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340

MARRIAGES, DEATHS, &c.

8. Marcellus Ofborne, of the InnerTemple, Efq; to Mifs Fox, an heiress of 400l. per ann. in Effex.

10. Thomas Dawfon, of Southwark, Efq; in the commiffion of the peace for Surrey, to Mrs. Venables.

Hickford, Efq; to Mifs HeTuckie, daughter to John Heluckie, Efq; fteward to his royal highness the duke of Cumberland.

12. Humphrey Edlin, of Walton, Efq; to Mifs Rogers of Colnbrook.

14. Dr. Richard Rock, of Ludgatehill, to Mifs Elizabeth Thompson, a teacher of the boarding-fchool at Newington, in Surrey.

Richard Nicholas, Efq; of Hackney, to Mifs Anne Hartley, niece to Sir William Penton, Bart. an heiress of 700l. per annum.

Matthew Bateman, of Whitechapel, Efq; to Mifs Hannah Coker.

18. Sir Robert Burdett, Bart. member for Tamworth in Staffordshire, to lady Caroline Harpur, relict of the late Sir Henry Harpur, Bart. and fifter to the duke of Rutland.

Thomas Matthews, of Chefhunt in Hertfordshire, Efq; to Mifs Beswick, of Low-Layton.

21. Henry Bambrigg Buckeride, Efq; of Queen's fquare, to Mifs Kitty Pinfold, daughter of Dr. Pinfold, of the fame place.

23. Hon. Alexander Drury, Efq; lieut. col. of the first regiment of foot-guards, to Mifs Ifabella Turner, youngest daughter of Edmund Turner, Efq; of Stoke, in Lincolnshire.

Henry Simons, Efq; folicitor at the Custom-houfe, to Mifs Elizabeth Mafterman, eldest daughter of Henry Mañer man, Efq; clerk of the crown.

24. Rt. Hon. lord Cathcart, to the Hon. Mifs Hamilton, daughter to lord Archibald Hamilton, governor of Greenwich-Hofpital.

25. Freeman, Efq; of Springgardens, to Mifs Manly, of Southamp

ton-row.

27. Hon. Francis Seymour, Efq; of Hampshire, poffeffed of a large eftate, to lady Caroline Cowper, fifter to earl Cowper,

July 2. The lady of Matthew Ridley, Efq; member for Newcastle upon Tyne, delivered of a fon.

5. Rt. Hon. the countess of Haddington, of a fon and heir.

9. The lady Elizabeth Waldegrave, wife of col. Waldegrave, of a fon.

22. The lady of the bishop of Chester, of a fon.

24. The lady of John Bond, Efq; member for Corf-Castle, of a fon.

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June 23.

DEATHS.

July

LADY Stapleton, relict of

pleton, Bart.

the late Sir William Sta

29. William Billinghurst, Efq; at Mitcham, in Surrey, in the commiffion of the peace for that county.

30. The lady Dyke Acland, wife of Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, Bart.

July 1. William Corbett, Efq; one of the commiffioners of his majesty's navy.

Rev. Thomas Harrison, B. D. Hebrew profeffor in the university of Cambridge.

2. Rev. Mr. John Peter Stehelin, F. R. S. minifter of the French church near Leicester-fields: He was remarkable for having made himself master of the following languages, viz. Hebrew, Greek, Latin, English, French, German, Italian, Danish, Dutch, Coptick, Armenian, Syriack, Arabick, Chaldean, Gothick, old Tudefco or Druid, Anglo Saxon; beuides Spanish, Portuguese, and Welch.

John Murray, Efq; member of parlia ment for the thire of Selkirk.

3. John Hill, Efq; member of parliament for Higham-Ferrers, in Northamptonshire.

Robert Chapman, LL. D. at his houfe in Doctors Commons.

4. Mr. Jofeph Pomfret, formerly a lace merchant in St. Paul's Church-yard.

6. Richard Churchill, Efq; knight of the fhire for Lincolnshire, in the first and fecond parliament of his late majesty.

8. Rt. Hon. Thomas Fermor, earl of Pomfret, baron of Lempfter, knight of the Bath, and baronet, ranger and keeper of St. James's and Hyde parks.

Lady Cecilia Garrard, relict of Sir Nicholas Garrard, Bart. by whofe death an eftate of 1oool. per annum devolves to Sir Jacob Garrard Downing, Bart.

13. James Henderfon, Efq; treasurer to the fociety for the propagation of the gofpel in foreign parts, folicitor to queen Anne's bounty, and receiver of the first fruits of the clergy.

Mr. Storke, an eminent Weft-India merchant.

John Voyce, Efq; mayor of Sudbury, and commiffioner of the land-tax for Suffolk.

14. John Powell, Efq; in the commif. fion of the peace for Middlesex and West. minner.

Chriftopher Lowe, Efq; one of the clerks of the treasury.

Lady viscountess Dupplin, the lady of lord viscount Dupplin.

15. Philip Stevens, Efq; formerly an Italian merchant, at lus feat near Ongar, in Effex,

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1753. PROMOTIONS, BANKRUPTS, &c. 341

18. Mr. Andrew Mitchell, an eminent apothecary in Pall-Mall,

20. Alexander Hay, Efq; last year high-fheriff of Suffex.

Lieut. gen. Panton, the oldest lieut. general in the army.

Philip Vanbrugh, Efq; commissioner of the navy, refident at Plymouth yard. 27. Abel Fonnereau, Efq; an eminent merchant, and one of the directors of the Eaft-India company.

ECCLESIASTICAL PREFERMENTS,

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R. Paul Wright, vicar of Ugley, prefented by the governors of Chrift's-Hofpital, to the donative of Burden, which the late Mr. Selby enjoyed, with the vicarage of Clavering cum Langley. Mr. Jones, jun. organist of the Temple, chofen by the governors, organift of the Charterhouse, in the room of Dr. Pepufch, deceased. Mr. William Goftling, prefented by the dean and chaper of Canterbury, to the vicarage of Stone, in the Ifle of Oxney.-Mr. Mawfon, to the vicarage of Deepham, in Norfolk, Mr. William Wade, by the archbishop of Canterbury, to the vicarage of Midly, near Queenborough, in Kent. Samuel Nicholls, LL. D. promoted by his majefty to the office or place of mafter of the Temple, in the room of the bishop of London, who refigned.Mr. Herring prefented to the rectory of Deal, near Dover, in Kent.-Mr. Peirfon, by lord Ilchefter, to the rectory of Puddimore-Milton, in Somerfetfhire. Mr. Richardfon, of Epping, in Effex, by the bishop of London, to the living of Finchinheld in the faid county. Biddulph, M. A. by Robert Biddulph, Efq; to the rectory of Coringham, in Effex. Mr. Daniel Thomas-Adams, by the bishop of Rochefter, to the vicarage of Westmoor, in Kent.-Charles Bedford, M. A. to the vicarage of New Anick, in Cornwall. Mr. Richard Levett, by the earl of Salisbury, to the rectory of Little Barkhamstead, in Hertfordshire. Mr. Cafon, by the bishop of Norwich, to the vicarage of Illing, in Suffolk.

PROMOTIONS Civil and Military.

From the LONDON GAZETTE.

-

W pointed Sir William Owen, Bart.

Hitehall, July 2. The king has ap

to be lieutenant and cuftos rotulorum of Pembrokeshire, and of the town and county of Haverford-Weft: And Ifaac Jamineau, Efq; to be his conful general at Naples.

Whitehall, July 3. The king has appointed Nathaniel Manlove, William Miles, Cholmondeley Brereton, and Geo.

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Biron, Efars. to be lieutenants, and Jofeph Hudson, Gent. adjutant, in the first regiment of foot-guards. John Clavering, and Chadwalladar Blaney, Efqrs. to be captains; Charles Vernon, Efq; a captain lieutenant, and Thomas D'Avenant, Efq; lieutenant in the Coldstream regiment of foot-guards. John Furbar, and Marifcoe Frederick, Efqrs. to be captains, John Wells, Efq; a captain lieutenant, and William Hamilton and Themas Wallace, Efqrs. lieutenants in the third regiment of foot guards.-Thomas Bristow, Efq; to be captain of a company in lieutenant-genera! Pulteney's régiment, and Digby Berkeley, Efq; major to lieutenant-general Johnson's regiment

of foot.

Whitehall, July 14. The king has appointed the earl of Ashburnham to be keeper of Hyde-park, in the room of the late earl of Pomfret.

Whitehall, July 28. Robert Coney, Efq; appointed by his majesty one of the commiffioners for appeals and regulating the duties of excife.

From the other PAPERS.

Enfign Charles Stanhope, of the third regiment of foot-guards, made a captain on the Irish establishment.-Edward Herbert, Efq; made comptroller of the cultoms in the port of Chefter. - William Brough, Efq; made marshal of the high court of admiralty. - Matthew Pleydeil, Efq; made ftore-keeper of Kensington palace.

B-KRTS.

Mner.-Elizabeth Brown, of Dul

ARY Lawes, of Norwich, milli

verton, in Somersetshire, chapwoman.Edward Backhoufe, now or late of the Minories, hofter.-Andrew Braughall, of the parish of St. James, within the liberty of Westminster, brazier, broker, and dealer.-Edm. Stevens the younger, of Deptford, in Kent, brewer. - Pury Caifter, of the parish of St. Martin in the Fields, victualler. - Samuel Phillips, of Norwich, butcher, dealer and jobber.

William Satterthwaite, of Lancaster, merchant. Charles Prefton, of Widegate-alley, near Bishopsgate street, weaver, and dealer. Richard Wanfbrough, of Trowbridge, Wilts, clothier.-John Scott, of Norwich, linen-draper and milliner. -Herbert Bedford, of Haverford. West, fhipwright.-Jofeph Marples, of Bishopfgate-ftreet, vintner.-John Slemaker, of St. Paul's, Shadwell, blockmaker.Tho. mas Lodge, of Norwich, money fcrive ner. John Clement, of Angel-court, in Throgmorton-ftreet, broker. John Savidge, of Tower-street, cooper and turner. OUR

342

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FOREIGN AFFAIRS, 1753.

UR laft accounts from Vienna say, that prince Venceslaus of Litchtenftein has had one of his fineft feats, which was on the confines of Saxony, deftroyed by fire, of which a Jew is faid to be the author, in revenge of the prince's refufing to renew an advantageous leafe of a farm he was poffeffed of, which is a fresh inAtance of the implacable revenge fo natural to that people; and this natural difpofition of theirs fhews how neceffary those Atrict injunctions were, which we have in the gospel against resentment and revenge.

From Wilna in Poland, June 11, we have an instance equally fhocking of popifh revenge against a Jew, as follows: The court of judicature in this city pronounced fentence a few days ago against an apoftate, named Raphael Sentimany, a native of Croatia, who after being educated in the christian religion, renounced it at the age of 12 years, embraced Judaifm, and took the name of Abraham Ifacowicz. While he was in prison, several zealous priests daily vifited him, shewing him the heinoufnefs of the crime of apoftafy, and exhorting him to repent and return to the church; and for a day or two they had fome hopes of reclaiming him: But they foon found themselves mistaken; he was fo hardened, that neither the torments he was to fuffer, nor the offer of a pardon, could make any impreffion on him. The 9th inftant he was led to execution: Being arrived under the gallows, the executioner plucked out his tongue, and flung it into the fire before his face; and then, with his hands tied -behind him, he was thrown alive into a heap of blazing faggots. When his body was confumed, the afhes were fcattered in the wind. This poor wretch fuffered death with great refolution; not fo much as a groan, or the leaft fign of fear having efcaped from him.

From Copenhagen they write, that the Jews of that city are like to pay for a proceeding prompted by their zeal for religion: A young man of their nation, named Lazarus, applied fome time ago to a Lutheran priest in order to be inAtructed in the chriftian religion; and he was accordingly received, placed in a private house, and supported by means of a penfion obtained from the king. This Lazarus, being invited to fup at a house in the principal quarter of the Jews, he was permitted to go thither, but has never fince appeared; and it is averred, that he was trepanned, and fent away. The bishop having informed the court of it, his majefty has ordered the Jews to produce this young man in a certain time, on pain of forfeiting eight thousand Ger

man crowns.

The town and diftria of St. Remo near the western border of the Genoefe territory rebelled lately against that republick, and confined the marquis Doria their governor, on account of fome new impofitions which they refufed to pay, as being contrary to the articles upon which they firft fubmitted to the republick; but when a weak ftate submits to a stronger, articles are of no great fignification. As foon as the republick had notice of the rebellion, they ordered a fmall fquadron to be fitted out with 600 regular troops and all necessary materials on board, under the command of M. Agustine Pinelli, which failed in a few days, with directions, that if the inhabitants did not fubmit immediately at difcretion, and comply with every thing the republick demanded, to fhew them no mercy, and to lay the town in afhes. On the 13th ult. this fquadron arrived before St. Remo, and on the inhabitants refufing to fubmit, began to bombard the town, which the rebels anfwered with fome fmall cannon, without doing much damage. On the 14th M. Pinelli having landed his troops without oppofition, and beat the rebels from their intrenchments, they defired to capitulate, which was rejected with indignation, fo that they were obliged to furrender at difcretion, and fix of the ringleaders were next day hanged, but none of the poor misled people were made to fuffer. However, the republick have fince imprisoned the magiftrates, and impofed a fine of 200,000 livres upon the town, befides depriving them of their charter.

From Munfter we hear, that there has lately been a fort of conteft between that regency and the regency of Hanover, about the purchase of the little principality of Bentheim upon the frontier of Overyffel, one of the Dutch United Provinces; but that the former were a little too late in their application, the agreement having been before concluded by the regency of Hanover.

Smyrna, May 25. In the night between the 14th and 15th inft. A fire broke out in the quarter of the Armenians, which deftroyed feveral houfes and magazines belonging to the merchants of that nation, and would probably have spread a great deal farther, if a flop had not been put to it by the English and Dutch factors fettled there, by means of their fire engines Among the houses burnt was that of Signor Aviet de Babijan, an Armenian, who, with his wife, then 'in the last month of her pregnancy, his fon and daughter, and five of his domefticks, perished in the flames,

DIVI

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The Monthly Catalogue for July, 1753.

DIVINITY and CONTROVERSY,

Ontemplations on the Ocean, Har

"C veft, Sicknefs, and the laft Judg-, ment. By R. Pearfall, pr. 2s. 6d. Buck

land.

2. Family Devotions, pr. 1s. 6d. Griffiths.

3. Theophilus to Gaius, pr. 6d. Noon. MISCELLANEOUS.

4. An Effay on the Government of Children. By J. Nelfon, pr. 5s. Dodney.

5. An Introduction to Book-keeping. By J. Shortland, pr. 2s. 6d. Fuller.

6. A Letter to the Publick on the Subject of clandeftine Marriages, pr. 15. Marsh.

7. The Hon. Thomas Hervey's Letter to Sir Wm. Bunbury, pr. 6d. Carpenter. 8. The honeft Country Quaker's Speech, pr. 6d. Carpenter.

9. An Enquiry into the legal Conftitution of the College of Physicians, pr. 1s, 6d. Noon.

10. A Letter from a Clergyman concerning the Affair of Elizabeth Canning, pr. is. Seddon.

11. Hypatia, pr. 6d. Cooper.

12. A Propofal for a free and unexpenfive Election of Parliament-men, pr. Is. Fuller.

13. An Account of the late Applica tion to Parliament of the Sugar Refiners, Grocers, &c. pr. 6d. Brotherton.

14. An earnest Perfuafive to the Jews, pr. 6d. Withers.

15. A fuli Anfwer to a fallacious Apology for the Jews, pr. 6d. Fox.

16. An hiftorical Treatife of Jews and Judaism in England, pr. 6d. Baldwin. 17. The Lives and Characters of Actors and Actreffes. Part I. By T. Cibber, pr. 35. Griffiths.

18. The Inspector Infpected, pr. 6d. Bouquet.

19. An alphabetical Collection of Maxims, Principles or Rules, Definitions and memorable Sayings in Law and Equity, pr. 25. Worral.

20. Remarks on the Minute Philofopher, pr. 1s. Robinson.

21. Remarks on Lord Bolingbroke's Letter to Sir W. Wyndham, pr. 1s. Cooper. 22. Obfervations on the Greek and Roman Clafficks. pr. 3s. Browne.

23. Elizabeth Canning's Story difplay'd, pr. 1s. Cooper.

24. An Effay on Sacred Harmony, pr. 6d. Owen.

25. Thoughts on the Reasonableness of a general Naturalization, pr. 6d. H. Cox.

26. Treafon, &c. confidered; with Remarks upon the Cafe of Dr. Cameron, pr. 6d. Corbett.

27. A Letter upon Churches being fo entirely forfaken, pr. 6d. Bizet.

343

28. A Letter concerning the Ufe of studying History. By J. Petvin, M. A. 29. A Difcourfe of the Poor. By R. North, Efq; pr. 18. Cooper. PHYSICK.

30. An Effay on the Hydrophobia. By C. Nugent, M. D. Cooper.

31. Remarks upon the Peftilence and peftilential Difeafes. By W. Hird, M. D. pr. 1s. 6d. Innys.

32. A Defence of the Letter to Dr. Lobb, pr. 1S. Roberts.

33. A Differtation concerning the Ufe of Sea Water in the Diseases of the Glands, &c. By R. Ruffel, M. D. pr. 5s. Ri vington.

POETRY and ENTERTAINMENT. 34. Scotch and English Poems, pr. 25. Baldwin.

35. The Song of Deborah, reduced to Metre. By W. Green, M. A. pr. 1s. Dod. 36. Tranflation; a Poem. By T. Franklin, pr. 15. Cooper.

37. Verfes written by M. Voltaire to the K. of Pruffia, pr. 6d. Cooper.

38. The first Six Books of Virgil's Æneid. Tranflated into blank Verfe. By A. Strahan, Efq; pr. 4s. Payne. 39. Merit; a Poem. By H. Jones, pr. is. Dodfley.

40. Tafte: An Epiftle to a young Critick, pr. 1S. Griffiths.

41. Eloge de la Ville D'Edinbourg, Wilson.

pr. 2s.

lar.

42. Shakespear illustrated, pr. 6s. Mil

43. Letters from Julia, the daughter of Auguftus, to Ovid, pr. 2s. fewed. L. Davis.

44. The Temple of Gnidon, pr. 25. fewed. Swan.

45. Paradifus Amiffus. Poema Joannis Miltoni. Latine redditum, a G. Dobson, LL. B. In 2 Vols, 4to. Manby.

46. The Works of Virgil. Tranflated by Mr. Pitt and Mr. Warton. In 4 Vols. 8vo, pr. 20s. DodЛley.

In

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47. The Works of Aaron Hill, Efq; 4 Vols. 8vo.

48. An Effay on Ridicule, pr. 13. 6d. Millar.

49. The Life and History of a Pilgrim, pr. 35. Whifton.

50. An Ode on Benevolence. By S. Beckingham, Efq; pr. 1s. DodЛley.

51. Poems by Mr. Grey, with Designs by Mr. Bentley, pr. 10s. 6d. DodЛley. (See p. 332.)

52. Sylla, a Dramatick Entertainment, pr. 15. Bouquet.

53. A Tranflation of the roth Satyr of Juvenal. By R. Hingefton, M. A. pr. is. Dod.

[To be continued in our next.]

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