June 3: China's Imperial Commissioner Lin Zexu begins month-long program of destroying opium seized from British traders, triggering the First Opium War
1839 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar 1839
MDCCCXXXIX
Ab urbe condita 2592
Armenian calendar 1288
ԹՎ ՌՄՁԸ
Assyrian calendar 6589
Balinese saka calendar 1760–1761
Bengali calendar 1245–1246
Berber calendar 2789
British Regnal year Vict. 1 – 3 Vict. 1
Buddhist calendar 2383
Burmese calendar 1201
Byzantine calendar 7347–7348
Chinese calendar 戊戌年 (Earth Dog)
4536 or 4329
    — to —
己亥年 (Earth Pig)
4537 or 4330
Coptic calendar 1555–1556
Discordian calendar 3005
Ethiopian calendar 1831–1832
Hebrew calendar 5599–5600
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat 1895–1896
 - Shaka Samvat 1760–1761
 - Kali Yuga 4939–4940
Holocene calendar 11839
Igbo calendar 839–840
Iranian calendar 1217–1218
Islamic calendar 1254–1255
Japanese calendar Tenpō 10
(天保10年)
Javanese calendar 1766–1767
Julian calendar Gregorian minus 12 days
Korean calendar 4172
Minguo calendar 73 before ROC
民前73年
Nanakshahi calendar 371
Thai solar calendar 2381–2382
Tibetan calendar ས་ཕོ་ཁྱི་ལོ་
(male Earth-Dog)
1965 or 1584 or 812
    — to —
ས་མོ་ཕག་ལོ་
(female Earth-Boar)
1966 or 1585 or 813

1839 (MDCCCXXXIX) was a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar and a common year starting on Sunday of the Julian calendar, the 1839th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 839th year of the 2nd millennium, the 39th year of the 19th century, and the 10th and last year of the 1830s decade. As of the start of 1839, the Gregorian calendar was 12 days ahead of the Julian calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923.

Events

January–March

  • January 2 – The first photograph of the Moon is taken, by French photographer Louis Daguerre.
  • January 6Night of the Big Wind: Ireland is struck by the most damaging cyclone in 300 years.
  • January 9 – The French Academy of Sciences announces the daguerreotype photography process.
  • January 19 – The British Aden Expedition captures Aden.
  • January 20Battle of Yungay: Chile defeats the Peru–Bolivian Confederation, leading to the restoration of an independent Peru.
  • January – The first parallax measurement of the distance to Alpha Centauri is published by Thomas Henderson.
  • February 11 – The University of Missouri is established, becoming the first public university west of the Mississippi River.
  • February 24William Otis receives a U.S. patent for the steam shovel.
  • March 5Longwood University is founded in Farmville, Virginia.
  • March 7Baltimore City College, the third public high school in the United States, is established in Baltimore, Maryland.
  • March 9
    • The Anti-Corn Law League is founded in Manchester, England.
    • The Pastry War between France and Mexico ends.
    • Prussia imposes the Child Labor Law of 1839, becoming the first nation in the world to place restrictions on child labor.
  • March 23
    • An earthquake in the Kingdom of Burma kills more than 400 people and destroys three cities, as well as heavily damaging the capital at Ava.
    • The Boston Morning Post first records the use of "O.K." (oll korrect).
  • March 26 – The first Henley Royal Regatta is held on the River Thames in England.

April–June

  • April 9 – The world's first commercial electric telegraph line comes into operation, alongside the Great Western Railway line in England, from London Paddington station to West Drayton.
  • April 19 – The Treaty of London establishes Belgium as a kingdom, with its independence and neutrality guaranteed by the great powers of Europe. Half of the Limburg province of Belgium is added to the Netherlands, giving rise to a Belgian Limburg and Dutch Limburg (the latter being joined (from September 5) to the German Confederation).
  • April 24Boston University is established as the Newbury Biblical Institute in Vermont.
  • May 711 – The Bedchamber Crisis in the United Kingdom: Following the announcement by Prime Minister Lord Melbourne that he intends to resign,[1] Robert Peel asks (for political reasons) that Queen Victoria dismiss some of her personal attendants, Ladies of the Bedchamber, as a condition for his forming a government. Victoria refuses to accept the condition and Melbourne is persuaded to stay on as Prime Minister.[2]
  • 13 May – First Rebecca Riots targeted against turnpikes in Wales, at Efailwen in Carmarthenshire.[3]
  • May 12 – Socialist activist Louis Auguste Blanqui and the Société des Saisons begin an uprising against the government of France. The insurrection is suppressed, but not before 50 people are killed and 190 wounded. Blanqui is imprisoned until 1848.[4]
  • May 22 – Former British statesman Lord Durham, as President of the New Zealand Company, formally asks the British government for permission to colonize New Zealand, and to establish a colonial government under the sovereignty of the United Kingdom.[5]
  • May 23 – Turkish troops cross the Euphrates River and invade Syria, but are defeated in battle in June.[6]
  • June 3Destruction of opium at Humen begins, casus belli for Britain to open the 3-year First Opium War against Qing dynasty China. A rapid rise in the sale of opium in China to over 40,000 chests (~56,000 kilograms (123,000 lb) per annum)[7][8] has caused the Chinese government to dispatch scholar-official Lin Zexu to Guangzhou to deal with the growing problem of opium addiction.
  • June 22Louis Daguerre receives a patent for his camera (commercially available by September at the price of 400 francs).
  • June 27 – The emperor of the Sikh Empire, Maharaja Ranjit Singh, dies at 58.[9]

July–September

Lithograph depicting the July 23 storming of the fortress during the Battle of Ghazni.
  • July 1
    • Slaves aboard the Amistad rebel, and capture the ship.
    • Abdülmecid I (1839–1861) succeeds Mahmud II (1808–1839) as Ottoman Emperor.
  • July 23First Anglo-Afghan War: Battle of Ghazni – British forces capture the fortress city of Ghazni in Afghanistan.
  • August 8 – The Fraternity of Beta Theta Pi is founded by John Reily Knox at Miami University.
  • August 19 – The French government gives the daguerreotype "for the whole world".
  • August 31 – The First Carlist War (Spain) ends with the Convenio de Vergara, also known as the Abrazo de Vergara ("the embrace in Vergara"; Bergara in Basque), between liberal general Baldomero Espartero, Count of Luchana and Carlist General Rafael Maroto.
  • September 4Battle of Kowloon: British vessels open fire on Chinese war junks enforcing a food sales embargo on the British community in China in the first armed conflict of the First Opium War.

October–December

  • October 3 – A railway between Naples and Portici (7.4 km (4.6 mi)) in the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies is inaugurated by King Ferdinand II of Bourbon as the first line in the Italian Peninsula.
  • October 15Emir Abdelkader declares a jihad against the French.
  • November 4Newport Rising: Between 5,000 and 10,000 Chartist sympathisers march on Newport, Monmouthshire, to liberate Chartist prisoners; around 22 are killed when troops fire on the crowd.[10] This is the last large-scale armed civil rebellion against authority in mainland Britain and sees the most deaths.
  • November 11 – The Virginia Military Institute is founded in Lexington, Virginia.
  • November 17Giuseppe Verdi's first opera, Oberto, conte di San Bonifacio, opens in Milan.
  • November 25 – A disastrous cyclone hits India with terrible winds and a giant 40-foot storm surge, wiping out the port city of Coringa; 300,000 people die.
  • November 27 – The American Statistical Association is founded in Boston, Massachusetts.
  • December 6 – The Whig Party (United States), at its first ever national convention, in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, nominates former U.S. Army General William Henry Harrison to be its candidate for President of the United States in the 1840 election. Although Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky has received 103 of the 128 necessary votes on the first ballot, he obtains only 90 on the final vote, while Harrison gets 148. Former U.S. Senator John Tyler is unanimously nominated for vice president.[11]
  • December 26Heinola in the Grand Duchy of Finland is granted town rights by Czar Nicholas I.[12][13]

Date unknown

  • The United Kingdom, backed by the Russian Empire and the Austrian Empire, compels July Monarchy France to abandon Muhammad Ali of Egypt, and forces him to return Syria and Arabia to the Ottoman Empire.
  • Khalid bin Saud Al Suad usurps the throne from Faisal bin Turki bin Abdullah Al Saud, who assumed power of Nejd in 1834, and is sent to Cairo as prisoner. Omar bin Ofaysan, the Amir Faisal's governor in the Eastern Province seeks asylum in Bahrain, but Khalid the pretender demands his surrender and the surrender of the fort at Dammam; then under the control of the Al Khalifa of Bahrain.
  • Khorshid Pasha vows to attack Bahrain to exert Egyptian rule over Bahrain, but his attack is prevented after Shaikh Abdulla bin Ahmed of Bahrain pays tribute.
  • A quarrel breaks out between the Chief of Abu Dhabi of the Beniyas tribe, Shaikh Khalifa bin Shakboot, and the fugitives who settled there after their departure from Bahrain, the Al Binali tribe. Under the command of their leader, Isa bin Tureef Al Binali, they relocate to Kenn Island where they exercise depredations over the Bahraini and other Gulf vessels. Their motive is to restore their belongings which they abandoned upon leaving Bahrain.
  • Tanzimat starts in the Ottoman Empire.
  • Emperor Minh Mạng renames Việt Nam to Đại Nam.
  • In the United States, the first state law permitting women to own property is passed in Jackson, Mississippi.
  • Michael Faraday publishes Experimental Researches in Electricity,[14] clarifying the true nature of electricity.
  • Charles Goodyear vulcanizes rubber.
  • Valley Falls Company, a predecessor of Berkshire Hathaway, a conglomerate and holdings company in the United States, is founded in Rhode Island.[citation needed]
  • Chattanooga, Tennessee, is incorporated as a town.
  • Galveston, Texas, is incorporated.
  • Episcopal High School (Alexandria, Virginia) is founded in Alexandria, Virginia, as the first high school in Virginia.
  • Archaeological excavation at the Mayan site of Copán begins.[citation needed]

Births

January–June

Paul Cézanne [dubiousdiscuss]
Marianne Hainisch
Josiah Willard Gibbs
Frederic W. Tilton
  • January 2Gustave Trouvé, French electrical engineer, inventor (d. 1902)
  • January 8William A. Clark, American politician, entrepreneur (d. 1925)
  • January 9John Knowles Paine, American composer (d. 1906)
  • January 19Paul Cézanne, French painter (d. 1906)[15]
  • January 26Rachel Lloyd, American chemist (d. 1900)
  • February 6Caroline Testman, Danish women's rights activist (d. 1919)
  • February 11
    • Josiah Willard Gibbs, American physicist, chemist (d. 1903)
    • Almon Brown Strowger, American telecommunications engineer (d. 1902)
  • February 15Rayko Zhinzifov, Bulgarian poet and translator (d. 1877)[16]
  • February 18Pascual Cervera y Topete, Spanish admiral (d. 1909)
  • February 22Francis Pharcellus Church, American editor, publisher (d. 1906)
  • March 3Jamsetji Tata, Indian Parsi businessman (d. 1904)
  • March 8Josephine Cochrane, American inventor of the first commercially successful dishwasher (d. 1913)
  • March 15Daniel Ridgway Knight, American artist (d. 1924)
  • March 16
    • Sully Prudhomme, French poet, critic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1907)[17]
    • John Butler Yeats, Irish artist (d. 1922)[18]
  • March 21Modest Mussorgsky, Russian composer (d. 1881)
  • March 23Julius von Hann, Austrian meteorologist (The father of modern meteorology) (d. 1921)
  • March 25
    • Carlo Pellegrini, Italian caricaturist (d. 1889)
    • Marianne Hainisch, founder, leader of the Austrian women's movement (d. 1936)
  • March 27John Ballance, 14th Premier of New Zealand (d. 1893)
  • April 3Karl, Freiherr von Prel, German philosopher (d. 1899)
  • April 8Belle L. Pettigrew, American teacher, missionary (d. 1912)
  • April 12Nikolay Przhevalsky, Russian explorer (d. 1888)
  • April 16Antonio Starabba, Marchese di Rudinì, 12th Prime Minister of Italy (d. 1908)
  • April 23Tom Allen, English boxer (d. 1903)
  • April 30
    • Floriano Peixoto, 2nd President of Brazil (d. 1895)
    • Yoshitoshi, Japanese artist (d. 1892)
  • May 21Mary of the Passion, French Roman Catholic religious sister, missionary, and blessed (d. 1904)
  • June 1Abdyl Frashëri, Albanian politician (d.1892)
  • June 10Ludvig Holstein-Ledreborg, Prime Minister of Denmark (d. 1912)
  • June 17Arthur Tooth, Anglican clergyman prosecuted for Ritualist practices in the 1870s (d. 1931)
  • June 21Machado de Assis, Brazilian author (d. 1908)

July–December

John D. Rockefeller
Alfred Sisley
  • JulyBaba Jaimal Singh, Founder of Radha Soami Satsang Beas (d. 1903)
  • July 6Édouard Pottier, French admiral (d. 1903)
  • July 8John D. Rockefeller, American industrialist, philanthropist (d. 1937)
  • July 17Ephraim Shay, American inventor of the Shay locomotive (d. 1916)
  • July 18James Surtees Phillpotts, English author (d. 1930)
  • July 22Jacob Hägg, Swedish admiral and painter (d. 1931)
  • July 28Isabelle Gatti de Gamond, Italo-Belgian educationalist, feminist, and politician (d. 1905)
  • July 31Ignacio Andrade, 37th President of Venezuela (d. 1925)
  • August 4Walter Pater, English essayist, critic (d. 1894)
  • August 8Nelson A. Miles, American general (d. 1925)
  • August 15Antonín Petrof, Czech piano maker (d. 1915)
  • September 2Henry George, American writer, politician, and political economist (d. 1897)
  • September 7Patricio Montojo y Pasarón, Spanish admiral (d. 1917)
  • September 8Gregorio Luperón, Dominican soldier, activist and general (d. 1897)
  • September 9Maria Swanenburg, Dutch serial killer (d. 1915)
  • September 10Charles Sanders Peirce, American philosopher, logician, mathematician, and scientist (d. 1914)
  • September 12Mary H. Graves, American minister, literary editor, writer (d. 1908)
  • October 2Oscar de Négrier, French general (d. 1913)
  • October 9
    • Georges Leclanché, French electrical engineer, inventor (d. 1882)
    • Winfield Scott Schley, American admiral (d. 1911)
  • October 11Jeanne Merkus, Dutch deaconess, guerilla soldier, and political activist (d. 1897)
  • October 30Alfred Sisley, French Impressionist landscape painter (d. 1899)
  • November 1Pál Luthár, Slovene writer in Hungary (d. 1919)
  • November 1Ahmed Muhtar Pasha, Ottoman field marshal (d. 1919)
  • November 12Frank Furness, American architect, soldier (d. 1912)
  • November 18Emil Škoda, Czech engineer, industrialist (d. 1900)
  • November 20Christian Wilberg, German painter (d. 1882)
  • November 30Catherine Amanda Coburn, American journalist, newspaper editor (d. 1913)
  • December 5George Armstrong Custer, American cavalry officer (d. 1876)
  • December 7Sir Redvers Buller, British general, Victoria Cross recipient (d. 1908)
  • December 21Sherman Conant, American soldier and politician (d. 1890)

Date unknown

  • Avis Crocombe, English cook at Audley End House

Deaths

January–June

William Farquhar
  • January 6Princess Marie of Orléans, French princess, artist, and duchess (b. 1813)
  • January 7Jacquette Löwenhielm, Swedish noble, lady-in-waiting, and mistress of Oscar I of Sweden (b. 1797)
  • January 12
    • Edward Coleman, gangster and founder of the Forty Thieves
    • Joseph Anton Koch, Austrian painter (b. 1768)
  • January 14John Wesley Jarvis, American painter (b. 1780/1781)
  • January 24Michele Cachia, Maltese architect, military engineer (b. 1760)
  • January 28William Beechey, British portraitist (b. 1753)
  • February 7Karl August Nicander, Swedish poet (b. 1799)
  • February 8William Williams, English politician (b. 1774)
  • February 10Pedro Romero, Spanish torero (b. 1754)
  • February 12Moulvi Syed Qudratullah, Bengali judge (b. 1750)[19]
  • February 26Sybil Ludington, alleged heroine during the American Revolutionary War (b. 1761)
  • March 2Charlotte Napoléone Bonaparte, niece of Emperor Napoleon (b. 1802)
  • March 19Rachel Plummer, American writer, daughter of James W. Parker, and the cousin of Quanah Parker (b. 1819)
  • March 20Caspar Voght, German businessman (b. 1752)
  • March 28Giuseppe Siboni, Italian operatic tenor, opera director, choir conductor, and voice teacher (b. 1780)
  • April 1Benjamin Pierce, American politician (b. 1757)
  • April 2Hezekiah Niles, American editor, publisher (b. 1777)
  • April 4 – Queen Kaahumanu II of Hawaii
  • April 5John Tipton, American politician (b. 1786)
  • April 8Du Pré Alexander, Irish peer, landlord and colonial administrator (b. 1777)
  • April 11John Galt, Scottish novelist (b. 1779)
  • April 15Christoph August Gabler, German classical composer (b. 1767)
  • April 22
    • Denis Davydov, Russian general, poet (b. 1784)
    • Samuel Smith (Maryland politician), American politician (b. 1752)
    • Pär Aron Borg, Swedish educator and a pioneer in the education for the blind and deaf (b. 1776)
  • May 3
    • Pehr Henrik Ling, pioneer of physical education in Sweden (b. 1776)
    • José Antonio Mexía, 19th-century Mexican general and politician (b. 1800)
  • May 6John Batman, Australian grazier, entrepreneur, and explorer (b. 1801)
  • May 11
    • Thomas Cooper, American political philosopher (b. 1759)
    • William Farquhar, First British Resident and Commandant of colonial Singapore (b. 1774)
    • Thomas Cooper, Anglo-American economist, college president, and political philosopher (b. 1759)
  • May 16Edward Clive, British politician who sat in the House of Commons (b. 1754)
  • May 17Archibald Alison, Scottish author (b. 1757)
  • May 24Anna Pak Agi, Korean Martyr (b. 1782)
  • May 27Barbara Yi, Korean Martyr (b. 1825)
  • June 10Jacob Munch, Norwegian military officer and painter (b. 1776)
  • June 19Joseph Paelinck, painter from the Southern Netherlands (b. 1781)
  • June 23Lady Hester Stanhope, English archaeologist (b. 1776)
  • June 27
    • Ranjit Singh, Maharaja of The Punjab (Sikh Empire) (b. 1780)[20]
    • Allan Cunningham, English botanist and explorer (b. 1791)
  • June 30Johan Olof Wallin, Swedish minister, orator, poet and later Archbishop (b. 1779)

July–December

Friedrich Mohs
  • July 1Mahmud II, Ottoman sultan (b. 1785)
  • July 5Lady Flora Hastings, British aristocrat and lady-in-waiting (b. 1806)
  • July 8Fernando Sor, Spanish guitarist, composer (b. 1778)
  • July 15Winthrop Mackworth Praed, English politician, poet (b. 1802)
  • July 16Chief Bowles, Cherokee leader (b. ~1756)
  • July 19Maurice de Guérin, French poet (b. 1810)
  • July 20John Baptist Yi Kwang-nyol, Korean Martyr (b. c.1800)
  • July 22John Birdsall, American lawyer and politician (b. 1802)
  • July 24Richard Spencer, captain of the Royal Navy (b. 1779)
  • July 26Mervyn Archdall, Irish officer in the British Army and Member of Parliament for County Fermanagh (b. 1763)
  • August 3Dorothea von Schlegel, German novelist and translator (b. 1764)
  • August 7Erasme Louis Surlet de Chokier, politician and first regent of Belgium (b. 1769)
  • August 10Sir John St Aubyn, 5th Baronet, English fossil collector (b. 1758)
  • August 18Bendix Frantz Ludwig Schow, member of the nobility of Schleswig-Holstein (b. 1778)
  • August 22Benjamin Lundy, American abolitionist (b. 1789)
  • August 28William Smith, English geologist, cartographer (b. 1769)
  • September 4Hermann Olshausen, German theologian (b. 1796)
  • September 10James Maitland, 8th Earl of Lauderdale, Scottish politician (b. 1759)
  • September 18Jeanne-Charlotte Allamand, Swiss-born Canadian pioneer, educator and artist (b. 1760)
  • September 21Laurent-Joseph-Marius Imbert, French Roman Catholic saint (b. 1796)
  • September 22Paul Chong Hasang, Korean Roman Catholic saint and martyr (b. 1794/1795)
  • September 28William Dunlap, producer, playwright, actor, and historian (b. 1766)
  • September 29Friedrich Mohs, German geologist, mineralogist (b. 1773)
  • October 2Mary Ann Rundall, British educational writer
  • October 6William Light, British Army colonel, first Surveyor-General of South Australia (b. 1786)
  • October 8Ee-mat-la, Seminole chief during the Second Seminole War (b. 1739)
  • October 9James Oatley, British-born colonial Australian watch and clock maker (b. 1769)
  • October 11Leonor de Almeida Portugal, 4th Marquise of Alorna, Portuguese painter, poet (b. 1750)
  • October 24William Charles Ellis, pioneer in treatment of mental illness (b. 1780)
  • October 27Frederik Hauch, Danish government official (b. 1754)
  • October 28Makea Pori Ariki, sovereign of the Cook Islands and one of three High Chiefs of Te Au O Tonga (b.
  • October 31Peter Yu Tae-cholm, Korean Martyr (b. 1826)
  • November 15William Murdoch, Scottish inventor (b. 1754)
  • November 18Hans Blackwood, Irish peer and politician (b. 1758)
  • November 22Vénérande Robichaud, Canadian businesswoman (b. 1753)
  • December 2Andreas Landmark, Norwegian politician and civil servant (b. 1769)
  • December 3Frederick VI, King of Denmark, ex-King of Norway (b. 1768)
  • December 4John Leamy, Irish–American merchant (b. 1757)
  • December 15Ignaz Aurelius Fessler, Hungarian court councillor, minister to Alexander I (b. 1756)
  • December 21Andrew Dũng-Lạc, Vietnamese Roman Catholic priest, saint, and martyr (b. 1795)
  • December 26Laurent Jean François Truguet, French admiral (b. 1752)

Date unknown

  • Thomas Plunket, Irish soldier (b. 1785)
  • Walter Jones, Irish politician (b. 1754)
  • Pierre le Pelley III, Seigneur of Sark from 1820 to 1839 (b. 1799)
  • George Scholey, banker who served as Lord Mayor of London
  • Otto Christian von Rohr, Prussian army officer during the Napoleonic Wars
  • John D'Arcy, founder of the town of Clifden (b. 1785)
  • Jean-François Allard, French soldier and adventurer (b. 1785)
  • Edmund Lodge, English officer of arms and a writer on heraldic subjects and short biographies (b. 1756)
  • Sankara Varman, astronomer-mathematician (b. 1774)
  • William Francklin, English orientalist and army officer (b. 1763)
  • Mattheus Ignatius van Bree, Belgian painter (b. 1773)

References

  1. ^ Mark Hovell, The Chartist Movement (Manchester University Press, 1966) p143.
  2. ^ Robert Peel (13 May 1839). "Ministerial Explanations". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). House of Commons. col. 984–985.
  3. ^ Davies, John; Jenkins, Nigel (2008). The Welsh Academy Encyclopaedia of Wales. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. p. 730. ISBN 978-0-7083-1953-6.
  4. ^ Jill Harsin, Barricades: The War of the Streets in Revolutionary Paris, 1830-1848 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2002) p124.
  5. ^ T. Lindsay Buick, The French at Akaroa: An Adventure in Colonization (Cambridge University Press, 1928)(reprinted 2011) p294
  6. ^ Charles Alan Fyffe, A History of Modern Europe, Volume 2 (Cassell & Company, 1886) p453
  7. ^ Greenberg, Michael (1969). British Trade and the Opening of China 1800-1841 (preview). p. 113. expansion in imports from 16,550 chests in the season 1831-2 to over 30,000 in 1835-6, and 40,000 in 1838-9
  8. ^ Ebrey, Patricia Buckley, ed. (2010). "Chapter 9: Manchus and Imperialism: The Qing Dynasty 1644–1900". The Cambridge Illustrated History of China (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 236. ISBN 978-0-521-19620-8.
  9. ^ "The Death of Maharaja Ranjeet Singh: The End of an Era". Timeless Tales India. Retrieved 2025-07-17.
  10. ^ "John Lovell and the People's Charter". The struggle for democracy. Kew: The National Archives. 2003. Archived from the original on 2007-09-26. Retrieved 2019-05-11.
  11. ^ Haynes, Stan M. (2012). The First American Political Conventions: Transforming Presidential Nominations, 1832-1872. McFarland. p. 54.
  12. ^ "Arkistonmuodostaja: Heinolan maistraatti" (in Finnish). The National Archives of Finland. Retrieved September 3, 2021.
  13. ^ "Heinolan historia" (in Finnish). Town of Heinola. Retrieved September 3, 2021.
  14. ^ Experimental Researches in Electricity. Retrieved 2025-04-01.
  15. ^ "Paul Cézanne | French artist | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 14 May 2023.
  16. ^ Igor I. Kaliganov, ed. (2020). Materials for the virtual Museum of Slavic Cultures. Issue II. Moscow: Institute of Slavic Studies of RAS. p. 277. ISBN 978-5-7576-0440-4.
  17. ^ "The Nobel Prize in Literature 1901". NobelPrize.org. Retrieved 4 September 2021.
  18. ^ Byrne, James Patrick; Coleman, Philip; King, Jason Francis, eds. (2008). Ireland and the Americas: Culture, Politics, and History : a Multidisciplinary Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 923. ISBN 978-1-85109-614-5.
  19. ^ মৌলভী সৈয়দ কুদরত উল্লাহ'র ১৮০ তম মৃত্যুবার্ষিকী আজ. MKantho (in Bengali). 12 February 2019. Archived from the original on February 16, 2019. Retrieved January 10, 2022.
  20. ^ Gardner, Alexander. "XII". Memoirs Of Alexander Gardner - Colonel of Artillery in the Service of Maharaja Ranjit Singh. William Blackwood & Sons. p. 211.
  • Media related to 1839 at Wikimedia Commons