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1835 - Deaths

A Wisdom Archive on 1835 - Deaths

1835 - Deaths

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1835, 1835 - Births, 1835 - Deaths, 1835 - Events

ARTICLES RELATED TO 1835 - Deaths

1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia - 1835

Canada - Mexico - South Africa - U.S. Rail Transport - Science - Sports Births - Deaths 1835 was a common year starting on Thursday (see link for calendar). 1835 - Events. January 1 – Ole Pedersen Hoiland breaks into the Bank of Norway and steals 64.000 dollars January 7 - HMS Beagle anchors off the Chonos Archipelago. January 30 - Unsuccessful assassination attempt against President Andrew Jackson in the United States Capitol - first assassinatio ...

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1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia - 1773

1773 in topic: Arts Architecture - Literature - Music Other topics Canada - Mexico - Science Lists of leaders: Colonial governors - State leaders From Categories: births - deaths 1773 was a common year starting on Friday (see link for calendar). 1773 - Events. January 12 - The first American museum open to the public is opened in ...

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1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia II - 1835 - Events

1835 - Month/day unknown. The Toledo War was fought between the State of Ohio and the Michigan Territory over the city of Toledo and the Toledo Strip. De revolutionibus orbium coelestium, Copernicus' book on the motion of the Earth, is removed from the Index of Prohibited Books. Samuel Colt patents the first revolver Civil war erupts in Uruguay between supporters of Blanco and Colorado parties Cachar Levy, forerunner of Assam Rifles, is founded in India ...

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1835, 1835 - Events, 1835 - Month/day unknown, 1835 - Births, 1835 - Deaths

Read more here: » 1835: Encyclopedia II - 1835 - Events

1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia - Carl Gustav Jakob Jacobi

Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi (Potsdam December 10, 1804 - Berlin February 18, 1851), was not only a great German mathematician but also considered by many as the most inspiring teacher of his time (Bell, p. 330). He was born of Jewish parentage in 1804. He studied at Berlin University, where he obtained the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in 1825, his thesis being an analytical discussion of the theory of fractions. In 1827 he became extraordinary and in 1829 ordinary professor of mathematics at Königsberg University, and this chai ...

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1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia - 1880

Canada - Mexico - South Africa - U.S. Rail Transport - Science - Sports Births - Deaths 1880 was a leap year starting on Thursday (see link for calendar). 1880 - Events. May 13 - In Menlo Park, New Jersey, Thomas Edison performs the first test of his electric railway. June 29 - France annexes Tahiti July 1 - First performance of O Canada, the song that would become the national anthem of Canada. July 16 - First woman licensed to pra ...

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1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia - De revolutionibus orbium coelestium

De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (English: On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres, Polish: O obrotach sfer niebieskich) is the seminal work on heliocentric theory and the masterpiece of the great Polish astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus. The book set out to offer an alternative model of the universe to the Ptolemaic system. Copernicus began to write it in 1506 and finishe ...

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Read more here: » De revolutionibus orbium coelestium: Encyclopedia - De revolutionibus orbium coelestium

1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia II - 1880 - Events

1880 - May - August. May 13 - In Menlo Park, New Jersey, Thomas Edison performs the first test of his electric railway. June 29 - France annexes Tahiti July 1 - First performance of O Canada, the song that would become the national anthem of Canada. July 16 - First woman licensed to practice medicine in Canada - Dr. Emily Howard Stowe. 1880 - September - December. September 5 - First successful test of an electric Tram in the ...

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1880, 1880 - Events, 1880 - May - August, 1880 - September - December, 1880 - Unknown date, 1880 - Births, 1880 - Unknown Birth Dates, 1880 - Deaths

Read more here: » 1880: Encyclopedia II - 1880 - Events

1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia - Empress Dowager Cixi

The Empress Dowager Cixi (Chinese: 慈禧太后; Hanyu Pinyin: Cíxǐ; Wade-Giles: Tz'u-hsi) (November 29, 1835 –November 15, 1908), popularly known in China as the Western Empress Dowager (西太后), and officially known posthumously as Empress Xiaoqin Xian (孝欽顯皇后), was a powerful and charismatic figure who was the de facto ruler of the Manchu Qing Dynasty, ruling over C ...

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1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia - Alamo Mission in San Antonio

The Álamo (formally: San Antonio de Valero Mission) is the name of former mission and fortress compound, now a museum, in San Antonio, Texas, United States. The compound, which originally comprised a church and surrounding buildings, was built by the Spanish Empire in the 18th century for the education of local Native Americans after their conversion to Christianity. After its later abandonment as a mission, it was used as a fortress in the 19th century and was the scene of several military actions, including most notably the 1836 Battle of the Alamo, one of the pivotal battles between the forc ...

Read more here: » Alamo Mission in San Antonio: Encyclopedia - Alamo Mission in San Antonio

1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia II - Søren Kierkegaard - The Journals of Søren Kierkegaard

One of the key texts in attempting to understand Kierkegaard and his work is his journals. [3] Kierkegaard wrote over 7000 pages in his journals describing key events, musings, thoughts about his works and everyday remarks. The entire Danish journal has been edited and published in 13 volumes, which consist of 25 separate bindings, including indices. The first English edition of the journal was edited by Alexander Dru in 1938. His journals reveals many ...

See also:

Søren Kierkegaard, Søren Kierkegaard - Life, Søren Kierkegaard - Early years 1813–1841, Søren Kierkegaard - Regine Olsen 1837–1841, Søren Kierkegaard - The First Authorship 1841–1846, Søren Kierkegaard - The Corsair Affair 1845–1846, Søren Kierkegaard - The Second Authorship 1846–1853, Søren Kierkegaard - Attack Upon Christendom 1854–1855, Søren Kierkegaard - Indirect communication and pseudonymous authorship, Søren Kierkegaard - The Journals of Søren Kierkegaard, Søren Kierkegaard - Kierkegaard on Schelling, Søren Kierkegaard - Kierkegaard on Schopenhauer, Søren Kierkegaard - Kierkegaard on Hegel, Søren Kierkegaard - Kierkegaard and Christendom, Søren Kierkegaard - Kierkegaard in contemporary ethical theory, Søren Kierkegaard - Important elements of Kierkegaard's philosophy, Søren Kierkegaard - Alienation, Søren Kierkegaard - Abstraction, Søren Kierkegaard - Death, Søren Kierkegaard - Dread or anxiety, Søren Kierkegaard - Despair, Søren Kierkegaard - The individual, Søren Kierkegaard - Spheres of existence, Søren Kierkegaard - Subjectivity, Søren Kierkegaard - Pathos Passion, Søren Kierkegaard - Criticisms of Kierkegaard, Søren Kierkegaard - Kierkegaard's influence, Søren Kierkegaard - Selected bibliography, Søren Kierkegaard - Notes

Read more here: » Søren Kierkegaard: Encyclopedia II - Søren Kierkegaard - The Journals of Søren Kierkegaard

1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia II - George Armstrong Custer - Family tree

George Armstrong Custer - First generation. George Armstrong Custer was a fifth-generation descendant of Arnold Kuster and his third wife Rebecca. Arnold was born in Kaldenkirchen, Westphalia, Holy Roman Empire on June 9, 1669. He later emigrated to Hanover, Pennsylvania. Rebecca was a native of the city born in 1671. They had eight children. Arnold is known to have died in 1739. ...

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George Armstrong Custer, George Armstrong Custer - Birth, George Armstrong Custer - Early life, George Armstrong Custer - Civil War, George Armstrong Custer - McClellan and Pleasonton, George Armstrong Custer - Brigade command and Gettysburg, George Armstrong Custer - Marriage, George Armstrong Custer - The Valley and Appomattox, George Armstrong Custer - Indian Wars, George Armstrong Custer - Battle of the Little Bighorn, George Armstrong Custer - Controversial legacy, George Armstrong Custer - Monuments and memorials, George Armstrong Custer - Family tree, George Armstrong Custer - First generation, George Armstrong Custer - Second generation, George Armstrong Custer - Third generation, George Armstrong Custer - Fourth generation, George Armstrong Custer - Fifth generation, George Armstrong Custer - Custer in popular culture, George Armstrong Custer - Films, George Armstrong Custer - Custer's Revenge, George Armstrong Custer - Music, George Armstrong Custer - Alternate history, George Armstrong Custer - Timeline

Read more here: » George Armstrong Custer: Encyclopedia II - George Armstrong Custer - Family tree

1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia II - Richard Owen - Owen and Darwin's theory of evolution

Following the Voyage of the Beagle, Charles Darwin had at his disposal a considerable collection of specimens and on 29 October 1836 he was introduced by Charles Lyell to Owen, who agreed to work on fossil bones collected in South America. Owen's subsequent revelations that extinct giant creatures were rodents and sloths showed that they were related to current species in the same locality, rather than being relatives of similarly sized creatures in Africa as Darwin had originally thought. Thi ...

See also:

Richard Owen, Richard Owen - Early life and career, Richard Owen - Work on invertebrates, Richard Owen - Work on fish reptiles and birds, Richard Owen - Work on mammals, Richard Owen - Owen and Darwin's theory of evolution, Richard Owen - Owen's legacy

Read more here: » Richard Owen: Encyclopedia II - Richard Owen - Owen and Darwin's theory of evolution

1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia II - Indigenous Australians - Population

As at June 2001, the Australian Bureau of Statistics estimated the total resident indigenous population to be 458,500 (2.4% of Australia's total), 90% of whom identified as Aboriginal, 6% Torres Strait Islander and the remaining 4% being of dual Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander parentage. In the 2001 census the Aboriginal population in different States was: New South Wales - 134,888 Queensland - 125,910 Western Australia - 65,931 Northern Territory - 56,875 Victoria - 27,846 South Australia - 25,544 Tasmania - 17,384 See also:

Indigenous Australians, Indigenous Australians - Definitions, Indigenous Australians - Origins, Indigenous Australians - Before European settlement, Indigenous Australians - Impact of European settlement, Indigenous Australians - Adaptation, Indigenous Australians - The path to reconciliation: 1950-2005, Indigenous Australians - Issues facing Indigenous Australians today, Indigenous Australians - Health, Indigenous Australians - Education, Indigenous Australians - Crime, Indigenous Australians - Unemployment, Indigenous Australians - Substance abuse, Indigenous Australians - Mainland Australia, Indigenous Australians - Clans groups and communities, Indigenous Australians - Culture, Indigenous Australians - Mythology, Indigenous Australians - Languages, Indigenous Australians - Music, Indigenous Australians - Art, Indigenous Australians - Traditional recreation, Indigenous Australians - Tiwi Islands & Groote Eylandt, Indigenous Australians - Tasmania, Indigenous Australians - Torres Strait Islanders, Indigenous Australians - Population, Indigenous Australians - Prominent Indigenous Australians

Read more here: » Indigenous Australians: Encyclopedia II - Indigenous Australians - Population

1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia II - Nikolai Gogol - Interpretation

Gogol's literary life and works show convolutions of struggle between the Westernizer and Slavophile urges in Russian culture. Living in post-Napoleonic Russia, with liberal discontent against Czarist rule, reformers interpreted Gogol stories as validation. This is because some of Gogol's stories satirized situations particular to Russian society. Indeed, Gogol was motivated as a reformer in his own mind, but not necessarily as defined by the liberals of the time. Toward the end of his life, liberals saw him as a religious fanatic, strangely ...

See also:

Nikolai Gogol, Nikolai Gogol - Life and Death, Nikolai Gogol - Dead Souls and Death, Nikolai Gogol - Interpretation, Nikolai Gogol - Works

Read more here: » Nikolai Gogol: Encyclopedia II - Nikolai Gogol - Interpretation

1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia II - Sam Houston - Early life

Houston was born in Rockbridge County, Virginia to Major Samuel Houston and Elizabeth Paxton and was one of nine children. His father was a member of Morgan's Rifle Brigade during the US Revolutionary War. Receiving only a basic education, he emigrated with his family to Maryville, Tennessee in 1807, following the death of his father. His mother then took the family to live on Baker Creek, Tenn. He ran away from home in 1809 and resided for a time with a Cherokee tribe on Hiwasee Island. He was adopted into the Cherokee Nation ...

See also:

Sam Houston, Sam Houston - Early life, Sam Houston - Politics, Sam Houston - Life in Texas, Sam Houston - U.S. Senator, Sam Houston - Houston in the 1850s-1860s, Sam Houston - Final Years, Sam Houston - Children

Read more here: » Sam Houston: Encyclopedia II - Sam Houston - Early life

1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia II - History of anti-Semitism - The 11th century

1008-1013 Fatimid Caliph Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah issues severe restrictions against Jews in the Land of Israel. All Jews are forced to wear a "golden calf" (made of wood) around their necks. On Oct. 18 1009 he destroys the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, but the French "historian" Raoul Glaber blames the Jews. As a result, Jews were expelled from Limoges and other French towns. 1012 One of the first known persecutions of Jews in Germany: Henry II, Holy Roman Emperor expels Jews from Mainz. 1032 Abul Kamal Tumin conquers Fez, Morocco and decimates the Jewish community, killing 6,000 Jews. 1050 Council of ...

See also:

History of anti-Semitism, History of anti-Semitism - Ancient animosity towards Jews, History of anti-Semitism - The 4th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 5th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 6th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 7th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 8th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 9th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 10th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 11th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 12th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 13th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 14th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 15th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 16th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 17th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 18th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 19th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 20th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 21st century, History of anti-Semitism - Books

Read more here: » History of anti-Semitism: Encyclopedia II - History of anti-Semitism - The 11th century

1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia II - Empress Dowager Cixi - Names

Cixi had different names at different stages of her life, which could be quite confusing. Moreover, most of her Western biographers, who in general do not read Chinese, frequently confuse these names. The name of Cixi at birth is still unresolved (see Youth section above). Upon her entrance into the Forbidden City, Cixi was registered as "the Lady Yehenara, daughter of Huizheng" (惠征). Thus she was called by the name of her clan, the Yehe-Nara, as was customary for Manchu girls. Cixi was a secretive person, and she seldom talked ab ...

See also:

Empress Dowager Cixi, Empress Dowager Cixi - Youth, Empress Dowager Cixi - Names, Empress Dowager Cixi - Road to power, Empress Dowager Cixi - Regency under Tongzhi, Empress Dowager Cixi - Securing absolute power, Empress Dowager Cixi - Crisis with Guangxu, Empress Dowager Cixi - Overview of politics, Empress Dowager Cixi - Tomb, Empress Dowager Cixi - Historical opinion, Empress Dowager Cixi - Reference

Read more here: » Empress Dowager Cixi: Encyclopedia II - Empress Dowager Cixi - Names

1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia II - Empress Dowager Cixi - Historical opinion

The traditional view is that Cixi was a devious despot who maintained a deathgrip on what little power she had until that power faded out completely. Three years after her death, the Qing dynasty was itself overthrown in the Xinhai Revolution. However, some authors, such as Sterling Seagrave in his biography The Dragon Lady maintain a far more positive view of Cixi, arguing that she has been unfairly maligned and when seen more closely, her actions were reasonable responses to the difficulties that China faced. Another sympathetic acc ...

See also:

Empress Dowager Cixi, Empress Dowager Cixi - Youth, Empress Dowager Cixi - Names, Empress Dowager Cixi - Road to power, Empress Dowager Cixi - Regency under Tongzhi, Empress Dowager Cixi - Securing absolute power, Empress Dowager Cixi - Crisis with Guangxu, Empress Dowager Cixi - Overview of politics, Empress Dowager Cixi - Tomb, Empress Dowager Cixi - Historical opinion, Empress Dowager Cixi - Reference

Read more here: » Empress Dowager Cixi: Encyclopedia II - Empress Dowager Cixi - Historical opinion

1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia II - James Douglas Governor - Early Life and Fur Trader

Douglas was born in Demerara, British Guiana, the illegitimate son of a Scottish sugar planter and a "free coloured woman". In 1812 he was sent to Lanark, Scotland to be schooled. It is also believed that he went to school in Chester, England, where he learned to speak and write in fluent French. At the age of 16 Douglas left Britain to enter the fur trade in the North West Company. He left Liverpool for Lachine, Lower Canada (now part of Montreal) in the spring of 1819. From 1819 until 1820 Douglas was stationed at the Fort William, ...

See also:

James Douglas Governor, James Douglas Governor - Early Life and Fur Trader, James Douglas Governor - Governor of the Colony of Vancouver Island, James Douglas Governor - The Gold Rush, James Douglas Governor - Governor of Two Colonies, James Douglas Governor - Retirement and Death

Read more here: » James Douglas Governor: Encyclopedia II - James Douglas Governor - Early Life and Fur Trader

1835 - Deaths: Encyclopedia II - Baptism - Roman Catholic Eastern Orthodox Lutheran Anglican and Methodist baptism

The liturgy of baptism in the Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Lutheran, Anglican, and Methodist traditions makes clear reference to baptism as not only a symbolic burial and resurrection, but an actual supernatural transformation, one that draws parallels to the experience of Noah and the passage of the Israelites through the Red Sea divided by Moses. Thus baptism is literally and symbolically not only cleansing, but also dying and rising again with Christ. Catholics believe that baptism is necessary for the cleansing of the taint of original si ...

See also:

Baptism, Baptism - Background in Jewish ritual, Baptism - Explanation, Baptism - Ecumenical statement, Baptism - Roman Catholic Eastern Orthodox Lutheran Anglican and Methodist baptism, Baptism - Baptism and salvation, Baptism - Conditions of the validity of a baptism, Baptism - Baptism by other denominations, Baptism - Who may administer a baptism, Baptism - Baptist and other Protestant baptism, Baptism - Reformed and Covenant Theology view, Baptism - Latter Day Saint baptism, Baptism - Baptism in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Baptism - Jehovah's Witnesses, Baptism - Baptism in Churches of Christ, Baptism - Other baptisms, Baptism - Non-christian religions, Baptism - Non-religious baptism, Baptism - Related articles and subjects, Baptism - People and ritual objects, Baptism - Resources

Read more here: » Baptism: Encyclopedia II - Baptism - Roman Catholic Eastern Orthodox Lutheran Anglican and Methodist baptism

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