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1746 and married
Carlo-Maria ( Ajaccio 1746 – Montpellier 1785 ) married Maria Letizia Ramolino ( Ajaccio 1750 – Rome 1836 ) in 1764.
Henry Fielding wrote a pamphlet titled The Female Husband in 1746, based on the life of Mary Hamilton, who married women on three separate occasions, and was sentenced to public whipping in four separate towns and six months in jail.
In 1746, he married Margaret Burr, and the couple became the parents of two daughters.
Velázquez, through his daughter Francisca de Silva Velázquez y Pacheco ( 1619 – 1658 ), is an ancestor of the Marquesses of Monteleone, including Enriquetta ( Henrietta ) Casado de Monteleone ( 1725 – 1761 ) who in 1746 married Heinrich VI, Count Reuss zu Köstritz ( 1707 – 1783 ).
Charles was born in Beaugency-sur-Loire in 1746, He married Julie Françoise Bouchaud des Hérettes ( 1784 – 1817 ), a creole woman 37 years younger than himself.
# Infanta Benedita of Portugal ( 25 July 1746 – 18 August 1829 ) married Infante Joseph, Prince of Beira, no issue.
On 31 January 1688 he married Majory Scott ( d. 8 April 1746, daughter of David Scott of Scotstarvit ( d. 1718 )).
Alexandre was born at Versailles to Lieutenant-Colonel Jean Baptiste Berthier ( 1721 – 1804 ), an officer in the Corps of Topographical Engineers, and first wife ( married in 1746 ) Marie Françoise L ' Huillier de La Serre.
He married, on 16 October 1735, Rebecca Samborne Le Bas ( died 16 January 1765 ), daughter and heiress of Charles Samborne Le Bas, of Pipewell Abbey, Northamptonshire, by whom he had two daughters, Lady Elizabeth ( 18 June 1739-21 January 1811, buried at Hartwell ), married on 20 June 1763 Sir William Lee, 4th Baronet, of Hartwell ( 12 September 1726-6 July 1799 ) and Lady Anne ( 1741 – 1746 ), and two sons, George Simon and William, who succeeded him as 2nd and 3rd earl respectively.
In 1746 he married Anna Tobler, daughter of Appenzell Ausserrhoden governor and later New Windsor Township founder Johannes Tobler.
It was Evreinov, in the service of Empress Elisabeth, who squarely warned around the period 1745 – 1746 the 16-year-old German-born married lady Sophie Friederike Auguste von Anhalt-Zerbst-Dornburg, later Dowager Empress Catherine II of Russia, about the rumours about her at the Imperial Court, then, candid and innocent mixings with the Tchernysov siblings, particularly Zakhar, the eldest.
Sevier married Sarah Hawkins ( 1746 – 1780 ) in 1761.
In 1762, Grey married Elizabeth Grey ( 1744 – 1822 ), the daughter of George Grey of Southwick ( 1713 – 1746 ), their children were:
* Philippe de France ( 19 December 1683 – 9 July 1746 ), Duke of Anjou, ( later King of Spain ); became King of Spain in 1700 ; married second cousin Princess Maria Luisa of Savoy and had issue ; married again Elisabeth Farnese and had issue such as the future Dauphine of France, Infanta Maria Teresa Rafaela of Spain ;
Jane Calvert ( died July 1778 ), married John Hyde ( 1695 – 1746 ), with whom she had many children.
On 14 July 1767, he married his first cousin, Mary Cadwalader ( 1746 – 1781 ).
# Benedita of Portugal ( 25 July 1746 – 18 August 1829 ) married Infante Joseph, Prince of Beira, no issue.
He married Cornelia Schuyler ( 1746 – 1822 ), their son is Henry Walter Livingston.
* Princess Tamar ( 1697 – 1746 ) who married, in 1712, Prince Teimuraz, the future king of Kakheti and Kartli
* Princess Anna ( Anuka ) ( 1698 – 1746 ), who married, in 1712, Prince Vakhushti Abashidze
In 1743, she married Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark-Norway, later King Frederik V and became queen consort of Denmark and Norway from 1746 until her death in 1751.
* Lady Diana Beauclerk ( c. 1746 – 1766 ), married Rev.

1746 and Burr
Thomas Clap, Jonathan Edwards, Burr, and Jonathan Dickinson founded the College of New Jersey ( now Princeton University ) at Elizabeth, New Jersey, in 1746.
In 1746 the College of New Jersey ( now Princeton University ) was founded in Elizabethtown by a group of Great Awakening " New Lighters " that included Jonathan Dickinson, Aaron Burr, Sr. and Peter Van Brugh Livingston.

1746 and daughter
In 1745 a daughter, Angélique-Françoise, was born, but she died in 1746.
In 1746, she gave birth to a daughter, Susannah, who died a year later.
George and Ann Taylor had two children: a daughter Ann, who was called Nancy and died sometime during childhood, and a son James, who was born at Warwick Furnace in 1746.
In 1746 Elizabeth Mason, daughter of John Villiers, 1st Earl Grandison, was created Viscountess Grandison, and in 1767 she was made Viscountess Villiers and Countess Grandison.
In 1750 the newly-ascended Joseph I ( believing that no sons would be forthcoming-and indeed, his wife and he produced no further issue after 1746, as we truly know with hindsight ) proclaimed his eldest daughter the official heiress and granted her the " crown-princely " title Princess of Brazil ( but apparently not that Duke of Braganza ).
*: Married 1717, Catherine, daughter of James Power, 3rd Earl of Tyrone, above ; created Viscount Tyrone 1720, Earl of Tyrone 1746.
Born Anne Hay-Mackenzie, she was the daughter of John Hay-Mackenzie of Newhall and Cromarty and the great-great-granddaughter of George Mackenzie, 3rd Earl of Cromartie ( who took part in the Jacobite rising of 1745 and was attainted in 1746 ).
They had one daughter, Princess Marie Thérèse of France ( 19 July 1746 – 27 April 1748 ).
Three days after the birth of their daughter, Louis's wife, Maria Teresa Rafaela, died on 22 July 1746.
* Princess Marie-Thérèse of France ( 1746 – 1748 ) eldest daughter of Louis, Dauphin of France ( 1729 – 1765 ) and his first wife Infanta Maria Teresa Rafaela of Spain ( 1726 – 1746 ).
The Infanta, known as Marie-Thérèse-Raphaëlle in France, died on 22 July 1746 after giving birth to a daughter, the couple's only child, Princess Marie-Thérèse of France.
In 1746 the 9th Earl of Huntingdon died and it passed to his daughter, Elizabeth Rawdon as 16th Baroness Botreaux.
After her death in June 1746 he married, secondly, Anne Hill, daughter of Trevor Hill, 1st Viscount Hillsborough and Mary Rowe, on 23 December 1746.
He married Elizabeth Hunter, the daughter of an associate, and had at least two children: Elizabeth, born on April 19, 1746, and John, born in July 1748.

1746 and Duke
* 1746 – The Battle of Culloden is fought between the French-supported Jacobites and the British Hanoverian forces commanded by William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland, in Scotland.
The Duke of Cumberland crushed the " Forty-Five " and the hopes of the Jacobites at the Battle of Culloden on 16 April 1746.
The Jacobites were pursued by King George II's son, the Duke of Cumberland, who caught up with them at the Battle of Culloden on 16 April 1746.
The Duke took no part in the Flanders campaign of 1746, during which the French made huge advances capturing Brussels and defeating the Allies at Rocoux.
The Duke had defeated the Scottish Highlanders in 1746 at the Battle of Culloden, an especially brutal conflict.
His works are ( 1746 ), ( 1749 ), ( 1754 ), ( 1755 ), a comprehensive Cours d ' études ( 1767 – 1773 ) in 13 vols., written for the young Duke Ferdinand of Parma, a grandson of Louis XV, ( 1776 ), and two posthumous works, ( 1781 ) and the unfinished ( 1798 ).
The subsidiary titles of the Duke of Wellington are: Marquess of Wellington ( 1812 ), Marquess Douro ( 1814 ), Earl of Mornington ( 1760 – but only inherited by the Dukes of Wellington in 1863 ), Earl of Wellington ( 1812 ), Viscount Wellesley ( 1760 – inherited in 1863 ), Viscount Wellington ( 1809 ), Baron Mornington ( 1746 – also inherited in 1863 ), and Baron Douro ( 1809 ).
He entered the army when he was 17 by buying a cornet's commission in the Duke of Cumberland's Dragoons in 1746.
The obverse has a left-facing bust of the king ( with an older head from 1746 ), with the legend, while the reverse features a single large crowned shield with the quarters containing the arms of England + Scotland, France, Hanover, and Ireland, and the legend — King of Great Britain, France and Ireland, Defender of the Faith, Duke of Brunswick and Lueneburg, Arch-Treasurer and Elector of the Holy Roman Empire.
In 1746 he was made an aide-de-camp to the Duke of Cumberland who led the Allied Army in Flanders.
* Charles Howard, 11th Duke of Norfolk, 10th Earl of Arundel ( 1746 – 1815 )
** William Murray, Marquess of Tullibardine ( 1689 – 1746 ) ( second son of the 1st Duke ; was a Jacobite who was attainted and executed, unmarried, for treason ; excluded from the succession )
This work, with libretto by Thomas Morell, had been written for the celebrations following the Duke of Cumberland's victory over the Scottish Jacobite rebels at the Battle of Culloden in 1746.
The Duke of Cumberland's army destroyed most of the palace buildings by burning in January 1746.
However before it could be used for its intended purpose, it was taken over by the Duke of Cumberland to use as a barracks for the Hanoverian troops on his visit to Aberdeen in 1746 to put down the Jacobite rising, and so the hospital did not open until 1750.
* Henry Scott, 3rd Duke of Buccleuch, 5th Duke of Queensberry ( 1746 – 1812 ), second son of Lord Dalkeith
The subsidiary titles of the Duke of Sutherland are: Marquess of Stafford ( created 1786 ), Earl Gower ( 1746 ), Earl of Ellesmere, of Ellesmere in the County of Shropshire ( 1846 ), Viscount Trentham, of Trentham in the County of Stafford ( 1746 ), Viscount Brackley, of Brackley in the County of Northampton ( 1846 ), and Baron Gower, of Sittenham in the County of York ( 1703 ).
: Other titles ( 1st Duke onwards ): Marquess of Stafford ( 1786 ), Earl Gower and Viscount Trentham, of Trentham in the county of Stafford ( 1746 ) and Baron Gower ( 1703 )
* Henry Scott, 3rd Duke of Buccleuch, 5th Duke of Queensberry ( 1746 – 1812 ), great-grandson of the 2nd Duke of Queensberry
* James Drummond, 3rd Duke of Perth ( d. 1746 ), 2nd Duke's elder son

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