Fort William College is established on July …
Years: 1800 - 1800
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John Hunter's difficulties as governor had soon begun: Phillip had immediately left the colony and the military took complete control.
During the lieutenant-governorship of Francis Grose, who has unmercifully exploited the convicts, a great traffic in alcoholic spirits has sprung up, on which there is an enormous profit for the officers concerned.
They have obtained the control of the courts and the management of the lands, public stores, and convict labor.
Hunter realizes that these powers have to be restored to the civil administration, a difficult task, and in John Macarthur he has an opponent who will hardly stop at anything in defending his supposed rights.
Hunter eventually finds himself practically helpless.
A stronger man might have sent the officers home under arrest, but it is not unlikely that if Hunter had attempted to do so he would have only precipitated the rum rebellion that will took place during the administration of William Bligh.
Anonymous letters have even sent to the home authorities, charging Hunter with participation in the very abuses he is striving to prevent.
Hunter, despite his vehement defense of the charges made against him, had been recalled in a dispatch dated November 5, 1799 from the Duke of Portland, one of the three secretaries of state.
Hunter acknowledges this dispatch on April 12, 1800, and leaves for England on September 28, 1800, handing over the government to the Lieutenant-Governor Philip Gidley King.
King, suffering from gout, had returned from Norfolk Island to England in October 1796, and after regaining his health, and resuming his naval career, had been appointed to replace Hunter as the third Governor of New South Wales.
He sets about changing the system of administration, and appoints Major Joseph Foveaux as Lieutenant-Governor of Norfolk Island.
His first task is to attack the misconduct of officers of the New South Wales Corps in their illicit trading in liquor, notably rum.
He tries to discourage the importation of liquor, and begins to construct a brewery.
However, he finds the refusal of convicts to work in their own time for other forms of payment, and the continued illicit local distillation, increasingly difficult to control.
José Bonifácio de Andrada e Silva, a Brazilian politician, naturalist, professor and poet, has studied chemistry and mineralogy with other scientists in his trips around Europe, collecting data, conducting scientific experiments and discovering four new minerals and eight types of previously unknown species.
The mineral andradite is named after him.
Among his other discoveries is petalite, a lithium-containing material, first discovered by Andrada at the beginning of the eighteenth century on a trip to Sweden; it in this mineral that Swedish chemists in 1817 will first discover lithium.
Bonifácio also is the first to discover another important lithium-containing mineral, spodumene, from the same source, Utö island near Stockholm.
Friedrich von Schlegel champions romanticism in 1800 in his Dialogue on Poetry, a critical work emphasizing the subjective aspects of literature.
Ludwig van Beethoven's Symphony No. 1 in C major, Op. 21, premieres at the Burgtheater, in Vienna, on April 2, 1800.
It is not known exactly when Beethoven finished writing this work, but sketches of the finale will be found to be from 1795.
Dedicated to Baron Gottfried van Swieten, an early patron of the composer, the symphony is clearly indebted to Beethoven's predecessors, particularly his teacher Joseph Haydn as well as Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, but nonetheless has characteristics that mark it uniquely as Beethoven's work, notably the frequent use of sforzandi and the prominent, more independent use of wind instruments.
Sketches for the finale are found among the exercises Beethoven wrote while studying counterpoint under Johann Georg Albrechtsberger in the spring of 1797.
Narrowly avoiding defeat, he bests the Austrians at the Battle of Marengo and reoccupies northern Italy.
Moreau meanwhile invades Bavaria and wins a great battle against Austria at Hohenlinden.
Moreau continues toward Vienna and the Austrians sue for peace.
The developments in Greece occasion panic in Constantinople, for they seem to indicate that the seditious and atheistic doctrines of the French Revolution have arrived at the very borders of the empire.
Napoleon's invasion of Egypt drives Selim into alliance with Great Britain and Russia.
The Ottoman Empire is labeled universally by 1800 as "The Sick Man of Europe."
The empire is precariously near total collapse and ready to be dismantled by a powerful neighbor, just as the Ottomans had dismantled the Byzantine Empire.
The logical successor in this case is Russia, an expanding empire with strong religious and cultural ties to the captive Slavic groups, and a continuing desire to achieve access to the Mediterranean Sea.
The Omanis oust the ruling Al-Khalifa family from Bahrain in 1800; they will occupy the country for two years.
Napoleon’s Consolidation of Power in Western Europe
Following his coup d’état in November 1799, Napoleon Bonaparte rapidly moved to consolidate military and political control over France and, eventually, Western Europe as a whole. His rule, initially as First Consul and later as Emperor, saw the transformation of France into a dominant European power, reshaping the continent through military conquest, legal reforms, and strategic alliances.
1. Establishing Authority in France (1799–1804)
After seizing power, Napoleon focused on stabilizing France and securing his leadership:
- 1799 – As First Consul, he centralized authority, dismantling the ineffective Directory and establishing the Consulate.
- 1801 – Signed the Concordat with the Catholic Church, reconciling relations between France and the Papacy, reducing religious tensions.
- 1802 – Declared First Consul for Life, solidifying his personal control of the state.
- 1804 – Introduced the Napoleonic Code, a legal framework that standardized laws across France and later much of Europe.
- December 2, 1804 – Crowned Emperor of the French, officially transforming France into an empire under his rule.
2. Military Expansion and Control of Western Europe (1800–1810)
Napoleon combined military brilliance with political strategy, conquering and reorganizing Western Europe into a Napoleonic order:
Key Military Campaigns
- 1800 – The Italian Campaign: Napoleon defeated Austria at Marengo, securing French control over northern Italy.
- 1805 – War of the Third Coalition:
- Defeated Austria and Russia at Austerlitz, one of his greatest victories.
- Eliminated the Holy Roman Empire, replacing it with the Confederation of the Rhine.
- Lost the naval Battle of Trafalgar, ensuring British naval supremacy but still dominating the European continent.
- 1806–1807 – War of the Fourth Coalition:
- Destroyed the Prussian army at Jena-Auerstedt and occupied Berlin.
- Defeated Russia at Friedland, forcing the Treaty of Tilsit (1807), aligning Russia with France.
- 1808–1814 – The Peninsular War:
- Attempted to control Spain and Portugal, placing his brother Joseph on the Spanish throne.
- Faced resistance from Spanish and Portuguese guerrillas, supported by Britain, leading to his first prolonged struggle.
Key Political Reorganizations
- Reorganized the German states into the Confederation of the Rhine, dismantling the Holy Roman Empire.
- Placed family members on European thrones:
- Joseph Bonaparte as King of Spain.
- Louis Bonaparte as King of Holland.
- Jerome Bonaparte as King of Westphalia.
- Eugène de Beauharnais as Viceroy of Italy.
- Introduced the Continental System (1806) to blockade Britain, attempting to cripple British trade by closing European ports to British goods.
3. The Height of Napoleon’s Power (1810–1812)
By 1810, Napoleon controlled most of Western Europe, having defeated major continental rivals:
- France was at its territorial peak, extending from Spain to the borders of Russia.
- Britain remained the only major European power still resisting him, due to its naval dominance.
- Marriage to Marie Louise of Austria (1810) strengthened his dynastic legitimacy and relations with Austria.
However, growing resistance in Spain, Portugal, and Russia, along with dissatisfaction among occupied territories, would soon challenge his dominance.
Conclusion – The Napoleonic Order in Western Europe
Napoleon’s consolidation of power transformed Western Europe:
- Legal Reforms: The Napoleonic Code influenced legal systems across Europe.
- Political Reorganization: Ancient kingdoms and empires collapsed, replaced by Napoleon’s client states.
- Military Dominance: France became the undisputed land power of Europe, but naval weakness against Britain remained a key vulnerability.
Although he had reshaped Europe in his image, Napoleon’s control would soon be tested by rising nationalist movements, prolonged wars, and the disastrous Russian campaign of 1812.
During this period another substantial fort will be built to the north of the city containing impressive and substantial barracks which will still be used as a military headquarters and stores in the twenty-first century.
The remains of a second fort to the south of the city (Cristo quarter) have been sliced in two by a railway (Forte ferrovia); a third one still remains in the middle of the same quarter (Forte Acqui).
Years: 1800 - 1800
July
Locations
People
Groups
- Britain, Kingdom of Great
- East India Company, British (United Company of Merchants of England Trading to the East Indies)
- India, East India Company rule in
