

Christian Wilhelm Ernst Dietrich died 23 April

Maria Machteld van Sypesteyn died 26 April

William Hewson died 1 May

Joseph Gerrish died 3 June

Joshua Kirby died 20 June

Anna Morandi Manzolini died 9 July

Caroline Fox, 1st Baroness Holland died 24 July

Johann Jakob Reiske died 14 August

Imperial Noble Consort Qinggong died 21 August
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Johann Friedrich Meckel, the Elder died 18 September

Robert Fergusson died 16 October

Ferdinand Augustin Hallerstein died 29 October

Abraham Tucker died 20 November

Johann Siegmund Popowitsch died 21 November
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Henry Baker died 25 November

Deborah Read died 19 December

Paul Whitehead (satirist) died 20 December
January
- January 1
- January 7
- January 9 – Jacques-François Blondel, French architect (b. 1705)
- January 13
- January 18 – Louis de Brienne de Conflans d'Armentières, French general (b. 1711)
- January 19 – Thomas Gillespie, Scottish church leader (b. 1708)
- January 21
- January 22 – Dudley Cosby, 1st Baron Sydney, Irish politician (b. 1730)
- January 29 – Franciszek Ferdynant Lubomirski, Franciszek Ferdynand Lubomirski was a Polish nobleman (b. 1710)
- January 30
- January 31 – Consort Yu, Concubine of Chinese Emperor Qianlong (b. 1730)
February
- February 1 – Johann Heinrich Zopf, German historian (b. 1691)
- February 4 – Charles Marie de La Condamine, French explorer, geographer, and mathematician (b. 1701)
- February 8 – Thomas Belasyse, 1st Earl Fauconberg, British peer (b. 1699)
- February 17 – Robert Jones, English politician (b. 1704)
- February 18 – Karl Michael von Attems, Austrian Catholic archbishop and prince of the Holy Roman Empire (b. 1711)
- February 25 – Johann Georg, Chevalier de Saxe, German general (b. 1704)
- February 27 – Knud Leem, Norwegian priest and linguist (b. 1697)
- February 28 – Anthony Askew, English physician and book collector (b. 1722)
March
- March 1 – Pierre-Antoine Gourgaud, French actor (b. 1706)
- March 2 – William Talbot, English evangelical clergyman (b. 1717)
- March 3 – Andrew Oliver, American merchant and public official (b. 1706)
- March 4 – William Boys, Royal Navy officer (b. 1700)
- March 5 – Georg Joachim Mark, German theologian (b. 1726)
- March 7 – Carlo Alberto Guidoboni Cavalchini, Catholic cardinal (b. 1683)
- March 10 – William Browne, English physician (b. 1692)
- March 18 – Matthew Fetherstonhaugh, British politician (b. 1714)
- March 19 – Lucas Ramírez Galán, Roman Catholic archbishop (b. 1715)
- March 21 – Diego Bernardo de Peredo y Navarrete, Mexican Roman Catholic clergyman, bishop of Yucatán (b. 1696)
- March 25
- March 30 – Countess Palatine Caroline of Zweibrücken, German noble (b. 1721)
April
- April 1 – Claudius Amyand, English politician (b. 1718)
- April 4 – Oliver Goldsmith, Anglo-Irish writer, poet, and physician (b. 1728)
- April 5 – Situ Panchen, Tibetan lama and painter (b. 1700)
- April 11 – Elias Gottlob Haussmann, German artist (b. 1695)
- April 15
- April 17 – John Winslow, British Army general (b. 1703)
- April 18
- April 20
- April 23
- April 24 – Sara Banzet, French educator, diarist (b. 1745)
- April 25 – John Fane, 9th Earl of Westmorland, English Earl (b. 1728)
- April 26 – Maria Machteld van Sypesteyn, Dutch painter (b. 1724)
- April 28 – Gottfried Lengnich, historian and politician (b. 1689)
- April 29 – Eland Mossom, lawyer, recorder of the City of Kilkenny and representative in the Parliament of Ireland (b. 1709)
May
- May 1 – William Hewson, British physiologist (b. 1739)
- May 3 – Heinrich August de la Motte Fouqué, German general (b. 1698)
- May 4
- May 6 – John Ward, 1st Viscount Dudley and Ward, British politician (b. 1704)
- May 8 – Réginald Outhier, French astronomer and priest (b. 1694)
- May 10
- King Louis XV of France (b. 1710)
- Timothy Woodbridge, Superintendent of Indian Affairs (b. 1709)
- Louis XV, Bourbon monarch who ruled as King of France and of Navarre (b. 1710)
- May 12 – Giuseppe Antonio Luchi, Italian painter (b. 1709)
- May 17 – Jeremiah Theus, American artist (b. 1716)
- May 18 – William FitzRoy, 3rd Duke of Cleveland, English noble (b. 1698)
- May 23 – Tatiana Mikhailovna Troepolskaya, actor (b. 1744)
- May 26 – Wilhelm Reinhard von Neipperg, Austrian field marshal (b. 1684)
June
- June 3 – Joseph Gerrish, Canadian politician (b. 1709)
- June 7
- June 11 – Emmerich Joseph von Breidbach zu Bürresheim, Roman Catholic archbishop (b. 1707)
- June 15 – Karl Heinrich von Bogatzky, German hymnwriter (b. 1690)
- June 18 – Francis Andrews, Irish politician (b. 1718)
- June 20 – Joshua Kirby, British artist (b. 1716)
- June 24 – Thomas Amory, English tutor/minister/poet (b. 1701)
- June 27 – Nicolas Tindal, British historian (b. 1688)
- June 29 – Zachary Pearce, English bishop (b. 1690)
July
- July 1 – Henry Fox, 1st Baron Holland, British politician (b. 1705)
- July 4 – William Price, Welsh High Sheriff and antiquarian (b. 1690)
- July 8 – Brooke Forester, British politician (b. 1717)
- July 9 – Anna Morandi Manzolini, internationally known Italian anatomist and anatomical wax modeller (b. 1714)
- July 11 – Sir William Johnson, 1st Baronet, Anglo-Irish official of the British Empire (b. 1715)
- July 13 – Otto von Münchhausen, German botanist (b. 1716)
- July 14
- July 17 – Miguel Anselmo Álvarez de Abreu y Valdéz, Bishop of Antequera, Oaxaca, México ; Bishop (b. 1711)
- July 18
- July 21 – Percy Wyndham-O'Brien, 1st Earl of Thomond, Irish earl (b. 1723)
- July 24
- July 25 – John Drummond, British private banker and politician (b. 1723)
- July 27 – Samuel Gottlieb Gmelin, German physician, botanist, and explorer (b. 1744)
August
- August 10
- August 11
- August 13 – Peter Applebye, British-Danish industrialist (b. 1709)
- August 14 – Johann Jakob Reiske, German scholar, physician (b. 1716)
- August 20 – Ann Wager, American educator (b. 1716)
- August 21 – Imperial Noble Consort Qinggong, Qing Dynasty imperial noble consort (b. 1724)
- August 25 – Niccolò Jommelli, Italian composer (b. 1714)
- August 26 – Philipp Jakob Straub, Austrian sculptor (b. 1706)
September
- September 5 – Sir Charles Herbert Sheffield, 1st Baronet, British estate owner and baronet (b. 1706)
- September 10 – Pierre-Jean Mariette, French art historian (b. 1694)
- September 16 – Christophe Le Menu de Saint-Philbert, composer (b. 1720)
- September 18 – Johann Friedrich Meckel, the Elder, German anatomist (b. 1724)
- September 22
- Filippo Farsetti, Italian patron (b. 1703)
- Charles Louis, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Beck (b. 1690)
- Pope Clement XIV, pope and bishop of Rome from 1769 to 1774 (b. 1705)[22]
- September 24 – Greta Donner, Swedish businesswoman (b. 1726)
- September 25
October
- October 2 – Alfonso Clemente de Aróstegui, Scholar and Roman catholic bishop (b. 1698)
- October 8 – Philippe Caffieri, French sculptor (b. 1714)
- October 11 – Jean-Claude Chambellan Duplessis, French designer (b. 1699)
- October 12 – Tokugawa Haruaki, Japanese samurai (b. 1753)
- October 13 – Willem Bentinck van Rhoon, Dutch politician (b. 1704)
- October 15 – Dmitry Ukhtomsky, Russian architect (b. 1719)
- October 16 – Robert Fergusson, Scottish poet and writer (b. 1750)
- October 22 – William Molineux, Colonial American merchant (b. 1718)
- October 23 – Michel Benoist, French Jesuit missionary, scientist (b. 1715)
- October 27 – Gerolamo Mengozzi Colonna, Italian painter (b. 1686)
- October 28 – Jean Löfblad, Swedish actor (b. 1728)
- October 29 – Ferdinand Augustin Hallerstein, Jesuit missionary (b. 1703)
- October 31
November
- November 1 – Johan Peter Falk, Swedish botanist (b. 1732)
- November 3 – Glocester Ridley, English writer (b. 1702)
- November 5
- November 6 – Thomas Bradshaw, British Member of Parliament (b. 1733)
- November 13 – Robert Rochfort, 1st Earl of Belvedere, Anglo-Irish politician and peer (b. 1708)
- November 15 – Anne Howard, Countess of Effingham, British countess (b. 1695)
- November 16 – Francis Owen, British Member of Parliament (b. 1745)
- November 17 – Jean Althen, Armenian agronomist (b. 1709)
- November 20 – Abraham Tucker, English philosopher (b. 1705)
- November 21 – Johann Siegmund Popowitsch, Austrian botanist (b. 1705)
- November 22
- Robert Clive, British military officer and East India Company official (b. 1725)
- Edward Rooker, English engraver, draughtsman and actor (b. 1712)
- November 23 – Gottfried Bernhard Göz, German artist (b. 1708)
- November 25 – Henry Baker, English naturalist (b. 1698)
- November 28 – Pierre de l'Estache, French sculptor (b. 1688)
- November 29 – Gabriel de Clieu, Guadeloupean politician (b. 1687)
- November 30
December
- December 2 – Johann Friedrich Agricola, German composer (b. 1720)
- December 5 – Karunai Prakasar, Spiritual writer and philosopher (b. 1756)
- December 13 – Guillaume du Tillot, French politician (b. 1711)
- December 16
- December 17 – Friedrich Wilhelm, Graf von Wylich und Lottum, Prussian army officer (b. 1716)
- December 19 – Deborah Read, spouse of Benjamin Franklin (b. 1708)
- December 20 – Paul Whitehead, British satirist (b. 1710)
- December 21 – Thomas Broughton, English clergyman, biographer and miscellaneous writer (b. 1704)
- December 23 – Francesco Maria Preti, architect (b. 1701)
- December 24 – Peter Fenger, Danish merchant (b. 1719)
- December 26
- December 27
- December 29
- December 30 – Antoniotto Botta Adorno, high officer (b. 1688)
- December 31 – Johann Christoph Handke, Czech painter (b. 1694)
References
- "Historical Events for Year 1774 | OnThisDay.com". Historyorb.com. Retrieved April 5, 2017.
- Harris, J. R. (2004). "Wilkinson, John (1728–1808)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/29428. Retrieved January 14, 2011. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- Woody Holton, Forced Founders: Indians, Debtors, Slaves, and the Making of the American Revolution in Virginia (University of North Carolina Press Books, 2011) p32
- "Beaumarchais", in The Cornhill Magazine (August 1884) p142
- "Fire News of the Week", in Fire and Water Engineering (December 9, 1905) p337
- Clifford Kenyon Shipton, New England Life in the Eighteenth Century: Representative Biographies from Sibley's Harvard Graduates (Harvard University Press, 1995) p324
- Gordon Carruth, ed., The Encyclopedia of American Facts and Dates 3rd Edition (Thomas Y. Crowell, 1962) pp80-82
- "What Happened in 1774; History-Page.com". History-page.com. Retrieved April 5, 2017.
- Robert K. Massie, Catherine the Great: Portrait of a Woman (Random House, 2011) p406
- Ann Fairfax Withington, Toward a More Perfect Union: Virtue and the Formation of American Republics (Oxford University Press, 1996) p197
- "Giacomo Casanova", by Mattia Begali, in Encyclopedia of Italian Literary Studies (Taylor & Francis, 2007) p402
- Robert Morgan, Boone: A Biography (Algonquin Books, 2008) p152
- Charles R. Steinwedel, Threads of Empire: Loyalty and Tsarist Authority in Bashkiria, 1552–1917 (Indiana University Press, 2016) p73
- Joe Jackson, A World on Fire: A Heretic, an Aristocrat, and the Race to Discover Oxygen (Penguin, 2007) p114
- Robert W. Kirk, Paradise Past: The Transformation of the South Pacific, 1520-1920 (McFarland, 2012) p27
- William Edward Hartpole Lecky, A History of England in the Eighteenth Century, Volume 3 (D. Appleton and Company, 1891) p456
- Richard R. Beeman, Our Lives, Our Fortunes and Our Sacred Honor: The Forging of American Independence, 1774-1776 (Basic Books, 2013) p xi
- Spencer Tucker, Almanac of American Military History (ABC-CLIO, 2013) p211
- James B. Collins and Karen L. Taylor, Early Modern Europe: Issues and Interpretations (John Wiley & Sons, 2008) p57
- Karen Racine, Francisco de Miranda, a Transatlantic Life in the Age of Revolution (Rowman & Littlefield, 2003) p13
- Jennifer J. Davis, Defining Culinary Authority: The Transformation of Cooking in France, 1650-1830 (LSU Press, 2013)
- "Clement XIV | pope". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved October 1, 2020.
Further reading
- Blair, John; J. Willoughby Rosse (1856). "1774". Blair's Chronological Tables. London: H.G. Bohn. hdl:2027/loc.ark:/13960/t6349vh5n – via Hathi Trust.
- Norton, Mary Beth. 1774: The Long Year of Revolution (2020) American Revolution online review by Gordon Wood
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