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given us so faithful an account of the most recent situation of the various Christian sects, together with the physical and political state of the Holy Land, as this traveller, who is so profoundly versed in the manners and languages of the East. He commenced his journey in Egypt, in company with the Prussian General, Baron Minutoli, who however part ed from him at the very outset of the expedition. A great deal has been said in the public papers of the discoveries made by the Baron in Egypt, and the unhappy loss of the greater part of his highly valuable collections by the wreck of the ship, on board which he sent them to Hamburg. Fortunately, however, his journal, and part of his drawings and collections were sent from Trieste by land to Berlin. From them will be published in the course of the year 1823, A Journey to the Temple of Jupiter Ammon, in the Libyan Desart, and to Upper Egypt, in 1820 and 1821, with the opening of the great pyramid of Saccara, from the Journals of Baron Minutoli, with an Appendix, by Dr. Toelken, Professor in the University of Berlin, with a map of the Desart, and thirty lithographical plates (many of them coloured) in imperial folio. Two other German literati who were with the Baron have proceeded to Nubia; and though their researches are chiefly directed to Natural History, they cannot fail to add important particulars to our information respecting that country. In the west, also, German travellers have distinguished themselves, and we had almost said seem to have fixed on Brazil as their own. The Travels of the Prince of Nieuwied in that country (of which only the first volume has been translated into English,) in two vols. 4to. with numerous fine plates, has been so well received, nearly 1000 copies having been sold, that the publisher has now printed an 8vo. edition of it, and has commenced the publication of a great and expensive work on the Natural History of Brazil, from the drawings and collections made by the Prince in that country. Another far more important work on

Brazil, is the account of the Journey of Drs. Spix and Martius, of Munich, now preparing for publication, under the immediate patronage of His Majesty, the King of Bavaria, by whom they were sent to that country. -Öther important works are an nounced, among which we will mention Mr. Baader's new System of the Mechanism of Wheel Carriages, Iron Rail Roads, &c. and a History of the House of Hohenstaufen and their Times, in 4 vols. large 4to. by Frederick Von Raumer. This work is expected to be highly important towards the history of the middle ages. The author obtained most valuable materials in various public libraries in Germany and Italy, particularly among the MSS. of the Vatican library; he was even permitted to examine the archives of the Vatican, which have been inaccessible to almost every writer, except Baronius and Ravnaldus. At the conclusion of the work, will be added some essays, tending to throw great light upon it, some of which have already been printed separately in periodical publications, and fully prove the author's qualifications for the important and laborious task which he has undertaken. The history will extend from the latter years of the reign of the Emperor Henry IV. to the end of the Crusades. Twelve copper-plates, chiefly portraits, will be added.

With respect to the translations of foreign works, those of the Scotch Novels, and of all the poetical works of Sir Walter Scott, take the first place. Translations of these novels are advertised as soon as there is even an intimation that one is preparing for the press; generally, two or three different translations are published, and sometimes almost simultaneously with the original. Nay, it seems certain, that Peverel of the Peak, though not yet published here, has been already for some weeks before the German public. We are inclined to think it probable, that the German translator has published the first or perhaps the second volumes, without waiting for the remainder, for it seems impossible that he should have the whole.

LITERARY INTELLIGENCE.

The author of the Confessions of an English Opium Eater, announces the speedy appearance of his Prolegomena to all future Systems of Political Economy, the publication of which has been so long delayed by his illness.

The new novel of the Great Unknown is not to appear we understand till the middle of January. The author has found it necessary to add a fourth volume to the work.

The Rev. Mr. Cary, the translator of Dante, is engaged on an English version of the Odes of Pindar.

A new Historical Novel, the scene of which is laid in England in the time of Charles I. and Cromwell, is about to be published, under the title of Marston Moor, or the Queen's page. It is the production of a celebrated literary character.

Mr. Cunningham's collection of Scottish Songs, ancient and modern, will be put to press immediately.

It is reported, that three more Cantos of Don Juan are in town, but we believe it is not decided who is to have the honour of publishing them. The poem of Heaven and Earth, which Mr. Murray is said to have refused to publish, will appear in the Liberal.

The new Poem from the pen of Mr. Barry Cornwall, will appear very early this

season.

The Letters of Edward Herbert, Esq. to the family of the Powells, will be collected and published in one volume.

Proposals have been issued for the publication of an uniform edition of the Works of the Rev. John Owen, DD. edited by Thomas Cloutt, MA.

A Spanish Quarterly Magazine is about to be published, under the title of Variedades, o Mensagero de Londres. Each number will contain about 100 pages in royal 8vo. and 12 coloured engravings.

It is proposed to publish by subscription, the Portraits of the late Rev. John Owen, Dr. Steinkopff, and the Rev. Joseph Hughes, Secretaries to the Bible Society.

The Works of Shakspeare are about to be printed in Miniature volumes, uniformly with the Spenser Classics.

Mr. T. E. Evans is engaged in trans. lating a Collection of the Constitutions, Charters, and Laws, of the various nations of Europe, and of North and South America, with historical sketches of the origin of their liberties and political institutions. From the French of Messrs. P. A. Dufau, J. B. Duvergier, and J. Guadet. first volume, containing the rise and progress of the governments of France and the Netherlands, will appear very shortly.

The

The Fortieth volume of Transactions of the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce, with an Analytical Index for Vols, XXVI. to XL, will be ready for delivery early in January. JAN. 1823.

The following works are in the press: Diary of a Journey through Southern India, Egypt, and Palestine, in the years 1821 and 1822, by a Field Officer of C2valry, illustrated with maps, &c.

The Cabinet of Portraits, Part I, containing Burns, Corneille, Shaw, Sherlock, and President West, with Biographical Notices, by Robert Scott, to be continued.

Don Carlos, a Tragedy, translated and rendered into verse, from the German of Schiller, and adapted to the English stage.

Pulpit Orations, Lectures, and Sermons, delivered in the Caledonian Church, Hatton Garden, in one Volume, 8vo. By the Rev. Edward Irving, AM.

Sequel to an Unpublished Manuscript of Henry Kirke White's; designed to illustrate the Contrast afforded by Christians and Infidels, at the Close of Life. By the Author of the Wonders of the Vegetable Kingdom Displayed, &c.

The Antiquities of Free-masonry. Com prising Illustrations of the Five Grand Pe riods of Masonry, from the Creation of the World, to the Dedication of King Solomon's Temple. By George Oliver, Vicar of Clee, in the county of Lincoln.

History and Topography of London and its Environs, to correspond with Pinnock's County Histories. With a Map of twentyfive Miles round the Metropolis.

Rassela, Principe D'Abissinia, opera del Signor Dottor Johnson, 12mo.

An Introduction to the Hebrew Language, by W. Heinemann, Professor of the Hebrew and German Languages.

Relics of Literature, by Stephen Collet, AM. in 8vo. with a Frontispiece of Autographs of eminent characters.

The Lives of Scottish Poets, complete in 3 Vols. with 30 Portraits.

Liberalism Examined, 1 Vol. 8vo. by the Author of Italy and the Italians in the 19th Century.

Highways and By-ways; or, Tales of the Roadside, gathered in the French Provinces. By a walking Gentleman, 8vo.

Prosings, by a Veteran; or, the Lucubrations of Humphrey Ravelin, Esq. late Major in the Regiment of Infantry, 8vo.

The Theory and Practice of Music, professionally analysed for the Use of the Instructor, the Amateur, and the Student, with a brief History of the Science, &c. together with a Practical Essay on the Capabilities and Application of the Human Voice. By J. Nathan, Author of the Hebrew Melodies. Royal 4to.

Tales of Old Mr, Jefferson, of Gray's-" inn, collected by the Young Mr. Jefferson, of Lyon's-inn.-Series I. Mandeville, or the Voyage; the Welch Cottage, or the Woodman's Fire-side; the Creole, or the Negro's Suicide.

December Tales, in one neat volumę.

WORKS LATELY PUBLISHED.

Antiquities.

A Series of Views of the most Interesting Remains of the Ancient Castles of England and Wales; engraved by Messrs. Woolnoth and Tombleson, from Drawings by Blore, Arnald, Fielding, Gastineaux, &c. With Historical Descriptions. By E. W. Brayley, Jun. Part I. To be continued Monthly.

History and Biography. Memoirs of the Life of Mary Queen of Scots. By Miss Benger. 2 Vols. 8vo. 11. 4s.

Sir Robert Naunton's Fragmenta Regalia, or Court of Queen Elizabeth; a new Edition; corrected by the Original MSS. With Notes, and a Life of Naunton; Eight Portraits. Small 8vo. 12s. 6d. Demy, 21s.

The History of Tuscany, interspersed with Essays. By Lorenzo Pignotti. Translated from the Italian, with the Life of the Author. By John Browning. 4 Vols. 8vo. 21. 8s. boards.

The Life of Sir Thomas More, by his Son-in-law, William Roper, Esq. A new Edition, Revised. By S. W. Singer, foolscap, Bs.

Dodsley's Annual Register, or a View of the History, Politics, and Literature of the Year 1821. 16s.

Rivington's Annual Register for 1821.

18s.

Journal of the Private Life and Conversations of the Emperor Napoleon at St. Helena. By the Count de Las Cases. 2 Vols. 8vo. 17. 18.

Memoirs of the History of France, during the Reign of Napoleon; written at St. Helena by the Generals who par took in his Captivity; and published from the Original Manuscripts, corrected by Napoleon. Vols. I. and II. 8vo. 11. 8s.

Medicine.

Treatise on Puerperal Fever. By John Mackintosh, MD. 88. 6d.

A Treatise on the Epidemic Puerperal Fever. By W. Campbell, MD. 8vo. 10s. 6d.

Practical Rules for the Restoration and Preservation of Health. By the late George Cheyne, MD. FRS. A new Edition, 12mo. 48.

Dr. Faithhorn, on Diseases of the Liver and Biliary System; comprehending those various, extensive, and often complicated Disorders of the Digestive, Internal Organs, and Nervous System, originating from these Sources. The Fifth Edition, with an Appendix of Cases, illustrative of the Principles of Treatment. 8vo. 93.

boards.

Practical Observations on the Treatment and Cure of several Varieties of Pulmo

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Outlines of Character. By a Member of the Philomathic Institution. 8vo. 98. Sketches of the Field Sports of the Natives of India. 8vo. 8s.

A Comment on the Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri, 18s.

An Accurate Table of the Population of the British Empire in 1821; specifying all the Cities and Boroughs in Great Bri tain, with every other Parish or Place, containing Two Thousand Inhabitants, or upwards, price 5s. or on large Paper, 7s. Palæoromaica, or Historical and Philological Disquisitions. 8vo. 16s.

Novels and Tales.

Kruitzner; or the German's Tale. By Harriet Lee. Fifth Edition, 8vo. 9s. 6d. Tales of my Father and my Friends. Small 8vo. 5s.

German Popular Stories, Translated from the Kinder und Haus Marchen of M. M. Grimm. With an Introduction and Notes, and 12 Plates by G. Cruikshank. 12mo. 78.

The Entail; or the Lairds of Grippie. By the Author of Annals of the Parish. 3 Vols. 17. 18.

Annals of the Family of M'Roy. By Mrs. Blackford. 3 Vols. 12mo. 14. 4s.

The Boarding School, or Familiar Conversations between a Governess and her Pupils. 12mo. 4s.

Reformation; a Novel. 3 Vols. 18s. Cervantes as a Novelist, from a Selection of the Episodes and Incidents of Don Quixote. Royal 8vo. with a Frontispiece, 128.

Poetry.

Childhood; a Poem. By the Rev. E. T. S. Hornby, MA. Foolscap, 5s. 6d. The Duke D'Ormond, a Tragedy; and Bentorta, a Tale. By Charles Lloyd. Foolscap, 8s.

The Press, or Literary Chit Chat; a Ša. tire. Foolscap, 5s.

Don Carlos, or Persecution; a Tragedy in Five Acts. By Lord John Russell. 8vo. 4s. 6d.

The Tournament; or the Days of Chivalry, with 24 Coloured Engravings. Royal 8vo. 15s.

The Vale of Apperley, and other Poems, 8vo. 6s.

Theology.

A General and Historical View of Christianity. By George Cook, DD.

3 Vols. 8vo. 11. 168, An Ecclesiastical History of Ireland. By the Rev. John Lawson, DD. 4 Vols. 8vo. 21. 12s.

Daily Bread; or Meditations, Practical and Experimental, for every Day in the Year, by more than 100 of the most Eminent and Popular Ministers of the last Century; and a few other Writers. 7s. 6d. boards, 88. bound.

Voyages, Travels, and Topography. Journal of a Tour in France, Switzerland, and Italy, during the Years 1819,

1820, and 1821; Illustrated by 50 Lithographic Prints. By Marianne Colston. 2 Vols. 8vo. 11. 1s. Fifty Plates to ditto, folio, 21.

Journal of a Horticultural Tour through some parts of Flanders, Holland, and the North of France, in the Autumn of 1819. 8vo. 16s.

Fifteen Years in India; or, Sketches of a Soldier's Life, from the Journal of an Officer in His Majesty's Service. 8vo. 148.

Travels in Egypt and the Holy Land. By William Rae Wilson, Esq. 8vo. 18s.

Sketch of the Mosquito Shore, including the Territory of Poyais. By Thomas Strangeways, KGC. 8vo. 12s.

ECCLESIASTICAL PREFERMENTS.

The Rev. W. Cockburn, MA, Dean of York, vice the late Dr. G. Markham.-The Rev. R. Tredcroft, AM. Rector of Combes, to the Prebend of Hampstead, in Winchester Cathedral. The Rev. Philip Perring, MA. to be Domestic Chaplain to his H. R. H. the Duke of Cambridge.-The Rev. Thos. Wright, to the Rectory of Kilverston, Norfolk.The Rev. W. Bedell Coucher, to the Rectory of Bawsey, Norfolk.-The Rev. G. Walls, Rector of Weston, Sussex, to a Prebendal stall in Chichester Cathedral-The Rev. R. Simpson, to the perpetual Curacy of Warston and Elkston, Wilts. The Rev. D. Creswell, DD. Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, presented by the Master and Fellows of that Society to the Vicarage of

BIRTHS.

Nov. 24-At Albury-park, Lady Harriet Drum. mond, a son.

25. In Saville-row, Newcastle, the lady of A. Compton, Esq. of Carham-hall, near Coldstream, a daughter.

26. The lady of Cyril J. Monkhouse, Esq. of Craven-street, Strand, a son.

Dec. 4.-At Hobland-hall, Suffolk, the lady of John Penrice, Esq. a daughter.

➡ In Queen-street, May-fair, the lady of Henry Boldero, Esq. a daughter.

5. At Underwood-cottage, near Exeter, the lady of John Tyrell, Esq. a daughter.

8. The lady of Thomas John Phillips, Esq. of Laudne, Cornwall, a daughter.

-At Gorhambury, the Countess of Verulam, a

son.

9. The lady of J. B. Heath, Esq. of Bloomsburyplace, a daughter.

H. Mrs. Haydon, wife of Mr. Haydon, historical painter, a son.

12. At Sir Archibald Macdonald's, East Sheen, Mrs. Randolph, a daughter.

-At his Excellency's house, in Charles-street, -Berkeley-square, the lady of Count D'Aglie, the Sardinian Ambassador, a son and heir.

13. At Norfolk-bouse, St. James's-square, the Countess of Surrey, a daughter.

14. At Clifton, the lady of C. A. Elton, Esq. a daughter.

-The Right Honourable Lady Frances Hotham,

2 son.

-At Harpole, near Northampton, the lady of the Hon. and Rev. T. L. Dundas, a daughter. 19. In Gloucester-place, the lady of Capt. Broug ham, a daughter.

20. At Bromley Common, Kent, the lady of H. Meux, Esq. a daughter.

21. In Bruton-street, Berkeley-square, Lady Eleanor Lowther, a daughter.

Lately, at Rigment-house, Bedfordshire, the lady of Thomas Potter Macqueen, Esq. a son and heir.

-At Hurst-h e, West Moulsey, Lady Berkeley, a daughter.

Enfield, Middlesex, vacant by the death of the Rev. H. Porter, BD.-The Rev. H. Palmer, to the perpetual Curacy of Broadway-The Rev. R. Davies, to the Vicarage of Dixton, Monmouthshire.-The Rev. G. H. Greenall, MA. Fellow of Christ College, Cambridge, to the perpetual Curacy of Oxford, Kent, on the presentation of the Dean and Chapter of Westminster.-The Rev. G. Turnor, Vicar of Wragby, to a Prebendal stall in Lincoln Cathedral.

OXFORD.-The Rev. W. T. Phillips, MA. Fellow of Magdalen College, appointed Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum, on the resignation of T. Dunbar, MA, of Brazenose College.

IN SCOTLAND.

At Edinburgh, the lady of Major James Hervey, of Castle Semple, a daughter.

IN IRELAND.

At Cork, the lady of Major Edward Webdman, of the 6th Dragoon Guards, a daughter.

At Dublin, the lady of the Dean of Clomfort, a daughter.

ABROAD.

At Naples, the lady of George Baring, Esq. a son. At St. Ann's, Jamaica, the lady of W. G. Macknight, MD. a son and heir.

MARRIAGES.

Nov. 21.-At Bowden, Edward J. Lloyd, Esq. of Manchester, Barrister-at-law, to Eliza, youngest daughter of William Rigby, Esq. of Oldfieldhall, in the county of Cheshire.

26. At Hull, the Rev. G. Browne, of St. Alban's, Herts, to Grace, second daughter of the late T. Riddel, Esq. of Hull.

Dec. 2. At Broxburn, Hants, Henry Browne, Esq. eldest son of Colonel Browne, of Amwell Bury, Hants, to Mary Anne, eldest daughter of John Walmsley, Esq. of Castlemeer, in the county of Lancaster.

2. At Flaxley, Gloucestershire, by the Rev. Chas. Crawley, Rear Admiral Ballard, to Catherine Crawley, daughter of the late, and sister to the present Sir T. B. Boever, Bart. of Flaxley Ab2. At Cheltenham, by the Bishop of Norwich, Major Hill Dickson, 64th Regiment, son of the late Archdeacon of Down, to Caroline Emma, second daughter of Thomas Stoughton, Esq. of the county of Kerry.

At Southampton, W. Baker, Esq. MD. to Miss Bernard, only daughter of Peter Bernard, Esq. of Southampton.

5. Henry Pringle Bruyeres, Esq. of the Royal Engineers, to Anne Judith Laurie, eldest daughter of the late John Minet Fector, Esq. of Dover, in Kent, and of Kearnsey Abbey.

5. At Holkham, the Hon. Spencer Stanhope, to Miss Coke, daughter of T. W. Coke, Esq. MP. 8. By special licence, at St. James's church, the Earl of Belfast, eldest son of the Marquis of Donegal, to Lady Harriet Butler, eldest daughter of the Earl of Glengall.

10. At Wragby, Lincolnshire. Sir T. C. Sheppard, Bart. of Crakenmarsh-ball, Staffordshire, and Thornton-hall, Bucks, to Mary Ann, only child of the Rev. G. Turnor, Prebendary of Lincoln, and niece of Sir T. Hanmer, Bart. 11. At the Friends' Meeting-house, Kingston-onThames, W. W. Prideaux, son of Walter Prideaux, Esq. of Kingsbridge, Devon, to Elizabeth, second daughter of Will. Foster Reynolds, Esq. of Carshalton-house, Surrey.

12. At Mary-le-bone church, James Henry Mitchell, of Moreland, in the island of Jamaica, to Jane, youngest daughter of the late David Mitchell, Esq.

At Lyndhurst, Hants, Daniel Gurney, Esq. of North Runcton, Norfolk, to Lady Harriet Hay, sister to the Earl of Errol.

-At St. Martin's, Donald M'Duffie, Esq. late of the 18th Hussars, to Frances Holroyd, only daughter of Richard Rice, Esq.

- Thomas Baker, Esq. of the Hon. East India Company's service, to Maria, eldest daughter of Henry Edmeades, Esq. of Cobham, Kent. 17. At Mary-le-bone church, by the Hon. and Rev. Gerard Wellesley, DD. Robert Lambert, Esq. Rear-Admiral of the White, to Louisa Ann, relict of the Rev. T. Cobb, of Igtham, in the county of Kent.

At Clapham, the Rev. Francis Kilvert, of Bath, to Miss De Chievre, of Acre-lane, Clapham. 18. The Rev. W. Longlands, Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford, and of Aston, Herts, to Judith Campbell, eldest daughter of John Pendrill, Esq. Bath.

19. At Clapham, Flintoff Leatham, Esq. Banker, of Pontefract, in the county of York, youngest son of John Leatham, Esq. of Ropergate-house, Pontefract, to Eliza, youngest daughter of Peter Blackburn, Esq. of Clapham-house, Surrey.

At Bath, H. Jenkins, Esq. of Sidmouth, Devonshire, to Miss Nicholson, daughter of the late T. Nicholson, Esq. of Bishop Wearmouth, Durham.

-Charles Adam Dyer, Esq. of Little Ilford, to Sarah, youngest daughter of W. Greenhill, Esq. of East Ham, Essex.

IN SCOTLAND. In Aberdeenshire, Major G. Turner, Roy. Artillery, to Margaret, daughter of the late John Ramsey, Esq. of Barra.

IN IRELAND.

At Douglas church. near Cork, Charles Wedder-burne Webster, Esq. of the Carabineers, to Rebecca, youngest daughter of the late Sir James Chatterton, Bart. of Castlemahon, Cork.

ABROAD.

At Trinidad, Henry Fuller, Esq. his Majesty's Attorney-General, to Miss C. Carter.

DEATHS.

Nov. 18.-At Eton, in her 74th year, Mrs. Catherine Middleton, relict of J. Middleton, Esq. brother of the late Sir Win. Middleton, Bart. of Belsay Castle, in Northumberland.

Lately, Lady Cholmcley, wife of Sir Montague Cholmeley, Bart. of Easton and Norton-place, Lincolnshire.

24 At Bishop Lavington, Wilts, in her 19th year, Maria Dorothea Frances, third daughter of the Rev. Dr. Maines.

Lately, near Stroud, Gloucestershire, aged 75, Samuel Snowden, MD.

28. The Rev. Joseph Rose, Vicar of Rothby, Leicestershire.

-At Bath, Don Antonio Francisco Zea, minister Plenipotentiary from the Republic of Columbia: his health had been in a declining state for some time.

29. At Hadley, in her 59th year, Martha, the wife of the Hon. G. A. Chetwynd Stapylton. Dec. 1. At Brighton, aged 25, Francis Fearon, Esq. of the Middle Temple, Barrister-at-law, and Fellow of New College, Oxford.

At Bury St. Edmund's, in his 80th year, the Rev. John Cotman, Rector of Langham, Suffolk, and Chaplain to the Earl of Clarendon.

7. At Stoke Newington, in his 65th year, John Aikin, MD. author of a great number of popular and useful works.

8. Hester Salusbury, the lady of Sir Corbet Corbet, Bart.

9. At his residence, at Walton, the Right Hon. Charles, Earl of Tankerville, Baron Ossulton, &c. His Lordship was born Nov. 16, 1743; succeeded his father, Charles, the late Earl, Oct. 27, 1767; and married Emma, daughter and co-heiress of Sir James Colebrooke, Bart. Oct. 7, 1771, by whom he had eight children. Is succeeded by his eldest son, the Right Hon. Chas, Augustus Lord Ossulton, MP. for Berwick-uponTweed.

10. Mrs. Jones, wife of W. T. Jones, Esq. of Aberystwith.

11. At Highbury Grove, aged 37, Sarah, wife of D. Rainier, Esq.

-In Montague-place, Jane, the wife of R. V. Richards, Esq.

-

At Ivy-bridge, Devonshire, of a sudden pleuritic inflammation, in his 48th year, Geo. Gilbert Currey, MD. senior Physician to St. Thomas's Hospital.

At Lynn, Norfolk, aged 72, Mr. Birbeck, relict of John Birbeck, Esq. Banker of that place. 14. Mary, wife of Apsley Pellatt, Esq. of Camberwell, and only daughter of Stephen Maberly, Esq. of Reading, Berks.

15. Elizabeth, relict of Bryan Mason, Esq. of the Hon. East India Company's service.

At Clifton, the Rev. James Olive, Rector of St. Paul's, Bristol.

16. Col. Wm. H. Boys, of the Chatham division of the Royal Marines.

17. At Southampton, aged 26, Charles Young, Esq. fourth son of John Young, Professor of Greek at the University of Glasgow.

19. At Hackney, Marianne, youngest daughter of Thomas Wilson, Esq. MP.

20. At Brighton, in his 33d year, Joseph Alcock, Esq. of Roehampton, Surrey.

22. In Bruton-street, the Countess D'Aglie, the lady of the Sardinian Ambassador.

ABROAD.

At Paris, his Excellency, Fernandez Nunez, late Ambassador from Spain to the Court of France. He had lately been employed as Envoy of the Duchess of Lucca, sister of Ferdinand of Spain. The Rt. Rev. Thomas Fanshawe Middleton. Lord Bishop of Calcutta, on July 8th. His Lordship was educated in the Grammar school of Christ's Hospital, whence he removed to Jesus College, Cambridge: his first literary work was the Conntry Spectator, a series of periodical essays. Besides several theological works, he is well known to Scholars by his volume" On the Doctrine of the Greek Article applied to the Illustration of the New Testament," 8vo. 1808.

In Jamaica, Dr. Samuel Fothergill, for many years a physician at London, where he was one of the conductors of the London Medical and Physical Journal; and who latterly practised with great success in Jamaica, whither he was induced to go for the sake of a change of climate. At Paris, in his 74th year, Count Bertholet, a native of Talloine, in Savoy, who was originally of the Medical profession, and who distinguished himself by highly valuable studies and labours in chemistry, in which science he was one of the founders of the new system.

On his passage to Lisbon, near the mouth of the Tago, Baron Wm. Fagel, late Secretary to the Netherland Embassy in London.

Suddenly, at Genoa, while on his way to the Congress at Verona, Charles Augustus Prince Hardenburg, Prussian Chancellor of State. This distinguished statesman, who was born at Hanover, in 1750, exhibited his talents as a diplomatist and politician very advantageously during the recent events of Europe.

At his seat, Hadersdorff, near Vienna, General and Field Marshal, Alex. Baron London.

At Paris, Miss Elizabeth Hume, niece of Arthur Hume, Esq. Teller of the frish Exchequer, and grand-niece of the late Marquis of Waterford. At Calais, in his 44th year, Win. Wylde, Esq. late of London.

At Paris, M. Andrien, the celebrated Medallist; his Napoleon series of medals place him at the head of this walk of art in modern times.

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