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1793

{| align=right cellpadding=3 id=toc style="margin-left: 15px;"\n|- \n| align="center" colspan=2 | Years:
1790 1791 1792 - 1793 - 1794 1795 1796\n|-\n| align="center" colspan=2 | Decades:
1760s 1770s 1780s - 1790s - 1800s 1810s 1820s\n|- \n| align="center" | Centuries:
17th century - 18th century - 19th century
1793 in art
\n1793 in literature
\n1793 in music
\n1793 in science
\n----\nList of state leaders in 1793
\nList of religious leaders in 1793
\n|} \n

Table of contents
1 Events
2 Ongoing events
3 Births
4 Deaths

Events

\n* January 2 - Russia and Prussia partition Poland\n* January 9 - Jean-Pierre Blanchard becomes the first to fly in a balloon in the United States.\n* January 21 - After being found guilty of treason by the French Convention, "Citizen Capet" ie. Louis XVI of France is guillotined.\n* February 1 - France declares war on England, the Netherlands (see French Revolutionary Wars)\n* February 25 - George Washington holds the first Cabinet meeting as President of the United States.\n* February 27 - The Giles resolutions are introduced to the United States House of Representatives asking the House to condemn Alexander Hamilton's handling of loans.\n* March 1 - John Langdon becomes President Pro Tempore of the United States Senate until March 3\n* March 5 - French troops are defeated by Austrian forces and Liege is recaptured\n* March 7 - France declares war on Spain\n* April 6 - Committee of Public Safety established in France with Georges Danton as its head.\n* June 10 - The Jardin des Plantes museum opened in Paris (a year later it would become the first public zoo).\n* July 9 - Act Against Slavery passed in Upper Canada\n* July 13Charlotte Corday kills Jean-Paul Marat in his bath\n* July 22 - Alexander Mackenzie reaches the Pacific Ocean becoming the first Euro-American to complete a transcontinental crossing north of Mexico\n* July 29 - John Graves Simcoe decides to build a fort and settlement at Toronto, having sailed into the bay there\n* August 23 - Universal conscription in France\n* September 5 - In France, the French National Convention votes to implement terror measures to repress French Revolutionary activities. The ensuing "Reign of Terror" will last until the spring of 1794 and causes death of 35,000-40,000 people.\n* October 12 - The cornerstone of Old East, the oldest state university building in the United States, is laid in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, on the campus of the University of North Carolina. The 12th of October is now celebrated at the University as University Day.\n* November 8 - In Paris, the French Revolutionary government opens the Louvre to the public as a museum\n* October 16 - Execution of Marie Antoinette\n* October 31 - Execution of arrested Girondist leaders in France\n* November 24French Revolutionary Calendar begins\n* December 6 - Execution of Madame du Barry\n* December 17 - French forces under {{Napoleon]] capture {{Toulon]] from royalists and British troops
  • British admiralty begins to supply citrus juice to Navy ships to prevent scurvy\n* {{Claude Chappe]] presents his {{Semaphore]] in France - 15 stations built within a year\n* In Philadephia more than 4000 die from yellow fever\n* Roman Catholicism banned in France.\n* First Coalition against France formed.\n* Holy Roman Empire declares war on France\n* First year of regular production for the United States Mint.

Ongoing events

\n*
French Revolution (1789-1799)\n* French Revolutionary Wars (1792-1802)-First Coalition

Births

\n*
January 3 - Lucretia Mott, women's rights activist and abolitionist\n* March 2 - Sam Houston, President of the Republic of Texas (d. 1863)\n* March 4 - Karl Lachmann, philologist (d. 1851)\n* April 19 - Emperor Ferdinand I of Austria\n* Constantine Kanaris, Greek freedom fighter, Admiral and politician. (Other possible year of birth is 1795).

Deaths

\n*
January 21 - Louis XVI of France executed\n* February 1 - William Wildman Shute Barrington, British statesman\n* February 6 - Carlo Goldoni, playwright\n* May 20 - Charles Bonnet, Swiss naturalist\n* July 13 - Jean Paul Marat (assassinated by Charlotte Corday)\n* October 8 - John Hancock, revolutionary, businessman\n* October 16 - Marie Antoinette, Queen of France (executed)\n* November 2 - Olympe de Gouges, French woman playwright (executed)\n* November 8 - Madame Roland (Manon Jeanne Phlipon), guillotined \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n

"Democracy does not guarantee equality of conditions - it only guarantees equality of opportunity." - Irving Kristol