1749 in Scotland

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1749
in
Scotland

Centuries:
  • 16th
  • 17th
  • 18th
  • 19th
  • 20th
Decades:
  • 1720s
  • 1730s
  • 1740s
  • 1750s
  • 1760s
See also:List of years in Scotland
Timeline of Scottish history
1749 in: Great BritainWalesElsewhere

Events from the year 1749 in Scotland.

Incumbents[]

Law officers[]

  • Lord AdvocateWilliam Grant of Prestongrange
  • Solicitor General for ScotlandPatrick Haldane of Gleneagles, jointly with Alexander Hume

Judiciary[]

  • Lord President of the Court of SessionLord Arniston the Elder
  • Lord Justice GeneralLord Ilay
  • Lord Justice ClerkLord Tinwald

Events[]

  • 5 January – James Wolfe is promoted to major in Peyton's Regiment of Foot, at this time stationed in Glasgow.
  • 6 March – A "corpse riot" breaks out in Glasgow after a body disappears from a churchyard in the Gorbals district. It is suspected that anatomy students at the Glasgow Infirmary "had raised a dead body from the grave and carried it to the college" for dissection.[1] The city guard intervenes after a mob of protesters begin breaking windows at random buildings, and groups of citizens begin to make regular patrols of church graveyards.[2]
  • 4 June – A fire in Glasgow leaves 200 families homeless.[3]
  • A stagecoach service opens between Edinburgh and Glasgow.
  • The Treason Outlawries (Scotland) Act is passed.

Births[]

  • 1 June – James Cunningham, 14th Earl of Glencairn, nobleman, soldier and patron (died 1791 in England)
  • 18 June – John Brown, miniature painter (died 1787)
  • 29 August – Gilbert Blane, naval physician (died 1834 in England)
  • 6 September – Benjamin Bell, surgeon (died 1806)
  • October – Archibald Skirving, portrait painter (died 1819)
  • 3 November – Daniel Rutherford, physician, chemist and botanist noted for the isolation of nitrogen (died 1819)
  • 7 November – Charles Smith, portrait painter (died 1824)
  • 8 December – Hugo Arnot, né Pollock, lawyer and campaigner (died 1786)
  • 15 December – James Graeme, poet (died 1772)
  • John Cunningham, 15th Earl of Glencairn, nobleman, cavalry officer and priest (died 1796)
  • Ralph Walker, civil engineer (died 1824 in England)

Deaths[]

  • 18 April – Alexander Robertson of Struan, chief of Clan Donnachaidh, Jacobite leader and poet (born c. 1668/70)[4]
  • 19 October – William Ged, goldsmith and inventor of stereotyping (born 1699)
  • 19 December – George Seton, 5th Earl of Winton, exiled Jacobite (born c. 1678; died in Italy)
  • 25 December – John Lindsay, 20th Earl of Crawford, 1st colonel of the Black Watch (born 1702)
  • John Munro, 4th of Newmore, soldier and politician

See also[]

  • Timeline of Scottish history

References[]

  1. ^ Moore, Peter N. (2018). Archibald Simpson's Unpeaceable Kingdom: The Ordeal of Evangelicalism in the Colonial South. Lexington Books. p. 40.
  2. ^ Fulton, Henry L. (2014). Dr. John Moore, 1729–1802: A Life in Medicine, Travel and Revolution. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 54.
  3. ^ Walford, Cornelius, ed. (1876). "Fires, Great". The Insurance Cyclopeadia: Being an Historical Treasury of Events and Circumstances Connected with the Origin and Progress of Insurance. C. and E. Layton. p. 51.
  4. ^ Pittock, Murray G. H. (2004). "Robertson, Alexander, of Struan (c.1670–1749)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/23783. (subscription or UK public library membership required)
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