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1762 and Teimuraz
* Teimuraz II ( 1732 – 1762 )

1762 and II
* 1762 – Catherine II becomes tsar of Russia upon the murder of Peter III of Russia.
Catherine II ( the Great ), who ruled in 1762 – 96, presided over the Age of Russian Enlightenment.
They were preparing to face 27, 000 Danish troops under the French general Count St. Germain in case the Russian-Denmark freedom conference, scheduled for 1 July 1762 in Berlin under the patronage of Frederick II, failed to resolve the issue.
He was elected to the Académie Royale d ' Architecture in 1762 and became chief architect to Frederick II of Prussia, a largely honorary title.
Among the finest examples are the Meissen Vulture from 1731 and the Möllendorff Dinner Service, designed in 1762 by Frederick II the Great.
On the accession of Catherine II ( summer 1762 ) still more stringent orders were sent to the officer in charge of " the nameless one ".
In 1762 the Piarists established a gymnasium here and Emperor Joseph II founded the Budweis diocese in 1785.
Well aware of his own military weakness, Mustafa III assiduously avoided war and was powerless to prevent the annexation of the Crimea by Catherine II of Russia ( 1762 – 96 ).
In 1762, Sophie Auguste Friederike von Anhalt-Zerbst, a German native of Stettin, Pomerania, displaced her husband Peter III ( an even more Western German ) and took the vacant Russian imperial throne, assuming the name of Catherine II.
Nevertheless he lost the chancellorship and suffered banishment to his estate at Goretovo ( April 1759 ), where he remained till the accession of Catherine II ( 28 June 1762 ).
The story of Pugachov's strong resemblance to the tsar Peter III, who in 1762 was overthrown and murdered by his wife, the future empress Catherine II, comes from a later legend.
A descendant of the Georgian Kings, with Georgia already annexed by the Russian Empire at the death of King George XII Bagration of Georgia in 1801, ( with the Russian conquest of Ossetia in 1802 ), successor of King Erekle II Bagration, ( Georgian: ერეკლე II ) ( 7 November 1720 or 7 October 1721 – 11 January 1798 ) reigning as the king of Kakheti from 1744 to 1762, and of Kartli and Kakheti from 1762 until 1798.
Grigory Orlov, one of Catherine's lovers, led a palace coup in June 1762 that ousted Peter III and enthroned Catherine II.
Here he witnessed the revolution which seated Catherine II of Russia on the throne, and thus obtained the facts noted in Anecdotes sur la révolution de Russie en 1762.
The Empress Catherine II of Russia ( reigned 1762 – 96 ) solved this situation by recalling Ernst von Biron from exile in 1763.
In 1762 Empress Catherine II ordered the construction of the suburb residence called " My Own Countryside House ".
Making use of the discontent and fearing for her own position, Peter III's wife, Catherine, deposed her husband in a coup, and her lover's brother, Aleksey Orlov, subsequently murdered him, so in June 1762 Catherine became Catherine II, empress of Russia.
His delight for rigid discipline alienated the palace guards, and ultimately allowed Catherine II, with the help of her lover Grigori Orlov who led the palace guard regiments, to overthrow Peter II on July 9, 1762 Peter ’ s assassination symbolically showed the end of the era of palace revolutions.
" Department of Defense Dependent Schools ", Published by: Phi Delta Kappa International .< http :// www. jstor. org / stable / 20342500 >.</ ref > After World War II, the increased demand for American education overseas was a result of the government's decision to allow soldiers to bring their families when deployed .< ref >< http :// education. stateuniversity. com / pages / 1762 / American-Overseas-Schools. html >.</ ref > By 1949 almost 100 schools were being operated separately by the Army, Navy, and Air Force in countries around the world.
* Irakli II ( 1762 – 1798 )

1762 and died
In 1762 Algarotti moved to Pisa, where he died of tuberculosis.
It was announced that he had died of " apoplexy ", and in 1762 she became ruler.
In 1762, Sabah I died and was succeeded by his youngest son, Abdullah.
On his return to Paris in 1754 Lacaille was distressed to find himself an object of public attention ; he withdrew to Mazarin college, where he worked actively for some years, and there died of an attack of gout aggravated by over-work in 1762.
Her brother, Charles Joseph, and sister Maria Johanna, had already died of smallpox in 1761 and 1762 respectively.
# Maurizio of Savoy ( 13 December 1762 – 1 September 1799 ) died unmarried of malaria.
His mother died in 1762, and when his father died in 1772, Joseph inherited his father ’ s house, looms and workshop as well as a vineyard and quarry in Couzon-au-Mont d ’ Or.
Over the years they would have 12 children: Mary ( 1754 ), Lois ( 1756 ), Miriam ( 1758 ), Rhoda ( 1760 ), Hannah ( who died as an infant in 1762 ), Levi ( 1763 ), Migale ( 1765, died that same year ), Johnathan ( 1768 ), Ezra ( 1770 ), Sarah ( 1773 ), Hannah ( 1776, also died as an infant ) and a child that was never registered.
* Richard ( died 1762 ), married Margaret Meadows ; his eldest son, Philip Taylor ( 1747 – 1831 ), was presbyterian minister at Kay Street, Liverpool ( 1767 ), and at Eustace Street, Dublin ( 1771 ), and grandfather of Meadows Taylor ; his second son, John Taylor, the hymn-writer.
She died in 1762.
** Ando Shoeki, philosopher ( died 1762 )
* January 13-John Boyle, 5th Earl of Cork, writer ( died 1762 )
* October 9-Marquard Herrgott, German Benedictine historian ( died 1762 )
* May 26-Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, poet and letter-writer ( died 1762 )
* January 15-Prosper Jolyot de Crébillon, poet and dramatist ( died 1762 )
John was succeeded in 1762 by his son the Drigue who died childless in 1797, aged 40, when New Hall devolved on his sister, the Honourable Elizabeth.
In early November 1762, Parr's mother died.
* February 10-Jan Frederik Gronovius, Dutch botanist ( died 1762 )
The buyer was Francis Heywood, whose son William died in 1762.
She came to London, and died in the year of her return, on 21 August 1762.
In 1762 he was appointed Woodwardian Professor of Geology, and in 1767 he became rector of Thornhill, West Yorkshire, near Dewsbury, where he died.
The 7th Dalai Lama died in 1757, and the 8th, Jamphel Gyatso, was born the following year, and was identified and brought to Lhasa in 1762.

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