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1822 and Eleanor
She had ten children: Horatio Nelson ( born 8 December 1822 ); Eleanor Phillipa ( born April 1824 ); Marmaduke Philip Smyth ( born 27 May 1825 ); John James Stephen ( 13 February 18271829 ); Nelson ( born 8 May 1828 ); William George ( born 8 April 1830 ); Edmund Nelson ( 1831 ); Horatia Nelson ( born 24 November 1833 ), Philip ( born May 1834 ) and Caroline ( born January 1836 ).
A rare exception to this is the epic poem Cœur de Lion ( 1822 ), by Eleanor Anne Porden, in which he is depicted as a tragic Byronic hero.
In her epic poem Cœur de Lion ( 1822 ), Eleanor Anne Porden portrays him fomenting discord in the Third Crusade and, because of his remorse over his involvement with Richard's imprisonment, becoming a hermit.
As " Alasia of France ", she appears in Eleanor Anne Porden's 1822 epic poem Cœur de Lion.

1822 and Anne
Marrying Elizabeth Gillespie in 1810, they had four children ; Rebecca Elizabeth ( 1813 ), Elizabeth Delsey ( 1817 ), Isabella Anne ( 1820 ), and Samuel Gllespie ( 1822 ).
He was the third son of the 7th Duke of Marlborough, and his wife, Lady Frances Anne Emily Vane ( 1822 – 1899 ), daughter of the 3rd Marquess of Londonderry.
* Lady Frances Anne Emily Vane ( 15 April 1822 – 16 April 1899 ), the eldest daughter of the 3rd Marquess of Londonderry and Lady Frances Anne Emily Vane-Tempest.
On 12 July 1843, Marlborough married Lady Frances Anne Emily Vane ( 15 April 1822 – 16 April 1899 ), the eldest daughter of the 3rd Marquess of Londonderry and Lady Frances Anne Emily Vane-Tempest.
The river has been depicted by many prominent Canadian artists such as William Armstrong ( 1822 – 1914 ), Frances Anne Hopkins ( The Red River Expedition at Kakabeka Falls, 1877 ) and Lucius Richard O ' Brien ( Kakabeka Falls, 1882 ).
In 1822 he was further honoured when he was made Earl Temple of Stowe, with remainder to his granddaughter Anne Eliza Mary, and Marquess of Chandos and Duke of Buckingham and Chandos, with normal remainder to heirs male.
* Anne Anstruther-Paterson, de jure 4th Lady Polwarth ( died 1822 )
Lord Donegall married Lady Harriet Anne Butler, daughter of Richard Butler, 1st Earl of Glengall, in 1822.
* Lady Frances Anne Emily Vane ( 1822 – 1899 ); married John Spencer-Churchill, 7th Duke of Marlborough.
In 1822, at the age of 68 and after 21 years as a widower he married Anne Keppel, the daughter of Lord Albemarle, and Coke's 18 year old godchild.
McNeile married, in 1822, Anne, daughter of William Magee, archbishop of Dublin, and aunt of William Connor Magee, archbishop of York, by whom he had a large family.
After the death of his wife in 1821, he married her younger half-sister, Emily Frances Smith, daughter of Charles Culling Smith, on 29 June 1822 ; they were both daughters of Lady Anne Smith, the Duke of Wellington's sister.

1822 and Porden
William Porden ( c. 1755 – 1822 ) was a versatile English architect.

1822 and used
Although the Fresnel lens was invented in 1822, it was not used in the U. S. until the 1850s due to the parsimonious administrator of the United States lighthouse establishment, Stephen Pleasonton.
Major advances in the decoding were: recognition that the stone offered three versions of the same text ( 1799 ); that the demotic text used phonetic characters to spell foreign names ( 1802 ); that the hieroglyphic text did so as well, and had pervasive similarities to the demotic ( Thomas Young, 1814 ); and that, in addition to being used for foreign names, phonetic characters were also used to spell native Egyptian words ( Champollion, 1822 – 1824 ).
Aspdin's process was similar to a process patented in 1822 and used since 1811 by James Frost who called his cement " British Cement ".
" Balzac's story Une Heure de ma Vie ( An Hour of my Life, 1822 ), in which minute details are followed by deep personal reflections, is a clear ancestor of the style which Proust used in À la recherche du temps perdu.
In 1822 during the Peruvian War of Independence, troops from both the Liberating Expedition of Peru ( Expedición Libertadora del Perú ) and the United Liberating Army of Peru ( Ejército Unido Libertador del Perú ) used a standard that was identical to the modern flag of Chile, except their flag had three stars in the canton, representing the three nations united by the cause of independence: the Argentine provinces, Chile and Peru.
Nevertheless, semiologist Roland Barthes, in a Spanish edition of his book " La chambre claire ", " La cámara lúcida " ( Paidós, Barcelona, 1989 ) shows a picture from 1822, " Table ready ", a foggy photo of a table set to be used for a meal.
James Green proposed a tub-boat canal in 1822, capable of handling boats, which would have used inclines instead of locks, and would have cost £ 120, 000.
The artist Johan Bennetter ( 1822 – 1904 ) used the church as a studio and lived there with his family.
The reverse, with a crowned numeral enclosed by a wreath, derives from a design first used during the reign of William and Mary, and which has been virtually unaltered since 1822.
The effect of thirty years evolution in the design of coastal fortifications, between the 1790s and 1822, can be discerned between Ferry Island Fort ( in the foreground ), with multiple guns arrayed to cover the water westward, and the Martello tower in the background, which used a single gun with 360 ° traverse to cover all of the surrounding area.
Threepences were struck in all years from 1822 to 1830, though the king's head is smaller on the 1822 issue, apparently because the correct punch broke and the one from the twopence was used instead.
In subsequent poetical works he was more successful, notably the Fall of Jerusalem ( 1820 ) and The Martyr of Antioch ( 1822, based on the life of Saint Margaret the Virgin ), which was used as the basis for an oratorio by Arthur Sullivan.
Byron also used the form for The Vision of Judgment ( 1822 ).
From the Proclamation of the Independence of Brazil in 1822 until the 1831 abdication, an anthem that had been composed by Pedro I himself, celebrating the country's independence ( and that now continues to be an official patriotic song, the Independence Anthem ), was used as the National Anthem.
In 1822, Joseph Fourier, a French mathematician, discovered that sinusoidal waves can be used as simple building blocks to describe and approximate any periodic waveform including square waves.
* Coquille, a corvette used in Louis Duperrey's 1822 – 1825 circumnavigation of the world
* First Hellenic Republic, sometimes used for Greece during the War of Independence ( 1822 – 1832 )
* The oldest surviving operating theatre in the country ( dating from 1822 ), used in the days before anaesthetics and antiseptic surgery.
Since then, they have been used to represent Royal Assent to legislation in both the Parliament of Scotland and Scottish Parliament, and have also been used at State occasions, including the first visit to Scotland as sovereign by King George IV in 1822 and the first visit to Scotland as sovereign by Queen Elizabeth in 1953.
The effect of thirty years of evolution on the design of coastal fortifications, between the 1790s and 1822, can be discerned between Ferry Island Fort ( in the foreground ), with multiple guns arrayed to cover the water westward, and the Martello tower in the background, which used a single gun with 360 ° traverse to cover all of the surrounding area.

1822 and her
Kate Larson records the year 1822, based on a midwife payment and several other historical documents, including her runaway advertisement while Jean Humez says " the best current evidence suggests that Tubman was born in 1820, but it might have been a year or two later.
In her Civil War widow's pension records, Tubman claimed she was born in 1820, 1822, and 1825, an indication, perhaps, that she had only a general idea of when she was born.
Sophie died in 1822, never having remarried, and having published all her husband's works between 1801 and 1804.
This 1822 drawing by Jacques-Pierre Maygnier shows a " compromise " procedure, in which the physician is kneeling before the woman but cannot see her genitalia.
See also F Hardy, Memoirs of Lord Charlemont ( London, 1812 ); Warden Flood, Memoirs of Henry Flood ( London, 1838 ); Francis Plowden, Historical Review of the State of Ireland ( London, 1803 ); Alfred Webb, Compendium of Irish Biography ( Dublin, 1878 ); Sir Jonah Barrington, Rise and Fall of the Irish Nation ( London, 1833 ); WJ O ' Neill Daunt, Ireland and her Agitators ; Lord Mountmorres, History of the Irish Parliament ( 2 vole., London, 1792 ); Horace Walpole, Memoirs of the Reign of George III ( 4 vols., London, 1845 and 1894 ); Lord Stanhope, Life of William Pitt ( 4 vols., London, 1861 ); Thomas Davis, Life of JP Curran ( Dublin, 1846 ) this contains a memoir of Grattan by DO Madden, and Grattan's reply to Lord Clare on the question of the Union ; Charles Phillips, Recollections of Curran and some of his Contemporaries ( London, 1822 ); JA Froude, The English in Ireland ( London, 1881 ); JG McCarthy, Henry Grattan: an Historical Study ( London, 1886 ); Lord Mahon's History of England, vol.
Lamb published three additional novels during her lifetime: Graham Hamilton ( 1822 ), Ada Reis ( 1823 ), and Penruddock ( 1823 ).
However, as memoirs and obituaries are quick to point out, she was probably most famous for her historical works: Memoirs of the Court of Queen Elizabeth ( 1818 ), Memoirs of the Court of James I ( 1822 ), and Memoirs of the Court of Charles I ( 1833 ).
About 1802 he began a liaison with Madame de Condorcet which lasted till her death ( 1822 ).
Caroline returned to Hanover in 1822 following her brother's death, but did not abandon her astronomical studies, continuing to verify and confirm William's findings and producing a catalogue of nebulae to assist her nephew John Herschel in his work.
In 1822, she met her son in Aachen.
Fuller began her formal education at the Port School in Cambridgeport in 1819 before attending the Boston Lyceum for Young Ladies from 1821 to 1822.
This 1822 drawing by Jacques-Pierre Maygnier shows a " compromise " procedure, in which the physician is kneeling before the woman but cannot see her genitalia.
* was launched in 1822, making her the first steam-powered vessel of the Royal Navy, although not added to the Navy List until 1831.
Neither Medora nor her mother met Byron's daughter by Claire Clairmont, Allegra Byron, who died at age five in 1822 in an Italian convent.
There were plans to renamed her HMS Providence in 1822, but this never happened, and she was broken up by 1829.
" By March 1822 it had been two years since she had seen her daughter.
Among other poems inspired by her are K N., and Ia pomniu vremia zolotoe … Published extracts from the letters and diaries of Maximilian von Lerchenfeld illuminate the first years of Tyutchev as a diplomat in Munich ( 1822 – 26 ), giving details of his frustrated love affair for Amélie, nearly involving a duel ( probably with his colleague, Baron Alexander von Krüdener ), in January 1825.
Leopoldina, advised by José Bonifácio, and using her power as Princess Regent, met on 2 September 1822 with the Council of Ministers.
She discovers that her mother was sold off to another plantation and that her father died of a broken heart two years later, in 1822.

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