CHRONICLE. 



57 



George II. who was then on the 

 banks of the Rhine, on business of 

 great importance. He was after- 

 wards ambassador at Petersburgh, 

 where he remained a twelvemonth, 

 when he was appointed to the im- 

 portant station of minister of the 

 cabinet, which he held ever since 

 1 749, full fifty years. 



27th. The rev. Dr. John Warren, 

 lord bishop of Bangor. He was of 

 Caius-coUege, Cambridge, where 

 he proceeded B.A. 1750; M. A. 

 1754; and D.D. 1772. In 1779, 

 he was promoted to the see of St. 

 David's ; from whence, in 1783, he 

 was translated to Bangor. 



The most hon. Charlotte Jane 

 Windsor, marchioness of Bute. 



At Gompas, in Hungary, a shep- 

 herd, in the 126th year of his age. 

 His manner of living was extremely 

 simple; he never ate any meat, but 

 subsisted entirely on milk, butter, 

 and cheese, and had never been ill 

 in his life. 



At Augsburg, baron de Steiger. 



The reigning prince bishop of 

 Constance. 



At Nice, after twelve days illness 

 of a putrid fever, general Cham- 

 pionet, commander of the French 

 republican army of Italy. 



At Nancy, Nicolas Guillemin, 

 M.D. formerly professor of materia 

 medica and botany in the medical 

 college of that city. 



At Bourdeaux, citizen Garat, 

 formerly an advocate there, and af- 

 terwards a member of the constituent 

 national assembly. 



At Dresden, in his 77th year, the 

 Saxon minister of State, Louis de 

 Wurmb. 



Feb. 6th. At Cambridge, Robert 

 Glynn Clobery, M. D. fellow of 

 King's-college, 1737; A.B. 1741 ; 

 A.xM. 1745 i M.D. 1752 ; and fel^ 



low of the college of physicians of 

 London, 1763. He practised first 

 as a physician at Richmond, but af- 

 terwards at Cambridge, where he 

 constantly resided. In 1785, he 

 received the Seatonian prize for the 

 poem on "The Day of Judgement," 

 which, however, was generally be- 

 lieved to be the production of ano- 

 ther fellow of the college, not then 

 of standing to be a candidate for it. 

 He changed his name to Clobery 

 for an estate left him by an uncle. 



At Hamburgh, in the 85th year 

 of her age, her excellency Sophia 

 Charlotte, countess dowager of Ben- 

 tinck, only child of the late count 

 Aldenburgh, and of the princess of 

 Varel, widow of the late hon. Wil- 

 liam count Bentinck Rhoon, second 

 son of the first earl of Portland, and 

 grandmother to the present count 

 Bentinck Rhoon, and of governor 

 Bentinck, the latter of whom she 

 has left her heir. 



In the city mansion-house, in 

 Dawson-street, Dublin, the right 

 hon. John Sutton, lord mayor of 

 that city. He is the 7th magistrate 

 who has died in that office since 

 the revolution. 



10th. In his 57th year, cardinal 

 Altieri. He renounced his dignity 

 while Rome was in the hands of the 

 French ; which step he repented 

 publicly, previous to his death, in 

 a printed pamphlet, in which he 

 entreats the pardon of God and the 

 church for his fear of men. 



21st. In her 57th year, after a 

 reign of four years, the princess ab- 

 bess of Lindau, baroness of Ulm. 



24th. Inher 80th year, Elizabeth 

 Douglas Hamilton, countess dow- 

 ager Brooke and of Warwick, eldest 

 daughter of lord Archibald Hamil- 

 ton, the youngest son of Anne, 

 duchess of Hamilton in her own 



