OBITUARIES, FOREIGN. 



593 



Hautes-Pyrenees. He was one of the most 

 active members of the Left. 



DUNCKEB, LUDWIG, a German theologian, 

 born August 17, 1810; died November 7, 1875. 

 He was Professor of Theology in Gottingen, 

 and was well known as a writer on theological 

 subjects. 



DYMOKE, HENBY LIONEL, born 1834; died 

 December 31, 1875. He was " Champion of 

 the Queen," a title which is hereditary in the 

 family. 



EICHMANN, FKIEDKICH YON, a German diplo- 

 matist; died October 27, 1875. Since 1862, he 

 had been successively embassador to Rio de 

 Janeiro, Dresden, Constantinople, and Stock- 

 holm, which latter position he had held up to 

 the time of his death since August 12, 1874. 

 He was a member of the Prussian Herrenhaus. 



ESMABCH, H. K., one of the leaders of the 

 German party in Schleswig-Holstein, born in 

 1792;' died February 2, 1875, He entered 

 the Danish civil service in 1813, was appointed 

 a member of the Supreme Court of Schleswig 

 in 1830, was deprived of this office in 1848, in 

 consequence of his participation in the revolu- 

 tionary movement of that year, and was even 

 excluded from the general amnesty in 1852. 

 He then went to Prussia, where he was appoint- 

 ed a councilor at the Court of Appeals in 

 Greifswalde, and afterward in Frankfort-on- 

 the-Oder. 



ESSAD PASHA, a Turkish statesman, born in 

 1829; died November 28, 1875. He had held 

 various offices, as Minister of War and of the 

 Navy, and had been Grand-Vizier twice, the 

 first time from August, 1872, to February, 1873, 

 and the second time from April to August, 1875. 

 He was soon after appointed Governor of Syria, 

 which position he held at the time of his death. 

 He was noted for his hatred of the Christians. 



EUGENE, Duke of Wiirtemberg, born Decem- 

 ber 25, 1820; died January 8, 1875. He was 

 a second cousin of the King of Wurtemberg, 

 an hereditary member of the Prussian Herren- 

 haus, and a Prussian cavalry general. 



EULENBURG, Count WEND BOTHO zu, a Ger- 

 man nobleman, was born May 19, 1845; died 

 December 5, 1875. At the time of his death 

 he was engaged to be married to the Count- 

 ess Marie von Bismarck, the chancellor's 

 daughter. 



FAY, JOSEPH, a celebrated German painter, 

 born in 1813 ; died July 27, 1875. In 1833 he 

 entered the Dusseldorf Academy. His first 

 large work was "Samson and Delila," in the 

 exhibition of 1839. The " Cleopatra," which 

 followed in 1841, was an improvement on the 

 former in the coloring. In 1840 a prize was 

 offered for the painting alfresco of the large 

 hall of the new City Hall of Elberfeld, and Fay 

 won it. He then went to Paris, where he 

 painted " The last Scene of Goethe's Faust," and 

 " The Balcony Scene from Romeo and Juliet." 

 Having returned to Dusseldorf he painted 

 scenes from Italian country life. He was one 

 of the founders of the " Malkasten," the artist 

 VOL. xv. 38 A 



society of Dusseldorf, and one of the most fa- 

 mous of Germany. 



FEILDEN, HENKY MASTEE, M. P., born 1818; 

 died September 5, 1875. He was a member of 

 Parliament for Blackburn since 1868. 



FINDLAY, A. E., an English geographer, born 

 January 6, 1812 ; died May 3, 1875. He was 

 author of several nautical handbooks and 

 charts, among these " Directory for the Coasts 

 and Islands of the Pacific Ocean" (1851). 



FlTZWALTEE, BEOOK WlLLIAM BEIDGES, Bai'- 



on, a British peer, born June 2, 1801 ; died 

 December 7, 1875. He was a member of Par- 

 liament for East Kent in 1852, and from 1857 

 to 1868. The barony became extinct upon his 

 death. 



FOEDYCE, WILLIAM DINGWALL, M. P., born 

 in 1836; died December 3, 1875. He was a 

 member of Paliament for Aberdeenshire, since 

 1866. 



FOEWEEK, LUDWIG, a German prelate, born 

 1817 ; died January 9, 1875. He was ordained 

 as a priest in 1839, and in 1854 was appointed 

 Vicar Apostolic of the kingdom of Saxony, 

 with the title Bishop of Leontopolis in part, 

 injid. 



FOUOHEE, PAUL, a French author, born April 

 21, 1810 ; died January 24, 1875. In his youth 

 he wrote a few novels. But during the period 

 from 1834 to 1874 he wrote about seventy 

 dramas, partly alone and partly in conjunction 

 with others. Among his best-known dramas 

 are: "Caravage" (1834), "Les Chevaux du 

 Carrousel " (1840), " Le Comte de Mansfeld " 

 (1841), " Les Deux Perles" (1844), "Red-gaunt- 

 let" (1844), and " Maurice de Saxe " (1859). 

 He was a brother-in-law of Victor Hugo. 



FOULD, BENO!T, a Parisian banker, born in 

 1792; died January 9, 1875. In partnership 

 with his younger brother, the late Achille 

 Fould, he conducted a Paris bank, trading un- 

 der the firm of Fould, Oppenheim & Co. 

 His brother withdrew from the firm upon en- 

 tering public life in 1842, leaving him in con- 

 trol of the establishment, which he managed 

 with great success. 



FEEDEEICK, CHAELES, an English vice-ad- 

 miral ; died December 23, 1875. 



FUELONG, Dr., an Irish prelate, born in 1803; 

 died November 12, 1875. He was Catholic 

 Bishop of Ferns at the time of his death. 



GAKCTA Y TESSAEA, GABBIEL, a Spanish poet, 

 born June 16, 1817; died February 14, 1875. 

 He was contributor for various journals, and in 

 his war-articles showed considerable political 

 foresight. His poem "Un Diablo mas," al- 

 though not finished, is considered one of his 

 finest productions. He was for a time Min- 

 ister-Resident of Spain in the United States. 



GENBEEG, PAUL, a Swedish prelate, born in 

 1811 ; died September 30, 1875. He was Lu- 

 theran Bishop of Calmar, and had been Minis- 

 ter of Education of Sweden. 



GINOULHIAO, a French prelate, born in 1806 ; 

 died November 17, 1875. He was considered 

 one of the most prominent French theologians 



