OBITUARIES, FOREIGN. 



595 



Bristol, and heir-presumptive to the title. At 

 the time of his death he was a member of Par- 

 liament for West Suffolk. 



HILL, Viscount ROWLAND, a peer of Great 

 Britain, J>orn in 1800; died January 2, 18T5. 

 He was a member of Parliament for North 

 Shropshire, 1821 to 1842, and at the time of 

 his death was Lord-Lieutenant of Shropshire. 



HOFSTATTER, HEiNRicH VON, a German pre- 

 late, born in 1805; died May 12, 1875. He 

 was ordained as priest in 1833, and in 1840 

 was appointed Bishop of Passau. He was 

 noted for many eccentricities, and, while zeal- 

 ously devoted to the doctrines of his Church, 

 inculcated, at the same time, very earnestly 

 loyalty to the state government and state laws. 

 He severely censured many political movements 

 of the Catholic party, and was, on the other 

 hand, most fiercely denounced by many ultra- 

 Catholic papers. 



HOLLOW AY, General Sir THOMAS, a British 

 officer, born in 1810 ; died July 21, 1875. He 

 served at the siege and capture of Sevastopol, 

 in the expedition against Kertch in 1855, and 

 was Senior Allied Commissioner at Canton, 

 1858 to 1859. 



HORN, EDWARD, a Hungarian statesman; 

 died November 2, 1875. He was Secretary of 

 State in the Ministry of Commerce of Hungary, 

 and a member of the Reichstag of the Austro- 

 Hungarian monarchy. 



HTJISSE, HIPPOLTTE DE LA FAILLE, Baron D', 

 a Belgian politician, born in 1800 ; died in 

 Ghent, on February 28, 1875. He had been 

 at one time member of the Second Chamber, 

 and afterward a senator of Belgium. 



HUNTINGDON, FRANCIS THEOPHILUS HENRY 

 HASTINGS, thirteenth Earl of, a British peer, 

 born November 28, 1808 ; died September 13, 

 1875. 



ISCHITELLA, FRANCESCO PINTO, Prince of, a 

 Neapolitan general, died April 2, 1875. He 

 was Minister of War under Ferdinand II. of 

 Naples. 



JARNAC, PHILIPPE DE ROHAN-CHABOT, Comte 

 DE, a French diplomatist, born in 1815 ; died 

 March 22, 1875. He was the son of Vicomte 

 de Chabot, a French emigre nobleman, who 

 served as a major-general in the British Army, 

 and his mother was Lady Isabella Fitzgerald, 

 sister of the Duke of Leinster. At the out- 

 break of the Revolution of 1848, the Comte 

 de Jarnac was chief secretary of the French 

 embassy in London, but he retired from all 

 diplomatic work throughout the Republic and 

 the Second Empire. He then settled down 

 upon his Irish estates in Kilkenny. On the 

 collapse of the Second Empire he again direct- 

 ed his attention to politics, returning to France 

 after a residence of about twenty years in Ire- 

 land ; and he was appointed embassador at 

 the Court of St. James in 1874, by President 

 MacMahon, in succession to the Due de la 

 Rochefoucauid-Bisaccia. In 1844 he married 

 his cousin, the Hon. Geraldine Foley. 



JOLOVICZ, Dr. H., a German Orientalist; died 



in February, 1875. His principal works are 

 " Bliithenkranz morgenlandischer Dichtun- 

 gen " (1860), and " Geschichte der Juden in 

 K6nigsberg"(1867). 



JUSTH, JOSEPH, a member of the Hungarian 

 Diet, born in 1808 ; died December 6, 1875. 

 He was President of the Deak Club in the 

 Diet of 1874. 



JUVARA, TOMMASO ALOYsio, an Italian artist, 

 born January 13, 1809 ; died by his own hand 

 May 30, 1875. His principal works are a 

 drawing of Christ, after the painting by Ali- 

 brandi, an engraving on copper of the Madon- 

 na della Regia di Napoli, by Raphael, and an 

 engraving showing a wonder performed by St. 

 Borroma3us, after a composition by Giuseppi 

 Mancinelli. He is considered one of the best 

 engravers on copper of modern times. 



KELLETT, Sir HENRY, a British naval officer, 

 born in 1807; died March 1, 1875. He en- 

 tered the navy at 14 years of age, took part in 

 the coast-survey of America from 1835-'40, 

 under Beechey and Belcher, continued this 

 work in 1845 in the Herald up to 1848, when 

 he was ordered to the Behring Straits to take 

 part in the researches for Sir John Franklin's 

 Expedition. In 1849 he discovered Herald 

 Island (Wrangell Land), and returned to Eng- 

 land in 1851. In 1852 he took part in the 

 Arctic Expedition of Belcher as commander of 

 the Resolute, and picked up McClure, with the 

 crew of the Investigator. In 1854 he was ap- 

 pointed commodore, in 1864 Admiral-Superin- 

 tendent of Malta, and in 1869 commander of 

 the naval station in China. 



KEON, M. G., an English author, died in 

 July, 1875. He was Colonial Secretary in the 

 Bermudas at the time of his death. In 1846 

 he published a history of the Society of Jesus, 

 by whom he had been educated. He was an 

 active contributor to various journals, particu- 

 larly the Morning Post, and while in Calcutta 

 edited the Bengal Hurkaru. His last work 

 was the novel "Dion and the Sybils," pub- 

 lished in 1866. 



KOERLE, B., a German painter, born October 

 21, 1823 ; died April 23, 1875. In his fifteenth 

 year he turned his attention to art, visiting a 

 drawing-school, and afterward the Art Acade- 

 my of Munich. His finest works are those de- 

 scribing the times of Louis XV. 



KRAJNER, EMERICH VON, a Hungarian jurist, 

 born in 1790 ; died October 5, 1875. He was 

 one of the most learned lawyers of Hungary, 

 and paid particular attention to the constitu- 

 tional history of that country. His largest 

 work is entitled "On the Original Constitu- 

 tion of Hungary from the Foundation of the 

 Kingdom to 1382" (1872), which was very 

 favorably received. 



KREMER, JOSEPH, a German philosopher, 

 born in 1808; died June 2, 1875. He was 

 Professor of Philosophy in Cracow, and was the 

 author of " System der Philosophie," and 

 " Reise nach Italien." 



LABROUSTE, PIERRE FRANC.OIS HENRI, a French 



