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1815

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Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries: 18th century19th century20th century
Decades: 1780s  1790s  1800s  – 1810s –   1820s   1830s   1840s
Years: 1812 1813 181418151816 1817 1818
1815 in topic:
Humanities
Archaeology – Architecture – Art – Literature – Music
By country
Australia – Canada – France – Germany – Mexico – Philippines – South Africa – US – UK
Other topics
Rail Transport – Science – Sports
Lists of leaders
Colonial Governors – State leaders
Birth and death categories
Births – Deaths
Establishments and disestablishments categories
Establishments – Disestablishments
Works category
Works
1815 in other calendars
Gregorian calendar 1815
MDCCCXV
Ab urbe condita 2568
Armenian calendar 1264
ԹՎ ՌՄԿԴ
Assyrian calendar 6565
Bahá'í calendar -29–-28
Bengali calendar 1222
Berber calendar 2765
British Regnal year 55 Geo. 3 – 56 Geo. 3
Buddhist calendar 2359
Burmese calendar 1177
Byzantine calendar 7323–7324
Chinese calendar 甲戌年十一月廿一日
(4451/4511-11-21)
— to —
乙亥年十二月初二日
(4452/4512-12-2)
Coptic calendar 1531–1532
Ethiopian calendar 1807–1808
Hebrew calendar 5575–5576
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat 1871–1872
 - Shaka Samvat 1737–1738
 - Kali Yuga 4916–4917
Holocene calendar 11815
Igbo calendar
 - Ǹrí Ìgbò 815–816
Iranian calendar 1193–1194
Islamic calendar 1230–1231
Japanese calendar Bunka 12
(文化12年)
Juche calendar N/A (before 1912)
Julian calendar Gregorian minus 12 days
Korean calendar 4148
Minguo calendar 97 before ROC
民前97年
Thai solar calendar 2358


Year 1815 (MDCCCXV) was a common year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar) of the Gregorian calendar and a common year starting on Friday of the 12-day slower Julian calendar.

Events

January–March

  • January 2 – Lord Byron marries Anna Isabella Milbanke in Seaham, County Durham.
  • January 3 – Austria, Britain, and Bourbon-restored France form a secret defensive alliance treaty against Prussia and Russia.
  • January 8 – War of 1812 – Battle of New Orleans: American forces under General Andrew Jackson defeat an invading British force.
  • February – The Hartford Convention arrives in Washington DC.
  • February 3 – The first commercial cheese factory is founded in Switzerland.
  • February 4 – The first Dutch student association, the Groninger Studenten Corps, Vindicat atque Polit is founded in the Netherlands. The first rector of the senate was B.J. Winter.
  • February 6 – New Jersey grants the first American railroad charter to a John Stevens.
  • February 17 – The Spanish reconquest of Latin America begins.
  • February 18 – The War of 1812 between the United States, Canada and the British Empire ends.
  • February 26 – Napoleon Bonaparte escapes from Elba.
  • March 1 – Napoleon returns to France from his banishment on Elba.
  • March 15 – Joachim Murat, King of Naples declares war on Austria in an attempt to save his throne, starting the Neapolitan War.
  • March 16 – William I becomes King of the Netherlands.
  • March 2– March 18 – The last King of Ceylon, Sri Vikrama Rajasinha is deposed under the terms of the Kandyan Convention, which results in Ceylon becoming a British colony.
  • March 3– The first student association in the Netherlands, Vindicat atque Polit, has its first fraternity, Mutua Fides, opened.
  • March 20 – Napoleon enters Paris after escaping from Elba with a regular army of 140,000 and a volunteer force of around 200,000 beginning his "Hundred Days" rule.

April–June

April 5– April 12: Mount Tambora explodes, changing climate.
Congress of Vienna, Jean Godefroy – Jean-Baptiste Isabey
  • April 5– April 12 – Mount Tambora in the Dutch East Indies blows its top explosively during an eruption, killing upwards of 92,000 and propelling thousands of tons of aerosols ( Sulfide gas compounds) into the upper atmosphere ( stratosphere). The high level gases reflect sunlight and cause the widespread cooling (known as a volcanic winter) and heavy rains of 1816, causes snows in June and July in the northern hemisphere, widespread crop failures, and subsequently famine, which is why 1816 is later known as the Year Without a Summer.
  • April 23 – The Second Serbian Uprising against Ottoman rule takes place in Takovo, Serbia. By the end of the year Serbia is acknowledged as a semi-independent state; the ideals of the First Serbian Uprising have thus been temporarily achieved.
  • May 3 – Battle of Tolentino: Austria defeats the Kingdom of Naples, which quickly ends the Neapolitan War. Joachim Murat, the defeated King of Naples, is forced to flee to Corsica and is later executed.
  • May 30 – The Arniston, an East Indiaman repatriating wounded troops to England from Ceylon, is wrecked near Waenhuiskrans, South Africa with the loss of 372 of the 378 people on board.
  • June 9 – Final Act of the Congress of Vienna is signed: A new European political situation is set. The German Confederation is created and the neutrality of Switzerland is guaranteed.
  • June 16 – Battle of Ligny: Napoleon defeats a Prussian army under Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher.
  • June 16 – Battle of Quatre Bras: Marshal Ney wins a strategic victory over an Anglo-Dutch force.
  • June 18 – Battle of Waterloo: The Duke of Wellington decisively defeats Napoleon.
  • June 22 – Napoleon abdicates again; Napoleon II (1811–1832), age 4, rules for two weeks (22 June to 7 July).
June 18: Napoleon at Waterloo.

July–September

  • July 8 – Louis XVIII returns to Paris, and is 'restored' as King of France (he had declared himself king on 8 June 1795, at the death of his nephew, 10-year-old Louis XVII, and had lived in Westphalia, Verona, Russia, and England).
  • July 15 – Napoleon boards HMS Bellerophon off Rochefort and surrenders to Captain Frederick Lewis Maitland of the Royal Navy.
  • September – Austria, Prussia and Russia sign a Holy Alliance to uphold the European status quo.
  • September 23 – The Great September Gale of 1815 is the first hurricane to strike New England in 180 years.

October–December

  • October – Robert Adams, American sailor and the first Westerner to visit Timbuktu, is found wandering the streets of London, starving and half-naked, leading to the invitation for him to tell his story as a Barbary captive, which is later published as The Narrative of Robert Adams.
  • October 3 – The Chassigny Martian meteorite falls in Chassigny, Haute-Marne, France.
  • October 15 – Napoleon begins his exile on Saint Helena in the Atlantic Ocean.
  • November 3 – Sir Humphry Davy announces his discovery of the Davy lamp as a coal mining safety lamp.
  • December 25 – The Handel and Haydn Society, the oldest continuously performing arts organization in the United States, gives its first performance, in Boston.

Date unknown

  • British missionaries arrive in New Zealand.
  • In the United Kingdom, use of the pillory is limited to punishment for perjury.
  • The second wave of Amish immigration to North America begins.
  • First-class cricket begins.
  • The Spanish Empire is expelled from Veracruz.

Births

January–June

  • January 11 – John A. Macdonald, First Prime Minister of Canada, Father of Confederation (d. 1891)
  • January 16 – Henry Halleck, American general (d. 1872)
  • February 15 – Constantin von Tischendorf, German Biblical scholar (d. 1874)
  • April 1 – Otto von Bismarck, German statesman (d. 1898)
  • April 1 – Edward Clark, Governor of Texas (d. 1880)
  • April 6 – Robert Volkmann, German composer (d. 1883)
  • April 24 – Anthony Trollope, British author (d. 1882)
  • May 27 – Sir Henry Parkes, Father of Australian Federation (d. 1896)

July–December

  • August 5 – Edward John Eyre, explorer (d. 1901)
  • August 16 – Saint John Bosco, priest and educator (d. 1888)
  • October 16 – Francis Lubbock, Governor of Texas (d. 1905)
  • October 23 – João Maurício Wanderley, Brazilian magistrate and politician (d. 1889)
  • October 31 – Karl Weierstrass, German mathematician (d. 1897)
  • November 2 – George Boole, English mathematician and philosopher (d. 1864)
  • December 10 – Augusta Ada King (née Byron), Countess of Lovelace, early English computer pioneer and the daughter of Lord Byron (d. 1852)
  • November 12 – Elizabeth Cady Stanton, American women's rights activist (d. 1902)
  • December 21 – Thomas Couture, French painter (d. 1879)
  • December 31 – George Meade, American general (d. 1872)

Deaths

January–June

  • January 8 – Edward Pakenham, British general (killed in battle) (b. 1778)
  • January 16 – Emma, Lady Hamilton, English mistress of Horatio Nelson (b. 1765)
  • February 24 – Robert Fulton, American inventor (b. 1765)
  • February 26 – Prince Josias of Coburg, Austrian general (b. 1737)
  • March 4 – Frances Abington, English actress (b. 1737)
  • March 5 – Franz Mesmer, German developer of animal magnetism (b. 1734)
  • April 21 – Joseph Winston, American patriot and Congressman from North Carolina (b. 1746)
  • June 1 – Louis Alexandre Berthier, French marshal (b. 1753)
  • June 16 – Friedrich Wilhelm, Duke of Brunswick, German noble and general (killed in battle) (b. 1771)
  • June 18 (killed at the Battle of Waterloo):
    • Thomas Picton, British general (b. 1758)
    • Claude-Etienne Michel, French general (b. 1772)
    • Guillaume Philibert Duhesme, French general (b. 1766)

July–December

  • August 2 – Guillaume Marie Anne Brune, French marshal (murdered) (b. 1763)
  • August 6 – James A. Bayard (elder), U.S. Senator from Delaware (b. 1767)
  • September 9 – John Singleton Copley, American painter (b. 1738)
  • September 13 – Mihály Gáber, Slovene writer in Hungary (b. 1753)
  • September 20 – Nicolas Desmarest, French geologist (b. 1725)
  • October 13 – Joachim Murat, French marshal and King of Naples (executed) (b. 1767)
  • October 19 – Paolo Mascagni, Anatomist (b. 1755)
  • October 22 – Claude Lecourbe, French general (b. 1759)
  • December 3 – John Carroll (priest), first American Roman Catholic Archbishop (b. 1735)
  • December 7 – Michel Ney, French marshal (executed) (b. 1769)
  • December 29 – Saartjie Baartman, sideshow performer
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