1830 in literature - 1830 in literature See also: 1829 in literature, other events of 1830, 1831 in literature, list of years in literature. Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Events 2 New Books 3 Births 4 Deaths 5 Awards Events New Books The Admiral and His Protégé - Rosalia St. Clair Auchindrane - Sir Walter Scott The Barony - Anna Maria Porter Boris Godunov - Alexander Pushkin (written in 1825) The Corsair's Bride - Louisa Stanhope Crotchet Castle - Thomas Love Peacock The Doom of Devorgoil - Sir Walter Scott The Fortunes of Perkin Warbeck - Mary Shelley The King's Own - Frederick Marryat A Mariner's Sketches - Nathaniel Ames Poems Chiefly Lyrical - Alfred Tennyson The Red and the Black - Stendhal A Tale of Our Times - Catharine.
1830 - 1830 Centuries: 18th century - 19th century - 20th century Decades: 1780s 1790s 1800s 1810s 1820s - 1830s - 1840s 1850s 1860s 1870s 1880s Years: 1825 1826 1827 1828 1829 - 1830 - 1831 1832 1833 1834 1835 Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Events 2 Arts, Sciences, Literature and Philosophy 3 Births 4 Deaths 5 Heads of states Events February 3 - The previously autonomous state of Greece gains full independence from the Ottoman Empire as the final result of the Greek War of Independence. Negotioations for the borders between the two states continue until 1832, under the supervision of Russia, France and Britain. April 6 - The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was organized. May 13 - Ecuador gains its independence. May 26.
1831 in literature - 1831 in literature See also: 1830 in literature, other events of 1831, 1832 in literature, list of years in literature. Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Events 2 New Books 3 Births 4 Deaths 5 Awards Events The play La Cocarde Tricolore by the Cogniard brothers introduces the term "chauvinism." New Books Gerald Fitzgerald - Anne Hatton The Hunchback of Notre Dame - Victor Hugo The Last of the Lyals - Rosalia St. Clair The Queen's Page - Selina Davenport The Spirit of the Age - John Stuart Mill The Tuileries - Catherine Gore The Young Duke - Benjamin Disraeli Births January 26 - Mary Mapes Dodged, writer (+ 1907) October 15 - Helen Hunt Jackson, writer-activist (+ 1885) Deaths June 30 - William Roscoe, English poet December.
1829 in literature - 1829 in literature See also: 1828 in literature, other events of 1829, 1830 in literature, list of years in literature. Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Events 2 New Books 3 Births 4 Deaths 5 Awards Events Louis Braille invents embossed printing that allows the blind to read. New Books Anne of Geierstein - Sir Walter Scott The Chouans - Honore de Balzac A Chronicle of the Conquest of Granada - Washington Irving Devereux - Edward George Bulwer-Lytton Fate and Fortune - Henrietta Rouviere Mosse A Journey on Foot from Holmen's Canal to the East Point of Amager - Hans Christian Andersen The Misfortunes of Elphin - Thomas Love Peacock The Naval Officer - Frederick Marryat On the Constitution of Church and State - Samuel Taylor Coleridge Romances.
Library of Congress Classification:Class P -- Language and Literature - Library of Congress Classification:Class P -- Language and Literature Class P: Language and Literature is a classification used by the Library of Congress classification system. This article outlines the subclasses of Class P P Philology; Linguistics PA Greek language and literature; Latin language and literature PB Modern languages; Celtic languages PC Romanic languages PD Germanic languages PE English language PF West Germanic languages PG Slavic languages; Baltic languages; Albanian language PH Uralic languages; Basque language PJ Oriental philology and literature PK Indo-Iranian philology and literature PL Languages of Eastern Asia, Africa, Oceania PM Hyperborean, Indian, and artificial languages PN Literature (General) PQ French literature - Italian literature - Spanish literature - Portuguese literature PR English literature PS American literature PT German literature - Dutch literature - Flemish literature since 1830 -.
List of years in literature - List of years in literature This page indexes the individual year in literature pages. Each year is annotated with a significant event as a reference point. 2000s - 1990s - 1980s - 1970s - 1960s - 1950s - 1940s - 1930s - 1920s - 1910s - 1900s - 1890s - 1880s - 1870s - 1860s - 1850s - 1840s - 1830s - 1820s - 1810s - 1800s - 1790s - 1780s - 1770s - 1760s - 1750s - 1740s - 1730s - 1720s - 1710s - Pre 1710s 2000s 2003 in literature - 2002 in literature - Atonement - Ian McEwan 2001 in literature - Life of Pi - Yann Martel 2000 in literature - Final original Peanuts comic strip is published, and creator Charles Schulz dies soon.
Literature of the United States - Literature of the United States This article is part of the Culture of the United States series. Cinema Folklore Music Dance Literature Cuisine Poetry Architecture Visual arts The literature of the United States may be considered as belonging to English literature or as a distinct body of literature. Much early American literature is derivative: European forms and styles transferred to new locales. For example, Wieland and other novels by Charles Brockden Brown (1771-1810) are energetic imitations of the Gothic novels then being written in England. Even the well-wrought tales of Washington Irving (1783-1859), notably Rip Van Winkle and The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, seem comfortably European despite their New World settings. Perhaps the first American writer to produce boldly new fiction and poetry was Edgar Allan.
Karl Otfried Müller - He was educated partly in Breslau, partly in Berlin, where his enthusiasm for the study of Greek literature, art and history was fostered by the influence of Böckh. In 1817, after the publication of his first work, Aegineticorum liber, he received an appointment at the Magdaleneum in Breslau, and in 1819 he was made adjunct professor of ancient literature in the university of Göttingen, his subject being the archaeology and history of ancient art. His aim was to form a vivid conception of Greek life as a whole; and his books and lectures marked an epoch in the development of Hellenic studies. Müller's position at Göttingen being rendered unpleasant by the political troubles which followed the accession of Ernest Augustus (duke of Cumberland) to the throne of Hanover in 1837, he.
Karl Joseph Simrock - studied law at the universities of Bonn and Berlin, and in 1823 entered the Prussian civil service, from which he was expelled in 1830 for writing a poem in praise of the French July revolution. Afterwards he was admitted as lecturer at the university of Bonn, where in 1850 he was made a professor of Old German literature and in which city he died. Simrock established his reputation by his excellent modern rendering of the Nibelungenlied (1827), and of the poems of Walther von der Vogelweide (1833). Among other works translated by him into modern German were the Arme Heinrich of Hartmann von Aue (1830), the Parzival and Titurel of Wolfram von Eschenbach (1842), the Tristan of Gottfried of Strassburg (1855). and the Heldenbuch (1843-1849), which he supplemented with independent poems..
James Mill - and Exchange." He also wrote on Spanish America, China, General Miranda, the East India Company, and the Liberty of the Press. In the Annual Review for 1808 two articles of his are traced--a "Review of Fox's History," and an article on "Bentham's Law Reforms," probably his first published notice of Bentham. In 1811 he co-operated with William Allen (1770-1843), quaker and chemist, in a periodical called the Philanthropist. He contributed largely to every number--his principal topics being Education, Freedom of the Press, and Prison Discipline (under which he expounded Bentham's "Panopticon"). He made powerful onslaughts on the Church in connexion with the Bell and Lancaster controversy, and took a prominent part in the discussions which led to the foundation of London University in 1825. In 1814 he wrote a number of.
James Henry Leigh Hunt - always inoffensive; and in 1813, an attack on the Prince Regent, based on substantial truth, resulted in prosecution and a sentence of two years' imprisonment for each of the brothers. The cheerfulness and gaiety with which Leigh Hunt bore his imprisonment attracted general attention and sympathy, and brought him visits from Lord Byron, John Moore, Lord Brougham and others, whose acquaintance influenced his later career. In 1810-1811 he edited for his brother John a quarterly magazine, the Reflector, for which he wrote "The Feast of the Poets," a satire which gave offence to many contemporary poets, particularly William Gifford of the Quarterly. The essays afterwards published under the title of the Round Table (2 vols., 1816-1817), conjointly with William Hazlitt, appeared in the Examiner. In 1816 he made a permanent mark.
James Gillray - political series and the social. The political caricatures form really the best history extant of the latter part of the reign of George III. They were circulated not only over Britain but throughout Europe, and exerted a powerful influence. In this series, George III, the queen, the prince of Wales, Fox, Pitt, Burke and Napoleon are the most prominent figures. In 1788 appeared two fine caricatures by Gillray. "Blood on Thunder fording the Red Sea" represents Lord Thurlow carrying Warren Hastings through a sea of gore: Hastings looks very comfortable, and is carrying two large bags of money. "Market-Day " pictures the ministerialists of the time as horned cattle for sale. Among Gillray's best satires on the king are: "Farmer George and his Wife," two companion plates, in one of which.
Jean-Jacques Ampère - popular poetry of the Scandinavian countries in an extended tour in northern Europe. Returning to France in 1830, he delivered a series of lectures on Scandinavian and early German poetry at the Athenaeum in Marseilles. The first of these was printed as De l'Histoire de la poésie (1830), and was practically the first introduction of the French public to the Scandinavian and German epics. Moving to Paris, he taught at the Sorbonne, and became professor of the history of French literature at the Collège de France. A journey in northern Africa (1841) was followed by a tour in Greece and Italy, in company with Prosper Merimée and others. This bore fruit in his Voyage dantesque (printed in his Grece, Rome et Dante, 1848), which did much to popularize the study of.
Jean Baptiste Sylvere Gay, Vicomte de Martignac - 1798 he acted as secretary to Sieyès; then after serving for a while in the army, he turned to literature, producing several light plays. Under the Empire he practised with success as an advocate at Bordeaux, where in 1818 he became advocate-general of the cour royale. In 1819 he was appointed procureur-géneral at Limoges, and in 1821 was returned for Marmande to the Chamber of Deputies, where he supported the policy of Villele. In 1822 he was appointed councillor of state, in 1823 he accompanied the duc d'Angouléme to Spain as civil commissary; in 1824 he was created a viscount and appointed director-general of registration. In contact with practical politics his ultra-royalist views were gradually modified in the direction of the Doctrinaires, and on the fall of Villèle he was selected.
Jean-Baptiste Henri Lacordaire - at the seminary of Saint Sulpice; four years later he was ordained and became almoner of the college Henri IV. He was called from it to co-operate with Lamennais in the editorship of L'Avenir, a journal established to advocate the union of the democratic principle with ultramontanism. Lacordaire strove to show that Catholicism was not bound up with the idea of dynasty, and allied it with a well-defined liberty, equality and fraternity. This new propagandism was denounced from Rome in an encyclical. In the meantime Lacordaire and Montalembert, believing that, under the charter of 1830, they were entitled to liberty of instruction, opened an independent free school. It closed in two days, and the teachers were fined by the court of peers. Lacordaire accepted the setback with quiet dignity; but they.
Josip Plemelj - Because it is α + β = π - γ this equation is: 2 vc sin γ - c cos γ = c cos (α - β). From this equation we have to obtain an angle γ. The easiest way is if we introduce a certain subsidiary angle μ. Namely we raise: 2 vc = m cos μ c = m sin μ. Both equations give us for μ an uniform certain acute angle and for m a certain positive length. Equation for γ is then: m sin ( γ - μ) = c cos (α - β). We can consider this equation as a theorem of the sine for a certain triangle in which c and m are its sides and their opposite angles are γ - μ and π/2.
Johan Rudolf Thorbecke - king, and more to the parliament. Thorbecke was born on January 14, 1798 in Zwolle, and started studying history and classic literature in Amsterdam in order to avoid conscription. After teaching in Germany and Belgium, he was promoted to professor in diplomacy and modern history at the University of Leiden in 1830. In 1839, he published his critics to the government of King William I, making him a well known political figure in the Netherlands. Five years later, together with 8 other politicians, he formulated a proposal to change the Dutch constitution. The proposal, known as the Voorstel der Negenmannen ("proposition of the nine men"), didn't pass through the Tweede Kamer, the second chamber of the Dutch parliament. Due to the international unrest in 1848, King William II decided to form.
Johann Heinrich Daniel Zschokke - attracted attention by his Geschichte vom Kampfe und Untergange der schweizerischen Berg- und Wald-Kantone. Through his Schweizerliote, the publication of which began in 1804, he exercised a wholesome influence on public affairs; and the like may be said of his Misceilen für die neueste Weltkunde, issued from 1807 to 1813. In 1811 he also started a monthly periodical, the Erheiterungen. He wrote various historical works, the most important of which is Des Schweizerlandes Geschichte für das Schweizervolk (1822, 8th ed. 1849). Zschokke's tales, on which his literary reputation rests, are collected in several series, Bilder aus der Schweiz (5 vols., 1824–25), Ausgewählte Novellen und Dichtungen (16 vols., 1838–39). The best known are: Addrich im Moos (1794); Der Freihof von Aarau (1794); Alamontade (1802); Der Creole (1830); Das Goldmacherdorf (1817); and Meister.
Joseph Jacotot - the French language at the university of Louvain, where he systematized the educational principles which he had already practised with success in France. His emacipatory or "panecastic" method was not only adopted in several institutions in Belgium, but also met with some approval in France, England, Germany, and Russia. It was based on three principles: all men have equal intelligence; every man has received from God the faculty of being able to instruct himself; everything is in everything. Regarding the first principle, he maintained that it is only in the will to use their intelligence that men differ. His own process, depending on the third principle, was to give a student learning a language for the first time a short passage of a few lines, and to encourage the pupil to.
Johann Heinrich Joseph Düntzer - December 16, 1901), German philologist and historian of literature, was born at Cologne. After studying philology and especially ancient classics and Sanskrit at Bonn and Berlin (1830-1835), he took the degree of doctor of philosophy and established himself in 1837 at Bonn as Privatdozent for classical literature. He had already, in his Goethes Faust in seiner Einheit und Ganzheit (1836) and Goethe als Dramatiker (1837), advocated a new critical method in interpreting the German classics, which he wished to see treated like the ancient classics. He subsequently turned his attention almost exclusively to the poets of the German classical period, notably Goethe and Schiller. Düntzer's method met with much opposition and he consequently failed to obtain the professorship he coveted. In 1846 he accepted the post of librarian at the Roman.