240] ANNUAL BEGISTER; 1790. 
-His remains have been depofited in 
one of the towers of Rabat. His 
fon Muli el Zezid was, on the 15th, 
proclaimed emperor in his room; 
and, as it is faid, began his reign 
with wreaking his vengeance on the 
Spanifh conful, to whom he has be- 
haved with uscxampled feverity. 
The hon. Mrs. Walfingham, re- 
Hi@ of the late hon. commodore 
Robert Boyle Walfingham, who was 
loft in the Thunderer man of war, 
fome years ago. She was the 
daughter and coheirefs of fir Charles 
Hanbury Williams, K.B. and of the 
lady Frances, daughter of the late 
ear] Coningfby. 
At Munich, in her 68th year, after 
two days ilinefs, her ferene highnefs 
the duchefs dowager of Bavaria, 
widow of duke Clement. 
Right hon. Hugh lord Mafiey, 
fon of Hugh, created lord Mafley 
1776. He married Catherine, eld- 
eft daughter of Edw. Taylor, efq. 
of Ballynort, 1760, by whom he 
had iffue three fons and four daugh- 
ters, and fucceeded his father in 
1788. / 
“At Roftellan, county of Corke, 
the countefs of Orkney and Inchi- 
quin. She was the grand-daughter 
of George the firft earl, who was 
the fifth fon of William and Anne 
duke and duchefs of Hamilton, and 
field-marfhal of his majefty’s forces. 
Both this lady and her mother mar- 
ried earls of Inchiquin. Neither 
of them having male iffue, the titles 
of Orkney have ever gone to fe- 
males, ‘The prefent countefs is 
married to Mr. Fitzmaurice (bro- 
ther to the marquis of Lanfdowne), 
who has a fon, now vifcount Kirk- 
wall, and the firft heir male of the 
family. 
At Briftol, the hon. Mifs Elizab. 
Hewitt, youngeit daughter of the 
late lord chancellor of Ireland. 
May. At his houfe in St, James’s« 
{quare, the right hon. Philip Yorke, 
earl of Hardwicke, vifcount Royfton; 
and lord Hardwicke, one of the tel- 
lers of his majefty’s. exchequer, lord 
lieutenant and cuftos roetuloram of 
the county of Cambridge, and high 
fteward of that univerfity, a truitee 
of the Britihh Mufeum, LL.D. 
F.R.S. London,. and’ F.S.A. of 
Scotland. His Jord{hip was born Dec. 
20, N.S. 1720, and fuceeeded his 
father, the late lord chancellor Hard- 
wicke, in March 1764. The titles, 
and fuch parts of the eftate as de- 
feended from the chancellor, are 
devolved on Philip Yorke, efq. 
‘eldeit fon of the late Mr. Charles 
Yorke. During his refidence in 
Bennet college, a work was under- 
taken by his lordthip, affifted by 
fome of his contemporaries, inti- 
tuled, “ Vhe Athenian Letters ;’” 
and though it has not hitherto beem 
printed with’a view to publication, 
yet it has been circulated amongit 
fo many of his lordfhip’s friends 
and acquaintance, that it is well 
known as a work of confiderable 
merit. He publithed the Corre- 
fpondence of Sir Dudley Carleton, 
embaffador to the ftates general 
during the reign of James I. and 
prefixed to it an hiftorical preface, 
containing an account of the many 
important negociations that were 
carried on during that interefting 
period. In 1779 he publithed two 
volumes of ftate papers, felected 
from the colleftions at the Paper- 
office and the Britifh Mufeum, as 
well as from his own valuable col- 
letion.—His lordthip was married, 
in May 1741, to Jemima, daughter 
of the late earl of Breadalbane, who 
inherited from her grandfather, the 
late duke of Kent, eftates in the 
counties of Bedford, Effex, and 
Wiltfhire, and the antient bardnies 
of 
