1725 in Great Britain
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Events from the year 1725 in Great Britain.
Incumbents
- Monarch â George I
- Prime Minister â Robert Walpole (Whig)[1]
Events
- 2 March â in London, a night watchman finds a severed head by the Thames; it is later recognized to be that of the husband of Catherine Hayes. She and an accomplice are executed the following year.[2]
- 12 May â the Black Watch is raised as a military company as part of the pacification of the Scottish Highlands under General George Wade.[3]
- 18 May â the Order of the Bath is founded by King George I.[4]
- 24 May â Jonathan Wild, fraudulent "Thief Taker General", is hanged in Tyburn, for actually aiding criminals.[5]
- 3 September â Treaty of Hanover signed between Great Britain, France and Prussia.[6]
- 20 November â the horse-post from Edinburgh to London vanishes after passing through Berwick-upon-Tweed; horse and rider are thought to have perished on tidal sands near Lindisfarne.[3]
Undated
- A fire in Wapping, England destroys 70 houses.[7]
- Alexander Pope produces an English language translation of Homer's Odyssey.[4]
Births
- 4 February â Dru Drury, entomologist (died 1804)
- 6 March â Henry Benedict Stuart, cardinal and Jacobite claimant to the British throne (born, and died 1807, in Italy)
- 28 March â Andrew Kippis, non-conformist clergyman and biographer (died 1795)
- 25 April â Augustus Keppel, 1st Viscount Keppel, admiral (died 1786)
- 23 May â Robert Bakewell, agriculturalist (died 1795)
- 1 July â Rhoda Delaval, portrait painter (died 1757)
- 24 July â John Newton, cleric and hymnist (died 1807)
- 29 August â Charles Townshend, politician (died 1767)
- 29 September â Robert Clive, 1st Baron Clive, general and statesman (died 1774)
- 17 October â John Wilkes, politician and journalist (died 1797)
- Paul Sandby, cartographer and painter (died 1809)
Deaths
- 8 April â John Wise, clergyman (born 1652)
- 24 May â Jonathan Wild, criminal (born 1682)