OBITUARIES, FOREIGN. 



631 



services at the capture of Prome received tlio 

 n|Hviiil thanks of tin- Governor-General of In- 

 dia in couDcil. Ho was actively employed in 

 the Indian campaign of 1858-'5D. In the lat- 

 ti-r par! of tin- campaign in Oude in 1858 he 

 \vas wounded, und liad a horse shot under him. 

 IIo was made a companion of the Order of the 

 Hath for his services during the mutiny. His 

 commission as ensign bore date January 22, 

 1838; lieutenant, July 13, 1838; captain, Au- 

 gust 28, 1845; major, October 81, 1852; lieu- 

 tenant-colonel, December 9, 1853 ; colonel, 

 November 28, 1854; major-general, March 6, 

 1868; and lieutenant-general, May, 1876. 



CLANRIOARDE, HARRIET, Marchioness of, born 

 April 18, 1804; died January 8, 1876. She 

 was the only daughter of George Canning, the 

 eminent statesman, ami sister of Earl Can- 

 ninir, a former Viceroy of India. She was mar- 

 ried to Ulick John, late Marquis of Clanricarde, 

 by whom she leaves one son, Hubert, Mar- 

 quis of Clanricarde, who inherited the prop- 

 erty of his uncle, Lord Canning, and four 

 daughters. Her eldest son, Lord Dunkellin, 

 died in 1867. 



CLARK, THOMAS, a British artist; died Oc- 

 tober 7, 1876. In the course of hrs school- 

 days he was unfortunate enough to sustain an 

 injury to the shoulder, the effects of which crip- 

 pled him through life. Having early resolved 

 to become a painter, he pursued the necessary 

 studies in Edinburgh, and in his twentieth year 

 began to exhibit. He was known as an assid- 

 uous cultivator of landscape-art, whose works 

 were never missed from the annual exhibitions 

 of the Royal Scottish Academy, and whose 

 efforts were recognized by that body in his 

 election as an associate in November, 1865. 

 He painted both in water-colors and in oil. 



CONSOLATI, FERDINAND, Count, an Austrian 

 peer, born January 7, 1833; died May 3, 1876. 

 He was Commissioner of Delegation in Ve- 

 netia up to the cession of this province to 

 Italy. In 1867 he was created a life-member 

 of the Herrenhaus, and in 1873 was elected 

 Mayor of Trent. 



OONYNGIIAM, JANE, Marchioness of, born 

 in 1798 ; died February 4, 1876. She was the 

 second daughter of Field-Marshal Henry Wil- 

 liam, first Marquis of Anglesea, by his first wife, 

 Lady Caroline Elizabeth Villiers, third daugh- 

 ter of George, fourth Earl of Jersey. She was 

 married in 1824 to the present Marquis of 

 Oonyngham, by whom she had two sons and 

 four daughters, all of whom survive her. 



DAVIDIS, HENRIETTA, a German writer on 

 the art of cooking, born in 1801 ; died April 

 8, 1876. She wrote, among other works, a 

 "Kochbuch" (twentieth edition, 1875), which 

 gained great celebrity, " Beruf der Jungfrau " 

 (sixth edition, 1876), and ''Die Hausfrau" 

 (eighth edition, 1876). 



DBAS, Sir DAVID, a British physician, born 

 in 1807 ; died January 12, 1876. He was In- 

 spector-General of Hospitals and Fleets, and 

 was created a K. C. 6. in 1867. 



DENZIN, KARL FBIBDBICH VON, a German 

 statesman, born October 16, 1800; died July 

 19, 1876. He had been a member of ditiV-rent 

 legislative bodies for nearly forty years. Fnnii 

 1888 to 1864 he was a member of the Provin- 

 cial Diet of Pomerania, and in consequence 

 took part in the united Diets of 1847 and 1848. 

 lie was a member of the Upper House of 1'nis 

 sia from 1848 to 1853, and, having been elected 

 to the Second Chamber in 1853, he formed a 

 conservative faction with Prince Hohenlohe 

 Ingelfingen, which existed up to 1858. He was 

 a member of the North-German and afterward 

 of the German Reichstag, ever since the crea- 

 tion of the empire. He was knighted by King 

 William in 1861. 



I MCKSI i\. JOHN BOURMASTER, a British naval 

 officer, born in 1815; died February 11, 1876. 

 He held the rank of rear-admiral. 



DIERIXGER, FRANZ XAVER, a German Cath- 

 olic theologian, born August 22, 1811; died 

 September 8, 1876. He was ordained as priest 

 in 1835, and appointed Professor of Homiletics 

 in the Seminary of Freiburg in the same year. 

 In 1843 he received a call as professor to Bonn, 

 where he afterward also became university 

 preacher, and director of the homiletic-cate- 

 chetical seminary, founded in 1871. Although 

 at first opposed to the doctrine of Papal Infal- 

 libility, he did not join the Old Catholics, but 

 resigned all his positions in Bonn, and retired 

 to a small country parish in Hohenzollern- 

 Hechingen. His principal works are : " Sys- 

 tem der gottlichen Thaten des Christenthums " 

 (1841; second edition, 1857), and ' Lehrbuch 

 der katholischen Dogmatik " (1847 ; fifth edi- 

 tion, 1865). 



DONOVAN, MICHAEL, an Irish chemist; died 

 in April, 1876. He was considered an admira- 

 ble chemist and physicist. He wrote two sys- 

 tematic treatises for "Lardner's Cyclopaedia" 

 on " Domestic Economy," and a " Treatise on 

 Chemistry." He also contributed a large num- 

 ber of monographs on various subjects to the 

 "Transactions" of the Royal Society, and of 

 the Royal Irish Academy, of which he was a 

 member. 



DREBER, HEINRICH, a German painter, born 

 January 9, 1822; died August 3, 1876. He 

 spent considerable time in Florence, and ex- 

 celled in landscape-painting. Among his finest 

 pictures is a harvest-scene in the East. 



DOMBRECK, Sir DAVID, a British physician, 

 born in 1805 ; died January 24, 1876. He was 

 Inspector - General of Hospitals, and was 

 knighted in 1871. 



DUPUIS, Sir JOHN, a British general, born in 

 1800; died the latter part of November, 1876. 

 He was twice in command of the entire artil- 

 lery before Sebastopol, and distinguished him- 

 self in different battles in the Crimea. 



DUSCH, ALEXANDER vox, a German states- 

 man, born January 27, 1789 ; died October -7, 

 1876. In 1815 he became secretary in the 

 Ministry of Finance in Baden ; was employed 

 from 1819 to 1825 in the Ministry of Foreign 



