This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1753 .
c. January – Mercy Seccombe, having emigrated from Harvard, Massachusetts to Nova Scotia, Canada , begins the earliest recorded diary by a woman in North America.[1]
February 1 – Christopher Smart makes his last contribution to the Paper War of 1752–1753 , with The Hilliad , which one critic, Lance Bertelsen, describes as the "loudest broadside" of the war.[2]
February 2 – Jane Austen 's aunt Philadelphia , mother of Eliza de Feuillide , marries Tysoe Saul Hancock in India.[3]
March 25 – Voltaire leaves the court of Frederik II of Prussia
December – The Paper War of 1752–1753 comes to a close, with the withdrawal of everyone except John Hill [4]
New books
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March 8 – William Roscoe , English historian and miscellaneous writer (died 1831 )
March 13 – József Fabchich , Hungarian translator of Greek and lexicographer (died 1809 )
April 8 – Pigault-Lebrun , French novelist and playwright (died 1835 )
April 11 – Sophia Burrell , English poet and dramatist (died 1802 )
May 8 – Phillis Wheatley , African-American poet (died 1784 )
June 26 – Antoine de Rivarol , French Royalist writer (died 1801 )
July 8 – Ann Yearsley , née Cromartie, English poet, writer and library proprietor (died 1806 )
August 11 – Thomas Bewick , English engraver, writer and natural historian (died 1828 )
September 16 – Märta Helena Reenstierna , Swedish diarist (died 1841 )
October 15 – Elizabeth Inchbald , English novelist, dramatist and actress (died 1821 )
October 16 – Johann Gottfried Eichhorn , German Protestant theologian (died 1827 )
References
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^ Oak Island Theories: Reverend Seccombe
^ Lance Bertelsen, "'Neutral Nonsense, neither False nor True': Christopher Smart and the Paper War(s) of 1752–53". In Christopher Smart and the Enlightenment , edited by Clement Hawes, p. 144. New York, NY: St. Martin's, 1999. ISBN 9780312213695 .
^ Paul Poplawski (1998). A Jane Austen Encyclopedia . Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 3–. ISBN 978-0-313-30017-2 .
^ Poetical Works p. 443.
^ Wakil Ahmed (2012). "Heyat Mamud" . In Sirajul Islam ; Miah, Sajahan; Khanam, Mahfuza ; Ahmed, Sabbir (eds.). Banglapedia: the National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Online ed.). Dhaka, Bangladesh: Banglapedia Trust, Asiatic Society of Bangladesh . ISBN 984-32-0576-6 . OCLC 52727562 . OL 30677644M . Retrieved 20 May 2024 .