1807
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+ | Shakespeare is [[Bowdlerization |bowdlerized]] between 1807 and 1818 when ''[[The Family Shakespeare]]'' is published, expurgating "those words and expressions... which cannot with propriety be read aloud in a [[family]]." | ||
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+ | "With some humour, he descants on the ''[[oikophobia]]'', as he calls the English rage for leaving home and going to ''watering-places'', and for [[picturesque]] travelling. We give a specimen or his ridicule of the former : • The English migrate as regularly ..." --[[Robert Southey|Don Manuel Alvarez Espriella]], ''[[Letters from England]]'' (1807) | ||
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+ | "[[Gotham]]" has been a [[nicknames of New York City|nickname for New York City]] that first became popular in the nineteenth century; [[Washington Irving]] had first attached it to New York in the November 11, 1807 edition of his ''[[Salmagundi (periodical)|Salmagundi]]'', a periodical which lampooned New York culture and politics. Irving took the name from the village of [[Gotham, Nottinghamshire]], England: a place inhabited, according to folklore, by fools." --Sholem Stein | ||
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== Art and culture == | == Art and culture == | ||
- | == Births == | + | *''[[Corinne]]'' |
+ | *The use of the term ''[[Modern art]]'' was first attested in 1807[http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=modern&allowed_in_frame=0]. It took more than 50 years to produce the first recognized works of modern art: "The Lunch on the Grass" (1863) and "Olympia" (1863), both by Edouard Manet. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Births == | ||
*[[Aloysius Bertrand]], French writer introduced the [[prose poetry|prose poem]] into [[French literature]] and inspired [[Symbolist poetry|Symbolist poets]]. | *[[Aloysius Bertrand]], French writer introduced the [[prose poetry|prose poem]] into [[French literature]] and inspired [[Symbolist poetry|Symbolist poets]]. | ||
*[[Jules Gay]], clandestine publisher of erotica | *[[Jules Gay]], clandestine publisher of erotica | ||
==Deaths == | ==Deaths == | ||
- | + | {{GFDL}} | |
- | ==Nineteenth century== | + | |
- | :[[1900]] - [[1899]] - [[1898]] - [[1897]] - [[1896]] - [[1895]] - [[1894]] - [[1893]] - [[1892]] - [[1891]] | + | |
- | :[[1890]] - [[1889]] - [[1888]] - [[1887]] - [[1886]] - [[1885]] - [[1884]] - [[1883]] - [[1882]] - [[1881]] | + | |
- | :[[1880]] - [[1879]] - [[1878]] - [[1877]] - [[1876]] - [[1875]] - [[1874]] - [[1873]] - [[1872]] - [[1871]] | + | |
- | :[[1870]] - [[1869]] - [[1868]] - [[1867]] - [[1866]] - [[1865]] - [[1864]] - [[1863]] - [[1862]] - [[1861]] | + | |
- | :[[1860]] - [[1859]] - [[1858]] - [[1857]] - [[1856]] - [[1855]] - [[1854]] - [[1853]] - [[1852]] - [[1851]] | + | |
- | :[[1850]] - [[1849]] - [[1848]] - [[1847]] - [[1846]] - [[1845]] - [[1844]] - [[1843]] - [[1842]] - [[1841]] | + | |
- | :[[1840]] - [[1839]] - [[1838]] - [[1837]] - [[1836]] - [[1835]] - [[1834]] - [[1833]] - [[1832]] - [[1831]] | + | |
- | :[[1830]] - [[1829]] - [[1828]] - [[1827]] - [[1826]] - [[1825]] - [[1824]] - [[1823]] - [[1822]] - [[1821]] | + | |
- | :[[1820]] - [[1819]] - [[1818]] - [[1817]] - [[1816]] - [[1815]] - [[1814]] - [[1813]] - [[1812]] - [[1811]] | + | |
- | :[[1810]] - [[1809]] - [[1808]] - [[1807]] - [[1806]] - [[1805]] - [[1804]] - [[1803]] - [[1802]] - [[1801]] | + |
Revision as of 13:04, 12 October 2019
Shakespeare is bowdlerized between 1807 and 1818 when The Family Shakespeare is published, expurgating "those words and expressions... which cannot with propriety be read aloud in a family." "With some humour, he descants on the oikophobia, as he calls the English rage for leaving home and going to watering-places, and for picturesque travelling. We give a specimen or his ridicule of the former : • The English migrate as regularly ..." --Don Manuel Alvarez Espriella, Letters from England (1807) "Gotham" has been a nickname for New York City that first became popular in the nineteenth century; Washington Irving had first attached it to New York in the November 11, 1807 edition of his Salmagundi, a periodical which lampooned New York culture and politics. Irving took the name from the village of Gotham, Nottinghamshire, England: a place inhabited, according to folklore, by fools." --Sholem Stein |
Related e |
Featured: |
Art and culture
- Corinne
- The use of the term Modern art was first attested in 1807[1]. It took more than 50 years to produce the first recognized works of modern art: "The Lunch on the Grass" (1863) and "Olympia" (1863), both by Edouard Manet.
Births
- Aloysius Bertrand, French writer introduced the prose poem into French literature and inspired Symbolist poets.
- Jules Gay, clandestine publisher of erotica
Deaths