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1760

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1760
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please note:
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{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2011}}{{Year dab|1760}}{{Year nav|1760}}File:Wedding Supper - Martin van Meytens - Google Cultural Institute.jpg|thumb|300px|October 5: Princess Isabella of Parma marries Archduke Joseph of Austria to strengthen the Franco-Austrian AllianceFranco-Austrian Alliance{{C18 year in topic}}File:Evangeline statue St Martinville Louisiana trim.jpg|thumb|200px| June 4: Evangeline statue commemorates the Expulsion of the AcadiansExpulsion of the Acadians{{Year article header|1760}}

Events

January–March

April–June

  • April 3Great Britain and Prussia agree to begin peace negotiations to end the Seven Years’ War.Basil Williams, The Life of William Pitt, Volume 2 (Frank Cass & Co., 1913, reprinted by Routledge, 2014) p80
  • April 7 – ‘Tacky’s War’, a slave rebellion, begins in Jamaica and lasts for 18 months. During the uprising, 60 white residents are killed and more than 400 black rebels die in the suppression of the revolt. Another 500 are deported to British Honduras.Candace Ward, Desire and Disorder: Fevers, Fictions, and Feeling in English Georgian Culture (Bucknell University Press, 2007) p179
  • April 10France’s Minister of the Navy Nicolas René Berryer finally receives permission to send ships to assist French forces at Quebec, and a fleet of six ships under the command of Captain François Chenard de la Giraudais of the {{ship|French frigate|Machault|1757|6}} departs Bordeaux, albeit too late to prevent the loss of New France to the British.“Machault”, in Warships of the World to 1900, ed. by Lincoln P. Paine (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2000) pp99-100
  • April 11 – The Burmese Army, under the command of King Alaungpaya, reaches the outskirts of Siam’s capital, Ayutthaya, but then retreats rather than laying siege to the city. William J. Topich and Keith A. Leitich, The History of Myanmar (ABC-CLIO, 2013) pp38-39
  • April 12 – Two of six French ships run into a British blockade led by Britain’s Admiral Edward Boscawen. Of the remaining four, one sinks before it can reach North America.
  • April 20 – France’s Marshal François Gaston de Lévis departs from Montreal up the St. Lawrence River with 7,000 troops on a plan to retake Quebec City from the British. Paul Williams, Frontier Forts Under Fire: The Attacks on Fort William Henry (1757) and Fort Phil Kearny (1866) (McFarland, 2017) p101
  • April 22 – Belgian entertainer Joseph Mervin is said to have given the first demonstration of roller skates, in a performance at the Carlisle House in London, but the stunt ends in disaster.William Hartston, The Encyclopedia of Useless Information (Sourcebooks, 2007)
  • April 26 – Marshal Lévis and his troops land at Saint-Augustin-de-Desmaures, adjacent to Quebec City, and prepares to lay siege to the British occupying force.
  • April 27 – British Army Brigadier General James Murray marches a force of 3,500 men toward Saint-Augustin to confront Marshal Lévis and the French Army.
  • April 28 – British defenders and the French Army clash at the Battle of Sainte-Foy to determine the future control of Quebec. General Murray is forced to retreat after the British suffer 259 deaths and 845 wounded, while the French under Marshal Lévis suffer 193 deaths and 640 wounded.Raymond B. Blake, et al., Conflict and Compromise: Pre-Confederation Canada (University of Toronto Press, 2012) p104
  • April 29 – Representatives of the remaining Penobscot Indian tribes in Maine and New Brunswick make peace with the British at Fort Pownal in Newfoundland. Federal Writers Project, Maine: A Guide ‘Down East (Houghton Mifflin, 1937) p37
  • April 30 – Swiss mathematician Daniel Bernoulli presents a paper at the French Academy of Sciences in Paris in which “a mathematical model was used for the first time to study the population dynamics of infectious disease.“Charles Roberts, Ordinary Differential Equations: Applications, Models, and Computing (CRC Press, 2011) pp139-140
  • May 11 – King Alaungpaya of Burma dies during a retreat from Ayutthaya after stopping at the village of Kinywa while en route to Martaban. His son Naungdawgyi becomes the new King of Burma.
  • May 16 – Three British Royal Navy ships under the command of Commodore Robert Swanton on {{HMS|Vanguard|1748|6}} arrive to break the siege of Quebec before Marshal Lévis can recapture the city from the British.
  • May 17 – Captain Giraudais’s French fleet reaches the Gaspé Peninsula of northeast Quebec and captures seven British merchant ships, but Giraudais learns that the British have already preceded him up the St. Lawrence River and diverts to Chaleur Bay at Newfoundland.
  • June 4Expulsion of the Acadians: New England planters arrive to claim land in Nova Scotia taken from the Acadians.
  • June 11Robert Rogers and his Rangers launch a strike from Lake Champlain against French military posts along the Richelieu River – they strike at Fort Sainte Thérèse and destroy the settlement.
  • June 19 – The British create Cumberland County and Lincoln County in Maine.
  • June 22 – Britain’s Captain John Byron, commanding HMS Fame, locates France’s Captain Giraudais but runs aground on June 25 before it can attack.

July–September

October–December

  • October 5 – The wedding of Princess Isabella of Parma and Prince Joseph of Austria takes place at Hofburg Palace’s Redoute Hall (Redoutensaele), at the former imperial palace in Vienna.WEB,www.google.com/culturalinstitute/asset-viewer/wedding-supper/8wGaVfLW0exl6A, wedding-supper, 22 August 2016,
  • October 9Seven Years’ War: Russian troops enter Berlin.
  • October 16Seven Years’ War: Battle of Kloster-Kamp – Ferdinand of Brunswick is beaten back from the Rhine by a French army.
  • October 25George II of Great Britain dies; his 22-year-old grandson George, Prince of Wales, succeeds to the throne as King George III and reigns for 59 years until his death on January 29, 1820.
  • November 3Seven Years’ War: Battle of Torgau – In another extremely hard battle, Frederick defeats Daun’s Austrians, who withdraw across the Elbe.
  • November 29 – French Army Colonel François-Marie Picoté de Belestre formally surrenders Detroit to British Army Major Robert Rogers, and the British Union Jack is raised over Fort Detroit.Bill Loomis, On This Day in Detroit History (Arcadia Publishing, 2016) p188
  • December 4 – For the first time since the surrender of Fort Detroit by France, British authorities meet nearby at a Native American council house with delegates from various Indian tribes that had fought as allies of the French Army, such as the Wyandot and Ottawa Indians, and with tribes that had formerly been allies of the British. The European and Native American representatives open the peace conference with the presentation by the Indians to the British of a wampum belt, and the pronouncement from the principal chief that “The ancient friendship is now renewed, and I wash the blood off the earth that had been shed during the present war, that you may bury the war hatchet in the bottomless pit.“”1763 in Native American Country”, by Ulrike Kirchberger, in Decades of Reconstruction: Postwar Societies, State-Building and International Relations from the Seven Years War to the Cold War”, ed. by Ute Planert and James Retallack (Cambridge University Press, 2017) p72
  • December 6 – The siege of Pondicherry, a stronghold of France in India, is begun by British Army Lieutenant General Eyre Coote. The French commander, General Thomas Lally, is finally forced to surrender Pondicherry to the British on January 15, 1761.“Carnatic Wars”, in Wars That Changed History: 50 of the World’s Greatest Conflicts, ed. by Spencer C. Tucker (ABC-CLIO, 2015) p222
  • December 18 – In the wake of Tacky’s War by African-born rebels, the Assembly of the British colony of Jamaica outlaws the African religious practice of obeah, with penalties ranging from banishment from the colony to execution. The legislation specifically bans use of contraband associated with obeah, including “animal blood, feathers, parrots’ beaks, dogs’ teeth, alligators’ teeth, broken bottles, grave dirt, rum, and eggshells”.Rebecca Shumway, Trevor R. Getz, Slavery and its Legacy in Ghana and the Diaspora (Bloomsbury, 2017) p76

Date unknown

Births

File:清 佚名 《清仁宗嘉庆皇帝朝服像》.jpg|thumb|right|110px|Jiaqing EmperorJiaqing Emperor

Deaths

File:George II by Thomas Hudson.jpg|thumb|right|110px|George II of Great BritainGeorge II of Great Britain

References

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