68 ANNUAL RE 
Afheton Curzon, fon of Lord 
C. lieutenant-colonel of the Lei- 
cefterfhire yeomanry-cavalry, , and 
one of the reprefentatives for that 
county, born 1757. 
20th. At Wetzlaer, in his 30th 
_ year, General Hoche, commander 
in chief of the French armies of 
the Sambre and Meufe, and of the 
Rhine and Mofelle. His body 
having been opened, his death was 
found to have been occafioned by 
a fpecies of convulfive afthma, and 
a polypus formed on one of the 
greater arteries, which had caufed 
an inflammation that had reached 
the lungs. 
25th. In his thirty-fifth year, the 
Honourable Robert-George-Wil- 
liam Trefufis, Lord Clinton. He 
is fucceeded in titles and eftates by 
his eldeft fon; has left fix children, 
and his lady pregnant with the 
feventh. His remains were in- 
terred in the family -vault at Tre- 
fufis, in the county of Cornwall. 
In the feventy-fixth year of 
his age, and fortieth of his epifco- 
pach the Right Reverend Charles 
falmefley, Lord Bifhop of Rama, 
vicar: apoftolic of the weftern dif- 
triét, and fenior bifhop and vicar 
apoftolic, doétor of theology in 
Sorbonne, F. R. $. and the laft 
furvivor of the eminent mathe- 
maticians who were confulted for 
calculating the alteration from the ~ 
old to the new ftyle; author of 
feveral literary works, particularly 
an Explanation of the Apocalypfe, 
Ezekiel’s Vifion, &c. By the fire 
at-Bath, fome years fince, at the 
time-of the riots, we believe, the 
other valuable MSS. he had _ been 
‘compiling during a well-fpent life 
of labour and travelling through | 
many countries before his. return 
re ogc were all irretrievably 
Oil. 
GOSTUER, 1497. 
Robert Shafto, Efq. brother to 
the Countefs of Lifburne. ARS 
Ifaac Minors, Efq. furgeon, of 
Chancery-lane, Holborn. 
27th. At his feat at Sevenoaks- 
Vine, in Kent, aged eighty-four, 
John Pratt, Efq. eldeft fon of John 
Pratt, Efq. the eldeft furviving for 
of Lord Chief fuftice Pratt, by his 
firft lady, and! uncle to Earl Cam- 
den, lord-lieutenant of Ireland, on’ 
whom the bulk of his fortune de- 
volves. 
At Exeter, whither he went for 
the recovery of his health, the 
Honourable Thomas Bruce, fon of’ 
William, Earl of Kincardine, and ° 
brother to the late Earl of Elgin 
and Kincardine, a lieutenant-gene- 
ral in the army, colonel of the 
fixteenth regiment of foot, and 
M. P. for Great Bedwin, Wilts. 
His remains were depofited, on the 
‘20th, -in Exeter cathedral, with 
‘military honours. _ 
8th. The Moft- Noble Henry de 
Burgh, Marquis’and Earl of Clan- 
rickard, and‘*Lord Dunkellin, of 
‘the kingdom of Ireland, and a 
Knight of the Order of St. Patrick. 
He was the fenior marquis of that 
kingdom, and born in 1742. Hav- 
ing left-no male-iffue, the marquif-- 
ate becomes extinét, but the earl- 
dom, with his eftates, defcend to 
his brother, General de Burgh. 
At Paris, in confequence ofa - 
difeafeé under which he had long 
aboured, M. Louvet, the ex-de- 
‘puty, author of “* Le Recit de mes 
Perils,” a work which exhibits a 
picture of the reign of terror:in | 
France, and editor of a Paris jour- 
‘nal (“¢ La Sentinelle.”) He was alfo 
the author of “ Ledoifea,” the opéra 
stranflated by Mr. Kemble. Louvet — 
‘was'a man of good talents, mixed “ 
with a great deal of vanity, and a 
great deal of vice. 
27th, 
