1771 in literature
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See also: 1770 in literature
1770 in literature
The year 1770 in literature involved some significant events and new books.-New books:* John Armstrong - Miscellanies* James Beattie -An Essay on the Nature and Immutability of Truth...

, other events of 1771, 1772 in literature
1772 in literature
See also: 1771 in literature, other events of 1772, 1773 in literature, list of years in literature.-Events:*May 7 - The Stadsschouwburg theatre in Amsterdam is destroyed by fire....

, list of years in literature.

Events

  • April 9 - Pedro Correia Garção
    Pedro Correia Garção
    Pedro António Joaquim Correia da Serra Garção was a Portuguese lyric poet.-Biography:...

     is arrested and committed to prison by Sebastião de Melo, Marquis of Pombal
    Sebastião de Melo, Marquis of Pombal
    Sebastião José de Carvalho e Melo, 1st Count of Oeiras, 1st Marquess of Pombal Sebastião José de Carvalho e Melo, 1st Count of Oeiras, 1st Marquess of Pombal Sebastião José de Carvalho e Melo, 1st Count of Oeiras, 1st Marquess of Pombal ((Marquês de Pombal, ; 13 May 1699–8 May 1782) was an 18th...

    .
  • Henry Mackenzie
    Henry Mackenzie
    Henry Mackenzie was a Scottish novelist and miscellaneous writer. He was also known by the sobriquet "Addison of the North."-Biography:Mackenzie was born in Edinburgh....

    's The Man of Feeling
    The Man of Feeling
    The Man of Feeling is a sentimental novel published in 1771, written by Scottish author Henry Mackenzie. The novel presents a series of moral vignettes which the naïve protagonist Harley either observes, is told about, or participates in...

    inaugurates the fashion for the "sentimental" novel.

New books

  • Claude Joseph Dorat
    Claude Joseph Dorat
    Claude Joseph Dorat was a French writer, also known as Le Chevalier Dorat.He was born in Paris, of a family consisting of generations of lawyers, and he joined the corps of the kings musketeers...

     - Les Sacrifices de l'amour
  • Elizabeth Griffith
    Elizabeth Griffith
    Elizabeth Griffith , sometimes also credited Elizabeth Griffiths, was an 18th-century Irish dramatist, fiction writer, essayist and actress, best known for her edition of Shakespeare's comedies published in 1775.- Biography :Griffith was born in Glamorgan, Glamorganshire, Wales to Dublin theatre...

     - The History of Lady Barton
  • The History of Sir William Harrington (anonymous)
  • John Langhorne - Letters to Eleonara
  • Henry Mackenzie
    Henry Mackenzie
    Henry Mackenzie was a Scottish novelist and miscellaneous writer. He was also known by the sobriquet "Addison of the North."-Biography:Mackenzie was born in Edinburgh....

     - The Man of Feeling
    The Man of Feeling
    The Man of Feeling is a sentimental novel published in 1771, written by Scottish author Henry Mackenzie. The novel presents a series of moral vignettes which the naïve protagonist Harley either observes, is told about, or participates in...

  • Tobias Smollett
    Tobias Smollett
    Tobias George Smollett was a Scottish poet and author. He was best known for his picaresque novels, such as The Adventures of Roderick Random and The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle , which influenced later novelists such as Charles Dickens.-Life:Smollett was born at Dalquhurn, now part of Renton,...

     - The Expedition of Humphry Clinker

New drama

  • Isaac Bickerstaffe
    Isaac Bickerstaffe
    Isaac Bickerstaffe or Bickerstaff was an Irish playwright and Librettist.-Early life:Isaac John Bickerstaff was born in Dublin, on 26 September 1733, where his father John Bickerstaff held a government position overseeing the construction and management of sports fields including bowls and tennis...

     - He Wou'd If He Cou'd
  • Joseph Cradock - Zobeide
  • Richard Cumberland
    Richard Cumberland (dramatist)
    Richard Cumberland was a British dramatist and civil servant. In 1771 his hit play The West Indian was first staged. During the American War of Independence he acted as a secret negotiator with Spain in an effort to secure a peace agreement between the two nations. He also edited a short-lived...

     - The West Indian
    The West Indian
    The West Indian is a play by Richard Cumberland first staged at the Drury Lane Theatre in 1771. A comedy it depicts Belcour, a West Indian plantation-owner travelling, to Britain. Belcour tries to overcome his father's lingering disapproval of him and marry his sweetheart Louisa...

  • Denis Diderot
    Denis Diderot
    Denis Diderot was a French philosopher, art critic, and writer. He was a prominent person during the Enlightenment and is best known for serving as co-founder and chief editor of and contributor to the Encyclopédie....

     - Le Fils Naturel
  • Carlo Goldoni
    Carlo Goldoni
    Carlo Osvaldo Goldoni was an Italian playwright and librettist from the Republic of Venice. His works include some of Italy's most famous and best-loved plays. Audiences have admired the plays of Goldoni for their ingenious mix of wit and honesty...

     - Le Bourru Bienfaisant
  • Hugh Kelly - Clementina
    Clementina (play)
    Clementina is a tragic play by the Irish writer Hugh Kelly. It was first staged at Covent Garden Theatre in February 1771. The plot follows a young Italian woman Clementina's marriage to Rinaldo despite her father's opposition to the wedding as he had wished her to marry Palermo...

  • George Alexander Stevens
    George Alexander Stevens
    George Alexander Stevens was an English actor, playwright, poet, and songwriter. He was born in the parish of St. Andrews, in Holborn, a neighbourhood of London...

     - The Fair Orphan

Poetry

  • James Beattie
    James Beattie (writer)
    Professor James Beattie FRSE was a Scottish poet, moralist and philosopher.He was born the son of a shopkeeper and small farmer at Laurencekirk in the Mearns, and educated at Aberdeen University. In 1760, he was appointed Professor of moral philosophy there as a result of the interest of his...

     - The Minstrel
  • James Cawthorn - Poems
  • John Langhorne - The Fables of Flora
  • Thomas Percy - The Hermit of Warkworth
  • Henry James Pye
    Henry James Pye
    Henry James Pye was an English poet. Pye was Poet Laureate from 1790 until his death. He was the first poet laureate to receive a fixed salary of £27 instead of the historic tierce of Canary wine Henry James Pye (20 February 1745 – 11 August 1813) was an English poet. Pye was Poet Laureate...

     - The Triumph of Fashion

Non-fiction

  • John Brown
    John Brown (essayist)
    John Brown was an English divine and author.His father, a descendant of the Browns of Coalston, near Haddington, became Vicar of Wigton in that year...

     - Description of the Lake of Keswick
  • Charles Burney
    Charles Burney
    Charles Burney FRS was an English music historian and father of authors Frances Burney and Sarah Burney.-Life and career:...

     - The Present State of Music in France and Italy
  • John Dalrymple
    Sir John Dalrymple, 4th Baronet
    Sir John Dalrymple, 4th Baronet was a Scottish lawyer and historian. He is best known for his Memoirs of Great Britain and Ireland from the dissolution of the last parliament of Charles II until the sea battle of La Hogue, first published in 1771...

     - Memoirs of Great Britain and Ireland
  • Oliver Goldsmith
    Oliver Goldsmith
    Oliver Goldsmith was an Irish writer, poet and physician known for his novel The Vicar of Wakefield , his pastoral poem The Deserted Village , and his plays The Good-Natur'd Man and She Stoops to Conquer...

     - The History of England
  • Samuel Johnson
    Samuel Johnson
    Samuel Johnson , often referred to as Dr. Johnson, was an English author who made lasting contributions to English literature as a poet, essayist, moralist, literary critic, biographer, editor and lexicographer...

     - Thoughts on the Late Transactions Respecting Falkland's Islands
    Falkland Islands
    The Falkland Islands are an archipelago in the South Atlantic Ocean, located about from the coast of mainland South America. The archipelago consists of East Falkland, West Falkland and 776 lesser islands. The capital, Stanley, is on East Falkland...

  • Thomas Pennant
    Thomas Pennant
    Thomas Pennant was a Welsh naturalist and antiquary.The Pennants were a Welsh gentry family from the parish of Whitford, Flintshire, who had built up a modest estate at Bychton by the seventeenth century...

     - A Tour in Scotland
  • William Smellie
    William Smellie (encyclopedist)
    William Smellie was a Scottish master printer, naturalist, antiquary, editor and encyclopedist. He was friends with Robert Burns, whose assessment is engraved on Smellie's tombstone: "Here lies a man who did honour to human nature"...

     - Encyclopaedia Britannica (in 100 volumes)
  • John Wesley
    John Wesley
    John Wesley was a Church of England cleric and Christian theologian. Wesley is largely credited, along with his brother Charles Wesley, as founding the Methodist movement which began when he took to open-air preaching in a similar manner to George Whitefield...

     - Works
  • Arthur Young - The Farmer's Tour Through the East of England

Births

  • June 13 - Sydney Smith
    Sydney Smith
    Sydney Smith was an English writer and Anglican cleric. -Life:Born in Woodford, Essex, England, Smith was the son of merchant Robert Smith and Maria Olier , who suffered from epilepsy...

    , author (died 1845)
  • August 15 - Walter Scott
    Walter Scott
    Sir Walter Scott, 1st Baronet was a Scottish historical novelist, playwright, and poet, popular throughout much of the world during his time....

    , novelist (died 1832)
  • September 11 - Mungo Park
    Mungo Park (explorer)
    Mungo Park was a Scottish explorer of the African continent. He was credited as being the first Westerner to encounter the Niger River.-Early life:...

    , explorer (died 1806)
  • December 25 - Dorothy Wordsworth
    Dorothy Wordsworth
    Dorothy Mae Ann Wordsworth was an English author, poet and diarist. She was the sister of the Romantic poet William Wordsworth, and the two were close for all of their lives...

    , poet (died 1855)
  • date unknown - John Lingard
    John Lingard
    Dr. John Lingard was an English Catholic priest, born in St Thomas Street in Central Winchester to recusant parents and the author of The History Of England, From the First Invasion by the Romans to the Accession of Henry VIII, an 8-volume work published in 1819...

    , priest, author (died 1851)

Deaths

  • May 21 - Christopher Smart
    Christopher Smart
    Christopher Smart , also known as "Kit Smart", "Kitty Smart", and "Jack Smart", was an English poet. He was a major contributor to two popular magazines and a friend to influential cultural icons like Samuel Johnson and Henry Fielding. Smart, a high church Anglican, was widely known throughout...

    , poet (born 1722)
  • July 30 - Thomas Gray
    Thomas Gray
    Thomas Gray was a poet, letter-writer, classical scholar and professor at Cambridge University.-Early life and education:...

    , poet (* 1716
    1716 in literature
    The year 1716 in literature involved some significant events.-Events:*Anne Lefèvre, Madame Dacier, meets Antoine Houdar de la Motte in person.*Voltaire is exiled to Tulle.*Poet John Byrom returns to England to teach his own system of shorthand....

    )
  • September 17 - Tobias Smollett
    Tobias Smollett
    Tobias George Smollett was a Scottish poet and author. He was best known for his picaresque novels, such as The Adventures of Roderick Random and The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle , which influenced later novelists such as Charles Dickens.-Life:Smollett was born at Dalquhurn, now part of Renton,...

    , novelist, journalist, translator (born 1721)
  • October 14 - John Gill
    John Gill (theologian)
    John Gill was an English Baptist pastor, biblical scholar, and theologian who held to a firm Calvinistic soteriology. Born in Kettering, Northamptonshire, he attended Kettering Grammar School where he mastered the Latin classics and learned Greek by age 11...

    , theologian (born 1697)
  • December 26 - Claude Adrien Helvétius
    Claude Adrien Helvétius
    Claude Adrien Helvétius was a French philosopher and littérateur.-Life:...

    , philosopher (born 1715)
  • probable - Henry Mill
    Henry Mill
    Henry Mill was an English inventor who patented the first typewriter in 1714. He worked as a waterworks engineer for the New River Company, and submitted two patents during his lifetime. One was for a coach spring, while the other was for a "Machine for Transcribing Letters"...

    , inventor of the typewriter (born c. 1683)
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