1783 in Scotland
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See also: | List of years in Scotland Timeline of Scottish history 1783 in: Great Britain • Wales • Ireland • Elsewhere |
Events from the year 1783 in Scotland.
Incumbents
- Monarch – George III
Law officers
- Lord Advocate – Henry Dundas; then Henry Erskine
- Solicitor General for Scotland – Alexander Murray; then Ilay Campbell jointly with Alexander Wight
Judiciary
- Lord President of the Court of Session – Lord Arniston, the younger
- Lord Justice General – The Viscount Stormont
- Lord Justice Clerk – Lord Barskimming
Events
- 1 January – Glasgow Chamber of Commerce is founded by Patrick Colquhoun, the first in Britain.[1]
- 27 January – The Herald newspaper begins publication as the weekly Glasgow Advertiser (with news of the Peace of Paris); it will become the longest continually-published daily in Britain.[1]
- 29 March – the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland and the Royal Society of Edinburgh are chartered.[1]
- Halbeath Railway opens from the colliery at Halbeath (in the Fife Coalfield) to the harbour at Inverkeithing.[2]
- Elspeth Buchan proclaims herself in Irvine as possessed of heavenly powers, leading to the formation of a Society of Buchanites.
Births
- 5 April – Andrew Geddes, portrait painter and etcher (died 1844 in London)
- 8 April – John Claudius Loudon, horticulturalist (died 1843 in London)
- 24 April – James Lindsay, 24th Earl of Crawford (died 1869 in England)
- 11 June – James Baillie Fraser, travel writer (died 1856)
- 15 June – Donald Mackenzie, explorer in North America (died 1851 in the United States)
- 27 June – Adam Anderson, physicist (died 1846)
- 6 September – George Hogarth, newspaper editor, music critic, musicologist and father-in-law of Charles Dickens (died 1870 in London)
- 22 October – James Henry Keith Stewart, Tory Member of Parliament (died 1836)
- John Finlaison, actuary (died 1860 in London)
- William Glen, poet (died 1826)
- Peter Grant (Pàdraig Grannd nan Oran), Baptist minister and songwriter in Gaelic (died 1867)
- Norman Macleod (Caraid nan Gaidheal), Church of Scotland minister and writer in Gaelic (died 1862)
- Richard Poole, physician, psychiatrist, and phrenologist (died 1871)
Deaths
- 30 March – William Hunter, anatomist (born 1718; died in London)
- 2 June – Charles Spalding, confectioner and diver (born 1738; died on dive in Dublin Bay)
- 27 August – John Glassford, tobacco merchant (born 1715)
The arts
- The Glasgow engraving and publishing firm J. Lumsden and Son, which becomes known for children's books, is founded.
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gollark: I figure people are mostly prompted by *something* instead of just bringing it up entirely at random, and a ControversialEsolangs server would lack many of those prompts if it's purely for that.
gollark: And controversial stuff has never arisen from discussing something else?
gollark: The idea of a "ControversialEsolangs" for that probably wouldn't work well for various reasons, including the difficulty of moving active conversations, cognitive overhead of switching and lots of overhead deciding when to switch, a smaller set of people there even if they could otherwise participate interestingly, and somewhat more difficult-to-express issues like, er, selection effects.
gollark: I think it's a nice-to-have property but not worth sacrificing much else for.
References
- "Chronology of Scottish History". A Timeline of Scottish History. Rampant Scotland. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
- Poustie, Mark. "Halbeath Railway". RailScot. Retrieved 16 December 2009.
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